Vida LocaPR6_25_16 - Andrew Smith Gallery
Transcription
Vida LocaPR6_25_16 - Andrew Smith Gallery
For Immediate Release: June 25, 2016 Vida Loca Gallery -where art is crazy fun A division of Andrew Smith Gallery, Inc. New Friends, Old Friends and Family Andrew Smith Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of Vida Loca Gallery at 203 W. San Francisco Street, Santa Fe, N.M. 87501 where la buena vida, the good life, lies at the heart of contemporary Nuevo Mexicano art and culture. Vida Loca Gallery celebrates regional fine art, folk art and vernacular art made in local barrios, villages, suburbs, and neighborhoods. It specializes in Car Culture art, Low Rider art, fine art photography, Native American contemporary jewelry, and works by diverse artists who share an eye toward the beautiful, humorous, ironic, witty, sexual, and modern. Special Events in July: Friday, July 15, 2016 - 5-7 p.m. Open House, Meet many of the artists. Friday, July 22, 2016 – 5-7 p.m.. "Natural Elements" by Flor Garduño. The artist will be in attendance. The new gallery is the brainstorm of long-time photography dealer Andrew Smith and his daughter Holly Smith. Both were raised in Santa Fe, attended its public schools and grew up embracing the notion that New Mexico’s homegrown arts merit regional, national and international attention. Vida Loca Gallery welcomes a younger generation of emerging local artists into the mix with an older generation of renowned artists who have achieved distinction for their folk art, photography, car culture art, airbrush painting, jewelry, and other forms of expression. A main gallery emphasis is on Low Rider and Car Culture art, a 75-year tradition in our region. Car clubs in New Mexico, like the artist societies in Taos and Santa Fe of the 20th century, have long nurtured the creation and exhibition of spectacularly decorated and restored automobiles. It’s a tradition that has been passed down between family members and friends since World War II. Part of the fun includes taking to the streets on Friday and Saturday night in “Night Cruise Lines” intended to show off new, modified and traditional car creations to fans and the public: a grass roots parallel to Friday and Saturday night gallery and museum openings. As leaders and innovators of Car Culture art, New Mexico’s artists from Espanola, Chimayo, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, Las Vegas, Farmington, Las Cruces and beyond, have come up with original embellishment styles such as flecking, striping, and mural painting. The gallery offers a vibrant sampling of automobile mural painting, long an integral part of Northern New Mexico’s vernacular and folk art traditions. Santa Fe airbrush artist Grant Kosh and fabricator William Rowell of Sure Shot Custom are showing outrageous collaborations and individual pieces. The primary object is the “Basilica of Santa Fe 1956 Mercury Car Couch,” [copyright 2016 Sure Shot Custom] that combines the worn out bullet-ridden trunk of a vintage Mercury with a mural of the Basilica of St. Francis of Assisi, Santa Fe. Las Vegas native and multi-media artist John P. Gonzales has an immense talent for painting, welding, fabricating, tinkering, and working with found objects. His work ranges from Modernist engine block tables to car couches, classically restored trucks and coupes, and chopped and recombined hybrid cars. [photo: “Chevy 409 with Triple Deuces, Engine Block Table,” copyright 2010 John P. Gonzales] Vida Loca Gallery represents legendary Chimayo car muralist, Arthur “LowLow” Medina, showing his paintings made between 1988 and 2014 of custom cars set against the backdrop of Chimayo. Like many of his peers, LowLow works with precise, first-hand knowledge of a small number of cars that are family heirlooms. His subjects are derived from his Catholic faith interwoven with the car club culture of Northern New Mexico, an expression that is at once macho, sexy, and religious. [Painting, “Barrio De Santuario, 2011, copyright Arthur “Lowlow” Medina.] Outrageously witty cartoon paintings by Ricardo Cate' from Kewa [Santo Domingo Pueblo] are on display. Well known for his comic strip “Without Reservations” in the newspaper Santa Fe New Mexican, Cate' paints clever, insightful works that reveal the absurdity of life from a Native perspective. Cate' is the only Native cartoonist featured in a daily mainstream newspaper read by some 60,000 readers. The artist will be periodically in-residence at the gallery cartoons classic and drawing painting favorites. new his [copyright 2010 Ricardo Cate' “It’s cool that your grandpa is…”] PHOTOGRAPHY AT LA VIDA LOCA GALLERY MIGUEL GANDERT- Andrew Smith Gallery first exhibited Espanola native Miguel Gandert’s work in 1984. His photographs of tough young kids from Albuquerque’s south valley fused street photography with high art and barrio culture. Gandert was born in Española in 1956, a descendant of Spanish settlers of Mora, New Mexico and Antonito, Colorado. Since 1980 he has documented the lifestyles and traditions of rural and urban Hispanics living along the Rio Grande valley from Mexico to southern Colorado, with an emphasis on barrio culture of Albuquerque and Northern New Mexico villages. His many exhibitions over the years include a one-man show at the National Museum of American History at the Smithsonian in 1990. He is currently a professor of journalism and communications at UNM. Gandert’s primary interest is in New Mexican IndoHispanic culture and rituals that remain a vital part of life along the Camino Real to Mexico City and beyond. His vast subject matter extends to documents of New Mexican artists, farmers, land grant activists, Santa Fe Plaza Rats, local boxing, carnivals, and barrio culture. [photo “Couple In '51 Chevy, Albuquerque, New Mexico,” 1986, copyright Miguel Gandert] DELILAH MONTOYA – Born in Fort Worth, Texas in 1955, Delilah Montoya describes herself as a Chicana artist who lives within the perpetual tensions of a minority woman in the United States. Since the 1980s she has explored her roots through powerful art works that delve deep into spiritual, political and emotional visions. Montoya is a master of various photographic, printmaking and mixedmedia processes