USC FISHER MUSEUM OF ART / ART DIVISION
ARTISTS IN RESIDENCE USC Fisher Museum of Art January 31 - April 8, 2017
University of Southern California Fisher Museum of Art Staff Selma Holo - Director Kay Allen - Associate Director Stephanie Kowalick - Registrar/Collections Manager Juan Rojas - Chief Preparator Selin Camli - Communications Coordinator Raphael Gatchalian - Administrative Coordinator and Business Specialist Catalog design by Guillermo Perez Printer: Typecraft Photography: Jose Marchi work by Brian Forrest, All other images used for Miracles and Unknown by John Elder, Art Division works by Andy Romanoff, Workshop photos by Maria Galicia
TABLE OF CONTENTS 7 - Directors’ Foreword
ISBN: 978-0-945192-46-6
Š 2017 USC Fisher Museum of Art University Park Campus Los Angeles, CA 90089-0292
9 - The Workshops at the Fisher Museum 15 - Miracles Unknown The Permanent Collection Exhibition 31 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
All Rights Reserved. No part of this catalogue may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or means, electronic, mechanical,
63 - Appendix
photocopy, recording or otherwise, without the written permission of the Fisher Museum execept by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in review.
75 - Acknowledgments
Directors’ Foreword The USC Fisher Museum of Art and Art Division are pleased to present a semester long project that featured a series of workshops, followed by an exhibition of Art Division students’ works. Art Division is a non-profit organization dedicated to training and supporting under-served young adults who are committed to studying the visual arts. For three weeks in February, Fisher was transformed from a traditional museum space to a studio, where Art Division students, USC students, and the public had the opportunity to participate in workshops led by renowned artists and scholars, Karen Carson, John Nava, Margaret Lazzari, Salomon Huerta, Katherine Sherwood, Professor Larry Swanson , Randell Mell, Ruth Weisberg, Xavier Fumat, Dan McCleary and Tony Abatemarco. As the workshops were taking place, a select group of USC Art History undergraduates curated an exhibition culled from Fisher’s permanent collection to serve as inspiration for workshop participants and museum visitors. Their exhibition, “Miracles Unknown” ranged from seventeenth century to contemporary art. It allowed for paintings to be on display that created an environment of a museum in which the Art Division students did their work. As they are normally surrounded by art books in their daily studies at Art Division, having works from the Fisher permanent collection on display added to the dimension of working in a museum to their experience. On the other hand, museum exhibitions normally only reveal the final product of an artist’s work—sidestepping the creativity that has led to the final stages of the presentation itself. Fisher has exposed that process. It has also invited the public to participate—challenging the normative relationships between museum, audience, and artists by having a community project during the workshop period. During the three weeks of workshops the museum space progressively developed, as Art Division students displayed the results of their workshops and our various visitors left their imprint on Fisher and Art Division’s community mural. This exhibition by the Art Division students is the result of the project. The Artists in Residence exhibition includes film, drawings, paintings, sculptures, and photographs by sixteen Art Division students. This catalogue celebrates this project: USC / Art Division: Artists in Residence. It documents both process and product and highlights the many pieces that contributed to the actual museum exhibition. If artists can be involved in transforming society for the better, the encouragement of master artists of the next generation continues that chain of transformation. Fisher Museum and Art Division thank USC Roski School of Art and Design and USC School of Dramatic Arts for their support of Fisher and Art Division during the totality of this initiative. Their contributions of faculty and facilities have been essential to the success of USC Fisher Museum of Art/Art Division: Artists in Residence.
Art Division Library
Selma Holo
Dan McCleary
Director, USC Fisher Museum of Art
Director, Art Division
Opposite: Fisher and Art Division’s community mural, Photograph by Guillermo Perez
7
THE WORKSHOPS AT THE FISHER MUSEUM January 31 – February 18, 2017
At the heart of the Art Division residency at USC were the workshops. This section demonstrates some of the range of workshops and the transformation of Fisher from a traditional museum space to a studio space. The workshops also included some members of the public and the USC community of students, staff and faculty.
9
WOR KS HOP S Install Day, January 31, 12-5pm Witness the installation process of our workshop series and exhibition as it happens during the museum’s open hours. Figure Drawing Workshop I, February 1, 12-3pm Learn how to draw multiple poses from a live model in this workshop led by artist Karen Carson. Figure Drawing Workshop II, February 2, 12-3pm Salomon Huerta will lead a workshop featuring a live model to explore different drawing techniques and introduce students to new ways of seeing. Figure Drawing Workshop III, February 3, 1-4pm John Nava will give an illustrated talk about drawing, followed by demonstrations and guided drawing from a live model. Drawing with Pastels Workshop, February 7, 12-3pm Learn how to draw with pastels in this workshop led by artist and Art Division Director Dan McCleary. Please come with source material; a drawing, painting, or image you would like to do a version of in pastel. Figure Drawing Workshop IV, February 8, 12-3pm Margaret Lazzari, USC Roski School of Art and Design Professor of Fine Arts, will provide instruction on drawing a skeleton model and how that relates to drawing the human figure. Printmaking Workshop I, February 9, 12-3pm Use a printing press to make your own prints with the guidance of Art Division students.
Acting Workshop, February 14, 12-3pm USC School of Dramatic Arts Acting Teacher Tony Abatemarco will lecture on acting for the stage and the camera, incorporating his own students in their scene work with camera work from the Art Division Film Collective to investigate acting techniques and history. Open Conversations with Art Division, February 15, 12-2pm Join Art Division students as they discuss their experiences and the creative process during the open workshops at Fisher. Public Speaking Workshop, February 16, 12-3pm Overcome the fear of public speaking and learn how to enjoy it in this workshop by USC School of Dramatic Arts Assistant Professor of Theatre Practice, Randy Mell. Art & Brain, February 17, 1-3pm Learn about the history and meaning of the neurological images that artist Katherine Sherwood incorporates into her art. Explore the tradition of interactions between artists and doctors who study the biology of the brain, dating as far back as the Renaissance Period. Featuring artist Katherine Sherwood, University Professor and Appleman Professor of Biological Sciences, Neurology, and Psychology Larry Swanson, and Postdoctoral Scholar Leonardo Christov-Moore. Community Days, February 4, 11, 18, 12-4pm Visit Fisher on the first three Saturdays of February to create your own artworks and contribute to Fisher and Art Division’s community murals. Experience the organic development of the exhibition throughout the three weeks.
Printmaking Workshop II, February 10, 12-3pm USC Roski School of Art and Design Professor of Fine Arts Ruth Weisberg will lead an introductory workshop on the nature of printmaking and the techniques it encompasses, followed by a demonstration of linocut technique for the audience to create their own linocut prints. 10 - The Workshops
Opposite: Xavier Fumas leading a printmaking workshop.
Top: Dan McCleary leading a pastel workshop. Middle: Randy Mell leading a public speaking workshop. Bottom: Karen Carson leading a figure drawing workshop Opposite: Margaret Lazzari leading a figure drawing workshop.
MIRACLES UNKNOWN THE PERMANENT COLLECTION EXHIBITION January 31 – February 18, 2017
While the Art Division students were engaged in their workshops, USC Art History undergraduate students curated an exhibition culled from Fisher’s permanent collection to serve as both art historical inspiration for the workshop participants and information about our collections for our other museum visitors. Miracles Unknown, ranged from seventeenth century paintings to contemporary art. This section includes a selection of images of those artworks. For a fuller display of the work that were on view, please go to our website, fisher.usc.edu. Each work in Miracles Unknown is described here in a short text by its curators Jade Matias Bell (J.B.), Madelyne Gordon (M.G.), Lauren Jones (L.J.), and Regina Chung (R.C.).
15
Fruit Stand opens this section, serving as a unifying reference to Everyday Miracles and Unknown. California-born artist Robert Glen Ginder is most well-known for his
Similarly, this comparison over time suggests the notion of an un-
gold-leafed triptych works representing common objects such as still
certain future. To some, where food is concerned, the future has
lifes or Southern Californian stucco homes. His golden backgrounds
already approached: with the click of a button online, they no longer
adorn subject matters with gold and turn them into modern icons.
need to interact with live cashiers for food. Fruit stands to them are becoming “Unknown” relics of the past. To others, however, quality
In Fruit Stand, this style further becomes relevant to the theme of
food and sustenance are becoming more elusive. To this number
the exhibition Miracles Unknown in conjunction with other works
of people, fruit stands turn into the Unknown, its possibility or lack
displayed in both sides of the gallery. For example, look at Maria’s
thereof throw them into anxiety.
Great Expedition. Just as one follows Maria’s everyday rituals and errands through four decades, they find small details that would
Uncertainty can be either a miraculous or an uncomfortable quality,
have then characterized a quotidian fruit stand, such as the per-
when everyday objects are concerned. It can fascinate us in awe, or
pound price of a McIntosh apple, or the analogue scales that hang
throw us into depression. This push-and-pull of sublimity is sadly not
on each sides of the stand.
only an event of the fictional, but also of a remarkably practical reality. R.C.
Opposite: Robert Glen Ginder, Fruit Stand, 1986. Oil and gold leaf on wood panel, 47 3/4 x 62 3/4 inches.
