Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture

Agriculture

The Colors of Earth: Artwork by Honduran painters on display in new AgroArt exhibit

Tiempo de lectura: 3 mins.

AgroArt, the Virtual Art Museum of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), inaugurated the exhibit dubbed “The Colors of Earth”, supporting the recognition of budding Latin American artists in an initiative that could be replicated across the Americas.

Colores Agroart

San Jose, 19 May 2021 (IICA) – AgroArt, IICA’s Virtual Art Museum—a space for disseminating and integrating the artistic expressions of the Americas emanating from the rich diversity of rural areas—inaugurated a new exhibit of Honduran art.

The exhibit entitled “The Colors of Earth” comprises 15 works of art that evoke the rich gastronomy, culture, history, and wealth and chromatic diversity of the Department of Intibucá, Honduras, as well as the leading role of women and indigenous communities in the field, and, above all, the close, fundamental relationship between agriculture and the identity of this Honduran territory.

This new art collection is the product of an initiative led by the IICA Representative in Honduras and the Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Intibucá (CCII) in the form of an art contest entitled “Agriculture in Intibucá”, with the participation of 45 artists.

The Museum hopes to reproduce this initiative throughout the American continent, through its IICA representatives in each of the 34 Member States.

“We believe and hope that this event can be replicated across the Americas, including the Caribbean. Each of the regions of our continent possesses enormous artistic wealth associated with rural life and, due to its unique characteristics, the Museum could be the catalyst for this invaluable diversity”, commented Amanda Fernández, architect and president of IICA’s Community Outreach Association and head of the AgroArt project.

Fernández added that “at AgroArt, we believe that opening a space to this contest in Honduras, as well as to others we have already held or will hold in association with the IICA representatives, will support budding artists in a number of ways, such as giving them a space in which to be seen and acting as a catapult for putting their artwork on display. It will also help artists who are just starting out to connect with others and create positive synergies”.

AgroArt’s virtual space helps to build bridges and creates a dialogue between the urban and rural spheres. One of its main premises is that through art the urban centers can learn about rural life.

Meanwhile, the access of the artistic expression emanating from the rural communities to spaces and channels of dissemination that were once seen as out of reach has the ability to awaken a sense of pride and belonging in remote areas.

The initiative in Honduras was supported by the Central American country’s Secretariat of Agriculture and Livestock and was called “extremely innovative in combining art and agriculture” by Mauricio Guevara, Secretary of Agriculture and Livestock, who expressed that “the artistic expression inspired by agri-food production is not often used”.

Intibucá, one of 18 departments of Honduras, is located in the western part of the country.

Franklin Marín, IICA Representative in Honduras, explained that the initiative seeks not only to demonstrate the agricultural opportunities available in the department of Intibucá, but also its climate and people, underscoring the role of Lenca women, an indigenous people with vast cultural heritage in the region.

Jessica Zamora, President of CCII, commented that the alliance with IICA made this first art contest possible, which put the department of Intibucá on the map in terms of Central American agriculture: “This fills us with pride and encourages us to keep moving forward in supporting the development of the department of Intibucá”.

Prior to “The Colors of Earth”, AgroArt had also inaugurated “Rural Chronicles”, a photographic tribute to women in rural areas, and “Identity and Roots”, painted expressions of the rich cultural diversity of the rural areas of the Americas.

AgroArt/IICA Virtual Art Museum: https://agroart.iica.int/

Link to the new exhibit: https://agroart.iica.int/concurso-los-colores-de-la-tierra/

 

More information:

Institutional Communication Division

comunicacion.institucional@ica.int

 

 

Share

Related news​

Torroba 1

Synergy of water and energy shows that ethanol can contribute to decarbonization in all Latin American countries

Experts agreed on this at the Global Workshop on ‘Synergistic Application of Sustainable Water and Energy Consumption and Production for the Achievement of the 2030 Agenda and the Paris Agreement’.

Tiempo de lectura: 3mins

slider (1)_0

Bayer and IICA strengthen their partnership with a focus on training for family farmers, the guardians of food security in Latin America and the Caribbean

The purpose of the agreement is to promote the sustainable transformation of small-scale agriculture by increasing productivity while conserving natural resources.

Tiempo de lectura: 3mins

WhatsApp Image 2024-11-20 at 11

The agriculture sector of the Americas shone brightly at COP29, where it demonstrated to the world that it is essential for food and environmental security

At the most important international event for political and technical negotiations on the future of production methods and consumption around the world, farmers in the Americas had an influential voice, and the science- and innovation-based solutions to the climate crisis they are implementing in rural areas attracted a great deal of interest.

Tiempo de lectura: 3mins