Description
Día de los Muertos in Oaxaca — the most elaborately celebrated version of Mexico’s syncretic festival — transforms the city’s markets, cemeteries, and public spaces in late October and early November. The Benito Juárez market and surrounding streets fill with cempasúchil (marigold) displays — the flower whose scent is believed to guide the dead back to their altars — alongside sugar skull (calavera) vendors, copal incense sellers, and altar supply merchants. The concentration of orange marigold light, the candle and lantern illumination, and the overlapping visual elements of religious imagery, food, and craft create a photographic environment of extraordinary complexity. This photograph was made at 10pm on November 1st — the peak of the market activity — from an elevated market balcony position that allowed a downward angle on the marigold display below, creating an abstract orange-gold pattern from the flower density.