Miracles Unknown - 17
Everyday Miracles We cannot always explain our own wonder. Whether it takes the form of shock, terror, or bliss, we assign a miraculous quality to the source of our strongest amazement and (often) head out to find it. Lives and volumes have been devoted to seeking out and materializing the miraculous. Only at the end of these pursuits, however, do we find that the root of amazement had been present in our daily lives all along. Our journeys and scavenging, no matter how misguided they may sometimes seem, develop our ability to appreciate these everyday miracles. Everyday Miracles is a testament to those journeys and that scavenging. The selections you see here, from the permanent collection of the USC Fisher Museum of Art, are testaments to the everyday miraculous in various ways: through medium, contents, history, and allegory. Works from series, such as Sin título (2002) by Sergio Belinchón and Christina Fernandez’s Maria’s Great Expedition (1995-1996), are literal examples of that journey. Other pieces, such as Carol Newborg’s Ark/Icon from her Gateway installation (1990), a part of an exhibition named Forbidden Entry, communicate an illusion of an arched window—beckoning but blocked. It asks the question: how to proceed when the forces appear to be against the journey itself? What it is about the quotidian that sometimes frightens us and keeps us from realizing the miraculous? Some works, like the Reverend Ethan Acres’s Miracle at La Brea, ask a slightly different question: when, and why, does the familiar give way to a miracle? The subject of our exhibition was also reflected in our process –digging through the permanent collection of the Fisher Museum, we found the miraculous to be all around us. In Robert Glen Ginder’s Fruit Stand, it was in the grocery store; in I Know Something About Love, it drifted through a window; some of it was so close that it was in our very bones, as in the Artists’ Hands. From the storage rooms of the museum, we assembled points of light into a constellation of miracles perceived and communicated by artists. We hope that it can serve as a reminder of the immediacy of the miraculous that is actually embedded into our daily lives—waiting to be noticed.
18 - Miracles Unknown
Left: Reverend Ethan Acres, Miracle at La Brea, 2000 Right: Rena Small, Artists’ Hans Grid Continuum: LouAnne Greenwald, 1986
Antonia Jade Matias Bell
Regina Yomyong Chung
USC Dornsife Art History Department
USC Dornsife Art History Department
Miracles Unknown - 19
Rev. Ethan Acres, Miracle at La Brea, 2000
Rena Small, Artists’ Hands Grid Continuum: Ed Ruscha, 1986;
Robert Rasely, I Know Something About Love, 1986.
The size of this piece is the most immediately striking thing about it,
LouAnne Greenwald, 1994.
This trompe l’oeil work appears at first to be a simple painting of a
dove as a classical symbol of peace, but a grey pigeon. Does the artist
and its material – ink on glass – gives it at once an impressive solidity
In these images, the hands of artists Ed Ruscha and LouAnne
window on what might be the side of a rusted-out ship, or perhaps the
mean to convey to us that Hunter’s elegance is enough to incarnate
and an almost ghostly fragility. Miracle at La Brea looks like viewing
Greenwald are approached as if they are subjects for conventional
scratched-up wall of a bathroom. Closer inspection, however, reveals
that virtue? It is the combination of technical and metaphorical
a memory (or perhaps a re-memory) of an inscrutable yet profoundly
portraits. Although these portraits contain no facial features or even
increasingly meticulous surreal detail: a model ship, an anatomical-
artistry that gives life to this painting, giving and maintaining
impactful event. In some ways, the composition parodies classical
bodies, they convey a wholeness through partiality: a kind of visual
heart-like shell hanging from a pin in the wall, a sketch of a vulva
miraculously to this day, a lasting life that beckons awe. R.C.
paintings of heavenly assumptions: Reverend Acres’ outstretched
synecdoche. The sculptural balance of Ruscha’s fingers on his palm
pierced by a fishhook. The dissonance between the incongruity of
arms, the bird-like angel wings on the back of the dinosaur. Reverend
and Greenwald’s symmetrical posturing lend these images a studied
these images and their hyperrealistic style gives Rasely’s painting
Arnaldo Roche, Difficult to Hide, 2014.
Acres makes surreal, vivid art centered around a radical sense of
tenderness. (The inclusion of text at the bottom of Ruscha’s portrait
a disorienting quality. I Know Something About Love’s hallucinatory
spirituality, and this piece is no exception: the mashing up of time
might also be seen as a coy nod to his text-heavy work.) The artists’
exploration of an unspecified emotional event gives us a glimpse
Contemporary Puerto Rican-American artist Arnaldo Roche (also
periods is at once absurd and completely natural. Like many of the
hands seem to emerge from nowhere, giving a mystical edge to
into a literal beyond while hinting at it in a series of myopic, detailed
pieces in this exhibit, Miracle at La Brea uses the language of what we
what most people might consider a practical, mundane part of the
visual metaphors. J.B.
know to convey something existing on the cusp of the unknowable.
body. To the artist, of course, hands are more than that – they are the
J.B.
physical centering of creative energy, the road to the mystical and
Angelica Kauffmann, Isabella Hunter, 1776-1790.
to livelihood. Looking at these pictures, one is reminded of a stage
In 1768, when King George III founded the Royal Academy of Arts in
at once American and Puerto Rican. This confusion, however, has
London, it had 34 members, only two of whom were women. Swiss-
gone through age and acceptance: the face lies with eyes closed, its
born history painter and portraitist Angelica Kauffmann was one of
long lashes pointing downwards the subtle smile on its lips; the blue
them. The sole traditional single portrait in this exhibition is Isabella
echoes peacefulness rather than sadness.
Christina Fernandez, Maria’s Great Expedition, 1995-1996.
magician, or perhaps the hands of an artist at work rather than rest.
This intimate series of photographs offers a highly personal view
What else might come from that darkness and appear like a sudden
of the migration of one of the artist’s ancestors through space and history. Christina Fernandez reenacts moments in her grandmother’s
miracle? J.B.
journey from Mexico to the US and back again using photographic
Judith Simonian, Fallen Vase, 1983.
technology appropriate for each era. A map is included to contextualize the images, grounding the mythology of family stories
known as Arnaldo Roche Rabell) is considered to be one of the most important Latin American artists today. Difficult to Hide “hides” a face behind bold patches of blue. This translucent face has paradoxical effects of calm and calamity, of identity and conformity. The chaos of blues parallels Roche’s personal struggles of being
Hunter (c. 1776-1790). The beautiful sitter donned with milky silk dress blushes bashfully, but does not shy away from confronting
In its indirect subject matter of individuality and identity, it relates
In this print, a vase is caught in an instant of crisis and transformation,
the viewer with her clear hazel eyes. Her direct gaze has qualities
to other paintings included in this exhibition, Angelica Kauffmann’s
moving away from itself and its physical integrity into chaos. It
not of lust, which was so often the trait given to female figures by
Isabella Hunter, Rena Small’s Artists’ Hands, and Salomón Huerta’s
in real space. The photos’ staged quality is evident and intentional,
seems to be spilling out its own form (its “guts”) onto the floor,
male artists, but of grace and serenity. As a result, Hunter’s dignity is
Cabeza. All of these paintings raise questions of the unknown both
but at the same time there is an uncalculated vulnerability to each
draining itself into an abstraction of scribble and shape. The liquid
elevated to an almost divine level.
within us and among others. R.C.
one; what might have come across as fraudulence instead feels
pouring from the vase is the only part of the composition to break
intensely honest. Fernandez, as Maria, is alive; she acknowledges,
the boundaries of the ghostly background. The forms in the distance
Hidden in the canvas are elements that act together to support the
dodges, and dominates our gaze. The intimate concept behind this
have already broken apart into entropy. The simultaneously belabored
sitter’s beauty; of course, these elements are given differentiating
work, as well as the loving attention to mundane detail in each image,
and agitated quality of Simonian’s linework raises a question: In an
treatment by the artist. She sits in front of a passing storm, which
pushes it into the canon of the exhibit. J.B.
instant of crisis, can the everyday indeed transcend itself into the
she may even have been intended to have calmed down with her
absurd and even otherworldly? We can recognize this shape as a
presence, edged with just enough shrubs. The face is most carefully
vase, but it looks ready to flatten, break apart, and disappear. J.B.
painted, with featherlike layers of brush strokes, creating a soft yet intense focal point. Curiously, she holds in her hands not a white
20 - Miracles Unknown
Miracles Unknown - 21
Carol Newborg, Ark/Icon, 1990.
Sergio Belinchón, Sin título, 2002.
When Ark/Icon was shown at the Fisher Gallery in 1992, it was
Spanish photographer and filmmaker Sergio Belinchón creates
physically entered through and beyond a wooden gate; it was part of
works that associate with human habitats, either directly or indirectly.
a larger Gateway sanctuary installation in the exhibition “Forbidden
Two untitled photographs here, part of a nine-piece project, remind
Entry.” In this, the principal piece, natural wood borders a window-
viewers of human pioneering, by showing paved roads in the middle
like frame that lures viewers into an unknown world beyond the white
of deserts. One wonders if at the end of these trails lie glorious cities
wall. The beams and arch encase a plaster-filled surface with three-
or abandoned villages; if they lead to lives of our era, or decades
level sunk-relief steps in the center. Common materials here create
back, or even forward into an uncertain future. It is exactly this kind
an eerily meditative effect. To what level does that meditation reach,
of questioning that perhaps led to infrastructure being laid on such
and what place does Ark/Icon take part in this meditation? Does it
barren lands, or maybe it was out of desperate necessity. These
create, or does it destroy? R.C.
photographs are intuitively simple yet extraordinarily quizzical— elements of curiosity that guide us to man-made miracles, for better,
Attributed to George Morland, Yarmouth Fort, 1803.
or for worse. R.C.
