Jun 102021
 
Art mystery: Where did August Lohr paint this scene?

This scenic view was painted in 1911 by Austrian artist August Lohr (1842-1920). August Lohr : his life and connection to Lake Chapala Lohr lived in Mexico City for almost thirty years. He undertook commissions, including interior decorations and murals, and is known to have traveled to many other locations to paint. This painting (above) […]

Jun 032021
 
John Sinclair visited Ajijic in the 1940s to write "Death in the Claimshack"

New York-born author John Sinclair was already the successful author of a “Western cowboy” novel, published by MacMillan, when he decided to hide out in Ajijic for a few weeks in 1946-47 to write his next novel. According to a newspaper article in December 1946, Sinclair planned to: “write another novel in Ajijic, which is […]

May 272021
 
Austrian landscape artist August Lohr (1842-1920) painted Chapala at the start of the 20th century

August Lohr was an Austrian landscape artist, born in 1842 in Hallein, near Salzburg. Lohr lived and worked in Europe, the U.S. and Mexico. After studying at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Munich, Germany, Lohr initially specialized in painting Alpine scenery. He and his Austrian wife, Franziska Geuhs, had three daughters, Rosina, Elise […]

May 202021
 
H. Owen Reed’s innovative composition “La Fiesta Mexicana” was inspired by Lake Chapala

American composer and conductor H. Owen Reed (1910-2014), a professor at Michigan State University, spent five months in Mexico over the winter of 1948-49. After several weeks in Mexico City and Cuernavaca, with side trips to Taxco and Acapulco, he spent a couple of months in Chapala. This trip, funded by a Guggenheim Fellowship, was […]

May 132021
 
Modernist artist Hari Kidd and his connection to Lake Chapala

Hari (Harry) Matthew Kidd (1899-1964) was a painter, printmaker and writer associated with Philadelphia (Pennsylvania), El Paso (Texas) and Key West (Florida). Kidd was living in Chapala in the mid-1940s when he first met his future wife Edythe Wallach, then living in Ajijic. Kidd had his paintings in a group show at the Villa Montecarlo […]

May 062021
 
The poem "Ajijic" helped Jan Richman win the 1994 Walt Whitman Award

Californian poet and novelist Jan Richman’s poem “Ajijic” was first published in 1994, and included in her first poetry collection, Because the Brain Can Be Talked Into Anything, which won the 1994 Walt Whitman Award from the Academy of American Poets. Born in La Jolla, Richman graduated from Torrey Pines High School before studying English […]

Apr 292021
 
Gerald van de Wiele and his painting entitled "Chapala"

Gerald van de Wiele was 19 years old when he visited Ajijic briefly with his good friend and fellow artist George “Jorge” Fick in 1951. Sixty-six years later, and despite never having returned to the area, van de Wiele completed an abstract painting entitled “Chapala.” What were the circumstances of van de Wiele’s original visit, […]

Apr 222021
 
Thriller by Louis Charbonneau captures the essence of Ajijic in the 1970s

Journalist and author Louis Henry Charbonneau (1924-2017) includes numerous passages about Ajijic in his book The Lair, first published in 1980. Presumably Charbonneau visited Ajijic in the mid-1970s. (If you can supply any details about his time in Ajijic, please get in touch) Louis Henry Charbonneau, Jr. was born in Detroit, Michigan, on 20 January […]

Apr 082021
 
Salomón Zepeda, the elusive author of "La Ondina de Chapala"

When I first wrote about Salomón Zepeda several years ago, I confessed that my research had failed to unearth anything of substance about him, despite the fact that he published a Spanish-language novel set at Lake Chapala in 1951. Salomón Zepeda was the author of La Ondina de Chapala (“The Water Nymph of Chapala”), a […]

Apr 012021
 
Do you recognize the subject of this portrait by Tink Strother?

Tink Strother (1919-2007) was, an acclaimed portrait painter who lived in Ajijic from 1961 to 1963. As Peggy Kelly wrote in her obituary of Strother for the Santa Paula News, Strother’s portraits reflect “not only the physical likeness of the subject but also their personality and soul.” In Ajijic, Tink Strother met Colombian artist Carlos […]

Mar 252021
 
American novelist Sandra Scofield wrote two books set in Mexico

Sandra Scofield’s first novel, Gringa, was based on the author’s extensive travels in Mexico in the 1960s. The novel is set in the violent turbulence of 1968 when, a few weeks before the opening of the Olympic Games in Mexico City, hundreds of students protesting in Tlatelolco Plaza were massacred by soldiers. The “gringa” of […]

Feb 252021
 
The Illuminated Elephants visited Ajijic in 1982

Of all the extraordinary individuals and groups visiting Ajijic during “hippie times”, one of the most curious was the group called The Illuminated Elephants (Los elefantes iluminados). The Illuminated Elephants visited Ajijic in 1982. The group, a traveling theatre “family” that had once been known as The Hathi Babas, adopted elements of the hippie movement, […]

Feb 182021
 
George Seaton: the first guide book writer to mention Ixtlahuacán de los Membrillos?

