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| Art Auction for Student Scholarship |
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The Center for Latino Arts and Culture has launched an ambitious effort to establish a Student Scholarship program that will support Latino and other minority students pursuing arts and cultural studies at Rutgers.
Inaugurated this year during our 15th Anniversary Gala program on November 10, 2007, the program is seeking donations during the fall 2007 and spring 2008 in order to build a $25,000 endowment for the scholarship. We are happy to report that we have already raised $8,725 towards our goal!
There are two ways to contribute to the scholarship fund:
1. You can simply write a check to the Rutgers Foundation with your contact information and mail it to us with the attached donation form.
2. The Center has developed an online Art Auction (see below) that features the original work of visual artists who have collaborated with the CLAC over the years. Your are welcome to make a bid on the artwork through March 31, 2008. Winning bids will be contacted by April 14, 2008.
All gifts are tax deductible as permitted by law.
To learn more about the art auction and the bidding process, please read the Conditions of Sale.
We are currently accepting written or phone bids. To submit a bid, please fill out the Bid Form and return to the CLAC by Monday, March 31 at 5pm. You will receive confirmation that your bid has been received. To submit a phone bid, please contact Carlos Fernandez, CLAC Director, at 732-932-1263. |
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Olga
Bautista
Rodriguez Calero
Monica Camin
Jose Camacho
Jo-Anne Echevarría Myers
Diana González-Gandolfi
Humberto Guanipa
Noé Hernandez
Cristina Hoyos
Ezequiel Jiménez
Maria
Lau |
Mariana Maldonado
Maria Mijares
Claudio Mir
Julio Nazario
Julio Cesar Ortiz
Raphael Montañez Ortiz
Mariam Romais
Juan Sanchez
Yilis del C. Suriel
Raúl Villarreal
Karin Weyland |
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Olga Bautista
Hand-made piece, 2002
Ceramic vase
14 x 6
Minimum bid: $120 (SOLD)
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"I was drawn by the curves in beehives and my love for
pre-Columbian art. I develop sculptural forms that go beyond what
I was exploring in nature. I believe that my talent lies in contextualizing
geometric forms with organic ones. In an attempt to provide a vessel
of quiet beauty to the senses, I have focused on creating primitive
shapes and colors in order to find the right tone combinations and
designs appropriated for my work."
Olga Mercedes Bautista is known by her sculpture made in
series using ceramic, bronze and other plastic materials. She holds
a masters degree in art education and is the director of the Perth
Amboy Gallery. Her work has been exhibited at the Morris Museum,
Mason Gross Gallery, Kenkeleba Gallery in New York, Broadway Gallery
and other venues.
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Rodriguez
Calero
Alma Negra, 2000
Monotype 1/1, 30 x 22
Minimum bid: $350 |
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"The imagery evokes a range of symbolic themes, and employs
a new vocabulary of classical and urban origin. The empowerment
of the spiritual and emotional evolves from the act of their own
creation and defines a distinctive quality. Complex currents and
modes of artistic expression that results in a rich interplay of
visual characterize the multicultural composition and conjures a
signature style, unique to RODRIGUEZ CALERO."
RODRIGUEZ CALERO was born in Puerto Rico, raised in New
York, and for the past 18 years she has worked and resided in New
Jersey. She first studied graphics at the Institute of Cultures,
School of Fine Arts, in Puerto Rico with Master Printer, Lorenzo
Homar and continued her studies at the Art Students League of New
York where her main focus was in painting and collage under the
tutelage of Master Artist, Leo Manso. While at the League, she received
various awards and scholarships and was the recipient of the prestigious
McDowell Traveling Scholarship. She continued her career abroad
while living in Spain and France. Upon her return to New York, she
was the recipient, for two consecutive years, of fellowships at
the Provincetown Art Association.
Rodriguez Calero developed and created a style in painting, ACROLLAGE,
which is uniquely distinct and innovative, not only technically,
but also in the scope of her subject matter and the depth of her
vision. The artist successfully combines her knowledge of mediums,
evolving them into another dimension of quality and visual sensibility
and expression, which in turn produces a striking and thought provoking
impression.
Rodriguez Calero, has received other awards and honors, and is
a recipient of fellowships from the New Jersey State Council on
the Arts, Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation and the New York Foundation
for the Arts. She has been given residencies by the New York State
Council on the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts. She
has exhibited in galleries and museums across the nation and the
Caribbean. Her works are in many private and public collections.
In 2005, RODRIGUEZ CALERO, was chosen with six other artists, to
represent, both Nationally and Internationally, the Liquitex Company,
developers of acrylic paint and mediums, in celebration of their
50th Anniversary. In 2006, she was featured in New Jersey Networks
Public Television State of the Arts Series, SIGN OF THE TIMES,
and in 2007 it received a New York Emmy Nomination for Outstanding
Arts Program.
