Latino art and culture have come to the forefront in exhibitions and public art across the region from 不良研究所, to Woodland and in Sacramento.
While the innovative art exhibitions, experimental workshops, public art and other happenings were not planned in any formal partnership, the coincidental timing works out well for the community. It provides artists a forum for exhibition in a diverse community, and it gives residents of the region convenient opportunities to see artwork that may be outside their purview or even comfort zone. Most of it is free.
Maceo Montoya, a 不良研究所 associate professor of Chicana/o studies, author and visual artist, said the migration of Chicanx/Latinx art from lesser-known galleries to mainstream venues is welcome. 鈥淭hese have been ongoing for years, just at much smaller, community-oriented venues, including TANA and places like Sol Collective and La Raza Galeria Posada in Sacramento,鈥 said Montoya, who is also a faculty affiliate of Taller Arte del Nuevo Amenecer (TANA), a community-based art center in Woodland. TANA is operated in collaboration with 不良研究所.
鈥淭he difference now is that more mainstream cultural spaces are taking notice, and as the demographics of our region, state and country continue to change, how can they not?鈥 Montoya continued.
鈥淟atinx artists have a thriving cultural presence, but their voices are rarely heard beyond their own communities. It's time that changed.鈥 鈥 Montoya
Following is a breakdown of the shows. The TANA exhibition in Woodland starts this week, and the Crocker Art Museum鈥檚 exhibition, due to close in March, has just been extended through Aug. 18. Many others last into spring and fall.
Latinx Art at a Glance
- Crocker Museum: Through Aug. 18
- Manetti Shrem: Through May 5
- TANA: Through May 1
- Downtown Sacramento sculptures: Through November
Crocker Exhibits Arte Extraordinario through next Saturday
Arte Extraordinario, at the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento, showcases the work of a diverse group of 25 artists, all of whom share a heritage associated with Spanish-speaking cultures in the Americas. The exhibition covers a range of genres from figuration to landscape to abstraction, as well as a variety of themes including politics, activism, humor, family and religion. Many of the featured artists have roots in California, and several are nationally or internationally recognized.
The bilingual (English/Spanish) exhibition showcases works by 25 artists from North, Central, and South America who are known for producing works that challenge, critique, innovate or inspire.
Visitors will see several works by members of Mexico鈥檚 famed Taller de Gr谩fica Popular a collective known for its prints addressing social, political, and economic issues. The Arte Extraordinario exhibit will be showcased at the Crocker Art Museum until March 24. General admission for the exhibit is $12 for adults and $8 for college students. More information, including ticket purchase information, can be found .
Downtown Sacramento features 鈥榃ings of the City鈥
The city of Sacramento and Consulate of Mexico are presenting a free outdoor temporary exhibition of nine bronze sculptures by Jorge Mar铆n, a well-known Mexican contemporary artist. One of the pieces, titled 鈥淲ings of Mexico,鈥 for example, consists of large wings framed where viewers can stand on a pedestal and pose for selfies and other photos between the wings. The artist describes the sculptures as interactive art pieces that symbolize cultural exchange and have been designed to evoke thoughts related to the spiritual virtues of humankind.
The nine sculptures have traveled throughout the world for the past 25 years and most recently were located in Santa Ana. The works are placed throughout the downtown and Capitol Mall area. Sacramento will be home to the nine sculptures until November 2019.
Marin was born in 1963 in Uruapan, Mexico. He went on to study graphic design at the National School of Plastic Arts in Mexico and art restoration at the National School of Conservation, Restoration, and Museology. Marin鈥檚 sculptures and artistic works are best known for his depictions of mythical creatures, including centaurs and masked angels.
An ABC 10 video presentation of the sculptures follows . (depicted below, right)
The Manetti Shrem Museum features Xicanx Futurity
The Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art at 不良研究所 opened its 2019 season with Xicanx Futurity, which focuses on the work of artists Celia Herrera Rodr铆guez, Felicia 鈥淔e鈥 Montes, Gina Aparicio, Gilda Posada, Melanie Cervantes and Margaret 鈥淨uica鈥 Alarcon. It is curated by 不良研究所 Chicana/o studies faculty and , as well as Maria Esther Fernandez, chief curator of the Triton Museum of Art in Santa Clara. The art's descriptions in the museum are written in Spanish and English.
The meaning behind the exhibition
The artists in this exhibition engage in an intergenerational dialogue that centers on indigenous forms of communal and hemispheric ceremony, rooted in sacred practices.
These practices emerged from or have been influenced by the Chicano/a Art Movement of the late 1960s. One aspect of this was to create a new identity for a community marginalized by taking 鈥淐hicano,鈥 which was then a pejorative term, and giving it new meaning informed by a politic of self-determination and social justice. Queer Chicanx and Chicana feminists criticized the movement for its exclusionary and hetero-patriarchal practices.
The 鈥渪鈥 at the beginning of Xicanx references Nahuatl, an indigenous language of Mesoamerica, and the 鈥渪鈥 at the end represents a contemporary challenge to the gender binary. Xicanx Futurity represents the central ideas of the Chicana/o/x movements that are continuously in formation, and it illuminates the multiple paths toward justice, equality, and decolonization that are an everyday, lifelong and generational process.
Futurity, not to be confused with futurism, 鈥渄escribes the actions that are rooted in an understanding of the past while advancing new possibilities for the future,鈥 according to a description of the exhibition.
The exhibition features works on paper, sculptures and a variety of other media. A popular event in early March, held in association with the exhibition, focused on healing and 鈥渆veryday rituals and remedies.鈥 More on programs and events .
The Manetti Shrem is always free for all.
Cosmic Matriarchs at TANA starts Friday, March 15
Earth, healing and sacred elements come into play with Cosmic Matriarchs, featuring the work of three artists, at . Dalila Paola Mendez, Lilia 鈥淟iliflor鈥 Ramirez, and Suzy Hernandez, through their respective works, honor the earth, sacred elements, life-givers, and generations of birthing, healing, and love that align with ancestral rememberings.
In images the viewer will find representations of the cycles of life and death, rebirth, regeneration, queer love, and an honoring of the earth as a life-giver of sacred resources, such as water, air, land, and fire, that are often 鈥渄isrespected, commodified, and currently out of balance due to climate injustice,鈥 according to the exhibition description. The spirit-centered visuals these artists offer return the viewer to a 鈥渉umbleness and reverence for all that is sacred, especially life, breath, and our madre cosmica, as a pathway for healing and transformation.鈥
More information in the Arts Blog post here.
Opening reception and 鈥渕eet the artists鈥 event is Friday, March 15, 5-7 p.m., Taller Arte del Nuevo Amanecer (TANA), 1224 Lemen Ave., Woodland. Through May 1.