"Jose Clemente Orozco's Mural Is Reimagined Through the Work of 4 Female Artists," by Yvette Montoya, Hip Latina
Jose Clemente Orozco is considered one of 鈥淟os Tres Grandes,鈥 which doesn鈥檛 mean much in the US unless you鈥檙e a fine arts major that decided to take special interest in . The term 鈥淟os Tres Grandes鈥 refers to Orozco, , and David Alfaro Siqueiros who started their promotion of Mexican muralism in the 1920鈥檚 as a way to unify a post-Mexican Revolution society. Together they created a style that defined Mexican identity. They used their works to teach a largely illiterate population about Mexican history depicting everyday people as heroes fighting the revolution and liberating the masses. They truly believed in the power of the new mixed race generation that would forge the next great era of Mexican history. However, a shifting political climate paired with diminishing commissions caused Orozco to move to New York in 1927 and in 1930 he became the first Mexican muralist to paint in the United States. 翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚 色中色 fresco also happened to be his first commission since his move to the US.
翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚 Prometheus recounts the Greek mythology 鈥 Prometheus is said to be mankind鈥檚 creator and greatest benefactor by giving humans fire that he stole from Mount Olympus. Zeus sentenced Prometheus to have his liver eaten by an eagle every day and every night it would grow back just to be eaten again for all of time. I know, way harsh! Thematically it is said to represent the struggle between generations and the struggle of the small against mighty seemingly omnipotent forces. In giving humans fire Prometheus also gave them enlightenment, thus knowledge is a theme also explored by the mural. Fast forward to today, the Prometheus 2017 exhibit is four female Mexican artists鈥 re-examination of 翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚 mural as an agent for myth-making, social change, as well as the unresolved tensions wrapped up in the dreams of a Mexican Utopia. It鈥檚 heavy stuff, all dealing with art as politicized expression and the messy business of US/Mexican relations from the female voice and perspective in what, to me, was quite different than anything I鈥檇 seen before.
Rita Ponce de Leon
Ponce de Leon鈥檚 exhibit struck me because it was painted directly onto the walls of the gallery and makes interesting use of negative and positive space. Her work is by far the most abstract in terms of her process 鈥 she creates imagery through dialogue. From November 2015 through June 2017, Ponce de Le贸n facilitated meetings and conversations with students from The Claremont Colleges. At each meeting, students reflected on questions, including 鈥淲hat does Prometheus mean to you today?鈥 and 鈥淲hat does art mean to you?鈥 After each meeting, the students would created a packet of their most best ideas, that would then be passed on to other members of the group who would then add their own ideas. This became the material that she used to conceptualize the imagery. Pretty cool, right?
Isa Carrillo
Carillo鈥檚 exhibit 鈥淢ano Izquierda鈥 (Left Hand) is a symbolic portrait of Orozco based on the loss of his left hand to the fireworks he was making to celebrate Mexico鈥檚 Independence Day at the age of 21. Her installation is a collection of divinatory readings that explore 翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚 mysticism and esotericism created by studying archival documents. It鈥檚 almost like entering a lab, there are microscopes with beetles where the slide should be, test tubes filled with graphite and gunpowder, as well as a palm readings, an astrological slide show, and traced outlines of 翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚 hands that form constellations. Carrillo鈥檚 art is quite literally an experiment where she explores the overlap or art, parapsychology and esotericism in order to reinterpret 翱谤辞锄肠辞鈥檚 life.
Adela Goldbard
Goldbard鈥檚 exhibit is a multimedia project that combines large scale pi帽atas, video, and pyrotechnics. She builds replicas of vehicles that have been central to recent acts of political violence and destroys them using traditional Judas-Effigy burning practices and 鈥淭orito鈥 as a way to contradict and question the 鈥渙fficial鈥 reports made by the press and the Mexican government. The burning of Judas is an Easter-time ritual held by Orthodox and Catholic communities. It is a scapegoating ritual where the corrupt official or character that would harm the people is burned, beaten or blown up. Many see burning the traitor as a way to exorcise evil, betrayal or corruption and purify the soul of the spectators. 鈥淭oritio鈥 are paper mache structures fitted with fireworks that are typically worn in celebrations for La Virgen De Soledad in Oaxaca, Mexico. Both are steeped in indigenous and Catholic tradition, both highlight the destructive and purifying effects of fire 鈥 as Orozco does in Prometheus. Goldbard鈥檚 exhibit includes film of her three most recent instances of political violence Lobo (2013), Microbus (2014) and Plutarco, putos (2015).
Naomi Rinc贸n-Gallardo
Imagine the teletubbies and a 90鈥檚 screen saver set to music and strange choreography and you鈥檒l have a taste for what you鈥檒l encounter in the room that holds Rinc贸n-Gallardo鈥檚 work. It was definitely my favorite part of the exhibit. Her 鈥渕usic videos鈥 offer viewers alternative realities and radical social experiences. She gathers other artists and musicians together to question official versions of history. Her work Odisea Ocotepec (Ocotepec Odyssey) (2014) features nine videos that explore counter narratives through acid trip sing-a-long that combined music, literature, drama, and feminist pedagogies along with protest songs, science-fiction, and Mexican liberation theology of the 1960鈥檚 and 70鈥檚. Her videos refer back to the philosopher Ivan Illich鈥檚 Epimetheus archetype, which came to represent those who give, treasure life and preserve hope 鈥 essentially looking at the myth from the perspective that knowledge and enlightenment should come from communities and free-form learning, not institutions. It鈥檚 definitely something totally different that really makes the viewer think about the function of knowledge as well as the vehicles used to deliver it.
The exhibit will be on display at the 色中色 Museum of Art until December 16, 2017.
: LA/LA is a far-reaching and ambitious exploration of Latin American and Latino art in dialogue with Los Angeles. Led by the Getty, Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA is the latest collaborative effort from arts institutions across Southern California.