Hermenegildo Bustos
Hermenegildo
Bustos nació un 16 de abril de 1832 en Purísima del
Rincón, Guanajuato pequeño poblado cuya población no
rebasaba los 600 habitantes, la mayoría de origen purépecha y
otomí. Para sobrevivir vendía nieve de frutas y en sus ratos
libres realizaba retratos de la gente de su pueblo. Por lo general utilizaba
óleo sobre lámina y al reverso describía a los retratados,
con frecuencia señalaba la altura y en ocasiones les escribía una
dedicatoria. Además siempre terminaba diciendo "Hermenegildo Bustos
de aficionado pintó" o simplemente "+H. Bustos
(aficionado)". Sus retratos se caracterizan por una fuerte carga
psicológica y a pesar de no contar con una preparación
académica su técnica es extraordinaria.
Hermenegildo Bustos, Autorretrato, óleo sobre
lámina, 34 x 24 cm.
1891. En el reverso del cuadro escribió: "Hermenegildo Bustos,
indio de este pueblo de Purísima del Rincón, nací el 13 de
abril de 1832 y me retraté para ver si podía el 19 de junio de
1891".
Obra de Hermenegildo Bustos
en la exposición Siglo XX Grandes Maestros Mexicanos, Los primeros
años en Museo
MARCO, Monterrey.
FUENTE: http://www.laberintos.com.mx/autorretratosnew/bustos.html
HERMENEGILDO BUSTOS, REALISMO Y
FIDELIDAD
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Ante
sus obras se tiene la impresión de que cada trabajo era para él
nuevo e importante, de que nunca se atenía a método rutinario,
sino que en cada caso procuraba copiar intensamente la auténtica e
intransferible originalidad del rostro delante de él, de la vivencia
de su alma. Nunca se repite, aunque viendo las cosas desde un punto de vista
exterior, casi siempre pinta lo mismo: retratos, es decir, semblantes y
figuras. Nunca deja de ser creador. Es lo que da a sus cuadros –en su
mayoría de dimensiones pequeñas, casi todos aquellos pintados
sobre lata– el valor permanente [...]
PAUL WESTHEIM SOBRE BUSTOS(1)
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Libertad estética,
las escuelas regionales
El retrato popular, protegido por la inestabilidad política de
principios del siglo XIX y en el cobijo de la infracción,
aportó versatilidad y un carácter propio a la
interpretación estética del género. Sin la
protección del gremio ni el reconocimiento de
la Academia de San Carlos,
numerosos artistas se dedicaron a su producción y firmaron como
aficionados para evitar las sanciones.
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Durante la primera mitad del siglo XIX,
la Academia vivió
un reposo forzado que tuvo un efecto trascendental en el desarrollo y
proliferación de los pintores populares.(2)
Lejos de los cánones, de la inocencia a la libertad, los artistas,
algunos con preparación formal y otros siguiendo su propia
emoción recorrieron caminos nuevos en el arte de eternizar al otro.
Los rostros, las costumbres y los lugares del pueblo, que el academicismo
desdeñó, fueron registrados por los pinceles de Arrieta,
Estrada y Bustos, entre otros. Chinas poblanas, peleas callejeras, y lugares
como las pulquerías y mercados de nuestro país, fueron algunos
de sus motivos; el retrato fue el más importante.
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Con el tiempo, la pintura popular comenzó a adquirir
características regionales que derivaron en escuelas con sello y valor
estético propio. En Jalisco sobresalió José María
Estrada; en Veracruz, Salvador Ferrando; en Puebla, José
Agustín Arrieta y Sacramento Espinoza; en Guanajuato, Juan Nepomuceno
Herrera y José Justo Montiel. Uno de los más destacados fue
Hermenegildo Bustos.
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Yo, Hermenegildo Bustos, aficionado pintor, indio de
este pueblo de la
Purísima [...]
(Al pie del retrato del padre
Martínez) Hermenegildo Bustos (3)
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Alejada de la capital del país y ubicada en las
cercanías del Camino Real de Tierra Adentro se encuentra la comunidad
de Purísima del Rincón cuyos habitantes fueron inmortalizados
por la mano de Hermenegildo Bustos. Nació en 1832 y sus primeros
años de vida transcurrieron en una población pequeña,
que también se vio alcanzada por los vendavales del siglo: el
cólera morbo, la desamortización de los bienes
eclesiásticos y la turbulenta conformación del Estado mexicano.
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El vacío de noticias que sobre la formación
académica de Bustos existe ha mantenido ocupados a los investigadores.
Gonzalo Obregón sostuvo que “el más famoso
discípulo de Herrera fue Hermenegildo Bustos”.(4) J.
Jesús Rodríguez Fraustro apuntó a un camino distinto, en
el que suponía que Bustos conoció al pintor jalapeño
José Justo Montiel, dada la cercanía y el intercambio frecuente
de Purísima del Rincón con la ciudad de León,
Guanajuato, donde se ubicaba la academia de pintura del veracruzano.Con
absoluta certeza, Hermenegildo Bustos, más allá de las escuelas
y los cánones, fue un pintor con sello estético único y
original. Raquel Tibol, estudiosa del pintor guanajuatense, afirma que el
enigma persiste, tanto como la certeza de la excelente calidad en la
preparación de los pigmentos que Bustos utilizó.
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Como tocado por la mano de un ángel,“el pintor
aficionado” parece haber recibido el don. Nunca dejó su ciudad
natal y esa fidelidad la mantuvo también en la técnica. La
lámina fue el soporte más frecuente. Pintó en su
mayoría utilizando óleo, sus figuras aparecen casi siempre de
tres cuartos, en otros, el retratado aparece de frente. En todas sus obras el
fondo es de tonos neutros. A partir de 1884 abandonó el
rectángulo para ir con la época. En muchas de sus
composiciones, trazaba un óvalo en el que dibujaba la figura, y cuyo
resultado final tenía el estilo de una fotografía enmarcada.
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Gutierre Aceve Piña afirma que el retrato de sacerdotes
fue uno de los temas recurrentes de su primera etapa, en la década de
los años cincuenta.(5) Sobre el Retrato de un
sacerdote en Museo Soumaya, Gonzalo Obregón comentó con
respecto a esta obra que originalmente fue suya:
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La
finura del modelado, la fuerza expresiva del artista, junto con el
interés psicológico del retratado, hacen de esta efigie una de
las obras maestras de Hermenegildo Bustos y uno de los más bellos
ejemplares de retratos mexicanos de la segunda mitad del siglo XIX ( 6 )
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En 1860, comienza a trabajar en el retrato de pareja y de
familia. Dos años después realizó el retrato de Juan
Nepomuceno Gutiérrez Valdivia, del cual, Gutierre Aceves afirma
existen tres versiones más.(7)
Museo Soumaya presenta durante febrero uno de estos retratos, fechado en 1863
y firmado por Bustos.
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En silencio, los rostros del “pintor de
purísima” hablan. Las manos de sus personajes, cuando aparecen,
están entretenidas con algo, la ropa, los objetos, consigo mismas.
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[...]
todos esos retratos irradian –o mejor: transpiran– una poderosa
carnalidad. El cuerpo se ha vuelto energía [...] Si se me pidiese
definir con una sola palabra la impresión que me causan esos retratos,
respondería sin vacilar: intensidad, OCTAVIO PAZ ( 8 )
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Rodríguez Fraustro comenta sobre Juan Nepomuceno
Gutiérrez que: “fue muy rico y como no tenía ocupaciones
precisas, se distraía poniendo sobrenombres y provocando situaciones
difíciles y chuscas a sus semejantes” y agrega: La cara que
pintó Bustos corresponde a un tipo que tenía en su haber un
bien nutrido anecdotario.(9) Entre los dos retratos de
Juan Nepomuceno publicados en el catálogo de Gutierre Aceve la gama
cromática difiere, en uno tiende más hacia el verde y en el que
hoy se exhibe como pieza del mes, hacia el azul. En uno de los casos, en la
mano derecha, el personaje sostiene una carta, en otro una moneda.
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Hermenegildo Bustos fue el cronista visual de su
región.Trabajó mucho, y bien, para inmortalizar a las personas
que conocía: los Aranda, los Estrada y en especial, los Valdivia; cuyo
caso se encuentra bien documentado gracias a la abundancia de obras que hoy
se conservan. A Francisca Valdivia la pintó en 1856 cuando
tenía 15 años, seis después la volvió a retratar,
aunque ahora casada y con sus dos hijos.
