'The African Presence in México' breaks new ground

WORKING TOGETHER:
John Outterbridge and Jane Castillo’s fabric piece “Outcast” is in
the complementary exhibition “Common Ground.”Email
Picture
Annie Wells / Los Angeles
Times
A rich exhibition explores
blacks' influence on Mexican culture.
By Agustin Gurza, Los
Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 2, 2008
CONSIDERING all the recent
speculation about hostility between blacks and Latinos, you have to
cringe when you hear what happened to historian Christopher West on
a working trip south of the border four years ago. The African
American academic was helping research the influence of tourism on
children in Isla Mujeres, an idyllic island near Cancun, when a
local boy on the street threw a piece of pan dulce at him.
The insult (not the first he had encountered) might be seen as more
evidence of that racial animosity, currently fueling the notion that
some Latinos are cool to Sen. Barack Obama because he's black. But
West considered the gesture an anomaly and went on to shoot some
hoops with his Mexican friends and colleagues.
In fact, the historian says he's been accepted as family in some
parts of Mexico, thanks to his wife, Ilda Jimenez, a Mexican
American anthropologist he met when they were students at USC. The
union of the two communities is reflected in their surname, which
they changed to Jimenez y West. Today, as history curator at the
California African American Museum, Christopher Jimenez y West
continues to explore the often overlooked cultural connections
between the country's two largest minorities. This week, he was busy
preparing for the opening of a groundbreaking exhibition, "The
African Presence in México: From Yanga to the Present," which
celebrates what is called the Third Root of Mexican culture, adding
African to the mix of European and native Indian.
Related
Photos:
The African Presence in Mexico
- Through paintings, photos, lithographs and
historical texts, the visiting exhibition tries to dispel the myth
that blacks had a minimal influence on the culture of our southern
neighbor, a myth held by many Mexicans either through ignorance or
prejudice. In addition, two related exhibitions explore the
connections between blacks and Latinos in the U.S., highlighting
shared social roots in leftist politics and showcasing local
collaborations between African American and Latino artists.
News about racially charged street killings and campus brawls
tends to overshadow the day-to-day, positive interactions between
the two communities in Los Angeles, says Jimenez y West. "Part of
the tension is simply the result of people being uninformed, at
all levels," he says. "The reality is this is a long-standing
conversation."
You could call it perfect timing for the exhibit to open on the
eve of Super Tuesday. But the idea originated more than 10 years
ago at the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago, where it was
first shown in 2006. It's been more of a mission than an
exhibition for Cesareo Moreno, the Chicago museum's visual arts
director, who co-curated the show with Sagrario del Carmen Cruz
Carretero, a Mexican anthropologist. Moreno's passion was evident
as he gave me a preview at the museum, located in Exposition Park.
He gestured like a conductor, still excited about his discoveries.
"This topic, this idea, this truth, if it gets out there, has so
much potential for people to understand one another and themselves
better," says Moreno. "The history lesson in these galleries is
extremely powerful."
If ignorance is the problem and art the solution, then this
exhibit should be a required field trip for schools from now until
it closes on June 1. I consider myself relatively well-informed
about the cultural contributions of blacks in Latin America,
especially the irresistible music coming from countries (Cuba,
Brazil, Peru, Colombia) on the routes of the slave trade. Like
many, I thought the African influence in Mexico was limited to the
Caribbean coast, especially Veracruz.
Think again. The exhibition illustrates the depth and reach of
African culture. You suddenly see African features in a
pre-Hispanic Olmec sculpture or in the faces of miners from the
central Mexican state of Guanajuato. The influence is unmistakable
in the rhythms of the son jarocho and the architecture of
round huts with thatched roofs in the Costa Chica, a coastal
region south of Acapulco with a strong African presence that is
documented in the striking portraits by African American
photographer Tony Gleaton.
It's in this region, straddling the states of Guerrero and Oaxaca,
that Moreno was first struck by a part of Mexican culture that had
seemed invisible to him until then. How many times had he hung
that 1910 photo by Agustin Casasola of a Mexican revolutionary,
"Portrait of a Female Soldier From Michoacan," and still not seen
it? "I was blown away that it had never before crossed my mind
that this woman is of African descent," he says. "I felt like an
idiot. There she was staring me in the face and I had never
recognized her before."
Racism has led to denial in Mexico, where the census doesn't even
have a category for counting blacks and even Afro-Mexicans prefer
to be called brown or Cuban, according to the exhibition's
meticulous and beautiful companion book. At the same time, Moreno
notes, interracial marriage has helped blur race lines in Mexico
almost since the Spaniards arrived.
Still, Mexico has had its Afro-Mexican heroes, including President
Vicente Guerrero, who outlawed slavery in 1829, a move that helped
spark the confrontation with Texas, a slave state, and the
subsequent war with the United States. (Like Lincoln, Guerrero was
assassinated.)
The first organized efforts to celebrate Afro-Mexican culture
didn't come until the 1990s. Today it's the focus of carnival
celebrations in the Veracruz city of Yanga, named after an African
who led a rebellion of runaway slaves, called cimarrones.
The two complementary exhibitions bring the history home. In "Who
Are We Now: Roots, Resistance, Recognition," we learn that the
Harlem Renaissance took some inspiration from Mexico's
revolutionary muralists and that Langston Hughes, the inspired
African American poet, wrote his first short story, "Mexican
Games," while living in Mexico. Hughes, the text tells us,
"enjoyed social freedoms in Mexico that he was denied in the U.S."
"Common Ground" was added for Los Angeles and features 20 Latino
and African American artists exploring black/brown relationships.
They include John Outterbridge and Jane Castillo, a Colombian born
in East L.A., who collaborated on an installation in the lobby, a
tall cylinder made of multicolored rags tied together with knots,
symbolizing the region's cultural fabric. They call it "Outcast,"
a play on their names.
"The world today to all of us is a very tiny place," says
Outterbridge, former director of the Watts Towers Arts Center. "We
live together, we play together, our children get happy together.
So working together, as African American and as Hispanic or Latino
artists, it's not new to us."
"The African Presence in México: From Yanga to the Present"
runs through June 1 at the California African American Museum, 600
State Drive, Los Angeles. Admission is free. Information, (213)
744-7432 or at
www.caam.ca.gov.
agustingurza@latimes.com
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http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-culture2feb02,0,4148627.story?html
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