Business & Tech

Margaritas to Host Mexican Mask Makers

Manuel Abeiro Horta and Modesto Horta will be at the restaurant tomorrow from 4 to 9 p.m.

Margaritas Mexican Restaurant in Salem at 1 Keewaydin Drive will play host to visiting artists Manuel Abeiro Horta and Modesto Horta, a team of mask makers from Tócuaro, Mexico on Wednesday, Nov. 9 from 4 to 9 p.m. The event is free and open to the public.

With nothing more than some hand-made tools forged by a local blacksmith, the brothers will transform a hunk of wood into an expressive work of art based on the traditions of their ancestors.

Wooden masks, such as the style of the Horta family, are still used in many regions of Mexico during fiestas. The Horta brothers started learning their craft at a young age and by the time they were 12, the duo helped their famous father Juan Horta carve wooden masks.

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Manuel Abeiro particularly enjoys carving animal masks and adorning them with hair and whiskers made from the hide of wild boars. Modesto is known for his elaborately carved high relief devil masks. They paint the masks with lacquer-based automobile paints. It’s not uncommon for the masks to be used for three or four days as dancers parade from street to street reenacting ancient plays and dances.

Both brothers have exhibited their masks in exhibitions in the United States and Mexico and have carved a variety of masks that will be on full display at Margaritas. A video presentation portraying life in their rural village will accompany the exhibit.

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The presentation in Salem is one of several scheduled during the next two months throughout New England. As part of Margaritas Education Outreach Program, artists visit not only the restaurants to demonstrate their craft to the public, but also are scheduled to visit several local schools to share Mexican culture, traditions and trade secrets with students and faculty.

Margaritas created the program in 1999 to bring artists, carvers and sculptors, to the northeast every year to share their talents with students and Margaritas diners.  The series provides a glimpse into the colorful culture and traditions of techniques that date back centuries.

Manuel Abeiro and Modesto come from a family of artisans famous for their traditional masks that are sought after by collectors from around the world. The region where they live, in the state of Michoacán, is known for producing high-quality wood products such as hand-carved tables, chairs, frames and folk art – many of which are used as furnishings in the 23 Margaritas restaurants. The world famous Monarch Butterfly Sanctuary is located in this central Mexican state in the Sierra Madre Mountains.

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