Onesimo Hernandez presented Thursday "looking elf. A jonda and anthropological vision".
The inauguration, which will feature a performance by the dancer Cynthia Cano, will take place on Thursday, March 17, at 20:00 h.
It will be open until 30 April in the Sala José Nicolas Almansa Museum of the University of Murcia.
This exhibition is part of the acts of the XXIII Flamenco Summit of Murcia, most important flamenco event in the region next to the Festival del Cante de las Minas, and in it the Service Culture UMU involved.
The exhibition is intended as a retrospective of all the audiovisual and Flemish work Onesimo Hernandez.
It has 12 screens where you can see different audiovisual materials, ranging from documentaries to big names in flamenco, like the late Enrique Morente, Miguel Poveda, José Mercé, to various documents on great artists of flamenco, from Manolo Sanlucar Paco de Lucia, dancing or Cynthia Cano Juan de Juan, and testimonies of scholars and artists of flamenco.
Antonio Parra, curator of the exhibition, said that "flamenco cinema Onesimo Hernandez belongs to the XXI century, which means that it is no longer a surprised or folk look like a curious extravagance, but it is analytical and scholar, as born from love and knowledge ".
The tour of the exhibition begins with "La Sierra Minera, a place to be born", where fragments of the documentary series "Heaven Mine" are collected, dedicated to Miguel Poveda and Mayte Martín, videos tribute to the winners of the Gold headframe, as the filmmakers Bigas Luna and Pablo Berger, the dancers Sara Baras and Eva Yerbabuena, bullfighters Enrique Ponce and José María Manzanares, or chef José Andrés.
In the Flemish dialogues, artists and flamencologists as the guitarist Manolo Sanlúcar, Antonio Parra, Mayte Martín and Miguel Poveda, give their views on the art of flamenco.
Finally, the "Flamenco en image" includes performances of the most important figures of flamenco and young talents: the singing of José Mercé, Enrique Morente and José Enrique Morente;
the touch of Paco de Lucía, Manolo Sanlúcar and Juan Habichuela;
or dancing of Israel Galván, Cynthia Cano and Juan de Juan.
Source: UMU