-40%

Cute Easter Rabbit OAXACAN WOOD CARVING OAXACA ALEBRIJE by Armando Jimenez

$ 84.48

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Featured Refinements: Alebrije Folk Art
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted

    Description

    New folk art Sculpture by Armando Jimenez and Antonia Alejandro.  Cute and charming rabbit with bright yellow tail and blue spots on a dark background, large ears for good hearing.
    about 10.5 inches in height
    MYSTICAL FIGURES OF OAXACA
    This adorable wood carving has all the curiosity and whimsey that we love in Mexican folk art.  Armando Jimenez is the grandson of the master carver Manual Jimenez, who is credited with creating the whole movement of the Oaxacan wood carvings or alebrijes. Armando works next door to his brother Moises and the carvings of both of these very talented men  are in high demand.  What a great way to support a living legacy and an art form that has been passed down within the family Armando and Moises pieces, while adhering to the traditional painting style of their family, show incredible range of creativity in the whimsical animals depicted and animals often not naive to oaxaca.
    Armando and his wife Antonio carry on this tradition of sensitively observed naturalistic
    carving and colorful and restrained painting mastered by their grandfather. Steeped into traditional folktales and belief Armando and Antonio improvise themes and motifs from the region’s diverse Indian tribes.  Folkways have intermingled alongside Spanish ideologies as the population overlapped while still uniquely remaining intact.
    Construction of Creatures from Dreams
    Hand carved from wood and then hand painted. These are not resin copies.
    They are conceived as creatures from dreams,
    carved
    with machete and smaller knives from copal
    wood
    and intricately painted.
    MEANING OF THIS ALEBRIJES
    Rabbit- Best known as the symbol of the moon. The rabbits profile fits the shape of the dark region of a full moon. Instead of a man in the moon the Zapotecs and Mayans saw a rabbit in the moon. The Mayan moon goddess was frequently depicted in art holding a rabbit.