NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- It feels good a relief to know that photographer Laura Aguilar, who died in 2018, lived long enough to see her fine career survey, which opened a year earlier in her hometown Los Angeles and has now, at last, landed in New York.
Its a movingly, sometimes discomfortingly intimate show. To know Aguilars art is, to an unusual degree, to know her, and to care about her, and to care about what she cared about: under-the-radar, under-threat social communities and hard-won personal survival.
Titled Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell, the retrospective was part of Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, the Getty Foundation-sponsored extravaganza in 2017 of more than 70 concurrent exhibitions in and around Los Angeles that together demonstrated the influence of Latin America and Latino art on the city. A few of the bigger, splashier entries traveled, without delay, from Los Angeles to New York one to the Met, another to the Brooklyn Museum. It would have made sense for the Aguilar show to head East too, to the Whitney maybe, or the New Museum. But its only getting here now, four years late, half its initial size and hosted by a small, punchy, queer-positive outlier institution, the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art in Soho.
Actually, its a natural berth for Aguilar, who was a born outlier to the mainstream art world and knew it. (She once photographed herself as a scruffy panhandler standing outside a gallery holding a hand-scrawled sign reading Artist Will Work for Axcess.) By the establishment standards of a few decades ago, she was of the wrong social class and ethnicity, the wrong gender and sexual persuasion, and the wrong physical shape and size; fat was her own descriptor. Plus, she had psychological disabilities dyslexia, depression that set her apart from easy integration into any kind of mainstream at all.
Talent, courage, brains and curiosity carried her. She was able to turn potential liabilities into creative assets, in part by making herself a large-bodied, disabled, working-class Latina lesbian a primary subject of her art. Today, when queerness in its many layered meanings, including its embodiment in the gender-neutral term Latinx, is acknowledged and valorized, she stands as a figure who was shaping a future that is our present.
She was born in 1959 in San Gabriel, in Los Angeles County. Her father, a welder, was Mexican American; her mothers background was native Californio and Irish. The assimilationist family wanted nothing to do with El Movimiento, the Chicano civil rights movement of the 1960s and 70s; and she herself, although brown-skinned, did not grow up speaking Spanish. In general, due to auditory dyslexia, undiagnosed until she was in her 20s, she had lifelong difficulties with communication, a handicap that led to an early sense of isolation.
She was introduced to photography by her older brother and was largely self-taught, though as a student at East Los Angeles College, she found encouraging mentors. In college she also took consciousness-raising courses in Chicano studies. Sybil Venegas, curator of the current retrospective, was one of her teachers and introduced her to the vivacious local Chicano art scene. Aguilars developing sense of a Chicana identity is evident in the earliest works here.
For a photographic series begun in 1984, she documented the fantastic costumes cooked up by young East Los Angeles artists to celebrate the annual Day of the Dead. A 1990 series called How Mexican is Mexican consists of photo portraits of Chicanas, including herself, annotated with handwritten statements. Hers reads, My mother told me whatever you do in life, all people will see is the color of your skin. I spent 20 years feeling ashamed, but that was then.
Despite her words, she was uncomfortable with a one-track identity. From 1990 also comes what is probably Aguilars best-known work, the triptych titled Three Eagles Flying. In its central panel the artist stands, nude to the waist, her head hooded in a Mexican national flag, her lower body wrapped in the U.S.' stars and stripes. A thick rope snakes around her neck like a noose and ties her hands. Shes held captive by political allegiances and their binding, smothering power.
In the 1980s, Aguilar came out as gay. In 1986, she began another portrait-and-text series, Latina Lesbians, which reads a bit like a cultural anthropology project. In 1992, she dove directly into the gay community with on-site portraits of the clientele of a local working-class lesbian bar called the Plush Pony. The good-humored rapport among her subjects, most of them Latina, comes through. But in a catalog essay, scholar James Estrella, who had access to Aguilars letters and diaries, suggests that, for various reasons, she felt emotionally conflicted about her relation to the scene. Surely her struggle with depression was a factor.
Aguilar made powerful videos about this experience. In a short 1995 piece titled Talking About Depression 2, she does exactly that. She addresses the camera and speaks gently but bluntly about her chronic feeling of despair, of waking up in the morning furious with God for keeping her alive. In a second video hard to watch she teases the blade of a knife against her hand while musing on an urge toward self-destruction. And in a set of photographic self-portraits titled Dont Tell Her Art Cant Hurt, she puts the barrel of a gun in her mouth.
Such displays of psychological exposure could easily feel self-aggrandizing. In Aguilars hands, they dont. Emotional nakedness what another catalog writer, Amelia Jones, refers to as radical vulnerability becomes, for her, a means of self-acceptance. And she translates it into literal, bodily nakedness in her late work, much of which is a form of self-portraiture.
Aguilar suffered a life of body-shaming and self-shaming, which she gradually addressed and confronted through art. In one of her earliest and most widely reproduced self-portraits, titled In Sandys Room from 1989, we see her nude and half-reclining in an easy chair, facing an electric fan. Its a great, witty and, by now, classic image: a new-style Venus related maybe to the Willendorf Venus relaxing, drink in hand, on a sultry Southern California day off.
She once noted that the only time she was truly comfortable with her body was when she felt it touched by a breeze or warmed by the sun outdoors, in nature. And thats where her late nude self-images are set, many in the deserts of New Mexico and Texas terrain associated, as now seems clear, with immigration and border crossings.
Sometimes Aguilar poses with other women, but in the best of these pictures meaning the most moving ones shes alone, her face often hidden, her prone body aligned with and echoing landscape contours and rock formations. The latest of the solo series, Grounded from 2006, brought color into her work, which until then had been primarily black-and-white. Also, theres an element of sensuality light and shadow on flesh that hadnt been evident before. And theres an air of harmony, even peace. This isnt a portrait of self-effacement, exactly, but where her presence in her art had always been essentially about being "apart from," here its about being "part of."
Aguilar, who scrambled over the years to stay financially solvent and lived alone in a small house passed down through her family, died of diabetes and renal failure at 58. By that point, although she had sold little, she had had many shows, culminating in this one, which was organized by the Vincent Price Art Museum at East Los Angeles College in collaboration with the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center.
In 2017 in Los Angeles, her retrospective was a popular hit. As U.S. cultural demographics change, shes entering the history books. But she still stands outside the mainstream and probably always will. When the art world forms its pantheons, it usually goes for glam of a standard, starry kind. Aguilar doesnt give us that. She gives us honesty, imperfection, generosity, herself. So much better.
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