Art Along the Hyphen: The Mexican-American Generation
Featuring Rarely Seen Art From Six
Extraordinary Los Angeles Artists
From 1945 to 1965
Part of the unprecedented
collaboration initiated by the Getty, Pacific Standard
Time,
and the
UCLA
Chicano
Studies
Research
Center’s L.A.
Xicano.
On view: October 14,
2011–January 8, 2012
The
Autry
National
Center, in partnership with the
UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center (CSRC), is proud
to present a collection of works by a virtually unknown
generation of Mexican American artists whose rarely seen
works will be exhibited to the public in Art Along the
Hyphen: The Mexican-American Generation, opening October
14, 2011.
This exhibition is part of a
collaboration with CSRC called L.A. Xicano,
which examines crucial dimensions of this history
through four interrelated exhibitions at the Autry, the Fowler
Museum
at UCLA, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. L.A.
Xicano is curated by Chon A. Noriega, Terezita Romo, and
Pilar Tompkins Rivas. Romo is the lead curator for Art
Along the Hyphen: The Mexican-American Generation. The
exhibition is also part of Pacific Standard
Time. This unprecedented collaboration, initiated by the
Getty, brings together more than sixty cultural institutions
from across Southern California for six months, beginning in
October 2011, to tell the story of the birth of the L.A. art scene. Pacific
Standard Time is an initiative of the Getty. The presenting
sponsor is Bank of America.
“The history of art in
Southern California is incomplete without a full
consideration of the contributions made by Mexican American
and Chicano artists,” said Daniel Finley, Autry President
and CEO. “Therefore, the Autry is proud to present this
exhibition that brings to light the works of these
extraordinary Mexican American artists thanks to our
collaboration with the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center
(CSRC) and the Getty initiative, Pacific Standard Time.”
Between 1945 and 1965, Mexican
American artists contributed to the emerging
California
iconography and its connections to the national imagery,
whether as part of the American West, Spanish California, or
Hollywood. Documenting an overlooked
yet significant tributary within the emergence of modern art
in Los Angeles, the exhibition combines the work of
Hernando Villa (1881–1952), Alberto Valdés
(1918–1998), Domingo Ulloa (1919–1997), Roberto
Chavez (born 1932), Dora De Larios (born 1933),
and Eduardo Carrillo (1937–1997) to explore each
artist’s dialogue with various art movements of the
twentieth century as refracted through cultural heritage,
artistic influences, and social commentary. The exhibition
also documents the fluid transition by some artists into the
Chicano art movement activism of the 1970s.
“Art Along the Hyphen opens up
an entirely new vein of American artistic production, one
that was in intimate dialogue with the major styles and
issues of its time period,” says L.A. Xicano
organizer and CSRC Director Chon Noriega. “But it is also
one that introduced a new aesthetic approach grounded in
dynamic space between two national cultures.”
Prior to the Chicano civil rights
movement, which began in 1965 and brought national
visibility to the community, artists of Mexican descent such
as Villa forged paths that followed traditional artistic
trajectories, yet countered stylistic conventions with their
“bicultural aesthetic synthesis.” The majority of these
Mexican American artists have, however, been neglected by
the mainstream art canon, ignored by art institutions, and
absent from the art school curricula.
Against the backdrop of post-WWII
social and political change in Los
Angeles, from the Zoot suit riots to “white
flight” and freeway construction, Mexican American artists
created work that responded to aesthetic developments in New York as well as artistic and cultural
influences from their Mexican heritage. This marks the
beginning of a synthesis that would define them as artists
and provide a foundation for the emergent Chicano art
movement of the late 1960s. The careers of Carrillo, Chavez,
De Larios, Ulloa, Valdés, and Villa constitute individual
stories of struggle and achievement, and together illustrate
the multiplicity of aesthetic responses present within the
Mexican American community.
Hernando Villa (1881–1952)
Villa was a successful illustrator and
art instructor who specialized in rail travel and worked for
various publications including Pacific Outlook, Town
Talk, West Coast Magazine, and Westways.