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En comparación con el primer retrato, Bustos supo
plasmar el semblante serio y austero de Francisca que sujeta con firmeza a su
hija.
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Sobre la obra que hoy se exhibe junto con la figura de Juan
Nepomuceno G.Valdivia, Raquel Tibol comenta que fue reentelada y que
tenía la siguiente leyenda:
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En el mes de
octubre de 1862 se retrataron la señorita Da. Francisca Valdivia de
Chávez de 21 años, 7 meses de edad, su hijo primogénito
Rafael Chávez de 8 años, 1 mes, Elena Chávez de 8 meses.
Firma Hermenegildo Bustos. (10)
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Como emergiendo de un mar profundo, el rostro de Francisca
destaca del vestido negro, el cabello se evidencia sólo por algunos
resplandores que sugieren las ondulaciones y la extensión. Su cuerpo
no se distingue, las proporciones se adivinan. Las caras de los niños
también resaltan en la oscuridad del conjunto. Para Hermenegildo
Bustos, sólo lo humano tiene derecho pleno a ser.
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Las manos de Rafael ocupadas en el irreconocible contenido de
una canasta, la pequeña Elena juega con sus dedos. Otros miembros de la
familia Valdivia plasmados por el autor fueron Lucia Valdivia de Aranda,
Isidoro González Valdivia y Romualda González de Valdivia.
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A la antigua usanza de la escuela flamenca, Bustos
prefirió centrarse en el personaje, poner todo el acento en el rostro
y las manos del personaje y dejar el fondo en una indefinición que da
fuerza a la composición. A partir de 1870, la producción de
retratos del autor disminuyó notablemente. Seis años antes de
su muerte en 1907, pintó su autorretrato.
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Las manos del indio de Purísima estuvieron presentes en
la parroquia de su pueblo, en las nieves que vendía y en las labores
del campo. En cuanto a sus pinceles, se ocuparon de la parroquia del pueblo,
los santos, los milagros de los exvotos, los fenómenos del cielo y
sobretodo la crónica de la gente de su pueblo.
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La sinceridad artística y el realismo pictórico
que los artistas del siglo XX discutieron, defendieron y anhelaron fueron
dones que Hermenegildo Bustos supo plasmar sin complejidades, con modelado
fino y con fuerza expresiva, para ilustrar la historia privada de una
comunidad donde el predominio, la fuerza y el carácter de lo humano se
convirtió en goce estético.
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EVA
MARÍA AYALA CANSECO
CURADURÍA E INVESTIGACIÓN
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1
Catálogo de exposición, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes.
Consultado en Tibol, Raquel, Hermenegildo Bustos, Pintor de pueblo, CONACULTA
/ INBA, Ediciones Era, México
2 Brown,Thomas A., La
Academia de San Carlos de
la Nueva España,Tomo
II, 1976, SEP, Dirección General de Divulgación, México
3 Consultado en Paz, Octavio, Los privilegios de la vista, Hermenegildo
Bustos, Televisa / Centro Cultural Arte Contemporáneo, México,
1990, p. 182
4 Tibol, Raquel op. cit.
5.- Aceves Piña, Gutierre Hermenegildo Bustos: 1832-1907, CONACULTA /
INBA / Munal, México
6 Obregón, Gonzalo, Retrato Mexicano, “Algunas consideraciones
sobre el retrato mexicano”, Artes de México No. 132, Año
XVII, México
7 Aceves Piña, Gutierre, op. cit.
8 Paz, Octavio, op. cit.
9 Tibol, Raquel, op. cit.
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FUENTE: http://www.soumaya.com.mx/html/hb.html
Hermenegildo Bustos , 1832-1907
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Hermenegildo Bustos nació el 13 de abril en
Purísima del Rincón, cerca de León, Guanajuato en
1832. Estudió solo por seis meses con el pintor Herrera, quien le
enseñó poco, empleándolo principalmente como
sirviente. Produjo esculturas religiosas y programas murales para su
parroquia; diseñó máscaras para festividades
religiosas, pintó retablos, y cientos de pequeños
retratos, usualmente en óleo sobre lámina, de amigos y
vecinos. Pascual Aceves estudioso de Bustos le atribuye las esculturas para
los templos de Purísima, entre ellos un Señor de
la Buena Muerte del
Santuario, un Ecce Homo y una Virgen de Dolores en
la Parroquia de
la Purísima.
Interesado en la astronomía, dejó pintados
registros de cometas y eclipses.Diseñó el abrigo que
usó para su Autorretrato en 1891. Sus retratos fueron
coleccionados primero por el escritor Francisco Orozco Muñoz de
Guanajuato; la casa del Dr. Aceves Barajas de Francisco del Rincón,
se convirtió en el Museo Hermenegildo Bustos. Su obra se
exhibió en en el Museo Nacional de Arte de la ciudad de
México en 1951 y posteriormente en París y Estocolmo (1952),
Londres (1953) y Tokio (1955).
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Retrato
de Dolores Hollos (1864)
Oleo / tela
35.5 x 25.5 cm
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Retrato
del niño Enrique González (ca. 1865)
Oleo / tela
41.3 x 29.9 cm
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FUENTE: http://www.museoblaisten.com/spanish.asp?myURL=%2F02asp%2Fspanish%2FartistDetailSpanish%2Easp&myVars=artistId%3D59
Museo
del Pueblo de Guanajuato
Sala Hermenegildo
Bustos
Se expone una colección de obras de Hermenegildo Bustos, genial pintor
guanajuatense que retrató magistralmente las clases sociales del siglo
XIX.
Don
Secundino Gutiérrez Hermenegildo
Bustos, óleo s/lámina, s. XIX
Museo
del Pueblo de Guanajuato
Positos 7, Centro Histórico
Teléfono y fax: +52 (473) 732 2990
museodelpueblogto@msn.com
Horario:
Martes a sábado: 10:00 a 19:00 horas
Domingo: 10:00 a 15:00 horas
FUENTE: http://www.guanajuatocapital.com/espanol/Tmuspuebl.htm
Hermenegildo Bustos: pintor de pueblo .
Raquel Tibol
Signatura:
759.0872 T554h.
Autor:
Tibol, Raquel.
Pie de
Imprenta:
México: Conaculta \ Ediciones Era S.A. 1992.
Descriptores:
· Pintura mexicana
· Pintura de retrato
· Bustos, Hermenegildo-1832-1907-pintor
mexicano
· Pintores mexicanos.
Notas:
Incluye índice general y catálogo razonado.
ISBN:
968-29-3574-1.
Enciclopedia de los Municipios de
México
ESTADO DE GUANAJUATO
PURÍSIMA DEL RINCÓN
NOMENCLATURA
Denominación
Purísima del Rincón.
Escudo
El escudo del municipio está dividido en tres partes. En la superior
izquierda aparece un árbol, que representa el lugar donde se
estableció el primer asentamiento de pobladores en lo que hoy es la
ciudad de Purísima de Bustos; en la superior derecha está la
imagen de San Juan Bautista, patrono del pueblo, figura religiosa muy venerada
en el municipio; en la parte inferior se encuentra la imagen de
la Purísima
Concepción, santa patrona del municipio. La leyenda en
latín Honor et Virtud labor, que en castellano significa “El
trabajo es honor y virtud”, es el lema de Purísima del
Rincón. La fecha que se aprecia en la parte inferior del escudo es la
que corresponde a la fundación de la población de San Juan del
Bosque, actual Purísima de Bustos.
HISTORIA
Reseña Histórica
La población de Purísima de Bustos, ciudad cabecera del
municipio de Purísima del Rincón, se fundó por orden del virrey
Martín Enríquez de Almanza, el 1° de enero de 1603 con el
nombre de San Juan del Bosque. En el año de 1649 dicho nombre le fue
cambiado por el de Nuestra Señora de
la Limpia Concepción;
posteriormente, en 1834, se le denominó Purísima del
Rincón, y finalmente en 1954 se le dio el nombre de Purísima de
Bustos, en honor del pintor Hermenegildo Bustos, oriundo de esta ciudad.
Personajes Ilustres
Hermenegildo Bustos Hernández, (1832-1907)
Pintor.
