SKU: 32057875001

Arnulfo Mendoza - La mujer de la magia musical (in orange)

Sale price$247.50 Regular price$275.00
Save 10%

Pay in installments of $68.75 with ShopPay, AfterPay and Klarna

Shipping Estimate
USA
  • USA
  • CAN

Ships within 48 hours · Estimated delivery Jul 20 - Jul 25

Promo Codes Available:

For Your Every Summer RSVP, with Code: SUMMER15

Description

Arnulfo Mendoza - La mujer de la magia musical (in orange)A large print measuring 31" x 22" (78cm. x 56cm.), in very good condition. Signed and numbered from an edition of 100. Done by Taller Lithografias Leo Acosta, Mexico City, in 1987. Marked down to celebrate our 25th anniversary. A simple black bow above the door of La Mano Magica heralded the bad news. On March 9, 2014, Arnulfo Mendoza, known for his unmatched skill as a rug weaver, died at the age of 59. To say that Arnulfo Mendoza was just a rug

A large print measuring 31" x 22" (78cm. x 56cm.), in very good condition. Signed and numbered from an edition of 100. Done by Taller Lithografias Leo Acosta, Mexico City, in 1987. Marked down to celebrate our 25th anniversary. 

 

A simple black bow above the door of La Mano Magica heralded the bad news. On March 9, 2014, Arnulfo Mendoza, known for his unmatched skill as a rug weaver, died at the age of 59.

To say that Arnulfo Mendoza was just a rug weaver is to say that Caruso was just a singer, Stradivarius just a woodworker, Michael Jordan just a basketball player and Bill Gates just some computer guy.

The reality is that Arnulfo Mendoza was one of the grand masters of Oaxacan art.

Unfortunately, too few people came to appreciate the great designs he created out of nondescript balls of yarn. For far too many people, the tapete, as it is known here in Oaxaca, was simply too utilitarian. After all how could someone call something art if its chief function was as a floor covering?

I remember the first time I walked into his store/gallery and realized that not only was I enthralled by Arnulfo’s work, but that he was sitting in the back of the store enjoying a cold beer. Humble and unpretentious, I sensed back then, not knowing who he was, that I was somewhere special, near a man who literally worked magic with his weavings. From that day on, every time I visited Oaxaca, I made the pilgrimage to his shop to see his creations.

I bring people every year to Oaxaca to experience part of the culture of this great area. One year one of the people who was traveling with me pulled me aside to ask a question. He had been walking along the Alcade in Oaxaca and said he had gone into a store called the “La Mano Magica, or something like that.” He wanted to know if I had any idea how much a rug from there might cost.

Clearly, he could sense the difference between what he saw there and what is typically available on the street corners and in the markets across Oaxaca.  What he was looking at was art. Delicate and at the same time, robust. Intricate on such as scale that when seen whole, Mendoza’s creations were mind blowing.

Standing in his gallery, looking at his creations, you just knew that Mendoza, and his work, were special. You got the same feeling admiring his work as you would in one of the worlds great art museums. Indeed, many of the stunning creations he wove over the years hung next to some of the greatest art we have ever seen.

As well it should.

El Maestro Arnulfo Mendoza will be missed, but not forgotten. Through his art, his legacy will live on, hopefully challenging the young weavers growing up in his hometown, Teotitlan del Valle, to further greatness.

Descansa en Paz Sr. Arnulfo Mendoza. You were and will continue to be, the standard of greatness to which all future generations of weavers will be measured.

By Oaxacadave.

 

Arnulfo Mendoza Ruiz (August 17, 1954 – March 7, 2014) was an artist and weaver, who exhibited his work both in Mexico and abroad. Born in Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca, a well-known center for traditional Zapotec weaving, he became one of its best-known artisans, recognized as a “grandmaster” by the Fundación Cultural Bancomer. As director of La Mano Mágica gallery and with his former wife Mary Jane Gagnier, he also worked to promote Oaxacan arts and handicrafts. 

Mendoza was born in Teotitlán del Valle, Oaxaca, a Zapotec community near the state capital that is well known for its weaving of rugs. The residents have been successful enough in this endeavor that unlike many other communities in the region, few people emigrate from here.

