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Wednesday, 18 November 2009

The Red House in Mazo

The Red House, Mazo, La PalmaThe Red House, Mazo

La Palma's embroidery museum is upstairs in the Red House in Mazo. (I'll write about that in my next post.) Downstairs is a museum about the fiesta of Corpus Christi in Mazo. If you're on La Palma for June 3rd next year, for goodness' sake go and see it. If not, I strongly recommend the museum.


Some of the things used to make the Corpus Christi archwaysSome of the things used to make the Corpus Christi archways, and a block for chopping them up.

The fiesta is in honour of the Eucharist -- the body of Christ. Every year since the 1950s, they've decorate the streets with spectacular archways and carpets covered with flowers, seeds and leaves, and small parts of these archways are in the museum. Well, when I say "small", they're a small percentage of the whole. The cross below is about four feet high, but the biggest archway is about ten metres (33ft) high.


Corpus Christi CrossCorpus Christi Cross

And below, you can see the details of the cross. It makes me wonder how many hours it took to do the whole thing.

Detail of the crossDetail of the cross

The museum is signposted from the main road through Mazo, and in any case, it's a pretty distinctive building. It costs 2€ to get in (1.50€ for residents) and it's open from 10 am to 2 pm Monday to Friday, and 11 am - 6 pm on Saturdays. Phone 922 428 587

A fish used to decorate an archwayA fish used to decorate an archway.

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Sunday, 14 June 2009

Corpus Christi in San Jose


San Jose main street at Corpus Christi

Corpus Christi in San Jose isn't nearly as spectacular as it is in Mazo, but it's still very nice. Since the whole thing takes out on a flat, tarmaced street, the tradition is to make carpets of coloured salt, with the altars being much more modest. This year, many of the carpets are made from seeds and petals, like in Mazo.

This carpet is by the Residents' Association from El Socorro.

Much as I love the petals, I think it's a mistake for San Jose to become a second-rate Mazo. I prefer salt (which I suspect wouldn't work on Mazo's steep cobbles, anyway). You can have brighter colours and finer detail.

And this one is by the village children

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Thursday, 11 June 2009

Corpus in Mazo - Photos of this year



Corpus Christi (the body of Christ) is a big festival in Mazo. They decorate the streets with spectacular archways and carpets covered with flowers, seeds and leaves.




People collect the materials and work on intensively the pieces a couple of weeks in advance, but the archways are erected a Wednesday night. But they had a problem with the crane, and they were still putting up the last of them when I arrived on Thursday morning.


The largest archway is always in the square near the top of the street, and I found it still laid out on trestles, waiting for assembly. This meant that I could get close-up shots of things which would later be ten metres (33ft) up in the air.




The carpets beneath the archways are made using things rather like wrought iron gates, as stencils. They lay the "gate" down on the sand, fill the sections with petals or whatever, squirt with water-with-a-bit-of-glue-in-it, and lift the gate up again.



Each archway includes a small altar. I've been photographing them for years without really wondering why they were there.


This year I finally got to seed the procession, and it became clear. The fiesta is in honour of the body of Christ.


During a normal Catholic mass, this is put into a special vessel called a monstrance.
In this procession, the priest walks on the flower carpets carrying the monstrance: everybody else walks along the sides. As the priest reaches each archway, he places the monstrance on the little altar, kneels, and wafts incense towards it.


The main feast day is ten weeks after Maundy Thursday, so this year it was on the 11th of June. If you're impressed enough to book a holiday to see next year's Corpus Christi, it'll be on June 3rd.

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Sunday, 25 May 2008

Corpus Christi in San Jose

Like a lot of places, San José in Breña Baja celebrates Corpus Christi (the body of Christ) on the Sunday ten weeks after Easter Sunday. Traditionally, they make carpets out of coloured salt, like this one from 2006. (You can see more at http://sheilacrosby.com/fiestas.php .)



The most famous of these carpets are in La Oratava in Tenerife. This year they'll be making them on Thursday, May 29th.

This year's carpets in San Jose are almost all made of leaves, seeds, and petals, like they do in Mazo. (See Friday's post.)






The whole thing is on a smaller scale than Mazo, but then San José is a smaller village than Mazo.



And at least one person is delighted with the change from salt to seeds. Breakfast is served!

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