Often, travelers go through a disaster to reach an end to a journey. British painter George Morland depicts a shipwreck scene in a sublime Romantic style. The center of the canvas is left empty, with the majority of the action taking place on the bottom foreground and the right-hand side. Despite the subject matter, the scene is not entirely terrifying. The storm is subsiding, and crew members are miraculously saved. The piece was once part of Fisher Museum’s exhibition “A Selection of British Paintings.” 1The work was then criticized for its paint that “barely covers the canvas and is applied unevenly.” This exact technical failure, however, makes the work more appropriate for “Miracles Unknown,” proving the power of context. R.C.
Christina Fernandez, 1910, Leaving Morelia, Michoacan, Mexico from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996 22 - Miracles Unknown
1 Jacqueline Crist, “Morland, George – attributed to. Yarmouth Fort, ” in A Selection of British Paintings, ed. Selma Holo et al. (Los Angeles: Fisher Gallery, University of Southern California, 1988), 22-23.
Miracles Unknown - 23
Unknown Part of the power of humans is our overpowering interest in explaining what is unknown. Our curiosity drives our experience, making us experiment, ponder, and create. But the unknown is also scary, particularly when it affects our everyday lives. The purpose of this exhibition is to discuss both what is unknown and how we deal with what we either do not understand or what is uncertain. In a time of political change, many are questioning the unknown in their everyday lives: access to healthcare, immigration, maintaining equal rights for minorities and women, as well as personal identity and belonging—all these issues are pressing and important because their resolution in the future is unknown. We have chosen works that specifically address these topical issues, expressing how artists depict and understand the complexities of the uncertainties that we are facing. However, the unknown is not a new concept. Every generation must deal with uncertainty, unrest and the unknown. And so, people have developed ways of explaining or discussing them. Religion, the Occult, science, technology, law and order, and art are examples of this quest. Therefore, we have compiled works that may also offer guidance and demonstrate how, throughout the ages, humans have tried to reveal, understand and find comfort with the unknown. The unknown can be terrifying and can cause chaos, but it is our job to actively confront these aspects of the human condition, and to not be passive in the face of doubt.
24 - Miracles Unknown
Clockwise from top left Ellen Lampert, Meaningful Relationship at 3pm, 1981 Jose Alberto Marchi, Nude Female with Dark Mask Loren Sandvik, Lucy Alamillo and Maria Ixchel Ramirez, 2000
Madelyne Gordon
Lauren Jones
USC Dornsife Art History Department
USC Dornsife Art History Department
Miracles Unknown - 25
Jose Alberto Marchi, Nude Female with Dark Mask, 2010
worthy of a soap opera storyline. Two men are being arrested by the
Francisco Toledo, Artist Book (Double Skeleton), 2003
Arturo Mallmann, Sin Título, 2004
Nude Female with Dark Mask, by Argentinean artist Jose Alberto
police and are being restrained against the cop car. Lampert conveys
Recalling a medieval manuscript illumination, Francisco Toledo’s
Sin Título, a mixed-media painting aptly described as a landscape
Artist Book (Double Skeleton), is a provocative rendition a common
of light, by Uruguayan artist Arturo Mallmann.
motif throughout Toledo’s work: skeletons. The conjoined figures
mixed-media paintings, Mallmann uses materials like fragments of
contemplate more than questions of death. While asking what
eighteenth-century doors to evoke a dreamlike, luminous journey
happens to us after we die is an inescapable concern of human
through space. Combining the distinct technique, “…applying
Marchi is made of two separate canvases joined together. The composition’s grey-scale color palette echoes the visual quality of just-developed film being viewed on a light table for the first time. Two notable themes present within this painting, contrast and duality,
a modern situation that remains strikingly relevant today through her languid depiction of the woman, unaware of the world around her. M.G.
Known for his
work in opposition and challenge the viewer to look inwards, and
Francisco Toledo, The Engineer, 1982
existence with no determinable clear answer, Artist Book (Double
innumerable coats of translucent acrylic paint between thick coats
in doing so, question his/her/their personal identity. This painting
The Engineer, a 1982 drawing by Mexico’s most famous living
Skeleton) also questions unknown problems in everyday life. The
of resin,” Mallmann’s Sin Título achieves a hazy, ephemeral quality.
contemplates inner tension that may hoist personal beliefs against
artist, Francisco Toledo, is a curious display of draughtsmanship.
gaunt ribcage, evocative of poor health, is a reminder of hunger
The soft white-ochre light radiating outward from the center—
societal values, what we do not know is ourselves. M.G.
Lines curve horizontally across both sides of the paper until they
and malnourishment, which are a result of lack of access to fresh
specifically, the area of transition where the lightest colors first begin
meet in the middle. Suddenly, emerging from the frame is a visage,
food that is nutrient-rich, clean water, and affordable healthcare.
receding into depths of the composition’s bottom half—anchors
Rena Small, Adam and Eve, Who Dunit, Adam?, 1991
transformed by lines merging into what roughly appears to resemble
Skeletons and skulls, frequently reused in Toledo’s body of work, are
perspective, reinforced by Mallmann’s subtle inclusion of a ground
One question that will never be answered is from where we came.
facial features. In the bottom quadrants of the composition a hand
seen as building upon on their metaphorical meanings, with their
line extending across the horizon. This technique produces a work of
holding a compass protrudes. Unlike the facial features, the hand
identities and interrelationships often clarified by their decorative
art best enjoyed piece upon which to meditate. In an artist statement,
conceals the lines with its shadow, interrupting the rhythm the lines
function. M.G.
Mallmann wrote,
Before science could answer this question, religion was used to reconcile this unknown. In Rena Small’s Adam and Eve, Who Dunit, Adam? biblical origins of mankind, and its transgressions, is called into question. Small’s insertion of ironic humor in the photograph, where Adam holds the forbidden fruit in front of Eve’s slightly open mouth, challenges preconceived notions of our patriarchal society.
established. “To me that thick foggy atmosphere where we constantly wonder This drawing can possibly be interpreted not as a physical depiction
Loren Sandvik, Lucy Alamillo and Maia Ixchel Ramirez, 2000
around and are unable to trespass, represents the barrier beyond
of Toledo’s subject, but a portrait of the subject’s personal identity
One of the greatest unknowns Americans face today relies on the
which lie the answers to those questions that we so frequently pose
M.G.
or even, perhaps his psychological state. On the one hand, Toledo
Ellen Lampert, Meaningful Relationship at 3pm, 1981
lines suggest instability of some sort; likewise, the imperfect circle
The unknown is ever-present in everyday life, yet, the world may pass us by and we may never realize it; relying on technology as a crutch for social interaction has dangerous consequences of missing what may have been in front of you the whole time. In Ellen Lampert’s watercolor drawing, Meaningful Relationship at 3pm, a woman sits in her kitchen, surrounded by insignia of domesticity; an oven mitt, a coffee mug, Pampers diaper bag, a mop, and a broom. Listlessly holding the remote, she rests her chin on the other, and watches an afternoon soap opera; ironically, mere steps from her door is a scene
26 - Miracles Unknown
projects what he already knows about his subject—the discontinuous drawn assumedly with the compass held in the subject’s hand, could be a similar cue—or it could all be fictitious, there is no way to truly know. The Engineer plays on our perceptions and without certainty, Toledo throws a wrench into our assumptions about not only this figure’s identity, but also our own personal identity. M.G.
implementation of the immigration policies passed by the Trump Administration. The photograph Lucy Alamillo and Maia Ixchel Ramirez, taken by Loren Sandvik in 2000, is a testament to this
to ourselves and to the universe, questions about our unknown origins and the meaning of our existence.”
conflict’s continued relevance in American life.
With these remarks in mind, Sin Titulo undeniably fits into the primary
An especially salient issue in Southern California, due to the
or reconcile the unknown as a perpetual fixture in human existence.
state’s proximity to the United States- Mexico border, hundreds of
mission of Unknown, which addresses the ways artists acknowledge M.G.
thousands of people are uncertain about their status in the country the now call home. This black and white photograph, showing a young woman holding her young child, with blood dripping down the young woman’s face is particularly poignant. The wound inflicted scarring not only the mother, but also her young daughter whose future becomes uncertain. M.G.
Miracles Unknown - 27
Johann Zoffany, The Cope Family, 1755
Salmon Huerta, Cabeza, 1991
Rufino Tamayo, Figura de Hombre, n.d.
Mira Bernabeu, En Circulo I, 2001
Johann Zoffany’s The Cope Family confronts the unknown through
In Salomón Huerta’s Cabeza, we are confronted by the back of the
In Figura de Hombre, Rufino Tamayo tackles the unknown by creating
En Circulo I by Mira Bernabeu, we are confronted by two separated
human relationships. As one of the greatest “conversation piece”
head. We are given no clues as to who this person is: what are they
an almost religious work, but still allowing us to see the everyday
but joined images: one is what we see everyday, a family portrait, and
painters of his time, Zoffany’s goal was to create images of interest
feeling? Where do they come from? What are they thinking? We aren’t
within the painting. The pose of the man with his stretched out
the other is something we never see, the same portrait, but without
to inspire viewers to discuss the piece. In The Cope Family, the family,
even given a glimpse of the subject’s face, yet everyone creates their
arms, as well as the light behind the figure creating a silhouette and
clothes and the subjects covered in blood. It is unsettling and dark to
though painted together, seems disjointed and each member seems
own story of who this person is based on practically no information.
long shadow invoke the obvious reference to Jesus on the Cross.
see an everyday experience morphed into a horror movie-like scene.
to be alone rather than connected. There is a sense of unease, that
We are forced to ask questions and try to uncover the answers based
However, other than the pose, there is no indication that this is in fact
As a modern day conversation piece and in the same line of artistic
is, a sense that no one truly knows where they stand in this family, or
on our own experiences but also our own prejudices, leading us to
a religious piece; instead, one could view it as very commonplace,
inquiry as Zoffany’s The Cope Family, Bernabeu creates mystery and
what the others think of them. The emotional distance between the
question both the unknown within others, and to question ourselves.
