Cielito Querido Café | Esrawe

Cadena Asociados®+ Esrawe Studio Mexico City / Mexico / 2010

26
26 Love 6,688 Visits Published
CIELITO ® draws its inspiration from our history: the games, the joyful colors, the language of symbolism, and the illustrated graphics of the late 19th to early 20th century. The Latin-American sign maker’s trade in conjunction with the product labels of the old grocery and company stores generate a graphic language proprietary of a culture that is rich in history but always open to reinvention and to reclaiming the market in a poetic, nostalgic, joyful, dynamic and vastly diverse manner. Its name comes from popular Mexican music, inspired by the song “Cielito Lindo”, which was written in 1882 by Mexican composer Quirino Mendoza y Cortéz. The song contains the phrase “México Lindo y Querido”, which translates to “Cherished and Beautiful Mexico”; this juxtaposition references the playful spirit of the Latin-American language. CIELITO ® rescues the aesthetic value of popular Latin-American culture, and reinvents it in a Neo-Retro style that fuses graphics from colonial times, both Spanish and French, (present in its fine use of typography), with modern Latin American 50’s media like that from the large department stores (whose marketing was also imported from the Old Continent and the United States), and the contrasting colloquial language of the popular markets and tiny convenient stores, or “tienditas”. All of these elements are subtly integrated, producing a contemporary product, very Latin, and at the same time, universal in appeal. The concept opens up the possibility of communicating with a broader audience, as it turns it into a timeless product, which is nurtured by its past but also continually seeks to present itself in new, fresh and attractive ways.
26 users love this project
Comments
View previous comments
    comment
    user
    Enlarge image

    CIELITO ® draws its inspiration from our history: the games, the joyful colors, the language of symbolism, and the illustrated graphics of the late 19th to early 20th century. The Latin-American sign maker’s trade in conjunction with the product labels of the old grocery and company stores generate a graphic language proprietary of a culture that is rich in history but always open to reinvention and to reclaiming the market in a poetic, nostalgic, joyful, dynamic and vastly diverse manner. Its...

    Project details
    • Year 2010
    • Work started in 2009
    • Status Completed works
    • Type Bars/Cafés
    Archilovers On Instagram
    Lovers 26 users