Under the Spell of San Miguel de Allende
Ever since American Stirling Dickinson arrived there in 1937, the Mexican town has been a magnet for artists and U.S. expatriates
- By Jonathan Kandell
- Photographs by Ann Summa
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
Cheryl Finnegan came to San Miguel in 2000 from San Francisco, where she had spent 14 years in the marketing department of Levi Strauss, the jeans and casual wear manufacturer. "One day I woke up and asked—Where is my passion? I had no passion," she recalls. "So I just dropped everything—my marriage, job, home, box seats at the opera—and moved down here."
A chance occurrence launched her new career. A decade ago, she was vacationing in the Mexican village of Sayulita, some 35 minutes north of Puerto Vallarta on the Pacific coast, during the annual December 12 celebration of the Virgin of Guadalupe. (The festival commemorates the day in 1531 when the Virgin Mary is said to have appeared on the outskirts of Mexico City.) As Finnegan strolled the town's central square, a fragment of fireworks hit her in the throat. A local doctor told her she would be permanently scarred. "The wound was shaped in the silhouette of [Our Lady of] Guadalupe, and when I walked around Sayulita, the villagers said it was a sign that I was her chosen one," says Finnegan. "Two weeks later, the wound disappeared without a scar—the doctor couldn't believe it!"
What remained was an obsession with the Virgin of Guadalupe. Finnegan began designing key chains, cameos, rings and belt buckles with the Virgin Mother's image, coated in resin and decorated with crystals. In 2004, paparazzi in the United States photographed pop singer Britney Spears wearing one of Finnegan's belts. "It put me on the map," says Finnegan. Other singers—Tim McGraw and Shakira—have sported Finnegan buckles.
Today she employs ten women to help run her jewelry and clothing accessories firm, housed in a restored 18th-century residence near the town center. Her designs, bearing tags with New Age slogans—"Everybody needs a miracle once in a while"—are sold throughout the United States, Europe and Asia under the name Virgins, Saints & Angels.
Jorge Almada, 37, is the grandson of Plutarco Elías Calles, a revolutionary general who served as president of Mexico in the 1920s. Almada and his French-American wife, Anne-Marie Midy, 38, met in New York City. After traveling across Mexico in search of artisan-made furnishings, the couple settled in San Miguel in 200o and began designing furniture to export to the United States and Europe under the Casamidy brand. "There is great artistry throughout Mexico," says Almada. "But we found San Miguel artisans to be the most open-minded and receptive to designer suggestions."
Refugio Rico García, 64, an ironsmith, is among the artisans employed by the couple. He lives and works in the same house in which he was born. The residence, a warren of rooms and tiny patios verdant with potted plants, scales a steep hillside. Photographs of his grandparents, faded to sepia, greet visitors in the foyer. "My grandfather was a potter—[he produced] pots and also sewage pipes, which used to be made of clay," says García. "He was the one who got me interested in becoming an artisan." (García's sons reject the life of an artisan as too lonely and demanding. The elder boy is a migrant worker in Arizona; the younger is a student.)
García labors up to 14 hours a day. The walls and ceiling of his workshop are blackened from the charcoal fires that fuel his forge. Near the furnace stands a heavy wooden table fitted with an iron plate; here he hammers half-molten metal into various shapes. García produces headboards for beds, chandeliers, and chairs and tables fitted with glass tops for Almada and Midy.
The Hotel Oasis, a restored 18th-century house with four guest rooms, features Casamidy tables and chairs in an interior designed by Hong Kong-born Leslie Tung, a San Miguel decorator, and hotel owner Nancy Hooper. A native New Yorker and former Texas resident, Hooper acquired the property in 2006.