as just a man walking out of a room. By creating a work that is both
discussion for the viewer; there is no explanation or reason given
subjects makes it seem almost as though the subjects were painted
Cabeza is not simply a head, but it is a study of how we see others.
religious and mundane, Tamayo enables us to see religion as an
for the two scenes and thus is up to the viewer to unravel the story
separately then simply placed on a theater stage. The Cope Family
L.J.
everyday occurrence that can exist anywhere and be a part of any
and the relationships in the photographs. There is a vulnerability to
person. Tamayo’s unknown looks at how and why we see religion in
the image, showing the viewer that it can be painful to reveal the
our everyday lives. L.J.
unknown. Bernabeu is forcing us to see the unknown, showing that
can cause us to consider our own relationships and if we connect or remove ourselves from others. L.J.
this is always something behind the image, behind the person that
Willie Robert Middlebrook, POMP #329, In the Shadow of the Cross, 2001. Robert Farber, Western Blot #15, 1992
José Alberto Marchi, Landscape with Burning Bush, 2013
Willie Robert Middlebrook’s POMP #329, In the Shadow of the Cross
In Landscape with Burning Painting, José Alberto Marchi, known
confronts religion, specifically Christianity. Humans use religion to try
Robert Farber in Western Blot #15 addresses the still unseen and
as one of the modern Latin American Master, creates an image of
and grapple with or accept the unknown, and often we find comfort
taboo epidemic of AIDS in 1992. It was the taboo around AIDS that
mystery and uncertainty. The curators of this exhibition interpret
in the community and routine religion provides. In Middlebrook’s
caused it to be both an invisible disease in the sense that you could
the painting’s title as a subtle reference to Moses and the Burning
photographic painting, he decides to upset traditional Christian
not see the illness, but also in that no one wanted to talk about it.
Bush, in which God appears to Moses as a burning bush which is not
iconography by placing on the cross not Jesus, but instead a nude
Farber, by creating a visual diary of his decline and imminent death,
destroyed by the fire, and tells Moses to free the Israelites in Egypt
black female. In this work, Middlebrook allows the viewer to question
made us think about the inner and unseen torment that he and others
from oppression. The painting, depicting two men standing in front
who religion is for, and how identity affect our beliefs, traditions and
faced on a daily basis. His own figure looks like any other person you
of the burning artworks is a symbolic representation of perseverance
our own sense of community. Do we define ourselves and others by
may see on the street, but is still overpowered and hidden by his own
and freedom, declaring art cannot be destroyed and acts as a
our religion, our race, our gender or perhaps a combination of various
words. However, by including a mirrored side to his work, Farber
metaphor for discussing injustice and censorship. L.J.
forms of identity? L.J.
allowed us to examine ourselves, our own pain, fear, and prejudices.
we may never see or understand. L.J.
He wanted us to understand the unknown suffering and pain that exists in others, but also in ourselves. L.J.
28 - Miracles Unknown
Miracles Unknown - 29
THE ART DIVISION EXHIBITION & INTERVIEWS March 19 – April 8, 2017
The installation shots that open this section give a sense of the exhibition as it greeted the public. They are followed by interviews of each Art Division artist, conducted by our undergraduate art history students, accompanied by a full color image of one of their works in the exhibition. A full checklist follows in the appendix. The interviewers are identified by their initials (J.B., M.G., L.J., R.C.) and the artists are presented in alphabetical order with the exception of Javier Carrillo and Maria Galicia, alumni of Art Division and current staff members.
31
Panorama of Artists In Residence exhibition.
M AR IA GAL ICIA As s i s t ant Di re c t or
M
aria Galicia began working at Art Division in 2010
One of the most successful aspects of Art Division is the sense of
serving as its Assistant Director. Alongside Dan
community. The students are there to support each other. For this
McCleary, the two worked at HOLA (Heart of Los
exhibition, Galicia observed that “Students worked late, long hours in
Angeles) where they ran the art department for
the studio. It has been wonderful seeing the progress of their work
elementary school students through high schoolers. Dan created the
from one day to the next. And they all helped each other, especially
idea of Art Division, a place to provide artists from age 18 to 26 year-
when they got close to the deadline.”
old with free art classes. The sense of community permeates all aspects of Art Division. As one of the founding members of Art Division, Maria has watched
There is already a deep connection to the community since many of
it grow from a small space for all the classes to having separate
the students come from the surrounding area. Maria’s contribution
studios for printmaking, drawing, painting, a gallery, and an art library.
to Art Division fosters a place for artistic growth for these students.
In addition, she says it has been wonderful to watch the students
Her passion, presence, and readiness to help in any way she can,
grow as well, and see how their work has changed.
are invaluable; furthermore, her dedication to Art Division and immense support for the exhibition at USC Fisher Museum has been
To Maria, Art Division is different from similar programs because
instrumental in creating such success. L.J.
it is small, allowing everyone to know the students personally. “Our students already have the passion and the talent. We just provide the resources. They learn from and help each other, as well from our professional staff.”
Maria Galicia, Self Portrait, Linolium and Acrylic on fabric, 2017 34 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 35
JAVI E R CAR R IL LO O p e rat i on s M an age r / P ri nt m ak i n g I n s t ruc t or
T
he delicately balanced compositions of Javier Carrillo’s
Carrillo’s commitment and respect for his subjects, combined with
portraits, accentuated by flat application of color, lined
his progressive spirit, is manifested in the political themes in his
the east wall of Fisher’s Artist in Residence show. Carrillo,
work which “show we’re more than how they see us. We’re more than
Art Division’s Operations Manager and Printmaking
people selling flowers.”
Instructor, is a soft spoken person who uses his art to speak volumes. Carrillo says “culture, identity, and finding out who I am are
Carrillo has showed at Craig Krull Gallery, and his book of truck prints
the strongest influences on my art.” Blending his cultural roots and
was recently published by Nazraeli Press. He will have a solo show
personal experiences, Carrillo’s paintings often depict friends, family,
at Bakersfield Museum of Art in the fall of 2017. He will also have an
and members of the community in various roles.
exhibition in Oaxaca, Mexico in 2018. His work can be found in many
Born in Michoacán, Mexico, Carrillo moved to Los Angeles at the
private and public collections. M.G.
age of seven. Carrillo’s series Lotería–a popular game in Mexico— uses images on a deck of cards based on street vendors. Most of these vendors, Carrillo notes, come from Mexico and are an underrepresented group in contemporary art. Vicente is a large scale oil painting of a balloon vendor. It shows the man seated on a small stool carrying his balloons. Carrillo explained, “I tried to express how tired he was [after] walking miles all day. One day I helped him carry the pole, it was much heavier than I expected,” and after years of carrying the pole, the vendor’s shoulder had become indented.
Javier Carrillo, Vicente, Oil on canvas, 2017 36 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 37
AL F R EDO ALVAR ADO
A
lfredo Alvarado has always been drawn to making art,
His artistic process thrives on spontaneity and experimentation. He
but he decided to make it his career after attending a
does few sketches, retaining them mostly as “a reminder of the idea”
summer intensive course at LA’s Otis College of Art and
behind the piece rather than letting them dictate the final outcome of
Design. At Otis, he studied printmaking, collage, and
the work. That outcome is almost always unexpected. This element
environmental issues, and was able to further develop his technique.
of surprise is one of the things Alvarado finds most rewarding about
His move away from paper and toward cardboard is representative
being an artist: the process of creating the art itself.
of his fluid, creative approach toward materials and format – “I don’t feel like I have a style because it is always in flux.” Even his
Alvarado chose cardboard as his medium for this series because
inspirations are constantly changing. The serie in this show was
he wanted to move away from “safe” materials such as paper and
influenced by Ramiro Gomez’s carnival paintings, Botticelli’s Birth of
canvas, and even away from the “safe” square or rectangular shape
Venus, and Félix Gonzalez-Torres’s installation Untitled (Perfect Lovers).
of those materials. While cardboard is often seen as scrap material or strictly for drafting, Alvarado emphasizes that it all “depends on
Most of all, Alvarado finds inspiration in the intersections between
how you treat the medium.” He does not fully cover up the cardboard
the political and the intimate. Transition, Nightly Passion, Morning
in his work, believing this allows him to fully explore the limits and
Heartbreak, and In Memory Of… explore the beauty and peril of LGBT
possibilities of the material. His ethic of respect for his material
identity in today’s world. The series moves smoothly from celebratory
and his spirit of experimentation and discovery give his work a
to tender, finishing with a monument to those in the community lost
fascinating vitality, and he hopes this allows the viewers to further
to violence, suicide, and those affected by discrimination both in
connect with his work. J.B.
the past and present. “The successes of our community shouldn’t distract us from the work that’s still left to do,” Alvarado explains.
