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Stunning mural to adorn new wing of city’s first hospital

Guadalajara painter Jorge Monroy, working with a team of three other artists, is nearing completion of a huge mural gracing the newest building of the Antiguo Hospital Civil complex.

The painting features Friar Antonio Alcalde, the hospital’s founder, but, as in Monroy´s previous murals, offers the viewer much more than what at first meets the eye.

 

Monroy has been working on this project since August 2013 along with Ilse Taylor, Cristina Partida and Luis Eduardo Gonzalez, as well as art student  Marcela Figueroa. The painting is 15 meters high and ten meters wide and situated in the middle of a giant spiral staircase  offering visitors a different view of the work from every level.

The main focus of the mural is Friar Alcalde, who laid the first stone of the hospital in 1787 and coined the expression “La salud del pueblo es la suprema ley” (Public health is the supreme law). In the mural, Alcalde is shown holding a human skull in his right hand.

Monroy explains: “He was known in his day as the Friar of the Skull and there’s a delightful anecdote about how he got his name and how pure chance brought him to the new world.”

 

At the age of 61, Alcalde was the Abbot at the monastery of Valverde near Valladolid, Spain. Continues Monroy: “One day, the king of Spain happened to be out hunting in the area and his party ended up getting lost. Finally, late at night, they came upon the abbey, so they asked permission to sleep there. That was how the king met Friar Antonio. His majesty was impressed by the wisdom, simplicity and austerity of this humble monk. Also, it happened that in the room where the king was to sleep, there was nothing but a human skull. The following day, the king was back in his palace and the order of the day was to designate a bishop for Mexico. Immediately, the king said, ‘We will send the friar of the skull.’ He didn’t remember Alcalde’s name, but he did remember that skull.”

Alcalde first served in Merida and came to Guadalajara when he was 71. He lived another 20 years and dedicated his time to relieving people’s suffering.

 

Included in the mural are small portraits of many individuals who are or were connected with Friar Antonio’s hospital, including famed author Mariano Azuela, who received his M.D. in Guadalajara in 1899 and went on to write “Los de Abajo” (The Underdogs), his first-hand description of combat during the Mexican Revolution, based on his experiences in the field.

 

In the painting, Friar Antonio is shown reaching out to one of humanity’s suffering souls, in this case a recent patient at the Hospital Civil. “I had a lot of trouble finding just the right model for ‘The Patient’ until I came upon this poor man,” says Monroy,  His name is Carlos and he’s from Guerrero. He ended up in this hospital because he was hit by a car in Guadalajara. The doctors fixed him up and Carlos decided he liked the neighborhood. Now he sells holy cards out there in the street and that’s where he sleeps, too. The moment I saw him, I knew he was the model I needed for this mural.”

 

Within his depiction of “The Patient,” Monroy has painted hundreds of small figures representing suffering and pain. Inside the head we can see people with mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and even arachnophobia. Inside the outline of the rest of The Patient’s body, the perceptive observer may find every infirmity from anorexia and diabetes to fractures and hemorrhages.

 

“If we reflect on the origin of many of the sicknesses which bring people to the hospital,” says the painter, “we can’t escape the conclusion that most of them are the result of modern life in a big city: congestion, unsanitary conditions, pollution, bad diet, lack of exercise, etcetera. So, at the bottom of the mural, I am portraying the city as a cause of infirmity. My model Carlos, in fact, is a good example. He was hit by a car and almost lost his leg. So I am showing the city as overcrowded, chaotic, catastrophic and apocalyptic.”

 

This monumental work of art will be entitled “Fray Antonio Alcalde y la Humanidad Doliente” (Friar Antonio Alcalde and Suffering Humanity) and will be signed by the artists in a ceremony expected to take place in November.

 

Like his previous murals, “Under the Wings of Mercury” (at the Guadalajara Chamber of Commerce), “Eternal Light” (at Infinity Funeral Home), “Tlaloc Reigns over Chapala” (at the State Water Commission, Chapala) and his monumental painting adorning the Phil Weigand Museum in Teuchitlán, Monroy’s newest mural transcends the art of placing paint on canvas and carries us into the realms of reflection and wonder.

 

The Antiguo Hospital Civil is located at Calle Coronel Calderón 777, between Hospital and Tenerías. Ask permission from the guards at the door if you would like to see the painting (say, “solo quiero ver el mural.”).

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