by Ernest Hogan
Papalomeh
in Nahuatl. Mariposas in Spanish. Butterflies in English.
Some
of my artwork, and artifacts of my weird career, are on display at Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, in Omaha, Nebraska, December 7,
2017 to Feburary 24, 2018, in a show called Monarchs:
Brown and Native Contemporary Artists in the Path of the Butterfly.
Monarchs
are the orange-and-black butterflies that cross the U.S./Mexico
border as part of their life cycle. No wall can stop them. Also, the
path of the butterfly is metamorphosis, transformation. Rather
Chicanonautical, if you ask me.
This
is thanks to Josh
Rios and Anthony
Romero, who have included me in their project that they call Is
Our Future a Thing of the Past?
A
good question in these dangerous days when, as Guillermo
Gómez-Peña
has
recently pointed out, “science fiction is merely a chronicle of
daily life.”
Strange
that this political turmoil has opened the door for me into the world
of fine art. Just another phase of my long, hard lucha for the
future.
To
give you an idea of what to expect, I've illustrated this post with
some special edition, computer-enhanced versions of some of my
battle-scarred sketchbook covers, two of which will be there.
The
Cultural
Subversion is Our Most Important Product
cover
will not be there, but I'm including it here because, yes, cultural
subversion really is our most important product, dammit!
Meanwhile,
as per usual, I'm keeping one foot in the underground, so if the shit
hits the fan, I'll have a place to stand.
Ernest
Hogan's novel High
Aztech will
be seen through the lens of Aztec philosophy by Sal Herrera as part
of "The Force of Teotl: Deriving Change From Chicano/a Futurisms
and Indigenous Philosophies" at the 2018 Native
American Literature
Symposium.
No comments:
Post a Comment