Search results
Victor A. Teran, age 85 of Rockford passed away Sunday June 19, 2016. He was born May 8, 1931 in Mexico City, Mexico the son of Leonardo and Francisca Bucio-Teran. He lived most of his life in Rockford coming here from Mexico, becoming a United States citizen in the 1950s.
Jun 4, 2016 · Photographs of loved ones taken after they died may seem morbid to modern sensibilities. But in Victorian England, they became a way of commemorating the dead and blunting the sharpness of...
Victor Terán. Victor Terán was born in Juchitán, Oaxaca, in 1958. He has received recognition and a grant from FONACULTA (National Foundation for Art and Culture). Carlos Montemayor, the critic, translator, and anthologist of contemporary indigenous literature, described Terán as one of the most accomplished of Mexico's younger poets.
Towards the turn of the century, parents and photographers began to pose their deceased children for these photos by fixing their hair, dressing them up or even opening their eyes.
Post-mortem photography was particularly popular in Victorian Britain. [23] From 1860 to 1910, these post-mortem portraits were much like American portraits in style, focusing on the deceased either displayed as asleep or with the family; often these images were placed in family albums. [4]
Jul 19, 2017 · As a ritual, postmortem photography helped check grief. By pressing subjects to execute specific poses and gestures, death photos helped the living externalize personal loss.
Victor Teran (Isthmus Zapotec/zapoteco del Istmo) Huadxi que ziyaba The Day Was Fading Away Caia la tarde Ndaani' batanaya' From the Palm of My Hand En la palma de mi mano Lu ti nagana Indecision Duda Xhoopa' diidxa' rui' xiinga guendaranaxhii Six Variations on Love Seis variaciones acerca del amor Yaga yaa Unseasoned Wood Lena verde Biluxe It's Over Se acabo