Then, in 1961, he joined Jorge de la Vega, Rómulo Macció and Luis Felipe Noé in an exhibition entitled "Otra Figuración".
The other founders included artists Jorge De La Vega, Rómulo Macció, and Luis Felipe Noé.
The Otra Figuración group believed they lived in a collective society and shared the conviction that in order to make good art, the artist had to delve into himself.
During Deira’s time with Otra Figuración, he and the other members of the group adopted free brushwork and drip techniques to combine various methods to create their surreal and expressionistic artwork.
He used thick brushstrokes in both the background and body, made with urgent stabs and twisting wrist motions.
All around the black square, Deira has painted Spanish words in scrawling cursive writing using various colors – blue, red, and yellow.
[6] The title responds to the severed hands of Ernesto Guevara that were used to identify his identity and confirm his death.
The series was part of an exhibition in Chile when the military regime of Augusto Pinochet came to power on September 11, 1973.