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Vida, Muerte, Justicia / Life, Death, Justice

Exposición / Ogden Contemporary Arts Center / 455 25th St / Ogden, Utah, Estados Unidos
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Cuándo:
10 oct de 2021 - 27 nov de 2021

Inauguración:
10 oct de 2021 / 18:00

Comisariada por:
Jorge Rojas

Organizada por:
Ogden Contemporary Arts Center

Artistas participantes:
Alexis Duque, Blanka Amezkua, Carlos Villalón, Esperanza Cortés, Guillermo Galindo, Jessica Lagunas, Scherezade Garcia, Tania Candiani

ENLACES OFICIALES
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Descripción de la Exposición

Vida, Muerte, Justicia / Life, Death, Justice is an exhibition of twenty-four Latin American and Latinx contemporary artists whose work responds to relevant themes in relation to social and racial justice. The exhibited artists offer local, national and international perspectives through multiple disciplines including painting, sculpture, photography, installation, performance, digital art and more. Vida, Muerte, Justicia / Life, Death, Justice is presented in partnership with Weber State University’s Shaw Gallery, and is curated by Jorge Rojas and María del Mar González-González. “Paired subsets of life and death, death and justice, and life and justice conceptually thread together works that explore the confrontation of death, the systemic lack of justice, and the struggle for equity among Latin American and Latinx people in the 21st century,” state curators Rojas and González-González. “This exhibition intends to amplify important voices, raise awareness, build community, and inspire action while providing space for reflection, mourning, and collective healing.” This significant roster of artists includes multiple international and museum-level exhibiting artists such as Harry Gamboa Jr., Guillermo Galindo, Tania Candiani and others. Prominent Utah artists include Andrew Alba, Nancy Rivera, Horacio Rodriguez, and Roots Art Kollective, who will paint an original mural for the exhibition. Artwork in the show responds to a number of current issues and movements including immigration reform, racial justice, femicide, Black Lives Matter and much more. Exhibited artists identify nationally as Mexican, Colombian, Chilean, Nicaraguan and Dominican, among others. Important conversations surrounding ethnic and gender identity within this community are also addressed, as artists in the show also self-identify as Chicano, Nuyorican, or Latinx. Guillermo Galindo and Tania Candiani’s work will be exhibited in the Shaw Gallery Project Space in the Kimball Visual Arts Building at Weber State University. The Shaw Gallery will host additional programming such as curatorial talks and performances with the visiting artists, providing opportunities for students and community members to engage on the important topics brought forth through this exhibition. Latin American and Latino/Hispanic peoples make up the largest ethnic or racial minority in our country, as well as our local community, making this an especially significant exhibition for Utah and the art world at large. These artists have played a significant role in calling out social injustice on local, national and international levels, creating relevant work that inspires action and change. The curators state: “As we look back on one of the most difficult years in recent history due to COVID-19 and global political and social uprising, this exhibition invites audiences to reflect on many of the issues that have taken center stage, as well as the movements that have united us to work toward justice.” ABOUT THE CURATORS: Born in Morelos, Mexico, Jorge Rojas is a multidisciplinary artist, independent curator, and educator. He studied Art at the University of Utah and at Bellas Artes in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. Rojas uses performance, visual art, and social engagement to examine cultural, social, and mediated forms of communication. His work and curatorial projects have been exhibited in museums and galleries nationally and internationally, including Museo del Barrio and Queens Museum of Art in New York; New World Museum and Project Row Houses in Houston; Utah Museum of Fine Arts and Utah Museum of Contemporary Art in Salt Lake City; Ex Convento del Carmen, Guadalajara; and FOFA Gallery at Concordia University, Montreal. In 2009, Rojas founded Low Lives, an international, multi-venue online performance festival, where he served as director, producer, and curator, worked with over 200 artists in 25 countries, and collaborated with directors and curators from more than 30 partner organizations in 12 countries. María del Mar González-González, PhD is an assistant professor of global modern and contemporary art history at Weber State University. Specializing in the fields of Latin American, Caribbean and U.S. Latinx art, with a research focus on the intersection of art and politics, her work investigates the interrelations among exhibitions, printmaking, and representation in the San Juan Graphic Arts Biennial and Triennial. Dr. González-González’s scholarly work and teaching interests extend to socially engaged practices, decolonization, the history of collecting and museums, and reprographic arts. Her academic writing has been published in Aztlán: A Journal of Chicano Studies, Caiana: Journal of Art History and Visual Culture of the Centro Argentino de Investigadores de Arte, and numerous art exhibition catalogs. EXHIBITING ARTISTS Andrew Alba, Blanka Amezkua, Tania Candiani, Ruby Chacon, Esperanza Cortes, Amelec Diaz, Alexis Duque, Patricia Espinosa, David Rios Ferreira, Guillermo Galindo, Scherezade Garcia, Las Hermanas Iglesias, Harry Gamboa Jr., Roots Art Kollective, Tamara Kostianovsky, Jessica Lagunas, Shaun Leonardo, Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz, Michael Pribich, Lina Puerta, Nancy Rivera, Horacio Rodriguez, Jaime Trinidad, Carlos Villalon.


Entrada actualizada el el 14 dic de 2021

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