Show by San Antonio artist Guillermina Zabala reflects on womanhood, aging, identity

by Neil Fauerso

Before Europeans colonized South Texas, the Payaya people, a Coahuiltecan group of Native Americans, lived in the valley around the San Antonio River Valley, or the Yanaguana River, as they referred to it. "Ahāuh: Mi Cuerpo," the first word of which means "body" in Coahuiltecan, is a dynamic exhibition by San Antonio artist Guillermina Zabala of linocut prints, mixed media photography and digital video that reflects on womanhood, aging and identity. The show will run Thursday, Feb. 6, through Thursday, Feb. 20, at Un Grito Gallery in The Upstairs Studios at Blue Star.
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