Showing posts with label Gloom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gloom. Show all posts

Saturday, August 31, 2024

Gallery Photographer Gabriela E. Campos Photographs Centennial Burning of Zozobra


Via The Santa Fe New Mexican

August 31, 2024


Gallery Photographer Gabriela E. Campos covered the 100th burning of Zozobra and the Santa Fe New Mexican featured her fantastic photograph full-page on the front cover of today's print edition: Zozobra burns in massive, joyous inferno for centennial.


screen shot of front page of The Santa Fe New Mexican newspaper edition of August 31, 2024 with a full page color photograph of the effigy "Zozobra" in flames


 

n newspaper edition of August 31, 2024 with a full pcolor photograph of the effigy "Zozobra" in flames

Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican


n newspaper edition of August 31, 2024 with a full page color photograph of the effigy "Zozobra" in flames with drones spelling out "Burn Him" in the night sky background

Gabriela Campos/The New Mexican


The Burning of Zozobra is a unique cultural event in Santa Fe staged annually by the Kiwanis Club of Santa Fe in Zozobra Field at Fort Marcy Park on the Friday of Labor Day weekend as an exciting and fiery finale to the last days of summer. 

Artist William Howard “Will” Shuster, Jr. created the first Zozobra in 1924 as the signature highlight of a private party for Los Cinco Pintores, a group of artists and writers who made their way to New Mexico in the 1920s.

Zozobra in Spanish means “anguish, anxiety, or gloom”, by burning it, people destroy the worries and troubles of the previous year in the flames.

 Made of wood, wire, and cotton cloth and stuffed with bushels of shredded paper, which traditionally includes obsolete police reports, paid-off mortgages, and even divorce papers, Zozobra is a dark and eerie character, part ghost and part monster


Wednesday, August 27, 2014

The 90th Annual Burning of Zozobra, Friday, Aug. 29, 2014


 
 
Zozobra (Old Man Gloom) is a giant marionette effigy that is built and burned every by the Kiwanis Club of Santa Fe to kick off Fiestas de Santa Fe in Santa Fe, New Mexico. As his name suggests, he embodies gloom; by burning him, people destroy the worries and troubles of the previous year in the flames. Anyone with an excess of gloom is encouraged to write down the nature of his or her gloom on a slip of paper and it will be stuffed into Zozobra and burned.


More information here. A link to the Internet live stream will be posteed here.

(The Gallery will close at 2 PM on Friday, August 29 and resume regular hours Saturday and Sunday, 10 - 5.)