Xilitla, San Luis Potosí, Mexico

Edward James' Mexican Delirium


Heart Arches
Bows designed by Edward James.
Xilitla Panoramic
Xilitla Street and the house where Plutarch Gastelum lived
musical wall
A painting of a violinist decorates a facade of the historic center of Xilitla.
The Cinematograph
One of Edward James' strange architectural projects.
Xilitla's Finger
A geological whim above Xilitla.
Refreshing Arc
Arch that frames a small waterfall in Las Pozas.
Musical Mural II
Don Eduardo's house
Unstable pillars of Edward James' supposed house.
avocado bathtub
A conceptual bathtub receives water from a waterfall.
Flower
Another pictorial sculpture from the surrealist garden.
3-story house (which could be 5)
Another house, another delusion of Don Eduardo.
Honeycomb Screen
Structural separator of Las Pozas in the form of honeycombs.
Gateway to the Path of the 7 Deadly Sins
A portico to a path flanked by stone serpents.
Sotano de Las Golondrinas
One of several deep caves around Xilitla.
Serpent of Sins
Vertical snakes, each one symbolizing a sin.
Cascata
The end of a long waterfall in Las Pozas.
parakeets
Large parakeets fly over the basement of las Golondrinas, around Xilitla.
In the rainforest of Xilitla, the restless mind of poet Edward James has twinned an eccentric home garden. Today, Xilitla is lauded as an Eden of the Surreal.

Salvador Dali had not yet seen it all when he described Edward James as “crazier than all the surrealists put together”. We, live, only enjoyed his garden in Las Pozas, in Xilitla. It was enough for us to come to an agreement.

From the moment we arrived at Xilitla, which James fell in love with, we felt a lush eccentricity in the air, sublimated in the mist that covered the valleys on the eastern slope of the Sierra Gorda and which seemed to snuggle the village for the night.

As abrupt as it had spread, the mist fled in the company of dawn.

When we woke up, the forested valley ahead was already showing its OK-shaped finger detached from the crest of the mountains, against the azure blue.

We crossed the center of the city, given over to the punishing hustle of any Monday morning. Down successive steep slopes, not only do we escape the confusion, but we also find ourselves surrounded by a chlorophyllin forest, with great arboreal intensity and in which squirrels and screeching birds hopped around.

We had spent four months in Costa Rica under the spell of Moctezuma's oropendula song.

Less than a year later, their reunion intensified Xilitla's inevitable charm, the same seduction for the wild that left Edward James intoxicated, at a time when the village was a sample of what it is today and the jungle almost swallowed it up.

The English Aristocratic Origin of Edward James

Edward James was born in a mansion in West Dean, a village in the English county of West Sussex. He was the only son (he had four older sisters) of William James and a high-profile Scotswoman, Evelyn Forbes.

From his father and uncle, James came to inherit the palace and the fortune generated by his grandfather, the wealthy merchant Daniel James.

That fortune allowed him to have an education in the best English colleges (including Oxford) and contacts and opportunities for artistic expression available only to a privileged few.

In 1930, at the age of 27, James married Tilly Losch, an Austrian dancer and choreographer to whom he dedicated several productions. After four years of marriage, James accused his wife of infidelity. Tilly Losch contested in court that her husband was homosexual.

Before the law, Edward James' sexual orientation remained unproven. Divorced, James saw his freedom reinforced, always in communion with talented nuclei of the European aristocracy.

An admirer of irreverent artistic expression, he praised and, with his financial freedom and voluntarism, supported the emerging Surrealism in the aftermath of the 1st World War.

The movement emerged as a conceptual reaction to the bourgeois, conservative, ostentatious and boastful values ​​that many thinkers and artists claimed had led to the military conflict, until then, the deadliest in history.

The Link to Surrealism and Migration to Post-War America

In this context, from 1938 onwards, with World War II already in the offing, James became an admirer and patron of Salvador Dali. Dali, in turn, deepened James' involvement in Surrealism.

He introduced him to Magritte. As James' guest, the Belgian portrayed him. Edward James appears in two works by Magritte, “Not to Be Reproduced"and "The Pleasure Principle: Portrait of Edward James".

In 1940, with the war in full swing, James crossed the Atlantic. she landed in Taos, an unlikely stop for the United States, a town of Anasazi indigenous origin, Hispanic colonial, adobe and recently transformed into an artists' colony.

