Postcard from Oaxaca, Mexico: More street art and signs of protests

Randomly combining more photos of street art encountered during our month in Oaxaca with signs of protesters. Sometimes the messages seem the same.

The pulse of everyday comings and goings downtown seem barely affected by the those encamped in the middle of the Zocalo round the clock. Garlands of holiday decorations encircled graffiti. Band concerts continued. El Dia de los Rabanos went on much as planned, artistic displays surrounding the tents in their midst. Radish carvings were replaced by the return of the authorized shoeshine stands, bearing their own messages of peace and tolerance preached by the city.

But no matter how lively the scene, the spirits of the missing 43 haunt the city.

Postcard from Oaxaca, Mexico: Snapshots of Street Art

Stucco walls, mainly outside the historic center of Oaxaca, often become canvases for artists. These represent a few we have encountered during recent meanderings.

Postcard from San Cristobal de las Casas, Chiapas, Mexico: Sweeping up the photographic crumbs

Street art and graffiti. Halloween. Fashion. Textiles. Museums. Street scenes. And the 43.

Random leftovers from our two-week stay in San Cristobal de las Casas.

It had been three decades since our earlier visit to this colonial city; we won’t wait long to return.