ATRACTIVOS CULTURALES Y TURÍSTICOS
Monumentos Históricos
A Don Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla, uno en el lugar donde nació, en
la Hacienda de Corralejo, y
otro frente a la Parroquia
de San Francisco de Asís, a don Benito Juárez, a
la Bandera y a
la Madre.
Monumentos Arquitectónicos:
El señor de la
Columna, que se localiza en el altar del templo del mismo
nombre, es una obra de Hermenegildo Bustos que data del año de 1870; el
Santo Cristo de las Tres Caídas fue creada también por
Hermenegildo Bustos, así como numerosos retratos pintados por este
singular artista, que se exhiben en el Museo de Historia Regional
Alhóndiga de Granaditas.
Fuente:
http://www.e-local.gob.mx/work/templates/enciclo/guanajuato/municipios/11025a.htm
Hermenegildo Bustos
Octavio Paz
As I write about the painter Hermenegildo Bustos, I think about his story
again, and again I am amazed. In any one event we see the effects of other
events that combine with it, shape it, even create it. Historians may argue
interminably about why Rome fell into decadence
(or whether the idea of decadence is relevant to Rome), but none of them would deny that each
historical event results from the combined action of other events and causes.
In the art world,
relationships among traditions and schools, society and personality, are no
less causal, no less deterministic. Yet whenever we deal with politics and
social change or change in the arts and the world of ideas, we find that
history resists rigidly deterministic explanations. In any historical
phenomenon there is always an unforeseen element - the ancient goddess Fortune,
chance, temperament. But the appearance of the painter Hermenegildo Bustos in
the tiny village of
La
Purísima
del Rincón midway through the last
century confronts us with a truly unusual event. Bustos is neither the heir to,
nor the founder of, a pictorial movement: his art begins and ends with him. He
had no masters, no colleagues, no disciples; he lived and died isolated in a
town lost in the heart of Mexico,
removed from important artistic movements. Nevertheless, Bustos's painting -profoundly
conventional and profoundly personal - is part of the great tradition of
portraiture, and occupies a unique place within that tradition.
Bustos reminds us that God
works in mysterious ways, the kind of explanation that since antiquity has scandalized
rationalists. It was Porphyry who mocked Jews and Christians alike for
believing in an omnipotent God who would work miracles such as stopping the
sun, parting the sea, or transforming stones into loaves of bread. "No,
God could never desire anything or do anything but that which is true, just,
and good. God cannot negate the axioms of geometry: to do that would be to
negate himself. " I don't dare to take. issue with the philosopher, but
the fact is that the unexpected surrounds us and challenges our rationalism
every day. The unexpected not only borders on the unexplained but at times
drifts into the inexplicable. We neutralize it with words like fortuitous,
accidental, and exceptional. These terms reveal our perplexity but do not solve
the puzzles. They are techniques for classifying abnormal facts without
understanding them. Bustos's painting seems inexplicable from the perspective
of art history. But it is a visible reality with a normal rather than
miraculous origin: a man named Hermenegildo Bustos, about whom we not only know
a few facts and anecdotes but whose self-portrait (one of his masterpieces) we
possess. Isn't that enough?
About twenty miles from the
city of León
in the state of Guanajuato there are two small towns adjacent to one another:
La Purísima
(Virgen) del Rincón and San Francisco del Rincón They were
founded in 1603 and populated with Otomí and Tarasco Indians. The
population remains predominantly Indian, although native languages have been
replaced by Spanish. It is a rich agricultural and commercial region. In the
past it was also a silver-mining center: in the sixteenth century the three
largest silver-mining centers in the world were Guanajuato, Zacatecas, and
Potosí (Bolivia).
The mining boom lasted until the beginning of the nineteenth century.
Agriculture, on the other hand, even now is the mainstay of the population.
"The Rincón towns," says Raquel Tibol in her monograph on
Bustos, "enjoyed stability without sharp variations - neither abject
misery nor spectacular prosperity.
La Purísima grew more rapidly than San
Francisco del Rincón and in 1860 could boast some 16,000 inhabitants.
Aside from the plantations around it, the town had orchards, a flourishing
crafts industry, small and medium-size properties, merchants, and various
members of the clergy. There was a primary school, an orchestra, and an amateur
theatrical group directed by the priest. Parades and religious processions were
common. There was no electricity, and
La Purísima communicated with León by
means of a stagecoach service.
While the citizens of
La Purísima
were affected by the turmoil of the nineteenth century and the battles between
conservatives and liberals, they were first and foremost traditionalists. The
nucleus of their traditionalism was Catholicism in its Hispano-Mexican version:
ritualism, intense collective piety, the cult of icons, and an abundance of
religious holidays and ceremonies. The Church, as much in its material nature
as in its institutional and psychological identities, was a refuge, inspiration,
guide, and conscience. The family served as an axis for town life. It was a
measured life, occasionally shaken by violent passions -principally lust and
jealousy. Elopements were not uncommon, nor were kidnappings, nor bloody
vengeance taken by fathers, brothers, and dishonored husbands. Along with these
passions and their ravages there were also the marvels and horrors of nature:
eclipses, floods, droughts, and comets. All these aberrations, both the human
and the natural, were accounted for by traditional values and doctrines. Thanks
to the Church, the world, even in its disorder, possessed coherence and sense.
Religion enabled the town to communicate not only with the vast supernatural
and natural forces but also with the past and present of Mexico. The
history of the nation blended with the history of the Catholic Church. Finally,
through its institutions and doctrines, but above all by means of its icons -
the crucified Christ and his Mother, the prophets, the martyrs, and the saints
- the Church linked La
Purísima and its people to Rome and to Europe. The
first things Bustos, a pure Indian (as he proudly described himself), ever saw
were reproductions and imitations of European religious icons.
Though Hermenegildo
Bustos's birth records are lost, we know from a statement written by his father
that Bustos was born on 13 April 1832. The scrupulous Jose Maria Bustos
recorded the day his son was born (Wednesday), the hour (11:30 a.m.), the names
of the midwife, godparents, and the priest who baptized him. The only name he
left out was that of the mother (Juana Hernandez)! Jose Maria Bustos was the
parish bellman, and Hermenegildo also had some connection to the Church. We
don't know if he was the parish sacristan, as some critics assert, or if he worked
on the restoration of altars, paintings, and sculpture. He apparently also
worked with the adornment and clothing of statues, and as a decorator of the
church during religious holidays. Hermenegildo divided his life between morning
work in the parish and afternoon professional labors in his small atelier.
While it may be difficult to establish a chronology for his life and his works,
it is not at all difficult to develop an impression of his character and his
activities. Some of his personal papers exist, among them a calendar from 1894 in the margins of
which, in fine, small handwriting, he noted with maniacal impartiality the
events of each day, local scandals, and above all natural phenomena - cloudy
weather, frosts, rains. His tasks and concerns in other years cannot have been
much different: life flowed with the regularity and consistency of the rosaries
that passed through the fingers of the devout. Most important, Bustos made a
profound impression on his contemporaries and left behind a legend that has
lasted until our time. His fervent and fantasizing biographer Pascual Aceves
Navarro attributes to him an almost infinite list of talents, and although it
is hard to believe Bustos was an architect, a theater director, and a
watchmaker, Aceves Navarro may not be exaggerating all that much. Bustos's
vocation was painting, but in the traditional town where he lived,
specialization and division of labor had not reached today's extremes. When he
was twenty-two years old, Bustos married Joaquina Ríos, who was barely
fifteen. It was a childless marriage, stable, but perhaps not entirely happy:
Bustos was a womanizer who had several lovers. With one, María Santos
Urquieta, he had one or two children. He owned a small freehold with fruit
trees and vegetable gardens, which he tended himself with the help of one or
two day laborers. Lust and eccentricity: he lived with an owl, a dog, and a
talking parakeet; these he described, tongue in cheek, as his whole family. He
was a true bricoleur and the variety of his work and activity never ceases to
surprise me: iceman, quack doctor, gardener, moneylender, musician, tinsmith,
building foreman, carpenter, sculptor, and painter.
