No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchivePhotographer Creates Archive of Tico Heritage

Photographer Creates Archive of Tico Heritage

The ruined church in Santiago de Puriscal, 40 kilometers southwest of San José, is a nostalgic landmark for its inhabitants and anyone driving through en route to the Pacific coast. Damaged beyond repair in a 1990 earthquake, its cracked walls and broken windows remain a symbol of a community’s valiant efforts come to nothing.

Construction with mostly local volunteer labor started in 1936 and took more than 20 years to complete. But the building was doomed even then, built as it was on unstable foundations and with more religious enthusiasm than engineering expertise.

Most records of the church’s history have been lost, though older Puriscal residents relate it was the first concrete construction in the town, with imported Italian marble and a clock from Spain. The magnificent mural of St. James the Apostle fighting the infidels, painted by local sculptor and artist Abilio Valverde, survives – barely – although the east wall is in imminent danger of collapse, after which the mural will be lost forever.

The dearth of recorded history and the church’s inevitable ruination because of lack of restoration funding led U.S. retiree Frank Kainrath, 68, to make a detailed pictorial archive of the structure. Now residing in Ciudad Colón, southwest of the capital, with his wife, Janie, Kainrath has combined a former California-based career in photography with a subsequent profession in the computer industry to create exquisitely composed, haunting digital canvases of a place of worship fallen into abandon.

His recently opened exhibit in the AltaHotel, on the old road between the western San José suburb of Escazú and Santa Ana, showcases 10 pictures of the church printed on velvet fine-art paper and mounted behind glass to protect against fungal invasion.

Kainrath’s technical proficiency in digital enhancement never overshadows the innate artistry and balance within each photo. The result is both an invaluable historical record and a collectable work of art.

The remainder of the exhibit is given over to the photographer’s recent trip to Antigua, Guatemala, and consists of charismatic portraits of the city’s Mayan population.

Sometimes poignant, sometimes delicately humorous, Kainrath captures the resilient essence of a people in his deceptively simple images. The studies are printed on stretched giclée canvas, giving them a textural quality similar to oil paintings.

Kainrath’s occasional use of stretched black nylon gauze over his Canon 20D lenses adds an even more artful representational character to his photographs.

The exhibit runs through Feb. 28 and is open to the public. All works are available for purchase, mounted or not, from $55 to $215. Smaller eight-by-12-inch copies are on sale for $25, and $3 greetings cards are also on offer in the hotel’s souvenir shop.

As Kainrath’s work is reproducible, you can visit the show and take home anything you like. For multiple orders, the velvet fine-art photos can be delivered in 24 hours and the treated canvases in three days.

For more information, contact Kainrath at 2249-2481 or phxphrank@yahoo.com, or call the AltaHotel at 2282-4160.

 

Trending Now

Weather Causes Flight Delays at Costa Rica’s Main Airport

Heavy fog and rain disrupted flight operations at Juan Santamaría International Airport on Monday, forcing five commercial flights to divert and delaying several departures...

Documentary Highlights Costa Rica’s Howler Monkey Crisis

There is a sound that defines the Costa Rican jungle before dawn: a deep, resonant roar that can carry for five kilometers through the...

Costa Rica Studies Find Microplastics in Beaches, Fish, Livestock and Poultry

Costa Rica’s microplastics problem is no longer limited to plastic bottles, bags, and debris washing up on beaches. Local research has found tiny plastic...

Costa Rica to Hold Sixth National Ocean Cleanup This Saturday

Costa Rica will hold its sixth National Ocean Cleanup this Saturday, June 6, bringing volunteers together at dozens of beaches, rivers and community sites...

Canada Begins Historic 2026 World Cup Campaign Against Bosnia

For the thousands of Canadians living in Costa Rica or passing through on vacation, tomorrow is a day circled on every calendar. At 2:00...

Costa Rica Extradites Canadian Fugitive Hiding in Tamarindo

A Canadian man wanted in connection with a major drug and firearms case in British Columbia has been extradited from Costa Rica after several...

Mexico vs South Africa Headlines World Cup 2026 Opening Day

After four years of waiting, the 2026 FIFA World Cup kicks off today, with the biggest and most expanded edition of the tournament in...

Costa Rica’s Route 27 Sinkhole Repair Still Has No Clear Finish Date

Those heading between San José and the Central Pacific will need to keep planning around delays on Route 27, where the permanent repair of...

Flesh Eating Fly That Spread Through Costa Rica Has Reached Texas

For decades, a small facility in Panama stood between the United States cattle industry and one of the most destructive parasites in the Western...
Avatar
🌴 The Weekly Pura Vida

Costa Rica, Once a Week

The week's top stories, weather & insider tips — delivered every Sunday. One email, zero clutter.

🔒 Free. No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

Loading…

Latest News from Costa Rica

Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Car Rentals
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel