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José Luis Cerda Báez Woodcarving in the Paracho Style The next step is a careful polishing of the wood utilizing planes and sandpaper until all splinters and projections are removed and the surface is smooth. The pieces are then assembled with adhesive many of them being left in their natural color. His father, Don Alfredo Cerda Moreno, introduced the Paracho style to the town where José lives and works. His great aunt, Cuca Cerda, was one of the major proponents of handcrafts in this town. Young José Luis continued the family folk art tradition and at the age of fifteen began to learn the art of handcarving wood from his father.
Another of José Luis' accomplishments is using the heart of the cornstalks to create incredible Christ figures on the cross. Almost a lost art in Mexico. Before the conquest of the Spanish, the Purépecha people fabricated images of their idols with the heart of cornstalks. Records from the 16th century relate that the Spanish missionaries who first arrived in Michoacán took advantage of this indigenous practice and began to elaborate images of the saints with this material, utilizing the technique to facilitate the process of the evangelization of the indigenous residents.
He continues adding more cornstalk centers and adhesive until a sort of thick form comes together that he ties with pita fibers and then sets aside to dry. When the figure is dry he removed the pita fibers and carves the object as if it were a piece of colorín wood. When the figure is dry, it is carefully polished prior to being painted.
José attended the 2005 & 2005 Feria Maestros del Arte art exhibition in Ajijic, Jalisco, Mexico. His incredible handcarved folkart is the best of what Mexican art has to offer. If you are interested in purchasing some of José Luis' work, call Marianne Carlson at 011522 376 765 7485 or email mariannecarlson@gmail.com (Our thanks to Karen Henderson for the use of her photographs) |