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Comments (40)
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The Smithsonian article of December 2010, "Under the Spell of San Miguel de Allende' enraptured many, including me! Only just today, as I go through thousands of Peter Olwyler's photographs in order to archive them, did I find among his hundreds and hundreds of contact sheets the photo of Stirling Dickinson that was used in this article (page 77 in the magazine edition). Others, like the one of Dotty Vidargas jumping her horse used in the online version of additional photographs, was also Peter's work. I'm sure that Smithsonian does everything possible to give credit where it's due, however, they missed giving Peter credit for these photos. So, I thought I'd share with you that I'm excited to find that his work is recognized by other artists and even international magazines for the quality of his work. He never sought much recognition during his life; he was too humble for that. The value of his photography is a record for the Mexican people, a record of a significant turning point when modernization was accelerating change in the Indian and mestizo culture of the Bajio of central Mexico. A record of the expatriates who lived in San Miguel in the late 1950s and on to Peter's death in 1999 in the town he called home for 44 years. I hope you all enjoyed the article, and that you'll remember Peter's amazing ability to capture light through the lens!
Posted by Michael Olwyler on January 10,2013 | 11:53 PM
An article in the April issue of the SUNSET magazine by Peter Fish quotes Fish as saying, "San Miguel can seem almost unbearably beautiful." Personally, I not only bear it, I embrace it. When I enter the Jardin I feel as if I am walking into a Norman Rockwell painting from a 50's LIFE magazine cover. I am a photographer and when I head back to Montana from SMA I especially miss the colors. Color is everywhere. Art is everywhere. It's a must-see! The photos on my website are all San Miguel shots.
Posted by Sharon Lasher on September 6,2011 | 06:43 PM
Great article . I have been in Mexico a few times. I was surprise that in the article was missing the name of CARL PAPPE, a great painter and sculpture more or less he probably arrive to Taxco at the same time or maybe early to Mr. Dicksinson. I have in my house beautiful things from Carl. He had one of the most interesting life, he was a good friend of the best painter from that era.
I know a person that you can contact if you are interesting in knowing more about his life. Patricia Lyon
Posted by patricia lyon on July 27,2011 | 12:01 PM
San Miguel de Allende is a truly magnificent location, and is becoming a locale of choice for American and Canadian expats. There is a highly developed infrastructure that supports a very large and sophisticated English speaking community here. Culture abounds, and there is extremely active social calendar. There are easily forty or more art galleries in town. The climate is among the best, with warm, dry temperatures year round. Real estate here is among the most beautiful in the world, and your dollar can buy you so much more house than in North America. I lead exciting home buyer trips to San Miguel. Join me on one of these exciting tours to view and buy real estate in San Miguel.
http://www.livinginsanmiguel.com
Posted by David on May 28,2011 | 12:14 PM
I have spent time in San Miguel on 5-6 different occasions and fall in love with it all over again every time. The last time I was there was Nov./Dec. 2010 for 5 weeks. I will return again some time within the next year as it is a lovely place. An artist worth visiting and buying is Toller Cranston. He is a former Olympic Skating star and has wonderfully colorful paintings. I have purchased several and when home in Seattle, the lively colors help me make it through the dark, rainy, days. His studio is such a worthwhile visiting place. The people are warm and friendly and all the great restaurants and markets make this a fabulous place to visit and perhaps I may want to live there sometime soon!
Posted by Esther Davis on February 25,2011 | 03:43 PM
It's good to read such a lovely, positive article about Mexico. I, too, feel an attachment to San Miguel de Allende as do so many other people who have lived or visited here. Near perfect weather, color everywhere, music in the air, beautiful flowers, friendly people...it's hard not to like. I occasionally write about San Miguel de Allende on my blog and always add photos. A great time to visit is spring when the jacaranda trees are in bloom. http://katiepickardfawcett.wordpress.com/2010/03/24/mornings-in-san-miguel-de-allende-with-the-jacarandas-in-bloom/
Posted by Katie Pickard Fawcett on January 22,2011 | 11:03 PM
I was born and raised in San Miguel de Allende. My dad was a WWII veteran that retired and went to live in San Miguel. There is an orchid garden at Dickinson's house. The town is safe and amazing. I get to go there every summer and holiday vacations. It is an awesome town to live in.
