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Event Details:
Join us for a walkthrough of curator highlights from De la Tierra: Indigenous Ceramics from West Mexico Transcending Time and Space, the latest exhibition from the Stanford University Archaeology Collections. The tour will be led by student curators and Dr. Danielle Raad, Curator and Assistant Director of Collections.
Among many other objects, the exhibition includes figurines related to Día de los Muertos, or the Day of the Dead, typically celebrated on November 1 and 2 inside and outside of Mexico.
We will gather outside the front entrance to the Stanford Archaeology Center. Please RSVP to reserve a spot or request special accommodations.
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Exhibition Description:
De la Tierra has multiple meanings: from the earth, from the ground, from the homeland. This exhibition draws from two collections of ceramic objects made by Indigenous creators in West Mexico. One is ancient burial offerings from the tombs of various communities in a region traversing what now comprises the Mexican states of Nayarit, Jalisco, and Colima. The other collection contains 20th-century sculptures by Purépecha creators in Ocumicho, Michoacán. De la Tierra celebrates Indigenous creativity and agency as well as Mexican cultural and linguistic diversity. It also critically reflects upon how and why these objects came to be here at Stanford University. This exhibition explores how the contemporary and ancient ceramics on display transcend temporal and spatial boundaries in a variety of ways, opening conversations between objects and between visitors and objects.
De la Tierra was curated by students in the Spring 2024 course “Introduction to Museum Practice,” taught by Dr. Raad.