A few years later, from New Mexico, he crossed the border of the Rio Bravo. According to art historian Irene Herner, in one of his wanderings through Mexico, James needed to send a telegram.

He entered the telegraph desk in Cuernavaca, in the Mexican state of Morelos.

The Relationship for Life with Plutarch Gastélum

There he was dazzled by Plutarch Gastélum “a proud northerner, son of a family of ranchers from Álamos, Sonora,

handsome, tall, with an athletic build and who took advantage of telegram deliveries to train for his fledgling boxer career.”

In 1945, World War II was finally over. James was looking for a place in the Americas where he could resettle, away from the earthly and ideological rubble of the Old World.

He convinced Plutarch to be his guide. Two years later, aboard a red Lincoln Continental, they arrive together in Xilitla, in the southeast of the state of San Luis Potosi.

Still according to Irene Herner, “Plutarch always remained an elusive, disdainful lover, and the prospect of marrying another man seemed to him like hell”. However, Plutarch signed several letters to Edward James as Palú.

It is also said that when they were bathing in a river, a cloud of butterflies enveloped them. James saw magic in the air.

Such magic would serve as an inspiration for what would turn out to be his "Eden's Garden" particular, extended to Xilitla and its surroundings, where later on he would often be seen walking, as God had brought him into the world.

The Simple Life in Pueblo picturesque of Xilitla

It took nearly six years for Edwards to convince Plutarch to settle in Xilitla in order to live out their shared fantasy. In 1952, at last, Plutarch acceded.

He had become fond of the simple life and the people. He loved to bathe in the streams with his friends and the children of the town who insisted on teaching how to dive.

Four years later, Plutarch married Marina Llamazares, daughter of a Spanish merchant, in a marriage sponsored by Edwards and with a lavish banquet paid for by him.

Plutarch and Marina would have four children.

In that time, James had seen his British family ties cut. At the same time, Mexican law prevented foreigners from owning property in Mexico. James made Plutarch his partner.

In his name, they bought the old coffee plantations bathed by waterfalls and streams from a Colonel José Castillo, whom Edwards, out of confusion, referred to as a general.

In these lands of almost nine hectares, they developed a plantation with about five thousand orchids and dozens of wild birds.

The Orchid Plantation from which a Sculptural “Garden of Eden” sprouted

In 1962, a strong hail destroyed it. James persuaded Plutarch to erect something perennial. They disagreed as much as possible about what it would be. Plutarch claimed a network of paths in which he would travel through the jungle in his jeep.

Surreptitiously, Edwards obtained Plutarch's approval to erect stairs that served only to stop the jeep.

For thirty-six long years, Edwards and Plutarch, with Marina's enthusiastic participation, dedicated themselves to providing "The pools” of unusual structures. A total of twenty-seven.

As we climb and wind our way, in the footsteps of the young guide Fidel Cardenas, we discover the successive surrealist works of “Las Pozas.

The Successive Unseen Works of Edward James

The first one we come across is the “Cinematograph” that James thought with the function of “projecting” to his visiting friends, through an arch, the glorious scenery of the jungle.

It crowned it with a “Stairway to Heaven” which, as the name suggests, leads nowhere.Sculptural Garden, Edward James, Xilitla, Huasteca Potosina, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, CinematographerNearby, Fidel shows us the “Don Eduardo's Cabin” and the various houses in which James came to keep the wild animals that kept him company, ocelots, snakes, deer, flamingos, parakeets, among others.

We passed the elegant but homeless”Bamboo Palace”, consistent with the philosophy cherished by James of living as much as possible without walls and which he preferred to call “Tower of Hope".

It appears detached from the slope between heliconias and soaked bromeliads. Based on a base that looks like a whale, an airplane cabin or a submarine, some say it is Jules Verne's “Nautilus”.

A little above, taking advantage of the flow of a stream, we see a natural jacuzzi bathtub installed in the shape of half an avocado.

Houses that never got to be Bem Casas

At the opposite end of the “Cabana de Don Eduardo”, we find the “Cabana de Don Eduardo”.Three-Story House That Could Be Five”. James designed it to entertain friends.

In particular, the family that owns the famous Irish Guinness beer, with whom he had a good relationship.

