Budget, Backpackers, Surfers, Beach Lovers, Naturalist, Hippie, Sun and Sand worshipers, Off the Beaten Path Paradise! Everyone is welcome at Zipolite!
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A little about Playa Zipolite, The Beach of the Dead . . .
Playa Zipolite, Oaxaca, Southern Mexico, on the Pacific Ocean. A little bit about my favorite little get-away on this small world of ours.Zipolite, a sweaty 30-minute walk west from Puerto Angel, brings you to Playa Zipolite and another world. The feeling here is 1970's - Led Zep, Marley, and scruffy gringos.A long, long time ago, Zipolite beach was usually visited by the Zapotecans...who made it a magical place. They came to visit Zipolite to meditate, or just to rest.Recently, this beach has begun to receive day-trippers from Puerto Angel and Puerto Escondido, giving it a more TOURISTY feel than before.Most people come here for the novelty of the nude beach, yoga, turtles, seafood, surf, meditation, vegetarians, discos, party, to get burnt by the sun, or to see how long they can stretch their skinny budget.I post WWW Oaxaca, Mexico, Zipolite and areas nearby information. Also general budget, backpacker, surfer, off the beaten path, Mexico and beyond, information.REMEMBER: Everyone is welcome at Zipolite.ivan
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- Budget Backpackers Off The Beaten Path - - - Mochileros económicos fuera del camino trillado
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Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Molusko
San Pedro Pochutla, Oax.
01 958 113 6151
https://maps.google.com/?cid=9022377746644374933
San Pedro Pochutla, Oaxaca
San Pedro Pochutla, Oax.
01 958 113 6151
https://maps.google.com/?cid=9022377746644374933
San Pedro Pochutla, Oaxaca
+52 999 152 7141
Price Range $$
Hours
Always Open
Villa Aikia Zipolite by Cha. Adults Only. Facebook Villa Aikia Zipolite by Cha. Adults Only., San Pedro Pochutla. 4,2 mil Me gusta. Boutique Hotel & Healing Center. Clothing Optional, Adults Only.
Villa Aikia Zipolite by Cha. Adults Only.
Villa Aikia Zipolite by Cha. Adults Only., San Pedro Pochutla. 4,2 mil Me gusta. Boutique Hotel & Healing Center. Clothing Optional, Adults Only.
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Sun Mountain Conversation Starter · 13 hrs This Saturday we have handmade soap workshop ---------------- Learn and undertake ----------------- Cost: $ 400.00 only 2 places left Reserve at 9515046166
This Saturday we have handmade soap workshop
---------------- Learn and undertake -----------------
Cost: $ 400.00 only 2 places left
Reserve at 9515046166
---------------- Learn and undertake -----------------
Cost: $ 400.00 only 2 places left
Reserve at 9515046166
Oaxaca's Central Valleys Planeta.com The Central Valleys are easy day-trips from Oaxaca City. The valley is Y-shaped with Oaxaca City in the center and the valley is quite high in altitude ...
Oaxaca's Central Valleys
The Central Valleys are easy day-trips from Oaxaca City. The valley is Y-shaped with Oaxaca City in the center and the valley is quite high in altitude ...
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Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Cairo Opera House hosts celebrations of National Day of Mexico Egypttoday The band was founded in August 2015 in the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca with the aim of spreading local arts and culture. The band had also ...
Cairo Opera House hosts celebrations of National Day of Mexico
The band was founded in August 2015 in the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca with the aim of spreading local arts and culture. The band had also ...
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Cairo Opera House hosts celebrations of National Day of Mexico
Mon, Sep. 16, 2019
CAIRO - 16 September 2019: The Egyptian Opera House headed by Magdy Saber will host a celebration of the Mexican Independence Day, which will be held in cooperation with the Mexican Embassy in Cairo on Sept. 16 at 8 p.m. in the Small Theater.
The Da Alma de Corda band has prepared a special program that reflects the artistic nature of the country and includes several musical compositions from the Mexican heritage.
The band was founded in August 2015 in the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca with the aim of spreading local arts and culture. The band had also participated in many festivals in various countries, including USA and China.
The Da Alma de Corda band has prepared a special program that reflects the artistic nature of the country and includes several musical compositions from the Mexican heritage.
The band was founded in August 2015 in the southern Mexican city of Oaxaca with the aim of spreading local arts and culture. The band had also participated in many festivals in various countries, including USA and China.
Francisco Toledo, activist and artist known as 'El Maestro' in his native Mexico – obituary Telegraph.co.uk Though Toledo would travel widely during his career, studying in Paris and working in New York City during the 1980s, it was to Oaxaca that he would ...
Francisco Toledo, activist and artist known as 'El Maestro' in his native Mexico – obituary
Though Toledo would travel widely during his career, studying in Paris and working in New York City during the 1980s, it was to Oaxaca that he would ...
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Francisco Toledo obituary
Mexican artist whose work paid homage to the myths he imbibed growing up in an indigenous Zapotec family
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The Mexican artist and activist Francisco Toledo, who has died aged 79, was best known for paintings, prints and ceramics that paid homage to the myths and stories he imbibed growing up in an indigenous Zapotec family, depicting a vast menagerie of real and fantastical animals, often on unconventional yet traditional grounds such as ostrich eggs and tree bark.
Playful depictions of monkeys were plentiful, but there was a darker side to his work, such as the red-stained ceramics he made in response to Mexico’s drug wars, Duelo (Mourning, 2015), and the overtly sexual, phallus-centered self-portraits he returned to throughout his career.