who creates two and three-dimensional works in a variety of sizes. Drawn to the spiritual icons of the southwest (her grandfather was a penitente from Las Vegas, New Mexico, she has lived in Albuquerque for over 30 years when she is not teaching at the University of Houston), Montoya incorporates powerful mythic symbols in her work, like the Madonna, La Malinche, La Sagrado Corazón, and La Llorona. To show how such sacred images are deeply imbedded in the collective consciousness of the culture, she produced a series of photographs of the Virgin of Guadalupe tattooed on the bodies of Hispanic and Latino men and women who cherish that image. [photo: “La Llorona In Lillith's Garden,” 2004, copyright Delilah Montoya) Montoya found examples of feminine power in ordinary life when she infiltrated the world of women boxers, primarily in Albuquerque a sport that attracts girls as young as fifteen who are anxious to emulate media superheros like Xena Warrior Princess, the Powerpuff Girls and Cat Woman. Her most famous subject is Holly Holmes, the local champion. FLOR GARDUNO - Flor Garduño is one of Mexico’s legendary contemporary photographers. In the 1980s she made numerous trips to remote parts of Latin America to photograph the lives and rituals of indigenous people, capturing the mysterious threshold between the sacred/temporal worlds. Her next project dealt with the mythic feminine and lyrical still lifes. This was followed with a major body of work called Trilogy which drew from three ongoing themes: Bestiarium (enchanted animals representing dreams and passions), Fantastic Woman (celebrating the mystery and sensuality of the female body) and Silent Natures (the realm of the wilderness). Garduño prints her photographs and portfolio prints using silver, platinum, palladium and digital processes. [photo: “Basket of Light, Sumpango, Guatemala,”1989, copyright Flor Garduño) ZIG JACKSON - Zig Jackson was raised on a reservation in North Dakota and is a member of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara tribes. He has been a guest a long time professor at the Savannah College of Art and Design, and is best known for his series of photographs titled Entering Zig's Indian Reservation. Each photograph was taken at a well-known site around San Francisco "occupied" by Jackson wearing a full Indian headdress and sunglasses and standing next to an official looking sign stating: "Entering Zig's Indian Reservation." Underlying the genuine humor, Jackson's photographs raise complex issues about Native American identity, land rights, indigenous sovereignty, and cultural ambiguity. [photo: “Kennecott Copper Mine, Tooele, Utah,” Zig Jackson copyright 2004] PATRICK NAGATANI - Patrick Nagatani's protean creativity is matched by a superb intellectual grasp about such serious issues as the nuclear waste industry, anachronistic archeology, prisoner of war camps, and apocalyptic disasters of all kinds. The theatrical dimension of his works reflects his experiences in the Hollywood film industry in the 1970s. Using magical realism, Nagatani explores such diverse subjects as Buddhism, gender and ethnic paradoxes, the creation and history of nuclear modernity, his own Japanese-American heritage, bodybuilding, color, light, healing, cancer, cars and airplanes. Each print is coded with multiple visual layers of clues and information. The intensity of his subject matter is softened by sheer beauty and humor. One of Nagatani’s most entertaining series was “Excavations,” (2001), a series of thirty photographs in which a Japanese archeologist named Ryoichi (invented by Nagatani) excavates historic and contemporary sites around the world noted for their cultural significance. To Ryoichi’s amazement (and ours) he uncovered evidence of a site-specific automobile culture that had existed all over the world in the past. For example, at Chichen Itza the car he uncovered from the ground was a Jaguar; at Stonehenge a Bentley, at Herculaneum a Ferrari, and so on. Nagatani’s meticulously crafted photographic “documents” play with society’s universal fascination with the cult of the car, while at the same time exploring the thin line between reality and illusion as photography creates, recreates, or supports a particular history. Nagatani ir retired from decades of teaching at the University of New Mexico. [photo: BMW, Chetro Ketl Kiva, Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, 1997,” copyright Patrick Nagatani] DON USNER – Photographer and author Don Usner was born in Embudo, New Mexico in 1957 and grew up in Los Alamos and Chimayo. After earning degrees in Biology, Environmental Studies and Geography in California and New Mexico, Usner moved to Santa Fe to teach, write and photograph. His extensive photography projects include the landscape and architecture of Chimayo, the Valles Caldera near Los Alamos, and portraits of ordinary and distinguished individuals from New Mexico and elsewhere. Usner has published eight books, many of which include his own photographs. He teaches photography at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design and Santa Fe Preparatory School. [photo: “Cinco De Mayo Car Show, Espanola, NM, 2, May 2015,” copyright Don Usner] [photo: copyright 2009 Vic Macias Photography] VIC MACIAS – Santa Fe Resident Vic Macias has been photographing Car Culture for decades, notably for Low Rider Magazine. His dynamic images depict cars, bikes, bikers, car makers and fans of lowriders and Custom Culture from his native California to New Mexico and beyond. From 1994 to 2008 the exhibition space at 203 W. San Francisco St. was home to the distinguished Andrew Smith Gallery, legendary for contemporary and classic photographs. Vida Loca looks forward to celebrating New Mexico’s extraordinary homegrown art that reflects our uniquely amalgamated culture of Indo-Hispanic-post-atomicrural-car-based-Americanized digital-world aesthetics! Gallery hours for VIDA LOCA are 10 to 5 Monday through Sunday. For more information please call VIDA LOCA at (505) 988-7410 or Andrew Smith Gallery at 505-984-1234. Visit us online at www.andrewsmithgallery.com to view photographs and ongoing exhibits. Our email: info@vidlalocagallery.com or info@andrewsmithgallery.com