In summertime Bustos and
his wife made lemon ice, which he would peddle in the streets. He built walls,
repaired roofs, and reconstructed the chapel dedicated to Christ's three falls
on the Via Crucis; he was a pawnbroker; he bred leeches and rented them out;
his infusions and herb concoctions (aromatic and medicinal) were celebrated; he
strummed the guitar, plucked the mandolin, played the saxophone, and was a
member of the municipal band that played every Sunday in the plaza; he
constructed a water clock and corrected the parish sundial; he excelled at
carpentry and in addition to tables, beds, chairs, and sideboards, he made
coffins: he made his wife's and his own - which he kept in his shop until his
death. He was a tailor: he cut and sewed his clothes according to the dictates
of his clerical-military fantasy. He also cut and fit the clothing of the
Virgins and altar saints. He was a tinsmith: as director of the show battalion
that paraded through the town on religious holidays, he made the armor, the
shields, and the helmets of the soldiers and officers. He was a goldsmith and would make necklaces, brooches, and rosaries. He sculpted and
carved: some of his wood sculptures of saints, Virgins, Christs, and one Ecce
Homo in the parish church
of
La Purísima
remain. He also left a series of masks used in the Holy Week pageants. He
wasn't learned, but his piety - he went to Mass every day and took communion
frequently - obliged him to read devotional books and, in time, to pick up a
smattering of Latin. He was famous for his caustic humor. He proclaimed that
there were only three notable people in this world: the Pope (Pius X), Porfirio
Díaz, the dictator of Mexico,
and Hermenegildo Bustos, painter and know-it-all. His clothes - or rather, his
uniforms -were his own invention. His outfit for important occasions was made
up of a green frock coat of military cut with gold buttons, three crosses, and
his own name embroidered on the collars, another two crosses on the chest, a
red stripe, and cowboy-style trousers. The uniform of a half-republican,
half-heavenly militia. He wore an Indo-Chinese straw hat; among his musical
instruments was a Chinese pi-pa -how the devil did he get it? There are two
photographs of Hermenegildo and his wife, Joaquina. One is inscribed: "The
priest Gil Palomares took this photograph on April 13, 1901." Hermenegildo
was sixty-nine years old and his wife sixty-two. In one photo the couple is
seated, in the other (the better of the two) they are standing. Joaquina's
clothing is typical of the time and place: a long skirt and a wide rebozo, or
scarf, that covers her head and half of her body. All we can see is her face:
serious, deeply wrinkled, and decidedly Indian. Hermenegildo is wearing his
fancy outfit, the green frock coat, which, half open, reveals a pleated shirt,
a vest, and a fringed sash. Hermenegildo wasn't very tall; perhaps to
compensate for that defect he rests his left arm on his wife's shoulders in a
gesture simultaneously familiar and imperious. His head held high; his deep
eyes half-closed as if to see the camera lens better; a deep crease between his
brows; his frown, geological creases, beginning with the wrinkle that
majestically descends his nose; his mustache thick and showing gray; his lower
lip thick, his chin firm, his cheekbones prominent, his forehead wide, his hair
thin and very short. His wife's face reveals resignation, fatigue, and a
certain impassivity; his is energetic and intelligent: bronzed skin, powerful
muscles and bones. It is an Indian face but it is also a Tartar's. The face of
a man-bird who sees from afar and penetrates deeply into things. Hermenegildo
Bustos died six years after this photograph was taken, in 1907, at the age of
seventy-five, one year after his wife. (When she died, he asked a neighbor to
help him wrap her in her shroud; then he locked up the house without letting
anyone in and spent the night alone with her.) With his usual serenity and
reserve, he left instructions on how he was to be buried. Eccentric,
capricious, avaricious, diligent, self-centered, astute, religious, sarcastic,
imaginative, ceremonious, lustful, devout, perspicacious, penetrating: a
genuine rara avis or, as the seventeenth century would say, a monster.
We wouldn't bother to
remember Hermenegildo's eccentricities or his abilities in the mechanical arts
- both talents glorified by local mythologizing - if it weren't for his
excellence as a painter. In life he was admired by the citizens of both
La Purísima
and San Francisco del Rincón, and he must have been known beyond these
two towns because he painted portraits of people from other villages nearby.
Nevertheless, his fame was limited to the area around
La Purísima,
His clientele was exclusively local, but not restricted to a single social
class. Among his subjects are churchmen, merchants, farm owners, artisans,
families of modest means, and many women of different classes and social
condition: young ones, wives, widows, the owner of a pulque brewery, devout
ladies. All were simple people.
Bustos painted in three
genres: oils and murals with religious subjects, ex-votos, and portraits. He
was paid a small amount for all three kinds of work, so we may safely say he
was a professional painter. He always insisted - out of humility or as a way of
challenging others? - that he was an amateur. Not many examples of his
religious painting remain. This is not strange: he was a careful, slow painter
who did not produce a great deal. In addition, he probably received few
commissions outside of La
Purísima and San Francisco del Rincón: he
wasn't famous enough to come to the attention of the high-ranking prelates of
León and Guanajuato. Besides, in those years the Church had ceased to be
a great patron of the arts. Among his religious paintings there is a curious
allegory, Beauty Conquering Force, which depicts a lion and a beautiful maiden;
the maiden, armed with a huge scissors, is cutting off either the lion s mane
or his claws. Is this an evocation of Saint Mary of Egypt? Gossip says the maiden is
Bustos's girlfriend María Santos Urquieta. His murals at the golden
altar in the parish church
of
La Purísima
represent scenes from Christ's passion and were not entirely painted by Bustos,
but "touched up, as he says in an inscription. But, as Raquel Tibol wisely
observes, "touched up" to Bustos "means something more than mere
restoration work. He adds elements which are of his own invention. For example,
in the panel of the Via Crucis where Jesus meets the Virgin, the faces of the
women were all painted by him." Those faces could only be women from
La Purísima. In
the triangular panels below the cupola of the parish church, there are four
paintings: Saint Bernard, Saint Ildefonso, Saint Bonaventure, and Saint
Alphonse of Ligorio. They are his; beneath Saint Alphonse is inscribed:
"Hermenegildo Bustos painted them, an amateur painter from this town.
"Neither the oils nor the murals are memorable; they are impersonal
examples of the religious painting of the era, copies of European copies. The
ex-votos are better. They were painted on sheet brass in small scale and
represent events worthy of memory. The donor gives thanks to the Virgin or to a
saint who saved him from grave danger -falling down stairs, being attacked by
thieves, being charged by a wild bull, or a bad fever. From the eighteenth
century until well into the nineteenth, thousands of ex-votos were painted in Mexico. Bustos's
ex-votos conform to the unwritten laws of the genre. They are popular paintings
in the strict sense of the word and are thus distinguished from his religious
painting, which lies somewhere between popular and academic painting. Bustos
usually followed the path of least resistance, which means that his ex-votos
(and many attributed to him are by other hands) are in no way different from
hundreds of others. But several of Bustos's ex-votos are more than examples of
a traditional and stereotyped art. These captivate us, not because of the naive
quality of the drawing or the subjects (rather monotonous miracles) but with
the energy and veracity of certain faces. The ex-voto becomes an authentic and
intensely personal work of art: the portrait of a unique person.
A competent painter of
traditional religious pictures and of ex-votos in the folk tradition, Bustos
should be remembered as an extraordinary portrait painter. In his religious
paintings Bustos really is an amateur; in his portraits he shows himself to be
a minor master. Minor because of the limitations of the genre, because of the
small number, and size, of his paintings; a master because of their intensity,
their penetration, and often enough because of their perfection. Looking at
these paintings we are moved to ask where, how, and with whom Bustos learned
the art of painting. I'm not sure I have the answers, but I can at least try to
locate the questions in their proper historical context.