Consistent with popular expectations of commercial tourist
imagery, Native Americans constituted a major iconographic
source for Villa’s art. Villa taught at the Los Angeles
School of Art and Design, and painted a number of L.A.
murals including one for Tally’s New Broadway Theater in Los
Angeles in 1916; one on the dome of the New Rialto Theatre
in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1921; and a multipaneled mural,
The Pioneers, at Citizens Trust and Savings Band in Los
Angeles in 1926. It was Villa’s creation of the iconic
emblem “The Chief” for the Santa Fe Railway that brought him
national recognition that lasted over four decades.
Alberto Valdés (1918–1998)
Valdés was a commercial artist
specializing in magazine advertisements, outdoor billboards,
and orange crate labels. His career was interrupted by his
service in the Army during World War II. On his return, he
found a position at MGM Studios as an art designer until he
retired in his forties. The end of Valdés’s commercial
career marked the beginning of his artistic productivity,
which would span four decades and encompass a wide range of
styles, from pure abstraction to enigmatic forms. A
consummate experimenter, Valdés worked in series, painting
several paintings at the same time until he was ready to
move on to another artistic style or genre. Evocative of
pre-Columbian stone effigies, Valdés’s work is often both
stately and menacing, and is replete with artistic
expression in the gradual shifts of hues, the subtle
handling of interlocking forms to shape the figure, and the
play of light that accentuates its mysterious, otherworldly
qualities.
Domingo Ulloa (1919–1997)
Before the civil rights movement in the
1960s, there were artists committed to promoting social
justice through their artwork. One of the most accomplished
yet under-recognized social realists during the 1940s and
’50s was Domingo Ulloa. Using the G.I. Bill to take classes
at the Jepson Art Institute, he studied with prominent
expressionist Italian painter Rico Lebrun. Both felt a moral
commitment to depict the horrors of war and created art that
was both courageous and outside the dominant stylistic realm
of abstraction. Ulloa developed deep respect for the figure,
acute observation skills, and the technical abilities of a
superb draughtsman. This combination of academic training
and political instructors generated a singular aesthetic
that is evident in works such as Painters on Strike
(1948), Racism/Incident at Little Rock (1957), and
his iconic work, Braceros (1960). In 1993, the
California State Assembly proclaimed Ulloa the “Father of
Chicano Art.”
Dora De Larios (born 1933)
De Larios decided to become an artist
after a trip to Mexico City where she was exposed to the ceramic art of the
Maya, Aztec, and West Mexico
civilizations. When De Larios enrolled in USC, she was the
only Mexican student studying with foremost clay artists and
instructors. Influenced by the Bauhaus movement and Japanese
pottery, her first exhibition in San Francisco’s Gump’s Gallery sold out. As a
professor at USC and UCLA, she maintained her dedication and
passion for exploring cultural styles as evident in her
haniwa and pre-Columbian–influenced Queen and King
sculptures. In 1977, De Larios created a cobalt-blue
glaze-over-porcelain dinnerware set for the White House
which was then displayed at the Smithsonian. In 1963,
De Larios was invited by Millard Sheets to create new
designs for tile manufacturer Interpace, and in 1966, she
was commissioned by Walt Disney at Disneyworld in Orlando, Florida.
When creating public art, De Larios ensured that each
commission was integrated as an organic component of the
overall plan.
Roberto Chavez (born 1932)
Roberto Chavez was born to parents who
came to Los Angeles after the
Mexican Revolution. Chavez showed an early fascination with
drawing, mainly cartoons and caricatures. He also loved to
create sculptures from metal scraps, recycling materials
into toys. He enrolled in Los Angeles City
College’s commercial art
program and transferred to UCLA following military service.