“Toledo’s is the art of shamanism,” wrote Christopher Goodwin in the Guardian in 2000, on the opening of a major exhibition of his work at the Whitechapel Gallery, London. While much of his subject matter came from pre-hispanic art, there was also, according to Toledo himself, who lived in Paris for several years in the 1960s, “the influence of Picasso, Miró, Dubuffet, and all the art that does something with primitivism”.
“Toledo is no whimsical folklorist,” wrote Laura Cumming in a review of the Whitechapel show, “but a draughtsman in the grand tradition. His etchings have been compared with Goya and Ensor and his watercolours elaborate a whole series of invented hieroglyphs and signs as delicate and toylike as anything by Klee.”
Toledo was one of the seven children of Florencia Toledo Nolasco and Francisco López Orozco. He often said he was from Juchitán, a city with a rebellious reputation on the pacific coast of Oaxaca where his family had deep roots, but he was born in Mexico City and spent his early childhood in Minatitlán, on the Gulf side of the state of Veracruz, where his father, a former leather worker, had a successful small business selling sugar.
Francisco grew up surrounded by many of the animals that would later inhabit his art, from the birds in the forests to the turtles in the marshes, and the tapirs, rabbits and iguanas that wandered around his home before they ended up in the pot. There were also a lot of insects, not least swarms of wasps attracted by the sugar at the family home that meant its members had to swipe their way out of the building with wooden rackets. “I doubt anybody has ever evoked the delirious hum of insects better,” Cumming later wrote in her review, “five pencils, tied together and zig-zagged in a skittering dance across a scrap of paper.”
He always loved drawing, but Toledo’s future career was triggered by his father’s decision to send him to secondary school in the city of Oaxaca, in the hope that he would become a lawyer. Instead, he started art classes and discovered a library where he marvelled at reproductions of the likes of Goya and William Blake.
By the time Toledo was 17 he was in Mexico City studying lithography. Soon he was being mentored by an influential gallery owner, Antonio Souza, who in 1959 put on his first exhibition, which travelled to the Fort Worth Art Center in Texas. The money made from the sales enabled Toledo to travel to Paris, where he was taken under the wing of Rufino Tamayo – another Zapotec artist who had already found success – and the writer Octavio Paz. He was 24 when he had his first exhibition in the French capital, at Galerie Karl Flinker, putting him firmly on the road to international recognition.
Rather than embrace this meteoric rise, Toledo decided in 1965 to return to Mexico and immerse himself in his cultural heritage. To begin with this meant a period in Juchitán, and in later years it meant a wandering life in which he would produce art wherever he happened to be – Mexico City, Paris, New York – though he slowly but surely became ever more intertwined with Oaxaca, where he eventually settled in the 80s.
Toledo used the considerable income from his art to set up several cultural institutions in his home city, supporting new artists and broadening access to the arts, including the Graphic Arts Institute of Oaxaca, the Oaxacan Museum of Contemporary Art, the Jorge Luis Borges library for the blind, and a botanical garden.
He also became a social activist, spearheading campaigns such as one that successfully halted the opening of a McDonald’s restaurant in Oaxaca’s central plaza in 2002 (with the slogan, “Tamales Yes, Hamburgers No”). In 2014 he printed kites with the faces of 43 missing student teachers who had been “disappeared”, and flew them through the city centre.
He continued to show internationally, and was included in the Venice Biennale in 1997. The following year he received the Mexican national prize for arts and sciences (Premio Nacional de Ciencias y Artes).
Two marriages ended in divorce. Toledo is survived by his third wife, Trine Ellitsgaard, a Danish weaver whom he married in the mid-80s, and their children, Sara and Benjamín; by two children, Laureana and Jerónimo, from his second marriage, to Elisa Ramírez Castañeda, a poet; and by a daughter, Natalia, from his first marriage, to Olga de Paz Vicente.
• Francisco Benjamín López Toledo, artist and activist, born 17 July 1940; died 5 September 2019
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Oaxaca Wins Guinness Record with "Mezcal Wall"
Oaxaca Wins Guinness Record with "Mezcal Wall"
The Mezcal Wall (Muro Mezcalero) will be part of a permanent exhibition that can be visited in the city of Oaxaca.
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Oaxaca Wins Guinness Record with "Mezcal Wall"
With 369 different mezcal labels, the Mexican State of Oaxaca wins a new Guinness Record. - The Mezcal Wall (Muro Mezcalero) will be part of a ...
Monday, September 16, 2019
Apple’s first flagship LatAm store opens this month in Polanco Published on Saturday, September 14, 2019
Apple’s first flagship LatAm store opens this month in Polanco
Published on Saturday, September 14, 2019
The multinational technology company Apple will open its first Latin American flagship store in Mexico later this month, its second store in the country.
Apple Insider reported that the store will be located in the Polanco neighborhood of Mexico City, and will open on September 27.
“Flagship” Apple stores are freestanding structures that are not connected to shopping centers. Apple opened its first Mexico store in Centro Santa Fe in 2016.
Outside Mexico, there are only two other Apple stores in Latin America, both in Brazil. The United States is the only other country in the Western Hemisphere to be home to a flagship store, although Apple has plans to open such stores in Brazil and Canada.
The Polanco store has already been added to the list of Apple stores on the company’s website, which says the new outlet will be located at Av. Ejército Nacional #843-B in the Antara Fashion Hall, a luxury Polanco mall. The store will be a free-standing, one-story structure near Antara’s entrance.
Apple had originally planned to take over a vacated Crate & Barrel store in Antara and inaugurate their flagship store in early 2019. But the plans were delayed after the Crate & Barrel was demolished, and Apple decided to build a new structure in the same location.
Source: Apple Insider (en)
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