“This bridge-building deserves our gratitude, because these Bolivian engravers traveled through Guanajuato, a World Heritage City, and with that they made their homeland, they fulfilled the function of ambassadors of Latin American culture”, the researcher and promoter, David Aruquipa, said at the inauguration.
Speaking on behalf of the Cultural Foundation of the Central Bank of Bolivia, Aruquipa thanked the Bolivian and Mexican artists for choosing the Center of the Cultural Revolution and its Inés Córdoba-Gil Imaná House Museum to share and strengthen the closeness between two brotherly peoples.
For his part, Carlos Vargas, cultural attached of the Mexican embassy in Bolivia, thanked on behalf of the ambassador, Eduardo Sosa, for the warm welcome to the work of these 20 Mexican engravers.
“Our peoples have always had this similarity, because in one way or another, except for the change of names, we are very similar, and this is reflected in the content of the exhibition,” the diplomat said.
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