He flanked her with more stairs aimed at the sky.

Everything is so precariously interconnected that, in order to avoid falls or collapses, the Pedro y Elena Hernández Foundation, which after the death of Edward James began to manage “The pools” was forced to prohibit access, previously abusive, to visitors.

We are still amazed at the large flowers, even if made of cement, with crowns that remind us of the orchids that James and Plutarch lost.

And with a kind of screen that emulates the combs of beehives.

In the descending direction, we cross another portal of your “Garden of Eden”.

Pioneer tourists christened it the “Queen's Ring”. We see an apple that gives way to the “Path of the Seven Deadly Sins”, flanked by the respective serpents.

Edward James's Obsession with Surreal in the Natural

It frustrated Edward James that his creations were too linear. Whenever this happened, he would have it destroyed and dictated new construction from scratch. Each and every restart satisfied the workers.

Employed by Edwards, the tasks came in a cascade and were better paid than in other odd jobs. As if that were not enough, in full nature and in conviviality, they were more pleasant to fulfill.

James Edwards traveled to and from Europe where he maintained his artistic circle of friends. He often took with him the telegraphist-turned-artist Gastélum and his wife Marina, who could no longer dispense with the bohemian incursions into the Old World.

So it was, until, in 1972, Plutarch found himself struggling with Parkinson's disease, a probable consequence of his boxing years. James traveled to Europe several times in search of a cure.

Despite Parkinson's disease, Plutarch lived six years longer than Edward James (died in 1984) and seven longer than Marina (1983).

James and Plutarch bequeathed Xilitla's surrealist Eden forever.

 

How to Book Your Visit to Xilitla and Huasteca Potosina: 

Izamal, Mexico

The Holy, Yellow and Beautiful Mexican City

Until the arrival of the Spanish conquerors, Izamal was a center of worship for the supreme Mayan god Itzamná and Kinich Kakmó, the one of the sun. Gradually, the invaders razed the various pyramids of the natives. In its place, they built a large Franciscan convent and a prolific colonial houses, with the same solar tone in which the now Catholic city shines.
Campeche, Mexico

Campeche Upon Can Pech

As was the case throughout Mexico, the conquerors arrived, saw and won. Can Pech, the Mayan village, had almost 40 inhabitants, palaces, pyramids and an exuberant urban architecture, but in 1540 there were less than 6 natives. Over the ruins, the Spaniards built Campeche, one of the most imposing colonial cities in the Americas.
Tulum, Mexico

The Most Caribbean of the Mayan Ruins

Built by the sea as an exceptional outpost decisive for the prosperity of the Mayan nation, Tulum was one of its last cities to succumb to Hispanic occupation. At the end of the XNUMXth century, its inhabitants abandoned it to time and to an impeccable coastline of the Yucatan peninsula.
Mérida, Mexico

The Most Exuberant of Meridas

In 25 BC, the Romans founded Emerita Augusta, capital of Lusitania. The Spanish expansion generated three other Méridas in the world. Of the four, the Yucatan capital is the most colorful and lively, resplendent with Hispanic colonial heritage and multi-ethnic life.
Cobá to Pac Chen, Mexico

From the Ruins to the Mayan Homes

On the Yucatan Peninsula, the history of the second largest indigenous Mexican people is intertwined with their daily lives and merges with modernity. In Cobá, we went from the top of one of its ancient pyramids to the heart of a village of our times.
San Cristobal de Las Casas, Mexico

The Home Sweet Home of Mexican Social Conscience

Mayan, mestizo and Hispanic, Zapatista and tourist, country and cosmopolitan, San Cristobal has no hands to measure. In it, Mexican and expatriate backpacker visitors and political activists share a common ideological demand.
Campeche, Mexico

A Bingo so playful that you play with puppets

On Friday nights, a group of ladies occupy tables at Independencia Park and bet on trifles. The tiniest prizes come out to them in combinations of cats, hearts, comets, maracas and other icons.

Mexico City, Mexico

mexican soul

With more than 20 million inhabitants in a vast metropolitan area, this megalopolis marks, from its heart of zócalo, the spiritual pulse of a nation that has always been vulnerable and dramatic.

