The Early Santo Revival in Albuquerque: Santero Luis
Aragón
by Thomas J.
Steele, S.J.
In his 1964 book Santos, the great scholar George Kubler
suggested that traditional New Mexican santos were the
world's last example of "the accumulated traditions of
Christian imagery" that we know as Medieval art, and that
the death of the last traditional santero therefore
marked "the end of a world of religious expression that
opened with the Middle Ages more than a thousand years
ago."1
In my 1974 book Santos and Saints, I stated that I
thought that Luis Aragón of Albuquerque, a friend of mine
in his lifetime, was the last surviving traditional
santero in New Mexico and therefore the whole world's
last Medieval artist. I have later discovered a few
merely technical reasons for awarding that particular
spot in history to Juan Ysillo Maéz of San Luis, Costilla
County, Colorado.2 But I continue to feel strongly that I
owe a tribute of appreciation to Luis Aragón, and on the
verge of the twentieth anniversary of his death, I wish
to share my memories of this fine man.
Luis Aragón was born at Cherry Valley Lake, New Mexico,
just below the confluence of the Mora and Sapelló rivers,
on 19 August 1899, in the same birth as a twin sister,
María Juana de la Cruz, who died in 1979. His parents,
Juan de la Cruz Aragón and María Melitona Gonzáles de
Aragón, chose as his padrinos Serapio Baca and Emma Hern
de Baca, and on 10 September the parents and the two sets
of padrinos took María Juana and Luis for baptism to
Father Maurice Olier at Sacred Heart Church, Watrous.
By the time of the 1920 census, "Louis" had become a
tipple coal worker in the mining town of Dawson in Colfax
County; he and his elder brother Modesto lived with
Serapio and Emma Baca, Luis's padrinos - and by a "small
world" coincidence, they lived right next door to the
Croatian family Starkovich, forebears of a Regis
University student I taught during the fall of 1994.
In 1927, Luis married and moved to Ilfeld, a few miles
west of San José del Vado in the Pecos Valley, but when
his wife Felipita Chávez and their infant both died in
childbed the next year, he seemed to lose his sense of
direction. He got to drinking at times, became something
of a loner, and never remarried; but he was a kind and
humble man, and people who met him always liked him very
much. During the Depression he joined the C.C.C., but for
the most part he farmed and did odd jobs and seasonal
work in and around the town of Pecos until he moved to
Albuquerque several years after World War II. In the
mid-1960s, as he got older, he moved in with his niece
Louise Gonzáles, his twin sister's daughter, in
Albuquerque's North Valley near Osuna Road.
Don Luis had whittled and worked with wood throughout his
life, and at this time he began to spend a lot of his
time carving small figures in white pine and red cedar,
using the natural colors of the unstained bare wood to
enhance the carved shapes. It was a plain and candid
style of his own. Only occasionally would he add small
stones, bits of wire, and pieces of leatherette or
stiffened and tinted cloth to achieve certain effects.
Many of his figures involved animals - Saint George's,
Saint Martin's, and Santiago's war-horses, the donkey
that Mary rode during the Flight into Egypt, the oxen
that pulled Saint Isidore's plow, the lamb in Santa Inéz
del Campo's arms, the ox and ass of the Nativity scene.
At times he made not santos but wonderful covered wagons
and simple animal figures, and having been a farmer he
knew the shapes of animals well and reproduced them very
convincingly.3
He also carved such standard santero subjects as Nuestra
Señora del Rosario, San Miguel Arcángel, San Francisco
with birds, and San Antonio de Padua, and he pioneered
such rare ones as San Francisco de Asís standing under
the cross from which Christ reaches down his right arm to
embrace him. Only a few of Aragón's figures are
polychromed - painted in various colors. During the
Depression era, the W.P.A. Artists' Project encouraged
polychromed santos, but santos in the tradition of the
Santa Fe revival led by Frank Applegate the artist, Mary
Austin the writer, and the Spanish Colonial Arts Society
were rarely gessoed or painted. Though Applegate made
polychromed bultos himself, he was afraid that his
amateur protegés would lack the appropriate restraint in
applying their colors.4
In Luis Aragón's earlier years of carving his works were
usually eight to ten inches in height, but during the
period before his death, as his eyesight got worse, they
grew to twelve or fourteen inches. The Jesuit Community
at Regis University commissioned perhaps the largest pair
of pieces he did, a crucified Christ and a Dolorosa, each
figure twenty inches tall, for the Sangre de Cristo
Chapel.
Don Luis sold his pieces at first through the Wood and
Iron Shop in the Ambrosio Armijo complex on Old Town
Plaza and later through Ray and Billy Griego's shops at
Lomas and San Pasquale and on North Fourth. His prices
were unusually modest for such good work, and so his
figures found their way into various private collections.
In addition to the several pieces at Regis, there are
four pieces in the Julián García Collection at the
Albuquerque Museum and five in the Museum of
International Folk Art in Santa Fe.
Luis Aragón died 18 March 1977. After a Requiem Mass on
Tuesday, 21 March 1977 in Our Lady of the Nativity Church
in Alameda, he was buried in Calvary Cemetery; the
pallbearers were family members Margarito Córdova,
Lorenzo Córdova, Benny Chávez, Modesto Borrego, Demetrio
Gonzáles, and Henry García. Dr. Clyde Tomlin, M.D., a
very special friend, was an honorary pallbearer.
Don Luis found peace in the santos he carved, and through
them he communicated that peace to many others; may he
forever rest in the peace of the Lord.
ENDNOTES
1 George Kubler, Santos (Fort Worth: Amon Carter Museum
of Western Art, 1964), p. 8. John Kessell, in a lecture
of 2 September 1982, remarked that the 1598 founding of
the Spanish colony in New Mexico with an encomienda
system was the last action of medieval Europe.
2 Thomas J. Steele, S.J., Santos and Saints (Albuquerque:
Calvin Horn Publishers, 1974; Santa Fe: Ancient City
Press, 1982), p. 213; in Santos and Saints (Santa Fe:
Ancient City Press, 1994), pp. 125-28, I give some
reasons for changing my mind. Pages 164 of the earlier
edition and 54 of the totally rewritten edition carry
illustrations of the Luis Aragón San Jorge in the Regis
University Collection of New Mexican Santos, one of many
San Jorges he made, which was modeled directly upon the
San Jorge in Willard Hougland, Santos: A Primitive
American Art (New York: Merle Armitage, 1946), p. 17.
Fred Birner of Denver is my source for updated
information about Maéz.
3 William Wroth, Hispanic Crafts of the Southwest
(Colorado Springs: Taylor Museum, 1977), p. 97. The photo
reproduced on that page shows Luis Aragón holding a copy
of the 1974 edition of Santos and Saints which Dr. Clyde
Tomlin, M.D., had given him; it is opened to one of the
pages that illustrated his work.
4 Charles L. Briggs, The Wood Carvers of Córdova
(Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1980), pp. 53,
203.
Jesuit Father Tom Steele is the author of Santos and
Saints (now in its 3rd edition from Ancient City Press).
Father Steele is the author of numerous other articles
and books on the art and culture of New Mexico.
First published in Tradicion Revista, Volume 1, No. 2,
Summer 1996.
Copyright 2002. May not be reproduced in any form without
written permission.