“The House America Built”
By Daniel Joseph Martinez |
I recently had the
opportunity as a member of the press (on behalf of La Bloga) to attend a preview of a truly innovative and powerful
new art exhibit at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) titled, “HOME — So Different, So Appealing.”
This exhibition was
organized by the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center, LACMA, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. It is part of Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, which is certainly, to use the words of LACMA, “a
far reaching and ambitious exploration of Latin America and Latino art in
dialogue with Los Angeles.”
This is LACMA’s official
description of this new installation:
“Organized in
collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, HOME — So
Different, So Appealing features U.S. Latino and Latin American
artists from the late 1950s to the present who have used the deceptively simple
idea of 'home' as a powerful lens through which to view the profound
socioeconomic and political transformations in the hemisphere. Spanning seven
decades and covering art styles from Pop Art and Conceptualism to
‘anarchitecture’ and ‘autoconstrucción,’ the artists featured in this show
explore one of the most basic social concepts by which individuals, families,
nations, and regions understand themselves in relation to others. In the
process, their work also offers an alternative narrative of postwar and
contemporary art.”
The exhibit includes over
100 works by well-established artists such as Salomón Huerta, Doris Salcedo, and
Guillermo Kuitca. It also includes younger emerging artists such as Carmen
Argote and Camilo Ontiveros.
I am not an art critic and
I certainly do not have the appropriate vocabulary and experience to adequately
review this exhibit in the manner that Carolina A. Miranda of the Los Angeles Times did
in this recent review. All I
can offer are a few thoughts as someone who grew up in a household that appreciated
and honored Latinx art.
As I walked from room to
room and spent time with the various works, I found myself feeling quite moved.
One of the aspects I found so compelling was the artists’ use of everyday
images and structures to express an ambivalent connection to what we call “home.”
This ambivalence arises from the often heartbreaking and perhaps irreconcilable
circumstances created by the crucibles of poverty, bigotry and/or the Latinx
diaspora. Here are some of the works that I saw:
“Untitled” (North)
By Felix Gonzalez-Torres |
“Temporary Storage: The
Belongings of Juan Manuel Montes”
By Camilo Ontiveros |
“Untitled House”
By Salomón
Huerta |
Photograph of one of the
exhibit rooms.
|
Buenos Aires Polyptych
By Juliana Laffitte and Manuel Mendanha |
Juanito Goes to the City
By Anonio Berni
|
I had the opportunity to speak with one of the artists, Carmen Argote (pictured immediately below), whose work is titled “720 Sq. Ft. Household Mutations” and consists of the actual carpet torn from her childhood home. It contains every mark and stain that is part of her family’s story and history. Of course, her family’s collective lives amount to more than this bit of carpet, but it was the stage for her family’s struggles as well as joyous occasions. She marveled at how small it looked as displayed in the gallery space.
In any event, I strongly
commend this innovative and powerful exhibit to you. The few photographs I share
here cannot fully capture the depth, intelligence, and heart that you will
experience in person. The exhibit started its run on June 11 and will continue to October 15, 2017.
For further information on this and other LACMA exhibits, please visit LACMA's website. LACMA is located at 5905 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90036.
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