38 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
Alfredo Alvarado, Transition, Acrylic on cardboard, 2017 In the permanent collection of Poet Laureate of Los Angeles Luis Rodriguez
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 39
JE S SICA CUAUT L E
J
essica Cuautle’s portraits are truly labors of love. She
The subjects of the portraits, though, give Cuautle’s work its heart.
blends highly refined, work-intensive technique with the
The woman in Fluid, depicted with an ocean behind her, is an
desire to depict her subjects – usually her friends – in a
indigenous activist; the subject of Breathe the Fire is a survivor of
way that conveys the depth of their character with both
domestic abuse. Both are close friends of Cuautle, who calls these
sensitivity and power. Cuautle’s devotion to her craft is immediately
portraits of them “appreciation drawings.” She captures the things
clear: when she talks technique, you are aware that she is a skilled
she notices about the people she loves – one’s cheerful, fluid
problem-solver and an ambitious artist, always striving to challenge
presence or the other’s strong will and powerful stare – and captures
herself with new medias and subjects. One of her favorite things
them “so people can notice them too.” “That’s my way of being corny
about Art Division is the atmosphere of “informal competition” that
with people,” she laughs, but is careful to add that “these are not
motivates her to learn more and improve.
pretty portraits.” They are, indeed, much more than that – they are captivating, meticulously crafted windows into the souls of these
This desire to challenge herself was Cuautle’s first inspiration for
two women. J.B.
the portraits seen in the show – she pursued pastels specifically because they are “chalky and messy” and a difficult medium for her to work with. She felt inspired to recreate the buttery look of oils blending the work as much as possible, giving these portraits an airbrushed quality that feels reminiscent of mid-century Hollywood.
Jessica Cuautle, Breathe The Fire, Pastel on paper, 2017 40 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 41
E M M A NUEL GALVEZ
E
mmanuel Galvez is in a transitional state in his art career. As
bread] paintings. The color royal blue is derived from his self-portrait
one of the four founding members of Art Division, he is now
series. The paintings feature him wearing orange prison uniforms
building a name for himself in the Los Angeles art scene.
against a blue background.
Galvez grew up in Puebla and Mexico City, then moved to Los
In describing the Pan dulce series, LA Times critic Christopher
Angeles at age 12. He met Dan McCleary one summer at a non-profit
Knight writes “...Emmanuel Galvez presents painting as a delectable
organization called HOLA (Heart of Los Angeles) and built a mentor-
social confection.” In his integration of subject and materials--he
student relationship. They have worked together for nine years.
sees crumbs and glitter, as representations of society. Galvez has
Through Art Division, Galvez sees himself not only as a student, but
developed a clear, succinct and intelligent style. He is represented by
also as a mentor to his peers. He has helped them with techniques
Craig Krull Gallery in Santa Monica, and his work is in many important
and materials, and has also exposed them to various artists.
collections. R.C.
He currently teaches art at HOLA, and clearly sees the unique pedagogical needs in guiding children K through 12. While studying at Santa Monica City College, classes in political science, opened his eyes to the importance of social justice, and has inspired him to give back to his community. Galvez’s installation at Fisher is titled Reconstruction:Tierra de la libertad. [Land of Liberty]. It consists of 13 royal blue felt panels sprinkled with glitter. Razor blades pierce the tops in a flowing yet erratic pattern. The panels are arranged in a rectangular grid on the museum floor. He explains that while it is his first installation in a major museum, it features two elements that spill over from his previous work. The glitter and with reflecting light of the chilling Emmanuel Galvez, Reconstruction;”Tierra de la libertad”, Silver glitter, razor blades, royal blue felt, & panels, 2017
42 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
razors, are reminiscent of the breadcrumbs from his Pan dulce [sweet
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 43
AL EX GONZ AL EZ
A
t the intersection of exceptional draughtsmanship and
All but one of Alex’s works in the show are part of narrative driven series
lowbrow infused Pop Surrealism stands Alex Gonzalez.
imbued with motifs; abstracted characters, cartoons, and technicolor
A self-taught Los Angeles native who works under the
smoke plumes spawning into visages of beast-like creatures. Boy Dog:
pseudonym OtisWoods, Alex’s innovative vision evokes
A Dog’s Day Out is an early piece in the narrative sequence where Boy
an ineffable spirit and aesthetic. With influences spanning from
Dog, one of the protagonists, is introduced. The character, a hybrid of
science fiction, fantasy, and cartoons, to old masters like Caravaggio
young boy and his dog, has one body, but two personalities that can
and contemporary artists like Botero, Alex is acutely aware of art
“switch at will or simultaneously talk to each other.” The idea came
history’s role in popular culture.
from his imagining of the different world his dog, Rigby, sees when they go out for walks together. The scene shows beings Alex calls “Color
Alex began drawing at a young age when Luis Mateo, his older brother
Dwellers” playing with Boy Dog; meanwhile, in the upper left quadrant
and fellow Art Division student, encouraged him to take up art. Alex
a large eye, referred to as the antagonist, looks at Boy Dog from the
recalled, “We started training ourselves [to draw] without realizing
shadows, remaining unknown to him.
that’s what we were doing. All we knew was it was something we both enjoyed.”
Alex’s work can be found in many private collections throughout Los Angeles. M.G.
Alex Gonzalez, Boy Dog, The Case, and Big Sister, Acrylic on canvas, 2017 44 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 45
LU IS HERNANDEZ
L
uis Hernandez’s installation, Your Child, was composed of photographs capturing the similarities in two diametrically opposed subjects: Churches and Nightclubs. Having grown up in a conservative Christian home and attending
services, to now living a lifestyle of parties and nightclubbing Hernandez states, “they both connote ritual to me. I also saw both as a form of escape and comfort, but also they posed similar problems. This installation is just the beginning of me stepping away, analyzing and documenting these worlds.” In some of his earlier work, Hernandez was inspired by garment factories. “There is a hidden world that most people don’t know about. The conditions are bad, suffocating heat, and people are overworked.” He decided to document the “behind the scenes” world of fast fashion primarily using his photography, taking photos of the workers both at work and as portraits, as well as recording their stories. He also uses his skill in graphic design to create posters for rallies and protests that help bring awareness to the conditions of garment workers. He uses his art to tackle subjects most people don’t think about, and exposes the viewer to other worlds that might otherwise go unnoticed. Hernandez credits his family for his interest in art and design, his parents are very supportive. While his work is highly aesthetic it also conveys a much deeper message. L.J.
Luis Hernandez, Your Child (installation), photographs, c-prints, 2017
46 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 47
LUIS MATEO
S
tepping in front of one of Luis Mateo’s paintings, the
Unlike much of his other work, he approached this painting with no
viewer is first confronted with their monumental quality.
intention or consistent technique, using brushes, forks, sanders,
His painting Cría cuervos y te sacarán los ojos feels
and his own hands to apply the layers of paint. Each layer, Mateo
both grandiose and intimate. He was influenced by the
says, had a connection to his life: at one point, he stuck over 1,000
sharp chiaroscuro of the baroque era as well as classical still life
pieces of blue painter’s tape on the canvas, painted over them, and
paintings. Mateo creates work that feels grand, but his style is far
peeled them off one by one, a process he says reminded him of when
from an imitation of technique. Cría cuervos y te sacarán los ojos was
he used to work in construction. When he began to paint with his
inspired by The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, and a combination
hands, he was reminded of finger painting as a child. This intimate,
of different ideas about the crow. These multiple concepts derive
emotional connection between the artist and the work makes
from the point of view of religion, culture, science, and other sources.
Mateo’s Self-Portrait feel both highly accomplished and electrifying.
When Mateo was a child his mother would say, “escuchastes al
Mateo’s width of technical knowledge and his depth of connection to
cuervo? Alguien se habrá muerto o se va morir… Ten cuidado”. [Did
his work combine to create an arresting visual experience. J.B.
you hear the crow? Someone died, or is about to… be careful.] Mateo states, “There are many speculations on the symbolic meaning of the crow - I did some research, collided all these notions, and gave it my own twist.” Many of his influences are literary: he was inspired by Robert Henri’s The Art Spirit, as well as the writings of Socrates, Aristotle, and other philosophers. He cites Caravaggio as a major influence, along with the contemporary artist Roberto Ferri. As a child, his love of art was sparked by copying drawings of cartoons along with his brother (who now creates under the name OtisWoods). Mateo explains that Self-Portrait was constantly changing, and involved between ten and twelve layers of paint. Describing its process as more “loose” than the intensely technical Cría cuervos y te sacarán los ojos. Luis Mateo, Cría cuervos y te sacarán los ojos, Oil on canvas, 2017 48 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 49
R OB ERTO ORT IZ
R
oberto Ortiz notices the beauty and detail in even the most basic objects, finding what people don’t notice, and then through his paintings, allows us to see this hidden visual world. Inspired by artists such as Wayne Thiebaud,
Roberto’s work is colorful and whimsical, but also thought-provoking. For the past three years, he has focused on capturing the chairs at the Walt Disney Concert Hall. Roberto worked at the concert hall, and every night, he would notice the chairs: their geometric pattern, their curved shape, and their colors all captured his interest. He first began sketching the chairs, then moved on to painting—his favorite medium because of the feeling, texture, and colors that acrylic paint provides. He says working at the Concert Hall allowed him to get a behind the scenes look, and the opportunity to study and appreciate the details inside the building, while most just marvel at the exterior. His chairs appear to be larger than life, each with a different feel, some more abstract and geometric while some are more realistic. Roberto says there is something almost spiritual about the chairs— they remind him of people, in the sense that they have arms and legs, but are also built specifically for humans. As he says, “Everything around us is built for us, everything is meant for humans and someone designed all of it for our own purpose.” But at the same time, all of these objects have their own life and individuality. Roberto says his favorite piece is Juntos, two chairs next to each other, because, according to Roberto, “not being alone is beautiful.” L.J.