Painted in 1957, Masks shows how Chavez synthesized
his love of the figure with his appreciation of abstract art
and reflects his preference for a loose, playful painting
style over realistic portrayal. He later taught at East Los
Angeles College (ELAC) and UCLA where he reconnected with
Eduardo Carrillo. Together they founded Ceeje Gallery, where
a distinct L.A.
style was developed. Chavez’s painting Ladies Art Class,
Sawtelle (1967) exhibits the artistic characteristics
that came to constitute his singular style. In 1974, Chavez
painted The Path to Knowledge and the False University
(1975) mural at ELAC. Citing poor conditions, ELAC’s new
president ordered the mural whitewashed in 1979. Chavez
resigned his teaching position at ELAC in 1981 and moved to
northern California.
Eduardo Carrillo (1937–1997)
Eduardo Carrillo’s first memory of
paintings, stained glass, and sculpture was in churches
while attending Catholic schools in Los Angeles. In
1956, Carrillo transferred to UCLA, and in 1960 he traveled
to Spain to study at the Círculo de Bellas Artes in
Madrid. It was
the Spanish artist’s emphasis on color and light that would
allow Carrillo to craft a unique painting style. Spanish
Still Life (1961) was a transitional piece in the
development of Carrillo’s signature artistic and cultural
synthesis. His background and influences are combined in
this painting that references the mestizo altar
traditions of Mexico and European vanitas symbolism as
well as
Mexico’s indigenous roots
and Spanish conquest. He moved to Baja
California along with his wife Sheila to
establish the Centro de Arte Regional in
La Paz. In 1976, he received tenure
at the University
of California, Santa Cruz, and taught until his death in
1997.
Art Along the Hyphen: The
Mexican-American Generation is part of Pacific
Standard Time. This unprecedented collaboration,
initiated by the Getty, brings together more than sixty
cultural institutions from across Southern California for
six months, beginning in October 2011, to tell the story of
the birth of the L.A. art scene. Pacific Standard Time is an
initiative of the Getty. The presenting sponsor is Bank of
America.
Art Along the Hyphen: The
Mexican-American Generation is also part of
L.A. Xicano, four interrelated exhibitions organized
by the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center (CSRC) in
collaboration with the Autry National Center,
the Fowler Museum at UCLA, and the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art. L.A. Xicano is curated by Chon
A. Noriega, Terezita Romo, and Pilar Tompkins Rivas. The
L.A. Xicano exhibitions will be documented in a single,
comprehensive catalogue published by the CSRC and
distributed by the
University
of Washington Press.
Major funders for L.A. Xicano include the Getty
Foundation and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual
Arts.
About the Autry National
Center
The Autry National Center,
formed in 2003 by the merger of the Autry Museum of Western
Heritage with the Southwest Museum
of the American Indian and the Women of the West Museum,
is an intercultural history center dedicated to exploring
and sharing the stories, experiences, and perceptions of the
diverse peoples of the American West. Located in
Griffith Park, the Autry’s collection of over 500,000 pieces of
art and artifacts, which includes the collection of the Southwest Museum
of the American Indian, is one of the largest and most
significant in the United States.
The Autry Institute includes two research libraries: the
Braun Research Library and the Autry Library. Exhibitions,
public programs, K–12 educational services, and publications
are designed to examine the contemporary human condition
through the lens of the historical Western experience and
explore critical issues in society.
Weekday hours of operation for the
Autry
National
Center’s museum at its
Griffith
Park location are Tuesday
through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Autry Store’s
weekday hours are Tuesday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., and the Autry Cafe is open Tuesday through Sunday,
9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday hours for the
museum and the store are 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The museum,
the store, and the cafe are closed on Mondays. The libraries
are open to researchers by appointment.
Museum admission is $10 for adults, $6
for students and seniors 60+, $4 for children ages 3–12, and
free for Autry members, veterans, and children age 2 and
under. Admission is free on the second Tuesday of every
month.
Contact:
Yadhira De Leon
Director of Public Relations
Autry
National
Center
ydeleon@theAutry.org
www.theAutry.org