Champoton, Mexico

Rodeo Under Sombreros

Champoton, in Campeche, hosts a fair honored by the Virgén de La Concepción. O rodeo Mexican under local sombreros reveals the elegance and skill of the region's cowboys.
San Cristóbal de las Casas a Campeche, Mexico

A Relay of Faith

The Catholic equivalent of Our Lady of Fátima, Our Lady of Guadalupe moves and moves Mexico. Its faithful cross the country's roads, determined to bring the proof of their faith to the patroness of the Americas.
Campeche, Mexico

200 Years of Playing with Luck

At the end of the XNUMXth century, the peasants surrendered to a game introduced to cool the fever of cash cards. Today, played almost only for Abuelites, lottery little more than a fun place.
Yucatan, Mexico

The End of the End of the World

The announced day passed but the End of the World insisted on not arriving. In Central America, today's Mayans watched and put up with incredulity all the hysteria surrounding their calendar.
Yucatan, Mexico

The Sidereal Murphy's Law That Doomed the Dinosaurs

Scientists studying the crater caused by a meteorite impact 66 million years ago have come to a sweeping conclusion: it happened exactly over a section of the 13% of the Earth's surface susceptible to such devastation. It is a threshold zone on the Mexican Yucatan peninsula that a whim of the evolution of species allowed us to visit.
Uxmal, Yucatan, Mexico

The Mayan Capital That Piled It Up To Collapse

The term Uxmal means built three times. In the long pre-Hispanic era of dispute in the Mayan world, the city had its heyday, corresponding to the top of the Pyramid of the Diviner at its heart. It will have been abandoned before the Spanish Conquest of the Yucatan. Its ruins are among the most intact on the Yucatan Peninsula.
Barrancas del Cobre (Copper Canyon), Chihuahua, Mexico

The Deep Mexico of the Barrancas del Cobre

Without warning, the Chihuahua highlands give way to endless ravines. Sixty million geological years have furrowed them and made them inhospitable. The Rarámuri indigenous people continue to call them home.
Creel to Los Mochis, Mexico

The Barrancas del Cobre & the CHEPE Iron Horse

The Sierra Madre Occidental's relief turned the dream into a construction nightmare that lasted six decades. In 1961, at last, the prodigious Chihuahua al Pacifico Railroad was opened. Its 643km cross some of the most dramatic scenery in Mexico.
chihuahua, Mexico

¡Ay Chihuahua !

Mexicans have adapted this expression as one of their favorite manifestations of surprise. While we wander through the capital of the homonymous state of the Northwest, we often exclaim it.
Chichen Itza, Yucatan, Mexico

On the Edge of the Cenote, at the Heart of the Mayan Civilization

Between the XNUMXth and XNUMXth centuries AD, Chichen Itza stood out as the most important city in the Yucatan Peninsula and the vast Mayan Empire. If the Spanish Conquest precipitated its decline and abandonment, modern history has consecrated its ruins a World Heritage Site and a Wonder of the World.
Real de Catorce, San Luis Potosí, Mexico

From New Spain Lode to Mexican Pueblo Mágico

At the beginning of the XNUMXth century, it was one of the mining towns that guaranteed the most silver to the Spanish Crown. A century later, the silver had been devalued in such a way that Real de Catorce was abandoned. Its history and the peculiar scenarios filmed by Hollywood have made it one of the most precious villages in Mexico.
Real de Catorce, San Luis Potosí, Mexico

The Depreciation of Silver that Led to that of the Pueblo (Part II)

With the turn of the XNUMXth century, the value of the precious metal hit bottom. From a prodigious town, Real de Catorce became a ghost. Still discovering, we explore the ruins of the mines at their origin and the charm of the Pueblo resurrected.
Amboseli National Park, Mount Kilimanjaro, Normatior Hill
Safari
Amboseli National Park, Kenya

A Gift from the Kilimanjaro

The first European to venture into these Masai haunts was stunned by what he found. And even today, large herds of elephants and other herbivores roam the pastures irrigated by the snow of Africa's biggest mountain.
Braga or Braka or Brakra in Nepal
Annapurna (circuit)
Annapurna Circuit: 6th – Braga, Nepal

The Ancient Nepal of Braga

Four days of walking later, we slept at 3.519 meters from Braga (Braka). Upon arrival, only the name is familiar to us. Faced with the mystical charm of the town, arranged around one of the oldest and most revered Buddhist monasteries on the Annapurna circuit, we continued our journey there. acclimatization with ascent to Ice Lake (4620m).
Visitors at Talisay Ruins, Negros Island, Philippines
Architecture & Design
Talisay City, Philippines