After his death, Bustos was
almost completely forgotten. Like the rest of his nation,
La Purísima
was enveloped in the turmoil of the Mexican Revolution of 1910. Around 1920,
the country at peace once again, we Mexicans began to scrutinize our past: we
were looking for clues about what we had become, not what we once were. We were
looking for ourselves. Popular art seemed simultaneously to be evidence of what
we were and a confirmation that the nation had survived. In 1933, the painter
Roberto Montenegro published Mexican Painting 1800-1860, which contains a portrait
of Joaquina Ríos (Bustos's wife) by an anonymous painter. (Raquel
Tibol's monograph includes a succinct account of the rediscovery of Bustos and
his painting.) The error was quickly noted: Francisco Orozco Munoz had already
begun his research and a few years later critics and students of Mexican
culture began to discover Bustos's life and work. Orozco Muñoz's action
was decisive in this process. Born in San Francisco del Rincón, he was a
poet and diplomat. He lived for many years in Belgium. There he married an
intelligent woman who was also an art lover: Dolly van der Wel. In Belgium, Orozco
Munoz was able to study the Flemish painters of the fifteenth century,
especially Jan van Eyck, his favorite. Perhaps the fortunate combination of his
admiration for Flemish painting and his love of his native land - and his
intelligence and sensibility - ensured Orozco Munoz 's memory of the small
paintings on sheet brass he had seen in childhood at home and in other homes in
San Francisco del Rincón. One sign of the connection he established
between the Flemish portrait painters and the modest Bustos is that when he
discovered on the back of Bustos's self-portrait the inscription "I
painted myself to see if could," he immediately connected it with van Eyck's
motto "Als ik Kan"
(As I Can). Orozco Munoz succeeded in collecting a considerable number of
Bustos's works, but he never wrote about him. Nevertheless, almost everything
written on Bustos in that first period shows traces of conversation with Orozco
Munoz. The few critics who did write about Bustos between 1930 and 1950 viewed
him as a "primitive," although some of them realized how
inappropriate the term was. There is nothing primitive or naive in works like
the Self-Portrait (1891), the Woman with Flowers (1862), the portrait of
Alejandra Aranda (1871), or the portrait of Francisca Valdivia (1856). Walter
Pach astutely remarked that Bustos was not a "primitive" (what does
that vague term really mean?) but in fact an autodidact: "a few books on
the use of oils and on the mixing of colors (which he mixed for himself in the
classic style) combined with the contemplation of the works of art that exist
in any old town in Mexico, formed the technical background of his professional
calling." In this seminal essay, Pach points out that in his early youth
Bustos "attempted to take lessons" but, disheartened by the mockery
of the other students, "he immediately went back to the country and solved
the problems of art on his own." The source of this story had to be Orozco
Munoz, who supplied Pach with all his information on Bustos. This information
was vague, but in 1952 it became more precise. That was the year that Fernando
Gamboa organized the first Bustos retrospective. The catalogue states that
although Bustos had attempted to study painting in León with the master
Herrera, "he abandoned this bad teacher after six months because instead
of teaching his students, Herrera used them to do his chores." The source
of this story had, once again, to be Orozco Munoz, who knew all the folktales
of the Rincón district. I stress the oral quality of these folktales: no
one has ever found any document that proves that Bustos was ever in the studio
of the academic painter Juan N. Herrera. That he was is plausible given the proximity
of León and
La Purísima. Nevertheless it is hard to
accept that a poor country boy like Bustos could enroll in an academy in
León. What credentials could he have? Who would back him up? Who would
pay the bills? In 1973, Gonzalo Obregón, a Mexican art historian,
published an essay maintaining that Bustos was a disciple of Herrera . He
contributes no documentary proof and bases his opinion exclusively on the
closeness of León to
La Purísima and on internal evidence: it is
impossible that Bustos could acquire on his own the mastery of technique we see
in his portraits. Obregón thinks Bustos studied for more than six months
with Herrera because even Bustos's early portraits display a notable technical
skill. This is true: the Portrait of a Priest (1850) and the Artist's Father
(1852), painted when Bustos was between eighteen and twenty years old, are
mature works. In the second the composition is both luminous and somber: the
white shirt, the black coat, the dark shine of the hair, the bronzed skin, the
mouth that seems to challenge us, the eyes that follow us as if from a distance
and yet at the same time from nearby. According to Obregón, these early
examples of Bustos's skill are evidence of a long apprenticeship. Bustos must
have studied with Herrera between 1848 and 1851 (his sixteenth to nineteenth
years). Later, he returned to his town, where "he would be alone, with no
one to influence him, and his art would drift toward the popular." There
is as well the economic factor: "His clientele in
La Purísima
couldn't pay as much as the well-off citizens of León. "For
Obregón, Bustos regresses: left to himself, with a poor and ignorant
clientele, Bustos went back to the popular although he retains a certain level
of quality, which he owes to Herrera.
I find this thesis
unacceptable for three reasons. First, the absence of documents: it's all
supposition, even Bustos 's having spent some months in Herrera 's studio.
Second, Bustos 's portraits, from the first to the last, are notable, often
perfect: there are no great changes between the earliest and the last. From the
beginning his awkwardness with figures and backgrounds is also notable, as is
his clumsy use of perspective. The first thing the student in an academy
learns, even before learning how to draw a face, is to draw the human figure
and to master perspective. It seems improbable that the process could have
reversed itself for Bustos. Then Obregón, to compensate for this lapse
in logic, presents an even less tenable hypothesis: involution or degeneration.
No, Bustos's excellence in portrait painting and his weakness in other
painterly techniques derives from his not having had formal instruction. And
now the third: not only did Bustos declare himself time and time again an
amateur, that is, someone who did not study painting in an academy, but in 1903, in the golden altar
of the parish church, he signs a painting: "Hermenegildo Bustos, amateur
painter without master at the age of seventy-two." We must fall back on
our original suppositions: Bustos's masters were a few books and icons. More
important were his eyes that penetrated all he saw, his memory that retained
his vision, and his skill and imagination that reproduced and transfigured that
vision. Bustos never painted landscapes, interiors, or nudes. Perhaps his
clumsiness in painting figures, backgrounds, and perspectives kept him from
trying. As for nudes, it may be that the Puritanism of provincial Mexico
prohibited it. There are two still lifes in which appear fruit, vegetables, a
frog, and a scorpion. The artist avoided composition problems by arranging the
fruit and vegetables in rows, which makes the pictures resemble illustrations
for a treatise on horticulture. The portraits, on the other hand, are notable
for their verisimilitude, their modeling, their color, and their strong,
flowing, finely detailed drawing. These qualities do not clash, but complement
each other. I must emphasize the excellence of his drawing: the lines are firm
and clear, but light, and, in their way, reflexive. By this I mean that the
hand that draws the lines serves the eye that looks and the mind that measures,
compares, and constructs. For Bustos, drawing was more than composition: it was
exploration. None of Bustos 's drawings I have seen is a finished work of art
in itself: all are studies, notes for future portraits. Nevertheless, they have
their own charm; they are the foreshadowing of a painting, the prefiguration of
a face. I am thinking specifically about the preparatory drawing for the
portrait of his wife. It is difficult to forget those eyes that gaze with some
surprise at the world from beneath bushy brows and a forehead that is dreamed
rather than drawn. The face of the girl is a flower ready to bloom: how could
that immature and delightful oval turn into the severe features that belong to
the matron in the portrait and into the resigned, rather stolid face of the
1901 photograph? Bustos 's drawings were exercises in visual memory. He also
used them to gain familiarity with his model and to try out his hand. Later, on
the metal sheet or the canvas, he would begin to paint directly, in monochrome
or in very subdued shades. Then he would apply color with delicacy and care.
His touch is firm, never violent: there is nothing extreme in his brushstrokes.
Expressionism was alien to Bustos. Walter Pach wonders how Bustos could follow
that procedure and still create compositions in which the painterly quality
seems supported by the skeleton of the drawing. The answer may lie in the
visual memory I mentioned. As he painted, Bustos would follow the mental
outline of his drawings: his hand painted while his memory drew. In any case,
whatever his method, Bustos's oils reveal an extraordinary hand at drawing. As
when bones covered with flesh and skin become the foundation for features, Bustos's
drawing provides a structure for color and shade - an invisible architecture.
Bustos draws the most complex and mysterious subject - the human face
-perfectly, but he simply cannot manage a body, a grove of trees, three books,
a glass, or a lamp on a table. This explains the strict limitations he imposed
on himself, the limits of his own skill. He eliminated backgrounds, painted no
interiors or exteriors, and reduced his models to their essence: the face. We
deduce their social rank by their clothes jewelry, and occasionally, by what
they hold in their hands: a book, a flower, a letter bearing the model's name,
a schoolboy's slate. Bustos generally paints them in three-quarter profile,
from the waist up. Except for a woman's portrait that shows her bare shoulders
- her light blouse allows us a glimpse of her breasts -Bustos depicts his
models fully clothed. Their clothing covers and defines them. Nevertheless, all
these portraits radiate or, better, exude a powerful carnality. The body has
become energy, has ceased to be mere form and volume, and become gesture,
temperature, a fixed gaze. If I had to define my impression of these portraits
in a single word, I would say without hesitation intensity. The drawing, the
shading, the volume all come together in a concentrated energy. Behind the
impassivity of these bronzed faces we sense seething passions and subterranean
desires, an immense vitality held in check yet obstinately alive. The few
critics who have tried to deal with this small, perfect, and personal oeuvre
have, naturally enough, sought antecedents and parallels in tradition. Bustos
makes us think about the origins of portrait painting, the Flemish masters of
the fifteenth century. This is because of his realism, his indifference to
social rank, conventions, notions of ideal beauty, and his visual economy - his
"essentialism." This is different from the characteristic or the
strange, from classical idealism, baroque or expressionist excess. Bustos does
not seek an ideal in his portraits, as do the great Renaissance painters, nor a
singularity or exceptional quality, as do baroque or modern portrait painters.