Posted by Astrid Burke on January 15,2011 | 09:13 PM
Great article on a wonderful place. Here nis another slide show of 50 photos of San Miguel.
http://douglaspeebles.photoshelter.com/gallery/San-Miguel-de-Allende/G0000TNMGWdqApjo/P0000IN4ISjtLhWU
Posted by Douglas Peebles on December 26,2010 | 01:45 PM
As the author of a biography of the Mexican artist, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Siqueiros, Biography of a Revolutionary Artist (Create Space, 2009), and a sometime visitor to San Miguel, I enjoyed reading about the town's history. I also had the privilege to meet and interview Sterling Dickinson, not only for my researach for the book on Siqueiros, but also for another project on American expatriates in Mexico in the 1920s-1940s. He must have been in his 80s then and was still very active in the children's relief and the library services, not to mention his orchid collection, which he donated to the people of Mexico and San Miguel, I recall. He also told me that he started the first little league baseball team in San Miguel, and perhaps, in all of Mexico.
Another outstanding artist and long time resident of San Miguel de Allende was the Canadian artist Leonard Brooks.
Tony, alias D. Anthony White, Ph.D.
Posted by D. Anthony White on December 17,2010 | 03:28 PM
We have been spending our winters in San Miguel for quite a while. I have been a photographer for a good number of years photographing people in their environment doing what the normally do. The basic theme is "Tell me a Story".
In 2004 I exhibited 40 photographs at the Instituto Gallery in an exhibition entitled "Face and Faces of San Miguel". The photographs are intended to tell a story about the people of San Miguel. I would be happy to share some of the images with anyone who would like to see them.
Richard
Posted by Richard Wolfeld on December 15,2010 | 05:16 PM
It is good to read and learn about San Miguel de Allende. I have visited Mexico several times with much appreciation and enjoyment but never to San Miguel. Now that I have learned about another wonderful place enhanced by a friend and her family, I am eager to look forward to the opportunity to visit there hopefully sometime in the near future. Anyone reading this comment should know that I am a ninety year old blessed with health enough to make the journey!
Posted by Richard Smith on December 13,2010 | 04:55 PM
Having spent 60 years in Mexico, I was delighted to read an article by someone like Jonathan Kandell who obviously knows Mexico well. (And who can write.) Jonathan and his family were neighbors back in the 1960s when we lived next door to each other in Polanco. I interviewed his mother some time back for a book of my own, "A Gathering of Fugitives..." Was delighted to learn what he's up to now. Warmest wishes, Diana Zykofsky Anhalt
Posted by Diana Anhalt on December 9,2010 | 04:23 PM
I felt that the article by Mr. Kandell was lightly researched and read more like a piece from a travel magazine.As wonderful as Stirling Dickinson and his contributions were, he was not "the person most responsible for San Miguel's becoming an international art center" Nor was he "co-founder of the Escuela Universitaria de Bellas Artes," nor did 'he' open it only a few months after his arrival in San Miguel" He did't hire Siquieros.The infamous Campanela(who purchased the Universitaria de Bellas Artes from Cossio del Pomar) hired Siquieros.
Dickinson was of enormous support to Felipe Cossio del Pomar, the Peruvian intellectial, artist, art critic, University professor, political activist.However it was Cossio del Pomar who had the dream of opening an art school.It was he who had the vision, passion,and drive, the intellectial and artistic talent, the political and social connections,the financial resources as well as the support of a few others[Stirling Dickinson being the most consistantly valuable]to whom he is careful to give credit.His contacts with some of the prominent artists of the day, some of whom signed on to give classes or lectures, were invaluable promotional additions.Stirling Dickinson provided the essential public relations role of outreach to the community outside Mexico, recruiting students to study at the Bellas Artes and later to the Instituto Allende (where Cossio "invited Stirling to become director under conditions I found acceptable".
As Carlos Alberto Montaner wrote in the second edition of Cossio's memoirs, "Cossio del Pomar en San Miguel de Allende", The direction of San Miguel de Allende's slow tread forward through time was radically altered when Cossio del Pomar arrived ...to detour its destiny, unwittingly changing forever the face of that beautiful Mexican Hillside town,".. an opinion seconded by the last remaining artist from those early days of the Universitaria de Bellas Artes, Leonard Brooks.
Posted by Maline McCalla on December 7,2010 | 12:59 PM
Would you like to see more photos from San Miguel?
Check out:
http://casa-del-campo.smugmug.com/Street-Scenes
Enjoy!
Posted by Joyce Morrell on December 7,2010 | 12:01 PM
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