De Tierra y Agua

De Tierra y Agua
Client: América Afroindígena
Art: Ale De la Torre
Art direction: Lucia Torres
Project: Album art

ENG. América Afroindígena recently released De Tierra y Agua, an album in which I had the great opportunity to participate with my art. A double digital album with the wonderful work of migrant musicians and creative women produced by América Afroindígena. 22 tracks, 22 groups, 22 visions of root music in Mexico City with the music of:

Iraida Noriega, Kumantuk Xuxpë, Alejandra Paniagua, Dantor, MamaSonica, Tavo Nanda Trío, Xochicanela ft Zeiba Kuicani, Los Salmerón, Mujeres Trabajando, Purhépechas de Charapan, Mitze Maíz ft Za-Hash y Ami Rojas, Ampersan, Fania Delena ft Cynthia Franco y DayanBeu Vázquez, CitadinoSon, La Creciente ft Julia Piastro, Elmagico Se Ihuan Eyi, Clau Arellano Larragoiti, Last Jerónimo, Olinka y Yun, Vico Díaz Trío, Laura Murcia y Los hijos del chuchumbé.

You can download the album here: De Tierra y Agua

Art & illustration: Ale De la Torre
Web: Dante Fuentes
Production Tierra: Ulises Mtz and América Afroindígena
Production Agua: Xalxiuehekatl Lucía and Xiuh Atl
General Direction: Rodrigo O Sánchez
Recorded, mixed and mastered in Cubetta Records by América afroindígena. CDMX. 2020-2021

♥︎ ♥︎ ♥︎ ♥︎ ♥︎

ESP. Recientemente se estrenó De Tierra y Agua, un disco en el que tuve la gran oportunidad de participar con el arte. Un disco digital doble con el maravilloso trabajo de músicos migrantes y mujeres creadoras producido por América Afroindígena. 22 tracks, 22 grupos, 22 visiones de la música de raíz en la Ciudas de México en el que participaron:

Iraida Noriega, Kumantuk Xuxpë, Alejandra Paniagua, Dantor, MamaSonica, Tavo Nanda Trío, Xochicanela ft Zeiba Kuicani, Los Salmerón, Mujeres Trabajando, Purhépechas de Charapan, Mitze Maíz ft Za-Hash y Ami Rojas, Ampersan, Fania Delena ft Cynthia Franco y DayanBeu Vázquez, CitadinoSon, La Creciente ft Julia Piastro, Elmagico Se Ihuan Eyi, Clau Arellano Larragoiti, Last Jerónimo, Olinka y Yun, Vico Díaz Trío, Laura Murcia y Los hijos del chuchumbé

El disco puede descargarse de manera GRATUITA aquí: De Tierra y Agua

Arte e ilustración: Ale De la Torre
Web: Dante Fuentes
Producción Tierra: Ulises Mtz y América Afroindígena
Producción Agua: Xalxiuehekatl Lucía y Xiuh Atl
Coordinación general: Rodrigo O Sánchez
Grabado, mezclado y masterizado en Cubetta Records por América afroindígena. CDMX. 2020-2021

Illustration and logo design process / Proceso de ilustración y diseño de logotipo

Final artwork for cover, back cover and logo /
Arte final de la portada, contraportada y logotipo

De Tierra y Agua

logo-aa.jpg

Sojourners Magazine: Julia Esquivel

Julia Esquivel
Client: Sojourners Magazine
Art direction: Ed Spivey
Art: Ale De la Torre
Design: Áurea Carmín Design Studio

ENG. Illustration process of the cover and some spreads for Sojourners Magazine about Julia Esquivel.

ESP. Proceso de ilustración de Julia Esquivel para la portada y páginas internas de la revista Sojourners.

Sketches / Bocetos

Julia Esquivel

Julia Esquivel was an academic at San Carlos University, Guatemala, the Seminario Biblico Latinoamericano in Costa Rica and the Bossey Ecumenical Institute in Switzerland.Her poetry was heavily influenced by the Theology of Liberation. Author of seven books including two collections of poetry Threatened with Resurrection (1982) and The Certainty of Spring (1993).

In 1994 she received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Bern for her poetry which the University noted "gave voice to the suffering of the Guatemalan people in her spiritual poetry." She died in Guatemala on the 19th July 2019.

Final artwork: Cover and spreads / Ilustraciones finales: Portada y páginas internas.

The other (The mushroom hunters)

The mushroom hunters

Science, as you know, my little one, is the study
of the nature and behaviour of the universe.
It’s based on observation, on experiment, and measurement,
and the formulation of laws to describe the facts revealed.

In the old times, they say, the men came already fitted with brains
designed to follow flesh-beasts at a run,
to hurdle blindly into the unknown,
and then to find their way back home when lost
with a slain antelope to carry between them.
Or, on bad hunting days, nothing.

The women, who did not need to run down prey,
had brains that spotted landmarks and made paths between them
left at the thorn bush and across the scree
and look down in the bole of the half-fallen tree,
because sometimes there are mushrooms.

Before the flint club, or flint butcher’s tools,
The first tool of all was a sling for the baby
to keep our hands free
and something to put the berries and the mushrooms in,
the roots and the good leaves, the seeds and the crawlers.
Then a flint pestle to smash, to crush, to grind or break.

And sometimes men chased the beasts
into the deep woods,
and never came back.

Some mushrooms will kill you,
while some will show you gods
and some will feed the hunger in our bellies. Identify.
Others will kill us if we eat them raw,
and kill us again if we cook them once,
but if we boil them up in spring water, and pour the water away,
and then boil them once more, and pour the water away,
only then can we eat them safely. Observe.

Observe childbirth, measure the swell of bellies and the shape of breasts,
and through experience discover how to bring babies safely into the world.

Observe everything.

And the mushroom hunters walk the ways they walk
and watch the world, and see what they observe.
And some of them would thrive and lick their lips,
While others clutched their stomachs and expired.
So laws are made and handed down on what is safe.
Formulate.

The tools we make to build our lives:
our clothes, our food, our path home…
all these things we base on observation,
on experiment, on measurement, on truth.

And science, you remember, is the study
of the nature and behaviour of the universe,
based on observation, experiment, and measurement,
and the formulation of laws to describe these facts.

The race continues. An early scientist
drew beasts upon the walls of caves
to show her children, now all fat on mushrooms
and on berries, what would be safe to hunt.

The men go running on after beasts.

The scientists walk more slowly, over to the brow of the hill
and down to the water’s edge and past the place where the red clay runs.
They are carrying their babies in the slings they made,
freeing their hands to pick the mushrooms.

Neil Gaiman