Jun. 19, 2007 - Issue #609: Mother Mother
Mumma mia! If only these mummies could talk
A trip to Guanajuato's mummy museum showcases a fascination with the dead
We came from Mexico City, arriving at the bus terminal at the edge of town late in the afternoon. Dusk is already slipping over Guanajuato as a taxi takes us into the city through its numerous cavernous tunnels, an intrinsic element in the city’s labyrinth. You slip into one for just a few moments and when you emerge it’s difficult to discern where you’ve gone. It’s the same with many of the cobbled streets, so narrow I can reach out my arms and touch the opposing buildings: they turn sharp corners, careen, come to a sudden halt, lead us in directions our internal maps can’t seem to follow. Maybe that’s why both an old man and a small boy compete to guide us to our hotel (which—surprise—is also a labyrinth of corridors and dead ends). From the rooftop patio we fleetingly see the city extend into the ragged edges of the ravine into which it was built, buildings crowding into crannies at all angles in the fading light.
Labyrinths have always been seen as possessing a certain magic—and a certain threat. The particular magic that brings most people to Guanajuato is said by some to result from the dry air, by others from something in the soil. Whatever the case, something about the specific atmospheric conditions of Guanajuato keeps the dead remarkably well preserved.
Laura and I came to Guanajuato for several things—there’s this terrific club that has good tequila, Cuban salsa and ladies’ footwear dangling over the bar—but really, like all the other tourists, we came for the mummies, which reside in a museum high up in the city, itself, again, a labyrinthine edifice, resting over the cemetery from which the first mummies were unearthed in 1965. It’s not the most well-organized museum you’ll find in Mexico, but what it houses proves to offer far more than morbid novelty.
Before entering the museum proper there’s a temporary exhibit of
photographs dating from the period in which it was customary to make
portraits of the dead before interment, mostly images of parents or siblings
with dead infants, standing before a stranger’s camera in their finest
clothing during a moment of unspeakable grief. These are some of the most
painful photographs I’ve ever seen, all the more so for their
formality. The series seems an ideal entry into the museum, functioning as an
antidote to the sense of abstraction you struggle against while gazing upon
the 100-plus corpses laying in the adjacent rooms.
Many of the mummies are said to have perished in a cholera outbreak here in
1833, though, due to rigorous taxes placed on keeping bodies in the limited
local cemetery space, bodies are continually being dug up and appropriated by
the museum, though only a fraction are ever on display. If one desired to
become a mummy, your best bet would probably be to die in Guanajuato and
simply wait a while. Sooner or later, you’d have a good chance of
winding up in here.
The mummies of Guanajuato—amongst them the smallest mummy in the
world!—are one of the most uncanny manifestations of Mexico’s
obsession with death, a strange conspiracy between the elements, the folklore
and the tourism industry. The museum doesn’t present these mummies with
a great deal of reverence. Most are unidentified. It is difficult—yet
perhaps vital—to look and remember that under other circumstances you
may once have passed them in the street, spoken with them, shook their hands,
made love to them. Of course, this sort of thinking leads to an uneasy
ontological quagmire. Maybe it’s better not to see these objects as
people, maybe this is too undignified a way to remember a once-living person.
The museum, for better of for worse, renders them more as objects than
individuals, as works of art, crafted solely by nature.
Amongst them is a woman, much of her flesh intact, whose knee-high leather
boots and stockings remain, while the rest of her clothing has disintegrated.
Her breasts have shriveled into dusty butternut squashes, her legs are
spread, her tongue protrudes from between her clinched teeth and a museum
guide claims that the black mark around her neck indicates she’s been
strangled.
In any other context, this arrangement could be regarded as ghoulishly,
perhaps misogynistically, erotic. Her taut, leathery skin and oddly
positioned limbs, like so many other specimens here, evoke Egon
Schiele’s work. Still others, mummies whose limbs have been severed at
certain joints seem to recall Paul Gaugin’s paintings of anatomically
incomplete Polynesian women ... Is it just me? Do the track lights, velvet
pillows and glass cases themselves provoke comparisons to great works of art?
Or is death finally imitating art as clearly as art imitates life?
There is a woman whose arms are closed around her face, as though weeping
in terror. The guide claims she was buried alive, and, given the
mummy’s vintage, it seems perfectly possible. Yet there’s a
nagging sense that the museum will happily interpret any aspect of the
mummies’ involuntary contortions as something horrific. The mummies,
after all, already appear frozen in a silent scream when they rise from the
earth, the way the flesh pulls back from their cheeks, the way so many mouths
desiccate into a plaintive O, the way the dark stains on the skin from
exploded organs speak of the unfathomable discomforts of decay. There are
pregnant mummies, baby mummies with pacifiers still in their mouths, rich and
poor mummies wearing all manner of regal clothing. And all of them are
gathered here, seemingly, to report collectively on the pain of death.
Leaving the museum, I feel at once as though I’ve seen something
extraordinary and still seen nothing at all. I know what I’ve seen has,
for lack of a better word, a sacred element, yet it’s as though it were
all an elaborate hoax as well, a sort of side show. In Mexico, death is all
part of the grand show, the tapestry of history made colourful, fun, exotic
and undercut with terror. Laura and I sink back into the labyrinth and try to
shake off the motes of old death lingering in our clothes. We know a good bar
down there, if we can find the way. V
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