Monument to a Luso-Philippine Love

At the end of the 11th century, Mariano Lacson, a Filipino farmer, and Maria Braga, a Portuguese woman from Macau, fell in love and got married. During the pregnancy of what would be her 2th child, Maria succumbed to a fall. Destroyed, Mariano built a mansion in his honor. In the midst of World War II, the mansion was set on fire, but the elegant ruins that endured perpetuate their tragic relationship.
Adventure
Volcanoes

Mountains of Fire

More or less prominent ruptures in the earth's crust, volcanoes can prove to be as exuberant as they are capricious. Some of its eruptions are gentle, others prove annihilating.
Correspondence verification
Ceremonies and Festivities
Rovaniemi, Finland

From the Finnish Lapland to the Arctic. A Visit to the Land of Santa

Fed up with waiting for the bearded old man to descend down the chimney, we reverse the story. We took advantage of a trip to Finnish Lapland and passed through its furtive home.
Sanahin Cable Car, Armenia
Cities
Alaverdi, Armenia

A Cable Car Called Ensejo

The top of the Debed River Gorge hides the Armenian monasteries of Sanahin and Haghpat and terraced Soviet apartment blocks. Its bottom houses the copper mine and smelter that sustains the city. Connecting these two worlds is a providential suspended cabin in which the people of Alaverdi count on traveling in the company of God.
Meal
World Food

Gastronomy Without Borders or Prejudice

Each people, their recipes and delicacies. In certain cases, the same ones that delight entire nations repel many others. For those who travel the world, the most important ingredient is a very open mind.
Maiko during cultural show in Nara, Geisha, Nara, Japan
Culture
Kyoto, Japan

Survival: The Last Geisha Art

There have been almost 100 but times have changed and geishas are on the brink of extinction. Today, the few that remain are forced to give in to Japan's less subtle and elegant modernity.
combat arbiter, cockfighting, philippines
Sport
Philippines

When Only Cock Fights Wake Up the Philippines

Banned in much of the First World, cockfighting thrives in the Philippines where they move millions of people and pesos. Despite its eternal problems, it is the sabong that most stimulates the nation.
Princess Yasawa Cruise, Maldives
Traveling
Maldives

Cruise the Maldives, among Islands and Atolls

Brought from Fiji to sail in the Maldives, Princess Yasawa has adapted well to new seas. As a rule, a day or two of itinerary is enough for the genuineness and delight of life on board to surface.
shadow of success
Ethnic
Champoton, Mexico

Rodeo Under Sombreros

Champoton, in Campeche, hosts a fair honored by the Virgén de La Concepción. O rodeo Mexican under local sombreros reveals the elegance and skill of the region's cowboys.
ice tunnel, black gold route, Valdez, Alaska, USA
Got2Globe Photo Portfolio
Got2Globe Portfolio

Sensations vs Impressions

Cilaos, Reunion Island, Casario Piton des Neiges
History
Cilaos, Reunion Island

Refuge under the roof of the Indian Ocean

Cilaos appears in one of the old green boilers on the island of Réunion. It was initially inhabited by outlaw slaves who believed they were safe at that end of the world. Once made accessible, nor did the remote location of the crater prevent the shelter of a village that is now peculiar and flattered.
Fluvial coming and going
Islands
Iriomote, Japan

The Small Tropical Japanese Amazon of Iriomote

Impenetrable rainforests and mangroves fill Iriomote under a pressure cooker climate. Here, foreign visitors are as rare as the yamaneko, an elusive endemic lynx.
Oulu Finland, Passage of Time
Winter White
Oulu, Finland

Oulu: an Ode to Winter

Located high in the northeast of the Gulf of Bothnia, Oulu is one of Finland's oldest cities and its northern capital. A mere 220km from the Arctic Circle, even in the coldest months it offers a prodigious outdoor life.
Almada Negreiros, Roça Saudade, Sao Tome
Literature
Saudade, São Tomé, São Tomé and Principe