At age nine, he began his training in form, color and materials at his family’s workshop, learning traditional Zapotec weaving. He went on to study at the school of fine arts at the Universidad Autónoma Benito Juárez de Oaxaca (UABJO) from 1972 to 1974.

 

Mendoza later married Canadian Mary Jane Gagnier, who had come to Teotitlán as a backpacker and fell in love with the area, as well as with him. They worked together to promote his work and that of other artisans in the central valleys of Oaxaca, by opening a gallery, La Mano Magica, and writing. The couple divorced but Mary Jane stayed in Oaxaca to continue this work. The couple has one son, Gabriel Mendoza Gagnier.

In 2014, Mendoza died unexpectedly of a heart attack at age 59. There was a wake in the city of Oaxaca as well as in his hometown, where he was buried.

 

Mendoza was one of Teotitlán’s most famous weavers, whose works sold for up to thousands of dollars.He dyed his own silk and wool yarn and was particularly partial to the reds produced by the cochineal insect and sometimes used silver and gold thread. He had over fifty individual and collective exhibitions of his work, including in museums in New York, Madrid, Dallas, Paris, Los Angeles and Berlin. In 2003 his work was featured at the Weaving a Cultural Testimony exhibit at the Mexican Art Museum in Chicago

His work can be found in many private, and permanent collections of the Mexican Art Museum in Chicago, Tama Life 21 in Tokyo, Fundación Cultural Banamex, Waterloo Center for the Arts in Iowa and published in Cuento Mayas, Native Tradition (1982), Textiles de Oaxaca, Artes de México No.35 (1997) and Oaxaca Celebration (2005). 

 

In 1980 he traveled to Paris to paint for a year. From 1987 to 2010 he founded and directed the Arnulfo Mendoza Workshop, producing tapestries with traditional and contemporary designs. In 1993 he participated in an International Art Project in Japan, with two of his works acquired by the largest public art collection in Tokyo. From 2009 to 2010 he was the co-director of the La Mano Mágica Gallery, one of the most recognized in Oaxaca. In 1996, the Fundación Cultural Banamex named him of one their “grandmasters” of Mexican folk art (Grandes Maestros del Arte Popular Mexicano). In 2001 he was awarded the Chimalli de Oro by the El Imparcial newspaper.

 

 


 

Mexico has the oldest printmaking tradition in Latin America. The first presses were established there in the 16th mainly to print devotional images for religious institutions. Because of their ephemeral nature, few of these early impressions survive. A rare early exception is a 1756 thesis proclamation printed on silk presented by a candidate for a degree in medicine. With the introduction of lithography to Mexico in the nineteenth century, printmaking and publishing greatly expanded, and artists became recognized for the character of their work. José Guadalupe Posada (1851–1913) is often regarded as the father of Mexican printmaking. His best-known prints are of skeletons (calaveras) published on brightly colored paper as broadsides that address topical issues and current events, love and romance, stories, popular songs, and other themes. Posada demonstrated how effective prints were for creating a visual language that everyone could understand and enjoy. In the early twentieth century, their example had a profound impact on artists who, in response to the turbulent political climate and social unrest, were similarly eager to reach broad audiences.

 

The best-known artists in Mexico from the early decades of the twentieth century are Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco (1883–1949), and David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896–1974)—“Los tres grandes” (The Three Greats). They were all committed to politics but expressed their views through their art in very different ways. Of the three, Rivera—who returned to Mexico from Europe at the invitation of the government in 1921 to work on a mural project—rose to greatest prominence. Rivera’s 1932 lithograph Emiliano Zapata and His Horse, based on a detail from one of his murals at the Palace of Cortés Cuernavaca to the south of Mexico City, has become an iconic twentieth-century print. Zapata was a landowner-turned-revolutionary who formed and led the Liberation Army of the South. He embodied the aims of agrarian struggle that aspired to improve conditions for those who worked on the land. Zapata was assassinated in April 1919. Rivera’s print conflates different moments of oppression with optimistic emancipation. It was commissioned and published by the Weyhe Gallery in New York for sale to American collectors. Orozco and Siqueiros also made prints for the U.S. market, a number of which are devoid of political content.

