Mexico City, November 20, 2015.- Luis Ordaz Murillo, a native of Purépero craftsman, Michoacan, won the National Award in the XXI Competition Births Mexicanos, a birth of applying wax feather art, who received his prize worth 100,000 pesos in cash. «My’m happy to have won the national award, this was my challenge for 2015, overcoming the prize last year I got the second prize and now I did it with a much better piece, which develop with love and discipline» Murillo said Ordaz, during the awards ceremony. Also Purépero artisan thanked the National Fund for the Development of Arts and Crafts (FONART) and Fomento Cultural Banamex, supports that provide for the amount in prizes of this contest, you are definitely a big motivation to strive to develop parts higher quality. During the award ceremony, he was attended by the secretary of the Secretariat of Social Development (SEDESOL), Jose Antonio Meade, who congratulated all the winners and all artisans and recognized the work of Fonart and Banamex Cultural Fund for the call for perform these contests. The Palace of Independence, Mexico City, was home to deliver 52 awards for creativity and talent of artisans from 17 states in Mexico, with a total purse for the million pesos, They were the hands of Candida Fernandez de Calderon and Fonart holder Liliana Romero Medina. Lilia Alvarez Gonzalez of Morelia, a birth of feather art and Marco Antonio Martínez Velázquez Santa Clara del Cobre, with an embossed and chiseled birth in hammered copper pan were the winners of the first, Zenaida Rafael Julian Ocumicho, He developed a portal Belem, Cornelio Antonio Rendon, Tzintzuntzan, with panikua birth and Leticia Martinez Espinosa, Purépero with a Purepecha birth, took second place. The third place went to Maya Maribel Aguirre, Morelia Velázquez and Francisco Martinez, Santa Clara del Cobre, and four honorable mentions for Martha Leticia Lopez Luna, Morelia, Melgoza Joel and Daniel Aguilar Garcia Luna and Reinaldo Rafael Tlazazalca surrendered Cerano Ocumicho. First 12 places (23,000 pesos), 12 second places (18,000 pesos) and first 12 places (16 thousand pesos) to births performed with different techniques and materials, from modeling clay and lead-glazed pottery, until Talavera pottery delivered , paper, cardboard, embroidery or frayed. They attended births also made in the fields of lacquer and lacquer, carved wood and gilded wood; hard and semi-hard plant fibers, paper, cardboard, corn husk, folk painting, candle making, metalwork, stonework, among others.