Thursday, May 16, 2024

Exhibit celebrates 70 years of Amalia Hernández’s folkloric ballet

To celebrate the 70th anniversary of Amalia Hernández’s Folkloric Ballet, an outdoor exhibition has opened featuring 62 photographs from different moments of the dance company’s history. The exhibition is displayed on the perimeter of Mexico City’s Chapultepec Park, along Reforma Avenue.

Running through Aug. 11, the exhibition recounts the history of the dance company from its beginnings up through an 18-month halt due to COVID-19, after which dancers continued to perform while wearing face masks. The exhibition was curated by Viviana Basanta, the ballet company’s artistic director, and Salvador López López, the company’s general director and grandson of its founder.

The exhibit, which is on display through August 11, features photos of performers, vintage posters, costume designs, as well as celebrities who saw the award-winning show in Mexico City. (Andrea Murcia/Cuartoscuro)

Several photographs show founder Amalia Hernández posing with personalities like John F. Kennedy and Jacqueline Kennedy, the Mexican muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros, the filmmaker Gabriel Figueroa and the Argentine singer-songwriter Facundo Cabral. 

Other pictures include posters from Amalia Hernández’s career, costume designs, the first front page features that the international press devoted to the ballet, and the Fine Arts Medal awarded by the National Institute of Fine Arts and Literature for the ballet’s 50th anniversary in 2002.

“Amalia Hernández was a Mexican woman who managed to immerse herself in the customs of a region and translate its emotions,” López said in his inaugural speech. “She turned legends into stories and dances into emotions of infinite colors […] and transcended the whole world by managing to show the essence of our cultural wealth,” López added.

As a choreographer and dancer, Hernández drew inspiration by studying and recovering the history, legends, religions and typical costumes of Mexico’s different cultures. 

With the exception of the COVID-19 pandemic, the folkloric ballet company has performed every Sunday at the Palacio de Bellas Artes since 1959. (Photo dated 1970/Wikimedia Commons)

The cultural wealth of the dances earned the company international recognition as the world’s best dance group in 1961 at the Festival of Nations in Paris, France, and the Tiffany for Lifetime Achievement Award in New York in 1992.  

Starting in 1959, the company has performed without interruption (except during the COVID-19 pandemic) every Sunday, and later every Wednesday, at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City. 

With reports from Cultura Cdmx and Chilango

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
Nava Mau, star of Netflix show Baby Reindeer

The Mexican Netflix star making waves in the activist community

2
Actress and Baby Reindeer star Nava Mau has intertwined a life of advocacy with success in the film industry.
Mexican TV presenter and comedian Paco Stanley

Who shot Paco Stanley? Series rekindles interest in TV icon’s unsolved murder

0
This month, Amazon Prime debuts "¿Quién Lo Mató?" a six-part miniseries about TV Azteca host Paco Stanley's still-unsolved murder in 1999.
Querétaro

Querétaro: A cultural gem and an economic powerhouse

0
The Bajío state has played host to some of Mexico's defining historical moments, houses many natural wonders and is championing the nearshoring surge.