 

The establishment of the print collective known as the Taller de Gráfica Popular (Workshop of Popular Graphic Art, TGP) in Mexico City in 1937 best expresses the symbiosis between prints and politics that had developed in Mexico. Its founders, Leopoldo Méndez (1902–1969), Luis Arenal (1908/9–1985) and Pablo (Paul) O’Higgins (1904–1983), were committed communists who abandoned mural painting to concentrate on printmaking, demonstrating how important prints had become as a vehicle for artistic, social, and political expression. Some of its members had belonged to the League of Writers and Revolutionary Artists (LEAR), which had been launched in 1934. The TGP has a fascinating history steeped in astonishing artistic production and political intrigue. The Bolshevik revolutionary and Marxist theorist Leon Trotsky arrived in Mexico in 1937, much to the horror of the communists represented by Siqueiros, who regarded him as a pro-fascist provocateur. Rivera was a supporter of Trotsky and established a Mexican branch of the Fourth International, a socialist organization that had its own journal, Clave, and ran articles attacking the USSR and the Mexican Communist Party. Siqueiros, then a guest member of the TGP, with fellow printmakers Antonio Pujol (1913–1995) and Luis Arenal, led an attempt to assassinate Trotsky in May 1940. The TGP workshop was their rendezvous point. After the failed attempt, Pujol ended up in prison and Siqueiros fled the country. Their action caused terrible ruptures in the TGP, with some remaining committed to the communist cause and others pressing for a more moderate line.

 

By 1947, the year that the Society of Mexican Printmakers was founded, printmaking had broadened its horizons far beyond its proletarian roots. In fact, printmaking was now considered to be the most intimate of media. Post World War II artist felt a need to reassert private values in opposition to highly politicized work. They opened the way to more subjective investigations of personal identity and myth.

 

Jose Luis Cuevas, Rufino Tamayo, and Francisco Toledo are fine examples of the new sensibility. These later artists have kept alive Mexico’s reputation for excellence in the graphic arts. A common Mexican trait on either side of the U.S.–Mexico border is the passionate interest in Mexicanidad (Mexicanness) and what comprises Mexican identity. Perhaps this obsession to understand the concept of Mexicanidad comes from nearly five centuries of mestizaje – the interracial and cultural mixing that first occurred in Mesoamerica among Native Indigenous groups, European Spanish and enslaved Africans during the 1520s. By the 18th century, Mexican identity had developed. Mestizaje was the process that constructed it. The museum’s permanent collection showcases the dynamic and distinct Mexican stories in North America, and sheds light on why Mexican identity cannot be regarded as singular; its vast diversity defies any notion of one linear history. -

 

Nuestras Historias destaca la colección permanente del museo, la cual expone las historias dinámicas y diversas de la identidad mexicana en Norteamérica. La exhibición muestra la identidad cultural como algo que evoluciona continuamente a través del tiempo, de regiones y de comunidades,  en vez de señalarla como una entidad estática e inmutable, exhibiendo para esto, artefactos mesoamericanos y coloniales, arte moderno mexicano, arte popular, y arte contemporáneo de los dos lados de la frontera EE.UU-México.  La gran diversidad de identidades mexicanas mostradas en estas obras desafía la noción de una sola historia lineal e identidad única. 

 

 
Shipping Notes
  • Free Standard Shipping on $100+ Orders to the USA.
  • Except Preorder products are shipped in 48 hours.
  • Delivery to the USA:
  1. Standard Shipping : 3-10 business days
  • If time is of the essence, please consider selecting expedited delivery for faster service.
Exchange/Return Notes
  • We offer a 30-day return/exchange service after receiving.
  • Final sale items are not eligible for returns or exchanges.
  • To process your return/exchange, please contact us at [email protected]
  • Please click here for more details>>> Return & Exchange Policy
SKU: 32057875001

