From the earliest sketches of Esperanza to the hundreds of hours of clay molding, basket weaving, zip tying, engineering, paper macheing, painting, and fine-tuning, she was a work of art sprung from many creative minds and many dedicated hands.
And that was just the beginning for Esperanza.
As we make exciting plans for her next big event, we want to thank the fantastic artists who supported the Immokalee puppet team from as far away as South Africa and England and as close by as LaBelle and Naples. For your time, talent, creativity, and support, we want to send a very special thank you to Andrew Kim of Thinguma Theatre, Adrian Kohler of Handspring Puppet Company, Mark Safford of Barebones Puppets, Danika Fornear Perry and Phoenix Perry of LaBelle, Tree and Erik with the Raow Raow Collective, and everybody else who had a hand in Esperanza’s creation.
Esperanza is also the latest in a long tradition of larger-than-life puppets and papier mache works of art to enrich and enliven the demands of farmworkers. Perhaps the most famous puppet made by the Fair Food Nation is the Immokalee Statue of Liberty, which depicts the Statue of Liberty holding a tomato bucket and tomato. She was carried by farmworkers and allies over 230 miles in 2000 as part of the March for Dignity, Dialogue, and a Fair Wage, and now lives on permanent display at the National Museum of American History in Washington DC.
Click "see more" below to check out a slideshow documenting Esperanza’s construction, and stay tuned for her next appearance!