Roberto Ortiz, Juntos, Acrylic on canvas, 2017 50 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 51
YUYA PAR K ER
A
lthough Yuya Parker started out studying architecture
These influences, combined with his expert sense of space, results in
and landscape design in his native Japan, he began
still lives that looks almost hallucinatory. The photos often resemble
to pursue food photography when he moved to Los
paintings, and the bright, unreal color schemes push the work into
Angeles and found himself captivated by the rising
the realm of the surreal. The influence of ikebana is clear in his work
trend of cupcake shops. Parker appreciated the cupcake’s organic,
and blended with an acute sense of surrealism. The elements he
elegant aestheticism, and he soon began frequenting flower stands
uses appear to have grown organically together rather than merely
and farmer’s markets in search of other unique items to photograph.
existing in arrangements with each other. The result is akin to an
Croissants are also a favorite subject. He has worked with a wide
alien landscape. Parker captures the eye by breathing new life into
variety of materials, but says he first and foremost “wanted to make
ordinary objects.
it simple and just enjoy the beauty of food.” Despite how seriously he takes his subjects (food), Parker While his move from architecture to photography might seem
emphasizes that his work is about celebrating its simplicity and
drastic, Parker sees his current work as not dissimilar to his previous
beauty. Just as ikebana can translate to “giving life to flowers,”
artistic pursuits. “When I take a photo,” he says, “I can create my
Parker’s work gives life to the simple objects it captures. He hopes
own space inside the camera…I use the camera frame like an artist
the viewers can gain access to his vision of infusing his subjects
uses a canvas.” He appreciates the comparison of his photographs
with a sense of humor and joy. “That’s always my big concept,” he
to paintings and describes photography as “painting with a camera.”
says. J.B.
As a child, Parker’s grandmother had practiced the Japanese art of ikebana, or ritual flower arrangement, which proved to be an inspiration for his still life compositions. He also drew inspiration from Keith Haring’s bold lines and dynamism and Ellsworth Kelly’s simplicity and strong sense of color.
Yuya Parker, A pear with gold, premium archival matte paper, 2016 52 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 53
G U I LL ER M O P ER EZ
G
uillermo Perez’s love of graphic design comes from two childhood sources: his love of soccer, and comic books. He loved the badges, crests, colors and symbols of the soccer teams he enjoyed watching. Comic books
inspired him in terms of typography, style, and creating emotion through an image. His favorite comics were dark, based on real life locations, and took place in communities similar to his own; it should come as no surprise that Daredevil is one of his favorites. Because of these inspirations, Guillermo became interested in graphic design and began making his own posters, logos and emblems for fictional teams and companies. Though still inspired by comics and soccer, he focuses now more on creating art that shows the history of his community and neighborhood of Westlake and MacArthur Park. He depicts how his neighborhood has transformed and how there is more to his community than what many might think. He says he wants to create a personal vision of what most people don’t see, and show a community that most people don’t know. Art Division has given him the opportunity to tell his own story through graphic design. He hopes to share both his art and knowledge with his community because of the prevalence and importance of graphic design in every part of our lives. He also hopes that graphic design can make the residents of Westlake proud of their neighborhood and that people will want to show their own stories and views of the world. L.J.
Guillermo Perez, Westlake, Digital Print, 2017 54 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 55
JAIR O P E R E Z
I
nspired by comedy and everyday life, Jairo Perez’s work comes
His painting Sarah employs contrast in his approach to conveying her
across as deceptively placid. The darker elements in his
personality. Simultaneously relaxed and structured, the composition
artworks (interestingly, his most prolific periods are prompted
is neatly kept and the subject remains distinct from its surroundings.
by sadness, anger, frustration) should be viewed as a dynamic
He communicates everything he thinks about Sarah without using words.
exploration of his subjects’ personalities. Jairo’s work extends far beyond portraits of other people. He paints From the earliest stage of planning, Jairo takes great care when
a version of himself where he exists outside his mortal coil, as if he
he first sketches a model. He investigates the pose, gesture, and
is giving the viewer a peek behind the stage curtain. The dissociative
facial features before beginning a gridded draft for the final piece.
air of his drawings demonstrates a vast awareness of the world
Jairo’s unique handling of color through various mixed media - ink,
around him, and how he sees himself in it as a creator. M.G.
watercolor, colored pencil, airbrush, and acrylic - brings his portraits to life. As Jairo puts it, “this adds an unexpected twist to reality.” Jairo, a Los Angeles native, likes to augment his subjects’ features, whether it be eye or hair color, or in his other works, bold elements of fantasy such as wings or bones sprouting from limbs. “My work is about creating a message. It is not only what I see, but more or less what I’m thinking about.” Through these creative additions, Jairo’s relationships with his subject become channeled through his work.
Jairo Perez, Title, Mixed Media on Paper, 2017 56 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 57
VICTOR R EYES
F
or this exhibition, Victor Reyes uses a singular motif of cartooning. He credits his genes for his talent. He comes from a large artistic family - his father does woodwork, his mother sews, and his older brother, who he looked up to in
terms of art, draws and paints. Reyes has lead a nomadic life that involves much observation. With many of his family still in Mexico, he continuously travels back and forth. Victor says he often feels like an outsider both in the United States and in Mexico. Even though he is the same person, people often perceive him as someone different than who he is. Perhaps that’s why he draws human figures. In drawing them, he creates a sense of equality. His sketchbook shows the process through which he arrived at his unique style. From these simple lines, Reyes drew different identities. Two of the works at Fisher are delicately crafted quilt-like constructions featuring these cartoonish faces, each with differing sexuality, ethnicity, and identifying traits. In one of the pieces, no individual is afforded mercy. Everyone is given derogatory nicknames. Reyes wants to deliver the message that although we are, indeed, all different, we are also one; and that although we are one, we are also different. R.C.
58 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
Victor Reyes, Untitled Black Background), color pencil, black gesso, yean and bamboo on paper, 2017
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 59
JORDAN VAZCONES & MILTON LAZARO
P
Jordan Vazcones & Milton Lazaro, Static, Experimental Short Film, 2017
laying on a loop against a corner wall of the Fisher
risks. Work like Static was very new to both of them; whenever Lazaro
Museum is a non-narrative film work by Jordan Vazcones
felt unsure of creating something that might be phony, Vazcones
and Milton Lazaro. The work, titled Static, aptly involves
was there to push him beyond his comfort zone.
the use of grainy static and warped cuts inspired by all but
forgotten VHS tapes. Between static, Jordan and Milton appear on
Like much else that happens at Art Division, a lot of Vazcones and
an empty stage, sometimes as actors, and other times as members
Lazaro’s work has been based on trust and collaboration. Film
of the audience. They recite original poetry, scribble madly on paper,
production is unique among other arts because of its developmental
and look behind their backs in fear of something that is creeping
stages. Pre-production consists of visionary and ideological
towards them. As the film loops, each repetition gets shortened, and
discussion with almost no evidence of visual proof. This stage
new sequences are added, including a fork combing through spilled
contrasts with production and post-production, where the art and
pepper, like a hand sifting through sand. Initially, the faces of the
craft is highly collaborative and teamwork based. The film collective
actors’ are fraught with frustration, but quell as the film progresses.
at Art Division, which they are both founding members, gave
The cuts get faster and faster, and little by little the angst subsides.
feedback on their piece and ample support. Vazcones and Lazaro
Achieving balance between clarity and instability, the harsh static
are proud of the end result of their work,and feel their contributions
eventually dissolves into background noise.
enhanced its overall quality.
In conversations with each director, I could see that this work
Before Art Division, both participated in a writing and acting
reflects who they are, and how they worked together in producing
program called Will Power to Youth at the Shakespeare Center of
their first non-narrative film. Prior to Static, Vazcones and Lazaro
Los Angeles. Through common friendships and word of mouth, they
worked mainly on writing, photography and acting for narrative
were introduced to Art Division and now spend much of their time in
short films, both in and out of Art Division. Static was their first
either the Library or the Studio there. Art Division and Dan McCleary,
time working together exclusively, and they both feel fortunate to
the artists say, not only provided them with the complete trust and
have done so, despite their different personalities. Vazcones and
freedom to venture out with their art, but also granted them with
Lazaro both acknowledge their unorthodox artistic chemistry and
encouragement and curiosity from their fellow artists. R.C.
the productive dynamic between them. Lazaro shows more restraint and attentiveness, while Vazcones is more relaxed and eager to take
60 - The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews
The Art Division Exhibition & Interviews - 61
APPENDIX 64 - Art Division Timeline 68 - Miracles Unknown Exhibition Checklist 72 - Artists in Residence Exhibition Checklist 75 - Acknowledgements
63
ART D I V I S I ON T R A I N I N G U ND E R S ERVED
A
rt Division was founded in 2010 by Dan McCleary with the assistance of Javier Carrillo, Maria Galicia, and
Elementary School in Gardena •
Emmanuel Galvez. Art Division serves young adults
Students take a field trip to Ojai, CA to visit artist John Nava’s studio for a figure drawing class
ages 18 to 26 in the Rampart district who are interested
•
Quarterly art retreats to Andrea Rich’s home in Ojai begin
in the visual arts. It has intentionally remained small so that it can
•
The Art Division Gallery opens with the exhibition FLOWERS
provide its students with an extensive and personal support system
•
“Meet the Artist” series begins with Karen Carson and Lucas Reiner
including mentoring, college counseling and tutoring services. We also provide valuable resources such as a comprehensive art library, computers, and printmaking, painting studios and drawing studio. Our classes include: Creative Writing, Drawing, Printmaking, Art
2011
We Attain Non-Profit Status •
Art Center student Hsin Chen designs our logo
•
The Lana C. Literacy Program is established to focus on reading, writing, and speaking about art
By providing students with the techniques, and skills they would otherwise go without, we believe each participant can maximize
•
Al Hurwitz, painter and arts educator gives a lecture
their potentials as artists and individuals.
