
he Balaya Military Camp (Barraja Barraja in English) is one of the most well-known buildings in the Old San Juan area of Puerto Rico. It is part of the Spanish military neighborhood, which includes Morrowa large fortress stands on its coastal area with the aim of discovering and preventing invading forces. When the island was a Spanish colony, Spanish soldiers held military exercises there, as well as barracks earthquakes and weapons storage responsibilities. The building has multiple entry points, all of which allow you to install a large open courtyard with a small army. This is a great space to focus on local talent, namely through drama activities, art galleries, folk dances and markets. Actually, use Military camp Emphasizing Puerto Rican creativity means trying to strike the colonies of the site and replacing it with something that drives its oppressive heritage.
Edgardo Miranda-Rodríguez Contributing to this cultural resistance effort Borinqueñanow on the third floor he Military camp. The exhibition, titled “The Art of LaBorinqueña”, is one of the first events Puerto Rican Humanities (Professor of English Humanities), a nonprofit organization that invests in projects involving arts. Now, it is open to the public from Thursday to Saturday from 11:00-4:30 pm. It will run until August 20Th This year.
“The Art of LaBorinqueña” has some of the most iconic pages and covers of the original comics, including legendary works George Perez,,,,, John “Crashed” Matosand Ken Rashley. If you’ve been following Miranda-Rodríguez’s book, you’ll find that you love enough here. If you are new to the world of LaBorinqueña, the exhibition is essentially a welcoming fantasy world that firmly plants one foot in the complexity of Puerto Rican identity, while the other is the richness of Puerto Rico experiences from the island to the diaspora.
One particularly exciting aspect of the exhibition is its action figure display. It contains the prototype of the first row of characters Miranda-Rodríguez with the latest addition BorinqueñaAllied Group: V-G1Gante. This is a mech inspired by Puerto Rico’s own Vejigantescharacters from local folklore that cover up characters originally designed to scare people to go to church with horns and poisonous fangs. Looks great. Those who visited Military camp Will observe it carefully.
Edgardo Miranda-Rodríguez is the main initiator of his work. Independent creators should pay attention. Miranda-Rodríguez has built La Borinqueña into Brick’s institution. This has taken many steps to elevate his character to his own. She has appeared in Smithsonian and Chocolate Bar, Inspiring Role Playing and Graffiti Art and is the main character in the fundraising comics rule To help victims of Hurricane Maria (which hit the Caribbean in 2017). She just got bigger and more important every step. The latest exhibition is based on missions, and the current stay Baraja Military Camp It was a pleasant achievement, and it showed a louder future.
This is V-G1Gante:
