2025 Día de Los Muertos Arts Festival
Details
Hey everyone, I have always loved the sugar skulls and decorations of Day of the Dead Festivals and I saw this morning that Living Arts is hosting a Dia de los Muertos Arts Festival on Saturday! Let's go check it out!
I am going to limit this to 8 people for a smaller group setting! Please keep your RSVP current so other's may join if your plans change!
This is a free event!
Official Event Information:
Come join Living Arts for the Dia de los Meurtos Arts Festival in November, where our Dia de los Muertos altar exhibition will open!
Living Arts of Tulsa, in partnership with Casa de la Cultura is hosting Tulsa’s annual Día de los Muertos Arts Festival on November 1, 2025! Día de Los Muertos (Day of the Dead) is a celebration of the Latinx heritage honoring loved ones who have passed away. This event builds bridges between the Latinx and non-Latinx cultures in Tulsa by creating a way for Tulsans to pay homage and honor ancestors/friends who have passed on.
Alongside the altar exhibition will be live performances, FREE art kits, a vendor market, food trucks and more, so there's plenty for you to see and do!
What is Day of the Dead?
Dia de los Muertos, or Day of the Dead, is a celebration held in Mexico and in Central American countries where family members commemorate their ancestors in a way that is different from customs in the United States. This important holiday is held on November 1 and November 2. It is a holiday that mixes parts of Roman Catholicism with Native American traditions that pre-date the arrival of the Spanish in the Americas.
Families often set up offerings or altars called ofrendas, either at home or at the cemetery. Throughout the Dia de los Muertos the living will remember their ancestors by honoring their memory, by feasting on foods (such as pan de muerto or calaveras de azucar), and playing or singing the songs which were favored by their ancestors. Some ofrendas are also decorated with marigolds and calaveras made of papier-mache.
The Altars of Day of the Dead
Day of the Dead celebrations is based on the belief that the souls of the ones gone can come back to this world on these days. The Day of the Dead altars is the most prominent feature in the celebration because they show the souls the way to their home. Altars make the souls (animas) feel welcomed and show them they have not been forgotten.
A traditional altar has some form of the following.
- Picture – A picture of the evoked relative is placed in the altar to make him present and revive his image.
- Flowers – The altar is decorated with fresh flowers as it is believed that their scent will make the returning souls feel welcomed and happy.
- Different Levels – In some areas altars are made with two levels that symbolize heaven and earth; in others they are made with three levels for heaven, purgatory, and earth; and there are places where altars with seven levels are placed, each of these levels represents the steps a soul has to make to get to heaven.
- An Arch – Symbolizes the entrance to the world of the dead. In the places where it’s set, it can be made with flowers.
- Day of the Dead Bread – or pan de muertos is different in every region of the country and one of the most important elements in the altar as it is a fraternal offering to the souls in the Catholic sense.
- Candy Skulls – Sugar, chocolate or amaranth seed skulls represent the death and its every moment presence.
- Candies – Alfeñique (almonds paste) fruits, donkeys, angels and skeletons and all kind of homemade candies are set to treat the children’s souls.
- Ornaments– Candleholders, incense burners, papier mache or clay figurines such as skulls or skeletons doing a certain activity or animals. In some areas, a clay Xoloitzcuintli dog is set in the altar to make the children souls feel good in their arrival to the fete.
I look forward to seeing everyone!
Ryan D