•
Javier Carrillo designs an original tapestry by John Nava for the University of Southern California - it hangs at the Ronald Tutor
2010
Campus Center •
Art Division Begins Art Division receives a donated space through the Los Angeles
•
“Portraits” exhibition opens at Harris & Ruble Art Gallery
•
Randy Mell leads workshops on public speaking
•
Our students tour the archive of master drawings and view the
•
Student exhibition Nuestra Vida opens at the Artcore Brewery Annex
•
Gronk creates a mural with Art Division students
•
Art Division does a live mural at Secret City Theater and the Bootleg Theater
•
18 to 94 opens featuring work by Art Division students, artists from the Lubner Studio and residents of the Tides Senior Center
•
Students paint an interactive 8 x 20 foot live mural with audience
•
Housing Partnership
John Densmore leads a discussion on how artists can find inspiration through music
Holds its first drawing class taught by Dan McCleary
•
Michael Kearns leads our first writing workshop
•
Lucas Reiner and Dan McCleary lead an art history class
•
We begin our printmaking collective run by Javier Carrillo
•
Our first studio visit is with Printmaker June Wayne
•
In partnership with Skylight Theatre, we conduct our first annual
•
Art Division’s official Board of Directors is formed
Thanksgiving food give-away and exhibition, Alimento, where we
•
We partner with Big Sunday in creating two murals - one at Sunny
prepare 100s of sack lunches and distribute them to the needy in
Brae Elementary School in Winnetka and the other at Chapman
the MacArthur Park area of Los Angeles
•
•
We keep the Alimento Thanksgiving food give-away tradition going
•
Studio Visits and Meet the Artist Series continue with: Mark Bradford, Kenny Scharf, Peter Zokosky, Bruce Richards, and Gronk
2013
The Opening of Our Library & Painting Studio •
Art Division grows and acquires additional space including a library and studio
•
Javier Carrillo, alumnus, Emmanuel Galvez, student, and Dan McCleary have an exhibition at Craig Krull Gallery which is reviewed in the LA Times
Twitter Art Exhibition holds a fundraiser in which artists from around the world donate postcard-sized art to benefit Art Division
•
Students join with “The Virginia Project” and “UCLA Arts and Healing” in three performances of Dark to Light
•
Students create masks for Drown the Alarm, Mitchell Klebanoff’s video about global warming
•
Studio Visits and Meet the Artist Series continue with: Don Bachardy, Sandeep Mukherjee and Writer Ken Fields
2014
Launching Our Outreach Programming •
We are invited to teach a printmaking workshop in Florida. Through this experience we create our community outreach program:
members at a Tedx event in Manhattan Beach
Stephanie Gordian and completed by Art Division Mural crew at
•
64
Student Begin Exhibits & Murals in the Community
Through Big Sunday, a third mural is designed by student Selma Elementary School in Hollywood
•
2012
permanent collection of the Getty Museum
History, Current Events, Film Collective, Simple Cooking, Graphic Design and Painting.
YO U N G A D U LTS IN THE V I S UAL ARTS
LEARN, DO, TEACH •
Students Robert Ortiz and Alex Gonzalez have a two man show at Art Division Gallery
•
Art Division creates its first ZINE
•
Mobile Arts Platform (MAP) and The Getty Center work with our students to create block prints
•
Our community outreach program grows: Two of our students teach at a local elementary school providing free art classes to first graders. This is an ongoing program
•
Curiouser and Curiouser opens - an exhibition based on Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll
•
Jessica Cuautle, Luis Mateo, and Guillermo Perez receive scholarships for Art Center at Night, the beginning of an ongoing relationship with Art Center
65
•
•
Jason Mendoza and Jessica Cuautle assist Konstantin Kakanias
•
Student Emmanuel Galvez has a one man show at Craig Krull Gallery
with making decorations for the Christmas tree at The Huntington
•
Luis Mateo becomes student body president
in San Marino, CA
•
Students visit the Pasadena Museum of California art and view the
Catherine Hess, Chief Curator of European Art gives a tour of The Huntington, and Art Division starts building a relationship with the
Sister Corita exhibition •
museum •
Studio Visits and Meet the Artist Series continue with: Karen
•
Luis Hernandez and Herica De Casas have a Photography Exhibition
• •
Luis Mateo is off to Penland School of Crafts in North Carolina
on their life, work, education and art goals •
Hernandez have gone since •
Television writer Ellie Herman runs an intensive screenwriting Opening reception for Art & Spirit at the Catholic center at USC
•
Hosted by Maria Galicia and Karen Carson, Women’s Pages is held in the library with thirty Los Angeles-based female artists and
•
Art Division starts building a partnership with the Mexican Consulate
•
An exhibition of Art Division student drawings made during the last five years is held at Loyola Marymount University
•
Studio Visits and Meet the Artist Series continue with: Filmmakers
students - women artist books are collected and discussed
Rodrigo Garcia, Jeanne Field and John Binder, Marjorie Nielsen,
We return to Gadsden Art Center in Quincy, Florida with Jessica
and Anthony Rich and artists James Brown and Don Bachardy
Cuautle and Luis Mateo to teach a week-long printmaking workshop •
Santa Barbara Museum invites us to teach a printmaking workshop and design Day of the Dead altar
•
workshop for aspiring filmmakers •
Current Events, College and Career, Painting, and Graphic Design •
• • •
Students begin work on their pieces for the USC exhibition
•
Studio Visits and Meet the Artist Series continue with: Roberto Gil De Montes, John Valadez, Peter Zokosky, Tryno Maldonado, Pierre
We host the exhibition Ayotzinapa, which originated in Mexico and
Picot, Pilar Gallegos, Kaleeka Bond, F. Scott Hess, Gwynn Murrill, Ruth Weisberg, Sandra Cornejo, Jack Taylor
Our 2nd Art & Spirit exhibition held In collaboration with the First Congregational Church of Los Angeles and Joan Quinn, attracts over 300 visitors on opening day. John Seed writes an article about the show for the Huffington Post
•
Jessica Cuautle is included in a group show OB.VER.SATIONS at Long Beach City College with Dan McCleary
•
Art Division is invited by the Incredible Children’s Art Network to hold workshops in Santa Barbara Elementary Schools
•
Art Division partners with Stamps & Stamps to create a window for Claremont Furnishings as part of LCDQ-LA
•
John Densmore leads a drum circle in Art Division’s library
•
Fernando Sandoval visits from Oaxaca to conduct a week of printmaking workshops at Art Division
•
We announce our collaboration with USC’s Fisher Museum - Artists in Residence
Political Graphics - the LA Times reviews the show •
Roberto Ortiz, Jairo Perez and Javier Carrillo have an exhibition of prints at Craig Krull Gallery
traveled to Los Angeles via SPARC and the Center for the Study of
League’s
We hire a college and career counselor to work with our students
Our classes now include: Creative Writing, Art History, Film Collective, Printmaking, Advanced Drawing, Beginning Drawing,
auction •
on full scholarship for two weeks. Jason Mendoza and Luis
Art Division students Jessica Cuautle, Luis Mateo, and Alex Gonzalez donate art pieces to the Anti-Defamation
Students Receive Scholarships to Art Programs •
•
Students read Frankenstein by Mary Shelley and we open Frankenstein an exhibition inspired by novel
2015
We Are Now Open Six Days a Week
Immigration and Cultural Memory
Carson, Lynne Berman, Joe Goode, Filmmaker Marta Cunningham, Photographer Leopoldo Peña, Writer Stephanie Waxman
Students also visit the exhibit SPARC. NEW CODEX: Oaxacan
2016
2017
Partnering With USC •
USC Fisher Museum of Art/Art Division: Artists in Residence project and exhibition
•
Printmaking students work with Xavier Fumat at USC printmaking studio
•
Annenberg Beach House exhibition opening in June
•
Art Auction at Craig Krull Gallery in August
•
Huntington Library Exhibition opening in September in conjunction with the LA/LA initiative
Student Yuya Parker has a solo exhibition, Food as Contemporary Art, in our gallery
•
Jairo Perez and Jessica Cuautle have a joint exhibition
Milton Lazaro and Ronnie Gonzalez are accepted and receive scholarships for Inner-City Filmmakers
•
Fabian Cereijido leads a workshop to train our students on the Reggio Emilia approach to teaching
•
Student Emmanuel Galvez exhibits at Vincent Price Art Museum as part of Cheech Marin’s collection
66
67
Miracles Unknown Exhibition Checklist Miracles
Unknown
Rena Small (United States, b. 1954)
Jose Alberto Marchi (Argentina, b. 1956)
Robert Farber (United States, 1948-1995)
Arturo Mallman
Adam and Eve, Who Dunit, Adam?
Landscape with Burning Painting
Western Blot #15
(United States, b. 1953 Uruguay)
Mira Bernabeu (Spain, b. 1969)
1991
2013
1992
Sin título
Arnaldo Roche (Puerto Rico, b. 1955)
En Circulo I, Mise en Scene 1 series
Black and white photograph
Oil on canvas
Oil, silver mylar, charcoal on wood panel
2004
Difficult to Hide
1996
6 13/ 16 x 4 5/8 inches
10 x 9 inches
40 x 62 inches
Mixed media on 18th century Italian door
2014
Chromogenic print
1999.10.04
Gift of the Estate of Dr. and Mrs. James L.