He paints real people and thus evokes the Flemings. But as soon as we see the
similarity it fades: comparison with Jan van Eyck is folly. The comparison
reduces Bustos to nothing. Van Eyck is a beginning or, more precisely, the
beginning of the great portrait art of the Western world. Bustos is a moment,
an instant, in that tradition. But the comparison, although exaggerated, is
useful. In Bustos we do not find the mysterious Flemish interiors, with their
mixture of daily life and symbolic objects: windows like gulfs of clarity, the
conjunctions of light and shadow on cloth and metal. But he shares their
passion for human truth and their honesty. Painting a face is less an act of
consecration than a recognition, a fraternal act. We owe to Walter Pach a less
risky comparison. He connects Bustos's paintings with the anonymous portraits
at Al Fayyum in Egypt.
Those ancient paintings are surprisingly like Bustos's portraits, although, as
we shall see, the similarities cannot mask the more profound differences. But
the similarities are striking: the small dimensions, the absence of
backgrounds, the face in three-quarter profile (the Al Fayyum artists also
painted frontal portraits), the human figure reduced to the face and upper
body, the care with emblematic details (the diadem of golden leaves in the
portrait of a priest of Serapis and the breviary and cross in the portrait of a
priest from La
Purísima, the tablet and stylus in the hands of a
Greek schoolmistress and the chalk and slate in the hands of a Mexican
schoolboy). Realism. Neither the artists of Al Fayyum nor Bustos sought to
represent types. They wanted concrete individuals, verisimilitude not
idealization. These similarities are not misleading: they are simply
superficial.
There are major differences between the portraits painted on the sarcophagi
that held the mummies of the elite of Al Fayyum and the portraits of the people
of La
Purísima. The differences relate to the social
function of the portraits as well as to their formal elements. The Al Fayyum
portraits are doubly anonymous: we don't know who the artists are and only
rarely do we know the names of the models. The earliest examples date from a
century or so after the fall of Ptolemaic Egypt under Roman domination in 30
B.C. and the most recent date from the fourth century A.D. The continuity of
this tradition over more than three centuries with so few stylistic variations
is notable. Without denying the charm, the psychological truth, or the
religious pathos of many of these portraits, we are undoubtedly dealing with a
collective style that precludes change and individual expression. For more than
three hundred years hundreds of painters repeated a formula. The Al Fayyum
portraits belong more to the history of religion than to the history of art.
Since their discovery at the end of the last century, more than six hundred
examples have been recovered, which may seem like a lot, but is nothing
compared to what has been lost or is still buried. The models belonged to the
upper classes of the province. Al Fayyum was a rich province in a rich nation, Egypt, and its managerial class was made up of
cosmopolitan people - Romans, Greeks, Egyptians, Syrians - in constant contact
with Alexandria, Athens,
Rome, and other
centers of the empire. Just one look at Bustos's world and the circumstances in
which he lived is enough to show the differences between him and the painters
of Al Fayyum. The dominant notes of that ancient art are continuity,
impersonality, and uniformity. Bustos's art is profoundly individual: he was
self-taught and his traditionalism is not an inheritance but a conquest, almost
an invention. Other differences are no less significant. Bustos's models did
not come from Mexico's
elite, not even from the elite of his province; they were modest people from
his small town. Nor were they anonymous: we know their names, when they were
born, when they married, what their professions were, how many children they
had. Bustos's oeuvre is not large and it occupies only half a century of the
obscure life of a corner (rincon means "corner, " after all) of
provincial Mexico,
itself a provincial nation. And finally, each of Bustos's portraits was a
distinct experience. Each one was an aesthetic and human adventure, a
confrontation, an encounter. The Al Fayyum portraits are the final expression
of the ancient funerary cults of pharaonic Egypt. Those cults, associated with
Isis and Osiris, survived until the Roman occupation - proof of Egyptian
traditionalism and the almost indestructible nature of religious beliefs. From
the beginning the mummies of important people were kept in sarcophagi that
archeologists term "anthropomorphous," but which Klaus Parlasca
thinks should be called "osiriform, " since they are related to the
cult of Osiris, the god of the dead, of vegetation, and of resurrection. The
custom survived under the Ptolemies and during the Roman period. The sarcophagi
were deposited in a special hall dedicated to the ancestors where ritual days
were celebrated with libations and funerary banquets. After two or three
generations, the mummies were sent to cemeteries. In Al Fayyum, the sarcophagi
were stored upright for reasons of space, often in special armoires.
Originally, only the name of the deceased was inscribed on the upper part of
the sarcophagus, but under the Romans, the custom of attaching a wooden tablet
with the portrait of the dead person painted in enamel was begun. Two traditions
merge in the Al Fayyum sarcophagi: the cult of Os iris (in his Hellenistic
identity, Serapis), with its promise of resurrection, and the Roman portrait,
which reproduces the physical traits of a person in order to perpetuate his
personality. Roman realism at the service of Egyptian eschatology. It seems to
me, nevertheless, that in the Al Fayyum portraits there is another element: the
vivacity, the love of the characteristic and the singular that typify
Alexandrian art. Despite the uniform painting technique, these portraits
display a variety of faces, temperaments, and characters. From their names we
see that many of the dead were Greeks or at least culturally Greek. Hellenism
did not disappear from Egypt
until the Arab invasion. Thus the hall of mummies at Al Fayyum actually held an
assembly of candidates for immortality, which would be conferred through the
combined action of Serapis and the portrait painters.
Hermenegildo
Bustos.
Bodegón con frutas, alacrán y
rana, 1874.
This immortality was
limited to the well-off, who could pay the inflated prices demanded by the
embalmers and the artists. The Al Fayyum portraits are part of a religious
ritual whose keystone is belief in resurrection. But these portraits are not
sacred images or relics: they are a passport to the other world, identification
papers for a supernatural voyage. Despite his association with the Church and
his genuine faith, Hermenegildo Bustos is essentially a secular artist. His
portraits have nothing to do with funerary rites and don't even allude to a
belief in the beyond. Nor are they concerned with death or eternity. Parlasca
finds a curious analogy between the art of Al Fayyum and a custom practiced by
aristocrats in seventeenth-century Poland: they would commission
portraits (from artists who specialized in painting the dead), which they would
then place on the coffin. We find the same custom in Mexico during the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries. Unlike his contemporaries, Bustos painted only one
deceased model - the portrait of a dead little girl of 1884. The clients of the
artists of Al Fayyum could carry on a silent dialogue with their dead on seeing
the portrait; Bustos's clients could have a dialogue only with themselves. The
realism of the Al Fayyum artists was an impersonal formula imposed by the
Greco-Roman culture of their clients. In the case of Bustos, the artist's taste
coincided with the taste of his clients: his art is born from the confluence of
his personal vision and the collective vision. Like the art of Al Fayyum, the
art of Mexico
is the result of a conjunction of external influences and local realities. In Egypt, the art
of a dominant group - Greeks and Romans - interpolates itself into the ancient
religion. In Mexico, the
religion and art of Europe quickened the
moribund sensibility and imagination of a people the con quest had made into
spiritual orphans. Of course, Bustos's attitude to artistic tradition was not
one of simple submission. Not only did he proclaim himself an amateur without
teachers but he proudly announced himself as an Indian. On the back of his
self-portrait he wrote, "Hermenegildo Bustos, Indian from this town of
La
Purísima
del Rincón. "At the bottom of
the portrait of Father Martinez, he repeated, "I, Hermenegildo Bustos,
amateur painter, Indian from this town...." There is no need to go on
citing examples, but I must emphasize the meaning of these declarations: for
Bustos, painting is an individual experience, a test. That's why he wrote on
the back of his self-portrait "to see if I could. " In that test, he
risked his entire being and something else: his racial identity. Bustos was
affirming himself in the face of tradition, and that affirmation is double: the
affirmation of a marginal artist with no academic education and that of an
Indian. His traditionalism is extraordinarily modern and, seen in this way,
polemical. Bustos's art is decidedly historical. It springs from the encounter
between the artist and his model, is nourished by the confrontation between two
othernesses, and resolves itself in a style that expresses not an eternal truth
but an instantaneous perception: the mobility of a face, still for an instant.
