by
Ernest Hogan
Caught
Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera from the Jacques and Natasha GelmanCollection at the Heard Museum here in Phoenix. It’s
spectacular and inspiring. It’s also very successful. It'll be here
until August 20.
There
has also been some controversy.
There
are some folks who don’t get what all this Mexican stuff has to do
with Native American culture, and why it should be in an Indian
museum. They don’t see the Aztlán connection. I’m amazed that it
has to be explained. Maybe we should start insisting that this should be General Education rather than Ethnic Studies.
As
usual--I have seen the work of both artists in Mexico and Casa
Azul--seeing the art in person blew me away. I tend to be a lowbrow
who likes his art as part of his environment; in this case, I can see
going downtown to visit the fine art. It gave a me the itch to get
back to my cartooning.
Meanwhile,
the Phoenix Metro Area’s Latinoid population is pouring a lot of
money into the Heard.
As
fitting for our times, Frida dominates the show. The new millennium
has made her A goddess for Latinoids, hipsters, and folks of various
sexualities.
Today’s
culture consumers prefer her inner trip to Diego’s prototype to
outward bound Chicanonaut explorations. But it’s interesting to see
their work displayed together, and see that the influences goes both
ways--sometimes it’s hard to tell them apart. As a writer married
to another writer (is it legal in your state?), I see how having a
creative partner helps.
The
catalogue offers a less intimate look at most of the displayed works,
and essays in which the artists discuss each other. Mutual respect is
seen. Their relationship had more to it than most: personal,
professional, historical. It was something powerful.
And
with Frida, art was never confined to paper, or canvas; as the
exhibit shows, she was creative in the way she dressed, the way she
decorated her home, and the very way she lived. Her influence can be
seen in today’s creative young women--back in the 20th century, I
saw a lot of them who would dress in bold styles, but who were intimidated
by taking that final step to becoming artists themselves. They would
settle to be artist’s girlfriends or hangers-on.
A
creative home helps, too. Though often creativity leaks into the home
environment whether it’s intended or not. This is the case with
Casa Azul, that I have visited twice. Recently, I acquired a book, La Casa Azul: Un Encuentro Con la Existencia, produced to be a
souvenir of Museo Frida Kahlo. It featured a lot of photos--including
some spectacular panoramic shots. Most of the text is written as if
Frida’s ghost was giving a tour. No American museum would get so
magic realist.
I
have a feeling that this disturbance in the separation between art
and life will have a lasting effect on culture in Phoenix.
Ernest
Hogan is the author of High Aztech,
and his work has appeared in Amazing Stories,
Analog, Aztlan, and Altermundos.
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