Gift of the Robert D. Farber Foundation
fragment
Oil on canvas
54 3/8 x 40 inches
Gift of Andrew Schwartz
Sheehy
1999.04.01
27 ½ x 43 inches
33 x 20 inches
Purchase Fund
Gift of the Estate of Dr. and
2004.05.01
Mrs. James L. Sheehy
Purchase Fund 2001.06.01a, b
2016.08.06 Jose Alberto Marchi (Argentina, b. 1956)*
Francisco Toledo (Mexico, b. 1940)
Nude Female with Dark Mask
Francisco Toledo (Mexico, b. 1940)
The Engineer
Johan Zoffany
Oil on canvas
Artist Book (Double Skeleton)
1982
Robert Willie Middlebrook
Angelica Kauffman
(Frankfurt 1733 - London 1810)
8 x 16 inches
2003
Silver point on wove paper
(United States, 1957-2012)
(Switzerland, 1741-1807)
The Cope Family
Gift of the Estate of Dr. and Mrs. James L.
Handmade paper and ink
15 x 11 inches
POMP #329, In the Shadow of the Cross
Isabella Hunter
c. 1775
Sheehy
17 x 10 ½ x ½ inch
Gift of the Estate of Dr. and Mrs. James L.
1992
1776-1790
Oil on canvas
2016.08.07
Museum Purchase
Sheehy
Gelatin silver print-photographic painting
Oil on canvas
2003.05.05
2010.08.19
66 ½ x 39 7/8 inches
30 x 25 inches
Purchase Fund
The Elizabeth Holmes Fisher Collection
2001.14.01
EF:39:21
39 ½ x 50 inches
2016.08.02
The Elizabeth Holmes Fisher Collection
Salomón Huerta (United States, b. 1965)
EF:39:41
Cabeza (Back of Head)
Ellen Lampert (United States, b. 1948)
Loren Sandvik (United States, b. 1967)
1999
Meaningful Relationship at 3pm
Lucy Alamillo and Maia Ixchel Ramirez
Rufino Tamayo (Mexico, 1899-1991)
Oil on canvas
1981
2000
Carol Newborg (United States, b. 1954)
Figura de Hombre
12 x 11 inches
Watercolor on paper
Gelatin silver print
Ark/Icon
n.d.
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
18 x 24 inches
30 x 32 inches
1990
Embossed lithograph
Class of 2001
Gift of Emanuel Culman
Gift of Acuña-Hansen Gallery
Wood, plaster, plywood
30 x 22 inches
1999.01.01
1984.05.01
2000.07.01
32 x 37 x 4 inches
Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Sullivan
Gift of the Artist
1980.06.08
1990.04.01
68
69
Rena Small (United States, b. 1954)
Robert Rasely (United States, 1950-2005)
Christina Fernandez (United States, b. 1965)
Christina Fernandez (United States, b. 1965)
Christina Fernandez (United States, b. 1965)
Artists’ Hands Grid Continuum: Ed Ruscha
I Know Something About Love
Composite map
1927, Going Back to Morelia
1950, San Diego, California
1986
1986
from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996
from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996
from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996
Silver gelatin print
Oil on birch
Iris print
Silver gelatin print
Chromogenic print
20 x 16 inches
36 x 36 inches
20 x 16 inches
20 x 16 inches
20 x 16 inches
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
Gift of Mr. Barney Rosenzweig
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
Class of 2002
1999.02.02
Class of 2004
Class of 2004
Class of 2004
2002.06.03a
2002.06.03d
2002.06.03g
2000.12.02 Reverend Ethan Acres Rena Small (United States, b. 1954)
(United States, b. 1970)
Christina Fernandez (United States, b. 1965)
Christina Fernandez (United States, b. 1965)
George Morland (British, b. 1763–1804)
Artists’ Hands Grid Continuum: LouAnne
Miracle at La Brea
1910, Leaving Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico
1930, Transporting Produce, Outskirts of
Yarmouth Fort
Greenwald
2000
from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996
Phoenix, Arizona
1803
1994
Ink on Plexiglas
Sepia toned gelatin print
from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996
Oil on canvas
Silver gelatin print
96 x 42 inches
20 x 16 inches
Silver gelatin print
28 x 36 inches
20 x 16 inches
Purchase Fund
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
20 x 16 inches
The Elizabeth Holmes Fisher Collection
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
2000.20.01
Class of 2004
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
EF:39:29
2002.06.03b
Class of 2004
Class of 2002 2000.12.04
2002.06.03e
D. Sergio Belinchón (Spain, b. 1971) Sin título
Christina Fernandez (United States, b. 1965)
Judith Simonian
2002
1919, Portland Colorado
Christina Fernandez (United States, b. 1965)
(United States, b. 20th Century)
Color photographs mounted on metal
from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996
1945, Aliso Village, Boyle Heights, CA
Fallen Vase
39 x 26 inches each
Sepia toned gelatin print
from Maria’s Great Expedition 1995-1996
1983
2003.01.01, 2003.01.02
20 x 16 inches
Silver gelatin print
Etching
Purchase Fund
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
20 x 16 inches
31 ½ x 24 inches
Class of 2004
Purchase Fund, Museum Studies Program
Donated by the Community Redevelopment
2002.06.03c
Class of 2004
Agency of the City of Los Angeles
2002.06.03f
2012.04.12
70
71
Artists in Residence Exhibition Checklist Alfredo Alvarado
El Globero, 2016
Emmanuel Galvez
Transition, 2016
Medium: oil on wood panel
Reconstruction;”Tierra de la libertad”, 2017
Medium: Acrylic on cardboard
Size: 36 x 24 in
Medium: Silver glitter, razor blades, royal blue felt, and panels.
Nightly Passion, 2016
Vicente, 2017
Medium: Acrylic, pastel, ink, and
Medium: Oil on canvas
cardboard pulp on cardboard
Size: 7 feet x 5 feet
Luis Hernandez
Yuya Parker
Starboy, 2017
Your Child (installation), 2017
A pear with gold, 2017
Medium: Mixed Media on Paper
Medium: photographs, c-prints
Medium: premium archival matte paper
Size: 24” x 18”
Size: 2 pieces 11” x 17” and 10 pieces
Size:
Size: h:102 x w:102 inches
11” x 14” Fruits on bubbles, 2017
Medium: Mixed Media on Paper
Alex Gonzalez
Luis Mateo
Medium: premium archival matte paper
Size: 24” x 18”
Self Portrait, 2017
Size:
BoyDog Intro, 2017
Kathryn, 2017
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Janet, 2016
Morning Heartbreak, 2016
Dejandolos atras, 2017
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Medium: Pastel, ink, and cardboard
Medium: oil on canvas
Size: 4 ft x 4ft
Size: 5’ x 5’
pulp on cardboard
Size: 72 x 48 in Big Sister Intro, 2017
Cría cuervos y te sacarán los ojos, 2017
Medium: Digital Print on foam board
Medium: Oil on canvas
Size: 18”x24”
In Memory of… , 2016
Jessica Cuautle
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Acrylic, pastel, and ink on cardboard
Fluid, 2016
Size: 4 ft x 4ft
Size: 5’ x 6’
Boy Dog, The Case, and Big Sister, 2016
Medium: Pastel on paper Javier Carrillo
Size: 18” x 24
Pal Jale, 2013
Medium: Acrlic on canvas
Medium: oil on metal
Breathe The Fire, 2017
Size: 48 x 48 in
Medium: Pastel on paper Size: 18” x 24
El Comerciante, 2017
Size: Dibujo Sin Igual / Unparalleled Sketch, 2017 Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Medium: oil on wood panel
Maria Galicia
Size: 36 x 24 in
Self Portrait, 2017
Size: 4 ft x 4ft
Medium: Linolium and Acrlylic on fabric
Boy Dog: 4 Pasos A Su Patio / 4 Steps Into
La dulcera de algodon, 2016
Size: 18x22
Her Backyard, 2017
Medium: oil on wood panel
Ave Extraña, 2017
Medium: Polymer Clay with flased paint
Size: 36 x 24 in
Medium: Etching
Size: sculpture 8” tall
Guillermo Perez
Medium: Colored Pencil on Paper
Rampart, 2017
Size: 24”x18” Victor Reyes Untitled (white background), 2017
Westlake, 2017
Medium: Yarn, Color Pencil, Bamboo on
Roberto Ortiz
Medium: Digital Print on foam board
handmade paper
Sola, 2017
Size: 18”x24”
Size: 44” x 31”
Jairo Perez
Untitled (Black background, 2017
Medium: Acrylic on canvas Size: 5x5 feet
Blue Skater Kid, 2017
Medium: color pencil, black gesso, yean and
Solo, 2017
Medium: Mixed Media on Paper
bamboo on paper
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Size: 24” x 18”
Size: 42” x 31”
Size: 5x5 feet Sarah, 2017
Untitled (I’m a real boy), 2017
Juntos, 2017
Medium: Mixed Media on Paper
Medium: acrylic on paper
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Size: 24” x 18”
Size: 44” x 30”
Size: 5x6 feet
Size: 10x 12
72
73
Acknowledgments Untitled ( yellow background), 2017
Thank you to the USC Fisher Museum staff for all their help,
Medium: acrylic on canvas
warmth and support in putting this exhibit together .
Size: 30� x 40� Untitled (faces black background), 2017
Thank you to the Art Division artists for creating such a magnificent
Medium: acrylic paint and oil pastels on
exhibit
canvas Size:
Thank you to Selma Holo for her vision , for believing in us and giving the artists this incredible opportunity to exhibit at the USC
Jordan Vazcones & Milton Lazaro
Fisher Museum
Static, 2017 Medium: Experimental Short Film - Ten
Dan McCleary
minutes and 45 seconds Size:
74
75