My favorite kid and I. The nephew, pics from 2022-2023
Somos Cultura, I’ll always represent so everyday is #hispanicheritagemonth
In the 90s I grew up a Lowrider and visiting #Mexico multiple times I’m in love with the Marichi. Pero everyday I wake up every morning feeling and living the modern day educated #Maya #Mayan #Indio #indigina #indegenous my first language is not #Spanish
Big thank you to @homiescreations_cc for always supporting la causa.
09/15 from 6-9pm Open Studio @nortonmuseumofart
#leaves #art #marker #markers #chalk #sharpie #queen #maya #indigenous #indigina
Another day in the office 🫶🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽🤎 #art #arts #creator #arte #students #artworks #mixedmedia
Honored to teach the first Visual arts program for DeGeorge program at the Kravis #Arts #visualarts #arts #artes #watercolor #clay #procreateart #markers #chalk
Taco boss #BornIntoThisCornLife #MyFirstMealWasAtortillaAfterMymomsboobiemilk #tacoboss #taco #tacotuesday #tacolife #TacoTuesdayEveryday
Spray paints, sharpies and shooters class, Sold out, thank you! 🙏🏽
Hola! Regresamos con un evento para la familia con arte, bebidas, comidas y actividades para los niños!
Sabado, Marzo 3/18/23 3pm-9pm
#Arte #Comidas #bebidas
Sabado
80s Street Art, Hip Hop, Fashion 1/11/23
Your favorite Teaching Artist in action 🙏🏽
@westpalmpal @nortonmuseumofart @nortonteens #KeithHaring #80s #Eighties #hiphop #graffiti #nyc #sculpture
Amor Eterno
R. Dot digital art on 11x14 aluminum canvas. $125 includes shipping
The two greatest additions to the festival this year was @lia_jilhs and @faithsplacecfe! You gave the event so much life! It was great to see the parade come together 🙏🏽🫶🏽✊🏽🤜🏽🤛🏿👑👑👑👑🐉🐉
Year 7 was amazing, thanks to you! The dust is settling and I’m able to reflect. I made time this year to hang out and enjoy the festival also. If you have any constructive feedback, please dm me! I’m so grateful for the community and appreciate your support #cultura #culture #familia #family #celebration #tradition ##diadelosmuertoslwb2022
A FREE event for whole family presented by the Lake Worth Beach CRA, LULA Lake Worth Arts, and R. Dot Creative Agency
-- Live Music, Dancing and Ethnic Performances
-- Day of the Dead Procession
-- “VIVA LA VIDA” Ofrenda Exhibition inside HATCH 1121 Gallery
-- FREE Children’s Crafts with LULA Lake Worth Arts
-- “Best Dressed” Contest with Prizes for Adults, Children & Pets
-- Face Painting, Live Art Demonstrations, Food Vendors, Arts and Craft Vendors & More!
** THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS **
• Florida Division of Art and Culture
• Lake Worth Beach Public Works
• Healthier Lake Worth Beach
• Chen Moore and Associates
• Affiliated Development
• Moss Construction
• Dixie Capital
• Cricket Wireless
• Compass Center
• Oak Lane Partners
• Living Designs Group, Florida Architects, Inc.
• Cana Bar & Grill
• Contin Architecture + Design
• Weiss, Serota, Helfman, Cole + Bierman
• Palm Beach Modern Auctions
• Mathews Brewing Company
• Jens Property
• Benzaiten Center for Creative Arts
• Rotary Club of Lake Worth Beach, FL
• The Tacky Tourist Lake Worth Beach
• Lake Worth Beach Farmers Market
• Compass Center
• The Zoo Health Club Lake Worth Beach
• Coastline Realty Inc.
• McMow Art Glass
• City of Lake Worth Beach
• R.Dot Creative Agency
1st Video credit @pamela.jpeg @15.ave
Kukulkan sticker available now!
#maya #mayas #indigenous
Kukulkan Style Sticker by R.
3 x 3 please message me to purchase.
, also spelled K'uk'ulkan, /kuːkʊlˈkɑːn/ ("Plumed Serpent", "amazing Serpent") is the name of a Mesoamerican serpent deity that was worshipped by the Yucatec Maya people of the Yucatán Peninsula before the Spanish conquest of Yucatán.
Kukulcan & the Yucatec Maya
The Yucatec Maya were (and still are) speakers of the Yucatec language, and they settled the Yucatan peninsula in the north of ancient Mesoamerica. Their chief god was the feathered serpent Kukulcan whose name means just that: feathered (k'uk'ul) and serpent (kan). He was a creator god, and the god of rain, wind, storms, and life. Throughout Mesoamerica, the snake, because of its living habits, became a symbol for life both below and above the earth, and so it was considered a point of connection between the gods and humanity. The open mouths of snakes were identified with caves, which give access to the underworld, and their bodies are often given sky symbols in Mesoamerican art. Further, the Maya words for sky and snake have the same pronunciation. The figure first appears, albeit rarely, in carvings of the Olmec civilization, which prospered in Pre-Classical (Formative) Mesoamerica from c. 1200 BCE to c. 400 BCE. Not a great deal more is known about Kukulcan except that the god had major temples dedicated to him at Chichen Itza, Mayapan, Uxmal, and others.