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Saturday, April 19, 2025 |
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Ruiz-Healy Art explores multiculturalism through contemporary craft in new exhibition |
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Consuelo Jimenez Underwood, Strawberry Pickers_ Half Moon Bay, CA 2020, 2022, Signed, titled and dated lower left, Loom woven in three panels, wire, linen, cotton, and metallic threads, 41 x 65 in, 104.1 x 165.1 cm.
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SAN ANTONIO, TX.- Ruiz-Healy Art is presenting Threading Glass: Consuelo Jimenez Underwood and Einar and Jamex de la Torre, on view at the San Antonio gallery from April 9th to May 31st, 2025. Threading Glass unfolds the reimagining of centuries-old craft traditions through a contemporary art lens, blending tradition with innovation. Artists Consuelo Jimenez Underwood and the de la Torre Brothers utilize history and personal experiences to create narratives that tackle multiculturalism, Latino heritage, and artisanship. This collection of works stimulates a dialogue between the tactile nature of both their practices, utilizing the rigid forms of glass and the flowing forms of tapestries as a vessel for social critique and a reaffirmation of craftsmanship as art.
Consuelo Jimenez Underwood grew up as a child of migrant farm workers, a Huichol father, and a Chicana mother, spending her childhood moving back and forth across the United States- Mexico border. Borderland life catalyzed Underwood to question the viability of border politics and the arbitrary lines that thrust a wedge into her ancestral home. The artist champions craftsmanship typically relegated to domestic settings, breathing new life and power into traditional weaving. Jimenez Underwood questions artistic canonical processes, elevating the stories and lives of marginalized migrant workers and Indigenous people through the use of weaving techniques and repurposed materials such as barbed wire, safety pins, and yellow caution tape. Green Hills was the first weaving Jimenez Underwood created after moving to Cupertino, California, where the rolling opulent green landscape surrounded her and her familys new household, a stark contrast from the metropolis of San Diego, their former home.
The artist states, I wanted the viewer to experience 'flight as I often did in my lucid dreams, soaring over the hills, in the valleys, (borders) where humans made their marks, you could stop and rest
often there appeared fences, like scars torn into the green flesh of the Earth.
Drawing from her tri-cultural background - Chicana, Indigenous, and American - the artist skillfully combines Aztec codices and Mexican iconography, weaving narratives of spirituality, social awareness, and physicality. The exhibition features her work, Father, Son, and Holy Rebozo, in which the artist reimagines the Catholic tradition of the Holy Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Laura E. Perez, in the book Consuelo Jimenez Underwood: Art, Weaving, Vision, states the following about the work, Jimenez Underwoods wicked sense of humor fuels her iconographic synthesis of these figures into specific hats worn by men. She represents the
Father with a cowboy hat, its exterior shape formed by a repeated chain stitch overlaid upon a woven ground that contains an additional raised depiction of the border intertwined with barbed wire. The artist follows the Christian hierarchy by placing the cowboy hat in the upper register and a baseball cap, its form again outlined with a chain stitch and placed on top of a raised woven border, in the register to stand for Son. The Holy Spirit, because He is ghostly, appears without form in the lower register, indicated with a section of open work weaving using shiny metallic and thicker cotton thread in various muted greens, blues, and lavenders. The artist interrogates and questions the construction of masculinity, the association of maleness with divinity, and the erasure of women and femaleness from positions of power and authority in the imagination of organized religions.
Einar and Jamex de la Torre are an artist duo born in Guadalajara, Mexico, who moved to Southern California as adolescents and have collaborated since the 1990s. The de la Torre brothers use a mixed-media process that includes glass-blowing, resin castings of carefully chosen objects, lenticular pieces, and large-scale installations. They craft baroque, theatrical scenes and characters that invoke humorous, multi-layered critiques of political figures, contemporary consumerism, and social stratification. These humorous critiques are evident in the work Letting Them Eat Cake, in which a glass pig is placed on top of a silver platter, holding out a slice of vanilla cake, reaching out to the viewer in a Marie Antoinette fashion. The work nods to the dark underbelly of decadence, wealth, and status, scorning contemporary powers and their priority of revenue at the expense of others.
The de la Torre brothers combine aspects of American popular culture, the absurd pageantry of Catholicism and machismo in Mexico, and materialism and overconsumption. Their work is an ongoing reflection of the mestizo experience, a cultural mix where stories, traditions, and aesthetics collide. In conjunction with their campy, maximalist style and satirical commentary, they pay homage to their polyculture heritage through references to Mexican vernacular arts, pre-Columbian art, religious iconography, and German expressionism. Through their ultra- Baroque multicultural work, irony and humor are essential tools to initially engage an audience but ultimately showcase social critiques, not just within one group but populations of affluent countries. The Latin Exoskeleton series is a collection of lenticular artworks that unravel the ongoing conversation of what it means to be Latinx. The artists do this by dissecting and appropriating Casta (caste) paintings, which were prominent in colonial Mexico, and used to depict the social hierarchy and evolving lineage of 18th-century society. A Nopalero character dressed in a luchador uniform takes center stage in Nopalero de las Americas. The Nopaleros skin mimics the coarse surface of a nopal cactus, alluding to the idea that coming from a diverse background encourages one to develop a strong exterior, challenging the negative undertones Casta (caste) paintings often present. The lenticulars background also features the Tower of the Americas in San Antonio, Texas, an iconic symbol of the city and a nod to the multiplicity of cultures that call San Antonio home.
Carefully chosen objects such as Jimenez Underwoods safety pins and the de la Torres silver trays carry layered meanings. Hybrid forms throughout the exhibition juxtapose sacred and profane imagery, pre-Columbian symbolism, and cultural references. From sparkling decadence to soft folk textiles, Threading Glass is an expression of reverence for the overlap of art and craft that embodies the content, form, and philosophy of the artists choice of medium to explore hybrid cultural themes and communication across real and imagined borders.
Consuelo Jimenez Underwood
Consuelo Jimenez Underwood was born in Sacramento, CA, the daughter of migrant agricultural workers, a Chicana mother, and a father of Huichol Indian descent. Jimenez Underwood received her BA and MA from San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, and in 1987, she received an MFA in Art from San Jose University, San Jose, California, where she immediately assumed the role of Professor and Director of the Fiber Art Department for more than two decades. In 2022, the artist was awarded the Latinx Artist Fellowship, a first-of-its-kind initiative that recognizes 15 of the most compelling Latinx visual artists working in the United States today. She is the subject of Consuelo Jimenez Underwood: Art, Weaving Vision, a comprehensive analysis of her work and impact on feminist textile art history.
Einar and Jamex De La Torre
Collaborating brothers Einar and Jamex de da Torre were born in Guadalajara, México, in 1963, & 1960. In a sudden family move, the brothers moved to The United States in 1972, going from a traditional catholic school to a small California beach Town. They both attended California State University at Long Beach, Jamex got a BFA in Sculpture in 1983, while Einar decided against the utility of an art degree. Currently, the brothers live and work on both sides of the border, The Guadalupe Valley in Baja California, México, and San Diego, California. The complexities of the immigrant experience and contradicting bicultural identities, as well as their current life and practice on both sides of the border, inform their narrative and aesthetics. Over the years they have developed their signature style featuring mixed media work with blown glass sculpture and installation art. In the last 15 years, they have been creating photomural installations and using Lenticular printing as a major part of their repertoire. They have won The USA Artists Fellowship Award, The Louis Comfort Tiffany Award, The Joan Mitchell Foundation Award, and The San Diego Art Prize. They have had 18 solo museum exhibitions, completed 8 major public art projects, and have participated in 4 biennales.
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