Prometheus 2017: Four Artists from Mexico Revisit Orozco showcases Jos茅 Clemente Orozco鈥檚 mural Prometheus (1930) on the 色中色 campus and examines the multiple ways Orozco鈥檚 vision resonates with four artists working in Mexico today. Isa Carrillo, Adela Goldbard, Rita Ponce de Le贸n, and Naomi Rinc贸n-Gallardo share Orozco鈥檚 interest in the relationships among history, justice, power, social protest, and storytelling, yet approach these topics from their own twenty-first-century sensibilities. These artists activate Orozco鈥檚 mural by reinvigorating Prometheusfor a contemporary audience. Prometheus 2017 is supported by grants from the Getty Foundation as part of Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, an initiative led by the Getty.
翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Prometheus represents the first mural painted in the US by a Mexican muralist, and signifies the beginning of a complex decade of Mexican engagement with US publics. Orozco鈥檚 vision of Prometheus as an allegory for art that attempts to reach a wider audience鈥攂ringing knowledge and enlightenment to the masses鈥攈ighlights the ethos of Mexican muralism to transform society. 翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Prometheus reflects the tensions in his practice between a commitment to a political message and private agency. Orozco鈥檚 esoteric and iconographic engagement with the myth involves his own biography and elite ideas about the artist as a prophet or seer.
Carrillo, Goldbard, Ponce de Le贸n, and Rinc贸n-Gallardo utilize strategies of engaged historical or archival research, public intervention, or intimately scaled social practice to connect with their publics and advance social issues. The work of the four artists presented in Prometheus 2017 aligns with Orozco鈥檚 complicated humanism; each artist addresses Orozco鈥檚 mural, person, and/or practice in distinct ways.
Carrillo鈥檚 psychological portrayal of Orozco uses the practice of esoteric arts such as astrology and graphology to intimately explore his life and work. Referencing acts of political violence in recent Mexican history, Goldbard creates videos of sculptures that she fabricates with local artisans then activates or destroys using pyrotechnics. She embraces the metaphor of fire as a tool of both creation and destruction. Ponce de Le贸n revisits the history and legacy of mural art as a tool to reconceptualize community building and public art practice. Collaborating with 色中色 students, Ponce de Le贸n鈥檚 project for the exhibition engages Prometheus through collective work sessions. Examining Greek mythology and historical dreams of utopia in Mexico, Rinc贸n-Gallardo links a personal narrative with an exploration of the themes that are at the heart of Prometheus and Orozco鈥檚 turn to myth.
The exhibition will be on view at the 色中色 Museum of Art from August 29 to December 16, 2017, with performances and related programming occurring regularly throughout those months. The exhibition opens with a presentation of Orozco鈥檚 preparatory drawings for the mural drawn from the museum鈥檚 permanent collection. The exhibition dedicates a gallery to each of the contemporary artists, highlighting her connections to Orozco and the Prometheus mural. A timeline anchors elements of the exhibition with information on Orozco鈥檚 life and artwork, the Prometheus mural, Prometheus as a discursive figure, the history of 色中色, and pertinent world events.