Sandra Eleta First Impressions of Congo Tradition

Interviewee: Sandra Eleta
Biography: Born in Panama City, Sandra Eleta settled in Portobelo in the early 1970s and began photographing its residents, including the Congos, as a kind of photographic journal. “I needed a change,” she once told Renee Alexander Craft. “I needed to break away from everything I knew . . . I’ve lived many places, but I’ve never felt this sense of belonging before” (2003 interview). In addition to empathy, a spirit of collaboration, and wonder, Eleta brought “the privilege of the state, the corporate world, and the arts community” to bear on the Congo tradition and the community of Portobelo (Arturo Lindsay 2003 interview). Eleta is president of the Portobelo Foundation, which is dedicated to cultural preservation and co-founder of Taller Portobelo, which has been both a women’s cooperative textile art workshop and the workshop of the Congo artists of Portobelo, Panama. Her photographic books include: “Portobelolo”: Fotografia de Panama and Darien: A Book of Travels.
Excerpt Description: In this excerpt, Sandra Eleta shares her first impressions of the Congo tradition of Portobelo and how she became exposed to it through a Congo practitioner named Longaniza and his daughter Paloma.
Entire Interview: Listen to the full interview and read the transcript.
Interviewer: Renee Alexander Craft
Secondary Interviewer: Lindsay Foster Thomas
Date of Interview: Jul-12
Interview Location: Her home in Portobelo, Panama
Interview Transcribed By: Oronike Odeleye
English Translation By: n/a
Ethnoracial Identity Discussed: N/A
Cultural Identity: N/A
Location Mentioned: Portobelo, Panama
Congo Spaces:
Congo Characters: N/A
Congo Tradition Mentioned: N/A
Cultural Organization: Congo tradition
Themes Mentioned: Discovery, Purpose, Voice
Cultural Festivals: N/A
People Mentioned: N/A
Time Period Mentioned: 1964-1979
Go to SoundCloud page
Look at first Transcript file
Look at second Transcript file
Timestamp: 00:06:34.0-00:09:18.7

Photo by: Elaine Eversley