The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)
PUERTO RICAN PUPPETRY
A FIRST-OF-ITS-KIND EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHTS HOW PUERTO RICAN PUPPETRY EDUCATES AND ENTERTAINS
The beloved character Juan Bobo, with his distinctive straw hat and white T-shirt with the Puerto Rican flag, greets visitors at the entrance of the Ballard Institute and Museum of Puppetry, welcoming them to the world’s first puppetry display dedicated to the Caribbean island.
While this Juan Bobo is only a few feet tall, over his left shoulder is a larger-than-life processional costume depicting an older woman traveling with a young girl, and over his right, a pair of menacing vejigante puppets look on. Together they’re part of Hecho en Puerto Rico: Four Generations of Puerto Rican Puppetry, an exhibition meant to celebrate Puerto Rico’s rich culture and its use of puppets to educate, entertain and advocate. “We’re always trying to connect with the very large Puerto Rican community in Willimantic and the huge Puerto Rican community in Hartford through festivals and various events, so when the idea for a full exhibition of Puerto Rican puppetry came about we knew immediately it was something we wanted to do,” says the museum’s director, John Bell.
Puppeteers Manuel Moran and Deborah Hunt curated the display, which opened in the fall and closes in June, based on Moran’s 2016 documentary film Titeres en el Caribe Hispano, a four-part series that explores the use of puppetry not just in Puerto Rico, but also Cuba and the Dominican Republic. For the Ballard exhibition, Moran and Hunt grouped puppets into four categories dating to 1960 with “The Pioneers” and extending to present day with “Emerging Artists.” Bell says that offering the display in English and Spanish was a logical decision.
The collection depicts not just the expected Afro-Caribbean culture of the island, but also the indigenous Taíno influence, the territory’s relationship with the mainland U.S., and the contempt for colonialism that goes back hundreds of years, Bell says. Puppets in the collection highlight issues of debt and ecology, as well as critiques of the educational system and even fast-food diets. “Puppetry has had a racial reckoning with its Black minstrel shows and Asian characters, and addressing that is essential,” Bell says. “Puppetry is sometimes considered a marginal art form.
THE COLLECTION DEPICTS NOT JUST THE EXPECTED AFRO-CARIBBEAN CULTURE OF THE ISLAND, BUT ALSO THE INDIGENOUS TAÍNO INFLUENCE, THE TERRITORY’S RELATIONSHIP WITH THE MAINLAND U.S.