Was George Seaton the first author to include mention of Ixtlahuacán de los Membrillos in an English-language guidebook to Mexico? When I was recently re-reading George Seaton’s What to See and Do in Mexico, first published in 1939, a one-line mention of Ixtlahuacán de los Membrillos jumped off the page. I can’t recall any earlier […]

Feb 112021
 
Esther Henderson and Chuck Abbott photographed Lake Chapala in the 1940s

Esther Henderson and her husband, Chuck Abbott, spent six weeks in Mexico taking photographs for Arizona Highways magazine in the early 1940s. They were major contributors to the magazine for decades. They published at least three photographs related to Lake Chapala in Arizona Highways. The first two were black and white images in the September […]

Jan 282021
 
Watercolorist Xavier Perez Aguilar was the first president of the Ajijic Society of the Arts

Xavier Pérez Aguilar became well known in Ajijic in the 1980s and 1990s for his fine watercolor landscapes and portraits. Pérez was a very talented and versatile artist who was also known for his fine oil paintings, sculptures and woodworking. According to a “Profile of the Artist” in El Ojo del Lago, Javier Pérez Aguilar […]

Jan 142021
 
Herb McLaughlin photographed Chapala in about 1950

Herb McLaughlin was a prolific commercial photographer who began his career in Illinois before moving to Arizona. These images of the church and waterfront in Chapala were published in Arizona Highways in November 1950. Herbert (“Herb”) McLaughlin was born in Chicago, Illinois, on 30 July 1918 and died in Phoenix on 19 February 1991. He […]

Jan 072021
 
Carol Shepherd McClain researched birth practices in Ajijic in the 1960s

It’s not often that obstetrics makes it into my random musings about the artists and authors associated with Lake Chapala. But there’s a first time for everything! Starting in the 1960s, Carol Shepherd McClain, a young California researcher, visited Ajijic several times in order to investigate “traditional” birthing practices in the village. McClain’s supervisor at […]

Dec 312020
 
Herbert Johnson's photos: Central Mexico (1940s)

Herbert Johnson (1877-1960) and his wife, Georgette (1893-1975), settled in Ajijic in December 1939. Shortly after Herbert died in Ajijic in 1960, Georgette returned to live in the UK. These photographs come from a photo album that once belonged to Georgette. For the story of its rediscovery by historian Dr Kimberly Lamay Licursi in an […]

Dec 172020
 
Alfredo Navarro España exhibited at the "Third Annual Painting Show" in Chapala in 1948

The talented and versatile artist Alfredo Navarro España was a photographer and painter who first exhibited in Chapala in 1948 and was most active during the 1950s. One of his photographs of fishing nets at Lake Chapala was published by Arizona Highways in 1950, along with several of his drawings and paintings related to Mexican […]

Dec 102020
 
John Upton: a sneak peek into a translator's notebook

John Upton, the translator of poets such as Pablo Neruda and Miguel de Unamuno, and of several seminal works of Spanish literature, lived (off and on) in Ajijic from 1949 to the early 1990s. Translator and educator John Upton moved to Ajijic in 1949 In the early 1950s, Upton submitted several colorful pieces about Ajijic […]

Dec 032020
 
Herbert Johnson's photos: Horsemanship and bullfights (1940s)

Herbert Johnson (1877-1960) and his wife, Georgette (1893-1975), settled in Ajijic in December 1939. Shortly after Herbert died in Ajijic in 1960, Georgette returned to live in the UK. These photographs come from a photo album that once belonged to Georgette. For the story of its rediscovery by historian Dr Kimberly Lamay Licursi in an estate […]

Nov 262020
 
Jesús Acal Ilisaliturri (1856-1902) and his poem "El Chapala"

Jesus Acal Ilisaliturri (sometimes “Ilizaliturri”) was born in Guadalajara on 16 August 1856 and died in the city on 25 September 1902. Acal’s parents were Ignacio Acal Ilizaliturri and Josefa Ilizaliturri. Acal left school after secundaria and was a founding member of two literary circles: “La Aurora Literaria” and “La Bohemia Jalisciense.” Acal, who married […]

Nov 122020
 
Non-fiction author Joseph Cottler first visited Ajijic in the 1950s

Educator, writer and musician Joseph (“Joe”) Cottler and his wife, Betty, first drove south from Philadelphia to Ajijic in about 1957. They returned to the village several times. About 20 years later, following Betty’s death, Joe brought his second wife, Harriet Linton Barr, to Lake Chapala. Cottler, a high school teacher, mostly wrote biographies of […]

Nov 052020
 
Herbert Johnson's photos: Archaeological Sites (1940s)

Herbert Johnson (1877-1960) and his wife, Georgette (1893-1975), settled in Ajijic in December 1939. Shortly after Herbert died in Ajijic in 1960, Georgette returned to live in the UK. These photographs come from a photo album that once belonged to Georgette. For the story of its rediscovery by historian Dr Kimberly Lamay Licursi in an […]