Calling that art "historic" perhaps creates confusion. All the arts
are historic, since all human activities are; by this I mean that all are born
in history and all, in one way or another, express history. All, also in one
way or another, transcend history and at times negate it. Nevertheless,
Bustos's art is historic in a more limited and particular sense. First, it does
not refer to any reality, idea, or entity (eternal or supernatural). In his
painting there are no myths, no ideas, no allegories. There are no visions of
this world and the other world: no landscapes, no paradises, no infernos. Nor
is there history in the usual sense of the word: heroes, traitors, tyrants,
martyrs, masses, events. He did not paint historical events but the event of
history. For Bustos, as for all of us, time passes, but not only in the chosen
places, not only in historical scenarios, but in the outlands, in places
without names. Each one of his paintings is dated and was painted in a
determined place but those dates are private and that place is outside the
great process of history. So, in what sense is his painting historic? It is born
in time, it expresses time: it is pure time. The portrait is the fixed and
momentous evidence of the meeting of two people - a dialogue, a struggle, a
discovery - resolved in a recognition. The other becomes a corporeal presence.
That presence speaks to us, gazes at us, hears us, and we hear it, we speak to
it, and we gaze at it. That's how we discover that the presence is a person or,
as we used to say, a soul. A unique being, similar to us, vulnerable and
enigmatic. When we see a painting by Hermenegildo Bustos, we repeat that
discovery. Time, the substance of history, appears for a moment: it is a human
face.
Fuente: http://home.earthlink.net/~cheetahead/bustos.html
Hermenegildo
Bustos
Retrato de un sacerdote
c. 1854
Óleo sobre lámina
Fuente: http://www.soumaya.com.mx/html/avs.html
1891, Purísima del Rincón
Vidas
De nadie aprendió; de aficionado pinta. Hermenegildo Bustos cobra en
especies o a cuatro reales el retrato. El pueblo de Purísima del
Rincón no tiene fotógrafo, pero tiene pintor.
Hace cuarenta años, Hermenegildo retrató a Leocadia López,
la belleza del pueblo, y le quedó muy ella. Desde entonces, en el pueblo
de Purísima hubo exitosos entierros y casamientos, muchas serenatas y
uno que otro destripado en las cantinas, alguna niña se fugó con
el payaso de un circo ambulante, tembló la tierra más de una vez
y más de una vez mandaron desde Ciudad de México nuevo jefe
político; y mientras pasaban los lentos días y ocurrían soles
y aguaceritos, Hermenegildo Bustos iba pintando a los vivos que veía y a
los muertos que recordaba.
Él es también hortelano, heladero y sieteoficios. Siembra
maíz y frijoles, en tierra propia o por encargo, y se ocupa de
desgusanar plantíos. Hace helados con la escarcha que recoge de las
hojas del maguey; y cuando afloja el frío hace conservas de naranja.
Además borda banderas patrias, arregla techos que se llueven, dirige los
toques de tambor en Semana Santa, decora biombos, camas y ataúdes y con
muy delicada mano pinta a doña Pomposa López en acción de
gracias ante la
Santísima Virgen, que la arrancó del lecho de
agonía, y a doña Refugio Segovia en retrato que destaca sus
encantos, sin olvidar ni un pelo de los rulos sobre la frente y copiando en el
cuello el dorado prendedor que dice Refugito.
Pinta y se pinta: recién afeitado, corto el pelo, pómulos
salientes y cejas fruncidas, traje de militar. Y al dorso de su imagen escribe:
Hermenegildo Bustos, indio de este pueblo de Purísima del Rincón,
nací el 13 de abril de 1832 y me retraté para ver sí
podía el 19 de junio de 1891”
Eduardo Galeano, “Memoria del Fuego, II. Las caras y las
máscaras”, Siglo XXI Editores
(“Hermenegildo Bustos, pintor de pueblo”, Raquel Tibol, Guanajuato,
Gobierno del Estado, 1981.)
Fuente: http://losquesefueron.galeon.com/productos1243703.html
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Texto:
Elin Luque Agraz / Michele Beltrán
En el
año de 1987 estábamos haciendo una catalogación de
pintura novohispana guadalupana en el museo de
la Basílica
de Guadalupe, fue precisamente en esos días cuando entramos en
contacto con los primeros exvotos (exvoto: por promesa, designa al objeto
ofrecido a la divinidad por un favor recibido), nos habían facilitado
una oficina y para llegar hasta ella teníamos que recorrer la
galería con los muros tapizados de techo a piso con exvotos, este
fascinante género pictórico producto de la religiosidad
popular.
Más
tarde decidimos empezar a investigar formalmente los exvotos
pictóricos. La gran disposición e interés que mostraron
los santuarios en nuestro proyecto nos animó mucho, pues ya en ese
momento habíamos constatado que había pocas publicaciones sobre
el tema, aunque en México, el exvoto pictórico había
atraído en la primera mitad de este siglo el interés de grandes
artistas como Gerardo Murillo Dr. Atl (1875-1964) y Roberto Montenegro
(1885-1968).
Otro
aspecto importante, al abordar la investigación sobre los exvotos fue
que la mayoría de las colecciones de los santuarios carecían de
inventario y registro fotográfico, sólo dos lugares
tenían un control completo de estas ofrendas empezando por
la Basílica
de Guadalupe a donde acuden más de 1,714 peregrinaciones anuales
dejando los romeros sus ofrendas en el altar mayor y a los costados de la
misma en la basílica nueva. Los mejores van a dar al museo el cual
cuenta con más de 1,300 en su acervo, en este museo todos los exvotos
pintados están registrados, fotografiados y colocados
temáticamente. Es el único lugar en México que tiene ese
control sobre todos sus exvotos.
Le
sigue en importancia el Santuario de Nuestra Señora de San Juan de los
Lagos, en el estado de Jalisco; este lugar se caracteriza por su fuerte
producción votiva como se puede ver a un costado de la
sacristía, en el salón donde son entregadas las ofrendas. A dos
cuadras del santuario se localiza el Pabellón de los Peregrinos, un
gran espacio acondicionado para que pernocten los romeros bajo techo y con
servicios de agua potable. En la parte de arriba de este galerón hay un
pasillo que rodea el espacio, sus muros están tapizados de exvotos
pictóricos. De alguna forma, este gran acervo de ¡ más de
2,000 piezas está custodiado y resguardado por; los candados del
pasillo, sólo humildes e peregrinos que acuden a esta sección
del santuario pueden contemplarlos. Hay santuarios que muestran otras
características y que tienen también una importante
colección de exvotos, como es el santuario del Santo Niño de
Atocha, localizado en el poblado de Fresnillo, Zacatecas. Este lugar tiene repletos
de exvotos los muros de la arquería y los pasillos que conducen a las
oficinas del santuario. Miles de peregrinos se congregan diariamente para
visitar al venerado Niño, dejando, muchos de ellos, gran variedad de
objetos-ofrendas como fotografías, cartas, trenzas de cabello, ropones
de bebé, ramos de novia, etc. Otro santuario digno de mención
es el de San Francisco de Asís en el recóndito pueblo de Real
de Catorce, en el estado de San Luis Potosí. Este lugar se hallaba
prácticamente abandonado hasta hace algunas décadas, pero un
culto dedicado a San Francisquito, como cariñosamente le llaman los
devotos, ha mantenido en actividad a la iglesia de
la Inmaculada
Concepción, desde principio de siglo. Nadie sabe
cómo llegó esa escultura al santuario, sólo se sabe que
desde hace más de 60 años ya era famosa por sus
«milagros».
Los fieles
han tapizado con exvotos pictóricos y con algunos otros objetos
prácticamente todos los muros de la sacristía, el salón
adjunto y un sitio especialmente increíble: la torre campanario. Es
maravilloso subir los escalones e ir apreciando los «milagros»
que se describen, llaman la atención la cantidad de piezas que han
dejado los emigrados mexicanos, que vienen desde Estados Unidos a dar una
prueba «patente» de la poderosa intervención divina.