Almada Negreiros: From Saudade to Eternity

Almada Negreiros was born in April 1893, on a farm in the interior of São Tomé. Upon discovering his origins, we believe that the luxuriant exuberance in which he began to grow oxygenated his fruitful creativity.
travel western australia, surfspotting
Nature
Perth to Albany, Australia

Across the Far West of Australia

Few people worship evasion like the aussies. With southern summer in full swing and the weekend just around the corner, Perthians are taking refuge from the urban routine in the nation's southwest corner. For our part, without compromise, we explore endless Western Australia to its southern limit.
Sheki, Autumn in the Caucasus, Azerbaijan, Autumn Homes
Autumn
Sheki, Azerbaijan

autumn in the caucasus

Lost among the snowy mountains that separate Europe from Asia, Sheki is one of Azerbaijan's most iconic towns. Its largely silky history includes periods of great harshness. When we visited it, autumn pastels added color to a peculiar post-Soviet and Muslim life.
Tibetan heights, altitude sickness, mountain prevent to treat, travel
Natural Parks

Altitude Sickness: the Grievances of Getting Mountain Sick

When traveling, it happens that we find ourselves confronted with the lack of time to explore a place as unmissable as it is high. Medicine and previous experiences with Altitude Evil dictate that we should not risk ascending in a hurry.
Van at Jossingfjord, Magma Geopark, Norway
UNESCO World Heritage
Magma Geopark, Norway

A Somehow Lunar Norway

If we went back to the geological ends of time, we would find southwestern Norway filled with huge mountains and a burning magma that successive glaciers would shape. Scientists have found that the mineral that predominates there is more common on the Moon than on Earth. Several of the scenarios we explore in the region's vast Magma Geopark seem to be taken from our great natural satellite.
aggie gray, Samoa, South Pacific, Marlon Brando Fale
Characters
Apia, Western Samoa

The Host of the South Pacific

She sold burguês to GI's in World War II and opened a hotel that hosted Marlon Brando and Gary Cooper. Aggie Gray passed away in 2. Her legacy lives on in the South Pacific.
conversation at sunset
Beaches
Boracay, Philippines

The Philippine Beach of All Dreams

It was revealed by Western backpackers and the film crew of “Thus Heroes are Born”. Hundreds of resorts and thousands of eastern vacationers followed, whiter than the chalky sand.
Religion
Annapurna Circuit: 5th - Ngawal a BragaNepal

Towards the Nepalese Braga

We spent another morning of glorious weather discovering Ngawal. There is a short journey towards Manang, the main town on the way to the zenith of the Annapurna circuit. We stayed for Braga (Braka). The hamlet would soon prove to be one of its most unforgettable places.
End of the World Train, Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
On Rails
Ushuaia, Argentina

Last Station: End of the World

Until 1947, the Tren del Fin del Mundo made countless trips for the inmates of the Ushuaia prison to cut firewood. Today, passengers are different, but no other train goes further south.
mini-snorkeling
Society
Phi Phi Islands, Thailand

Back to Danny Boyle's The Beach

It's been 15 years since the debut of the backpacker classic based on the novel by Alex Garland. The film popularized the places where it was shot. Shortly thereafter, the XNUMX tsunami literally washed some away off the map. Today, their controversial fame remains intact.
Busy intersection of Tokyo, Japan
Daily life
Tokyo, Japan

The Endless Night of the Rising Sun Capital

Say that Tokyo do not sleep is an understatement. In one of the largest and most sophisticated cities on the face of the Earth, twilight marks only the renewal of the frenetic daily life. And there are millions of souls that either find no place in the sun, or make more sense in the “dark” and obscure turns that follow.
Ross Bridge, Tasmania, Australia
Wildlife
Discovering tassie, Part 3, Tasmania, Australia

Tasmania from Top to Bottom

The favorite victim of Australian anecdotes has long been the Tasmania never lost the pride in the way aussie ruder to be. Tassie remains shrouded in mystery and mysticism in a kind of hindquarters of the antipodes. In this article, we narrate the peculiar route from Hobart, the capital located in the unlikely south of the island to the north coast, the turn to the Australian continent.
Full Dog Mushing
Scenic Flights
Seward, Alaska

The Alaskan Dog Mushing Summer

It's almost 30 degrees and the glaciers are melting. In Alaska, entrepreneurs have little time to get rich. Until the end of August, dog mushing cannot stop.