Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Mexican lucha"


2 mentions found


A 24-foot-long banquet table has been laid out, but the dinner guests seem to have disappeared, leaving their coats behind. “We’re repulsed by this opulence,” said one of its creators, Einar de la Torre. “But we’re also thinking: ‘God, I wish I’d been invited to this party.’”The brothers Einar and Jamex de la Torre create mixed-media works of dazzling complexity. Pre-Columbian deities, Mexican lucha libre wrestlers, Olmec heads, Slavic water spirits — the de la Torres’ visual universe is vast and pantheistic. The brothers freely mix high and low, in part, they say, to challenge entrenched ideas about beauty and “good taste.”
Persons: “ We’re, , Einar de la, we’re, I’d, ’ ”, Einar, Jamex, Torre, Torres Organizations: Art Museum, Einar de la Torre, Mexican lucha Locations: San Antonio, Mexican
MEXICO CITY — A day before Major League Baseball played regular-season games here for the first time, Nick Martinez, a pitcher for the San Diego Padres, had an idea. On the way to the church, Martinez noticed several shops selling piñatas. He bought a few, hoping they could be smashed by the player of the game after each of the contests. “Being in San Diego, Mexican culture is very much a part of our culture,” Martinez said. His teammates cheered him on while wearing Mexican lucha libre wrestling masks.
Total: 2