Discover Niche Categories That Outsell

Top-Converting Item to Boost Your Average Order

4.4 ★★★★★
Based on 12 reviews
Sort
Highest Rating
Newest First
Oldest First
Product Reviews
A
Verified Purchase
Amazon Customer
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Quality & great price
Size: Iphone 17, Color: Light Purple
Had a silicone Apple case & screen protector from the Apple Store and this one is the same quality if not better. Fits my iPhone 17 perfectly, a pretty lilac purple, magnetic chargers works great and feels good (smooth feeling when putting into pockets or holding)… great price for quality case and screen protector
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2026
D
Verified Purchase
DJ
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 4
Great case, bad magnet.
Size: Iphone 17 Pro Max, Color: Dark Blue
The case itself is very good. It fits well on the phone. It’s not bulky at all and it seems pretty sturdy. The only problem is the magnet in the back is very weak. Besides that, it’s a great buy.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2026
S
Verified Purchase
Shipra Shandilya
Lake Worth, US
★★★★★ 5
Sleek & Protective iPhone 17 Pro Case – Perfect Everyday Fit
Size: Iphone 17 Pro, Color: Orange, Size: Iphone 17 Pro, Color: Orange
This iPhone 17 Pro case fits perfectly and feels sturdy while still being lightweight. It gives good protection without making the phone bulky, and the design looks clean and premium. The buttons are easy to press and it feels comfortable to hold for everyday use.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 20, 2026
A
Verified Purchase
Angel
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Practical Protection meets everyday elegance
Size: Iphone 15, Color: Black
When it comes to phone cases, functionality often battles design, leaving users to compromise on one or the other. However, the Miracase Magnetic Series Designed for iPhone 15 strikes an impressive balance, making it a standout choice for everyday users. Here’s a deeper dive into this case’s performance, practicality, and aesthetics. Unpacking Military-Grade Protection The first feature that grabs your attention is the military-grade protection claim. Unlike many cases that use the term as a buzzword, Miracase delivers. The corners are reinforced with shock-absorbing material, offering a solid defense against accidental drops. I tested this (intentionally dropping the phone from about waist height), and the iPhone 15 emerged unscathed—a testament to the case's reliability. The anti-scratch back panel further ensures your phone looks pristine, even with daily use. MagSafe Compatibility Done Right This case integrates seamlessly with MagSafe accessories, from chargers to wallets. The magnets are powerful enough to keep your MagSafe charger locked in place but not so strong as to make removing the accessories a struggle. Charging performance remains efficient, with no noticeable slowdowns compared to using the phone without a case. This makes it ideal for users who rely on wireless charging. Dual Screen Protectors: A Value-Added Bonus The inclusion of two screen protectors is a thoughtful touch. These aren’t flimsy add-ons; they are well-crafted with edge-to-edge coverage and excellent clarity. Application is easy with the provided guide frame, minimizing air bubbles—a detail often overlooked by competitors. Anti-Fingerprint and Smudge Resistance One of the standout features is the case’s anti-fingerprint coating. Many cases promise this but fail in practice. After a week of continuous use, the Miracase still looked clean and sleek, even with sweaty hands or frequent handling. The matte finish not only resists smudges but also adds a touch of understated elegance to your device. Slim Profile Meets Grip Security Despite its rugged features, the case maintains a slim profile, sliding easily into pockets. The textured sides provide a secure grip, reducing the chances of accidental drops. This combination of slimness and grip is rare in protective cases and makes the Miracase ideal for on-the-go lifestyles. What Sets It Apart? What truly makes the Miracase Magnetic Series unique is its thoughtful design for real-world use. It doesn’t just protect your phone; it enhances your interaction with it. From its MagSafe efficiency to its smudge-resistant finish, it’s clear that Miracase designed this case with user convenience in mind. Who Is This For? This case is perfect for individuals who want a no-nonsense protective case that doesn’t compromise on style or functionality. It’s particularly suited for professionals, students, and anyone who appreciates the integration of thoughtful design and durable performance. Final Verdict At its price point, the Miracase Magnetic Series Designed for iPhone 15 is an exceptional value. With its military-grade protection, MagSafe compatibility, and added extras like quality screen protectors, it confidently holds its own in a crowded market. Whether you prioritize protection, style, or everyday convenience, this case delivers on all fronts. Rating: 9.5/10 A near-perfect blend of style, durability, and user-focused design.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2025
S
Verified Purchase
Spark
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Great phone case!
Size: iPhone 16e/17e, Color: Black
Perfect protective case for my iPhone 17, without it the phone was too small and easily slipped out of my hand this makes it easier to hold but it’s not too big, it even comes with two screen protectors.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on May 7, 2026

recommand products