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A detail salvaged from the original convent of Santo Domingo graces one side of the main entrance to the newly refurbished Oaxaca Cultural Center and Regional Museum
In August of 1998, amid much official fanfare and festivities, and after four years of restricted access and outright closings, what was the "Regional Museum" reopened as the Oaxaca Cultural Center. Located in the ex-convent of the Church of Santo Domingo, the new museum has been designed to be a multi-use municipal building housing, among other things, a reading room, extensive gardens complete with orchards, a cactus garden, a collection of artifacts gathered from Oaxaca’s history from colonial to contemporary eras (including the desk and chair upon which Benito Juarez edited the proposed Constitution for a new democratic Mexico), an art gallery, and a fabulous collection of objects recovered from nearby archeological digs, including the gold artifacts taken from tomb seven at Monte Alban.
A vast and sprawling complex, the Center constantly surprises the visitor, with hallways inside of hallways, windows with magnificent views of the mountains, the surrounding neighborhood, the gardens and the interior courtyard. Until 1992, the ex-convent was used as an army base. It reverted to the city when the army moved to new, larger quarters.
Until a year ago, we lived a block away from the ex-convento, and the tick-tick-tick of rock hammers were the music of our days and nights, as hundreds of workers labored around the clock shaping stones, some as big as sofas.
It is hard to compass the vastness of the available space, only a small portion of which is presently being used, leaving a large number of rooms, locked away behind closed doors, in reserve for future projects.
With such a magnificent structure to use as a physical plant, it is a bit disappointing that the artifacts on view within are on the whole poorly displayed. Mostly, it is a matter of the placement and intensity of the lighting that is being used. The display cases themselves are very impressive; simple, colonial in flavor, and well tagged in Spanish. Placards with more detailed descriptions of what is on display are available in every room, adding to the richness of the experience. Flash photos are not allowed (which is why we have only "natural light" pictures).
Construction and reconstruction continue, and probably will for some years. This is a huge project, and a wonderful addition to the lives of Oaxacans, whether permanent residents or tourists.
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If you have comments or suggestions for Stan, you can contact him at: stan@realoaxaca.com
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