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Every year in the highlands of Guatemala, the town of Sumpango
celebrates Day of the Dead by flying kites. The kites are massive,
the largest measuring 45 feet in diameter. Smaller kites, close 20
feet in height, are flown in a death-defying race down the side of
a mountain. From a distance, the kites appear luminous and
blissful, but the radiant colors of the kites mask an ominous
subtext. On closer inspection, the images on the sails depict
people in agony and torment: mutilated bodies, mass burials,
kidnappings, and rivers of blood. In graphic illustration, the
kites allude to the dark and painful history of Guatemala's 30-year
civil war. Originally centered on remembering the dead, the kite
festival has become a way for the indigenous community to heal
itself from the trauma of the war. Wings of Resistance examines the
politics and art of the giant kites, placing this Guatemalan
tradition in the context of international kite cultures. The
contributors include Alison Fujino, Christopher Ornelas, Jose
Sainz, Scott Skinner, and Victorino Tejaxun.
Pat Hammond is not your ordinary artist. In fact, she doesn’t
even consider herself an artist. She takes everyday objects, such
as spinning tops and jars of cicada shells, and infuses them with
new meaning and hope. Through humor and personalization, she uses
insignificant and unconventional objects to illuminate a “grand
truth” about the world, and even about herself. Author
Christopher Ornelas found out about Hammond through her remarkable
kite collection—hundreds of kites amassed over twenty years.
Hammond’s kites, which have been featured at the Smithsonian and
the Modern Museum of Art, were gathered from every corner of the
world, including Guatemala, Korea, and Polynesia. Hammond also
designs her own kites, drafting ideas and sketches for numerous
creations she has dreamed of flying. While many of these kites have
never made it into the air, they demonstrate her untamed
creativity: a corset on a string titled “Of Corset Flies,” a
kite made of chicken wire titled “Flew de Coop.” Hammond’s
idiosyncratic humor soars beyond her kites, and as Ornelas quickly
discovers, they are just a stroke on the canvas of an artistic life
that includes troves of trinkets laced with whimsy and beautiful
intentions, all displayed in Hammond’s home in San Antonio,
Texas. Hammond’s love for the unexpected and her fascination with
science and physics are contagious. She is passionate about bees
and collecting honey, and her shelves upon shelves of books touch
on subjects as varied at Goya and Asimov. From her assortment of
animal specimens (bird wings, butterflies, beetles) to crates of
small spinning tops (she makes hundreds of them from round metal
discs and matchstick spindles), every item is an exploration
illustrating the heart of an artist and the legacy of a true free
spirit. With a foreword by poet and friend Naomi Shihab Nye and
intimate photographs of Hammond’s home and collections, Name
Them—They Fly Better offers a portrait of a woman who has sought
to transform each moment into a creative act.
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