Los sitios
anteriormente mencionados no son los únicos en contener una vasta
colección de exvotos, los hay también en otros famosos
santuarios: el de la Virgen
del Rosario en Talpa, Jalisco o el de
la Virgen de los Dolores de Soriano en Colón,
Querétaro, por mencionar algunos.
El hilo de
nuestra investigación nos llevó a España para averiguar
el paradero del exvoto que Hernán Cortés mandó hacer en
Nueva España para ofrendarlo a
la Virgen de Guadalupe de Extremadura como
agradecimiento por salvarle la vida del piquete de un alacrán. Se
trata de un Pijante del siglo XVI, posiblemente el exvoto cristiano
más antiguo de la
Colonia. Este exvoto es registrado por un lego del
monasterio; quien en el siglo XVIII levantó un inventario del joyel de
la virgen y dejó todo escrito en un códice; la pieza se
extravió en el siglo XIX, y pasado el tiempo se registra en la
colección del Instituto Valencia de Don Juan en Madrid. Después
de que fuimos a la
Biblioteca del Santuario de Guadalupe, en Extremadura y a
otros sitios, contactamos a la doctora Leticia Arbeteta, especialista en
joyas medievales y de acuerdo con sus investigaciones concluimos que el
«alacrán» de Hernán Cortés no es el que
aparece en el códice del santuario de Extremadura y que se cuestiona
hoy en día su existencia.
Esta
investigación de más de cuatro años, encontró una
oportunidad para concretarse en el Centro Cultural Arte Contemporáneo
de la Ciudad
de México, a través de la exposición: Dones y Promesas:
Quinientos Años de Arte Ofrenda (exvotos mexicanos), que se exhibe
desde el 20 de marzo hasta el 8 de septiembre en el mencionado espacio
museográfico.
Esta
exposición del Centro Cultural de Arte Contemporáneo presenta
más de 300 exvotos mexicanos seleccionados entre varios centenares por
su calidad plástica y documental. Provienen del Distrito Federal y de
11 estados de
la República. Además se exhiben
algunos ejemplares de coleccionistas de Estados Unidos. La mayoría de
las piezas provienen del centro de México y de algunos estados adyacentes,
ya que en este punto geográfico es donde se ha concentrado la
producción de exvotos.
La muestra
permite al espectador maravillarse ante esta fuente inagotable de
expresión popular y artística y al mismo tiempo acercarse al
espíritu religioso y tradicional que la motiva, denominador
común de todos los' pueblos de todas las épocas. Debido a que
la máxima producción votiva popular se dio en el siglo XIX al
inicio del XX y para facilitar la lectura visual al público, se
pensó en su organización por temas, que muestran las
principales preocupaciones del pueblo y son: problemas de salud,
acción de gracias, accidentes, medios de transporte, cárceles y
violencia, guerras y revolución, desastres naturales problemas del
campo.
En los
exvotos pintados de la exposición podrán apreciarse, en forma
simultánea, más de 70 advocaciones a las que se rinde culto
(Santos, Vírgenes y Cristos) , entre ellas predomina la de
la Virgen de Guadalupe y el
de la Virgen
le San Juan de los Lagos, pero también están la del Santo
Niño de Atocha, el Señor del Saucito, el de Sacromonte y el de
Chalma, o las de San Francisco de Asís, la le Loreto, la de
Ocotlán, la del Patrocinio, la de
la Solelad, la de los
Remedios, la del Rosario, entre otras.
La idea
museográfica fue privilegiar ciertas piezas, como la ofrenda
prehispánica que permite al público un acercamiento a la
preocupación del gesto votivo del mundo precolombino, para pasar
después a unos grabados que documentan cómo llega la
tradición europea del exvoto pictórico a
la Nueva España,
vía el culto mariano. Sobresalen en este planteamiento dos soberbias
piezas que resultan espectaculares por lo que aportan. La primera
Procesión de súplica ante
la Virgen de Guadalupe, de la colección del
Museo de la
Basílica de Guadalupe; lienzo pictórico de
gran formato del siglo XVII-XVIII que presenta una procesión de
Niños solicitando la intercesión de
la Virgen de Guadalupe para
que termine una epidemia de cocolixtle o pica-atroz que azotó a la
población indígena en el año de 1537. Este cuadro no puede
apreciarse en su museo por estar oculto abajo de otro cuadro monumental.
La segunda
pieza proviene de la colección del templo de San Francisco de
Asís,.se trata de una carabela hecha de prismas de cristal;
según la tradición esta pieza formó parte de un grupo de
barcos de cristal que se donaron al convento de los mercedarios en el siglo
XVIII.
En
esta muestra consignamos distintos gremios que se distinguen por sus
constantes al elaborar exvotos y los hemos denominado «talleres
regionales», siendo el más destacado el de Purísima del
Rincón, hoy de Bustos, en el estado de Guanajuato, taller del que se
sabe su autor: Hermenegildo Bustos (1832-1907) quien facturó
más de 70 exvotos, algo sorprendente en un retablero. En la
exposición damos noticia de tres nuevos exvotos de Bustos,
pertenecientes a una colección privada y que estaban fichados como
anónimos.
La
producción de exvotos pintados en México abarca cerca de 500
años y sus piezas más sobresalientes pertenecen a los siglos
XIX y XX por ello, 168 piezas exhibidas en esta ocasión son de dichos
periodos, amén de varias obras de mayor formato realizadas por
connotados artistas contemporáneos que han hallado, con razón,
una temática apasionada en los exvotos populares. Las 168 obras
citadas son de pequeño formato, anónimas o firmadas y hechas
por encargo de la gente común, siguiendo la tradición votiva
propia del pueblo, desde siempre y en todas partes. Al final de la
exposición se puede apreciar una instalación que remite al
espectador a los muros del santuario.
Los
exvotos pintados son una forma de expresión que ha prevalecido en
México a lo largo de casi cinco siglos y, debido al loable celo de
algunos rectores del santuario y a que se han iniciado trabajos de rescate e
inventario, las colecciones votivas del país se han salvado de la
destrucción. Hay quienes señalan que existe la amenaza de que
el exvoto pintado desaparezca lentamente (por el uso de técnicas
contemporáneas de expresión, como fotografías fotocopias
y trabajos en computadora, o porque el hombre de nuestros tiempos tiende a
ser engullido por el consumismo, sobre todo en las urbes de desmesurado
crecimiento), pero también es muy posible que esta hermosa muestra de
piedad popular no se extinga, gracias a la profunda religiosidad del mexicano.
Por último, hemos de señalar que una de las principales
preocupaciones al hacer esta curaduría fue con el fin de que localizar
los exvotos y exponerlos dentro de un recinto museo gráfico contribuya
a que se aprecien como objetos de arte de expresión popular y esto
motive a su procuración y rescate.
Fuente:
México
en el Tiempo No. 14 agosto-septiembre 1996
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Fuente: http://www.mexicodesconocido.com.mx/espanol/cultura_y_sociedad/religion/detalle.cfm?idpag=2183&idsec=19&idsub=0
Una guía infantil para conocer la vida y obra
de Don Hermenegildo Bustos a través de actividades manuales que combinan
la literatura y el arte de una manera divertida. Especialmente para
niños de entre 6 y 12 años, pero también para todas
aquellas personas que tengan el espíritu de serlo.
TEXTO: CHAC / Alba Nora Martínez / 92
páginas / estampas, dibujos / 23 x 16.4 cms / Español / Pasta
suave / Museo Nacional de Arte / Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de
Manterrey.
Fuente: http://www.marco.org.mx/tienda_catalogo_exp.htm
"Portrait de Famille", sans date, fin du XIXème
Fuente : http://www.vivamexico.info/Index1/HistoireArt.html#
Hermenegildo Bustos, Hurbano Muñoz, 1894
oil on copper (Private collection)
óleo sobre lámina (Colección particular)
Fuente: http://argentina.artealdia.com/var/storage/images/objetos_relacionados/imgenes/img_revista_99/marco08/308247-1-esl-ES/marco081_large.jpg
"Jesús
Muñoz a los ocho años", Hermenegildo Bustos, óleo,
col. Museo de la
Alhóndiga de Granaditas, Guanajuato.
Fuente: http://biblioteca.redescolar.ilce.edu.mx/sites/colibri/cuentos/arte5/img/20.jpg
Fuente: http://www.fmrnapoli.it/images/catalogo/isegni/suo141min.jpg