Her works can be viewed on the following sites:
www.rodriguezcalero.com
www.artonline.net/rodriguezcalero
www.liquitex.com/awardprograms/aotm/0402calero/artist.cfm
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Monica Camin
Violoncello in Love, 1991
Bonded bronze and oil, 25 x 12 x 12
Minimum bid: $1,800 |
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"I, through my art, fill my doubts in search for my answers
from an emotional point of view. I try to find the thread, or umbilical
cord, that unite us all since the beginning of our existence."
Monica S. Camin, born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, currently
resides in Monmouth County, NJ. She received her formal training
at the Paula A. Sarmiento Art Academy in Olivos, Argentina (1967)
and Manuel Belgrano Art University, Bs. As., Argentina (1971). She
continued her education at the Arts Students League, New York, NY
(1985-87) and studied sculptor under Chaim Gross at the New School,
New York, NY (1987). Select notable solo exhibitions include Series
of Letters, Perth Amboy Gallery Center for the Arts, Perth Amboy,
NJ (2004); Sculptures & Paintings, San Martín
Cultural Center, Bs.As., Argentina; Monica S. Camin: Painting
& Sculpture, Jadite Galleries, New York, NY (1989); and
Pindar Gallery, New York, NY (1988). Camin has participated
in numerous group shows including Monmouth County Arts Council Annual
Juried Art Show, Monmouth Museum (2007,2006, 2003, 2002); Shelters,
Mary Lou Zeek Gallery, Salem, OR; Art 4 Business Inc, Novartis Pharmaceuticals,
Philadelphia, PA (2007); Elliot Museum, Martin County, FL; James
Howe Gallery, Kane University, Union, NJ (2005); Transcultural
New Jersey: Four Visions, Bergen Museum, Bergen, NJ; Celebrating
the Culture and Heritage of the Andes, Perth Amboy Gallery Center
for the Arts, Perth Amboy, NJ (2004); and The Visual Imaginary
of Latinos/as in New Jersey, Mason Gross School of the Arts
Galleries, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ and Kenkeleba Gallery,
New York, NY (2002) among others.
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Jose
Camacho
Preciosa, 2006
Digital Print with Lithography, 33 ¾ x 24 1/8
Minimum Bid: $1,000 |
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"This print follows the same theme I have been exploring
in my paintings and drawings for past two years; Puerto Rico, its
people, its colonial status and its geography. Also In my work I
started introducing text taken from the island colloquialism, or
phrases from different songs, either from boleros (romantic ballads)
and guarachas (popular songs and dances). In this print by playing
off a popular song against a social reality in Puerto Rico, such
as its current territorial status, which is an ambiguous and jumbled
commonwealth system, I try to contextualize issues such as politics,
economics, and stereotyping (tropicalisms)."
"Preciosa, which means precious in English,
is the title of a Puerto Rican song, composed by our own Rafael
Hernandez. This song talks about the enchantments of the island,
and its people, regardless of its colonial status, and/or its political
struggles. The background in the print comes from a collage I made
with pictures of a cemetery, and El Morro Castle in Old San Juan
taken in one of my trips to the island. The composition is divided
in half: one half reflects a golden island, and the other half the
ruins of a culture. These two sides could be read as a barrier defining
oppositions, or marking a transition between variants, and ideologies.
The symbols and the images are there to evoke a dialogue, and hopefully
add new insight about Puerto Rican culture."
José Camacho was born and raised in Puerto Rico.
Mr. Camacho enrolled the department of communication at the University
Sagrado Corazón in 1985. Encouraged in his artistic interest
by his teachers he began to study painting and drawing at the Art
League in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico. In 1987, at the age of 19,
he moved to New Jersey, and enrolled Montclair State College. He
studied drawing and painting with Miriam Beerman. While in college
Camacho assisted Puerto Rican artist Antonio Martorell at the installation
of La Casa de Todos Nosotros at El Museo Del Barrio in New
York City, and also at the installation of El Zocalo del Silencio
at the university of Puerto Rico. Mr. Camacho received a Bachelor
of Art degree from Montclair State University in 1992. All through
college, in order to earn a living, Camacho worked in different
galleries and frame shops. Ever since Mr. Camacho has been exhibiting
his paintings in New Jersey and New York City. Currently he is the
director of Midland Gallery.
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Jo-Anne
Echevarría Myers
A Childs Garden of Versus, 1996
Color Xerox
9¾ x 6 ½
Minimum bid: $25 (SOLD) |
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"My first images were made on clean, smooth white surfaces
of preface pages of my parents hard-bound books. Some have
been retrieved and appear in A Childs Garden of Versus,
a non-autobiographical edition (100) of artist stamps. As a multi-media
artist whose concepts are Dada-based, my art is often wrought with
beaucoup entente taking me through performances, installations,
painting, mailart and bookmaking. Predictably, this stamp sheet
appears again in an expanded version, a book with the same title.
Although I employ many diverse techniques of expression, both book-
and stamp-making are the most satisfying as the process provides
me with an incomparable venue for my sense of humor, abundant verbiage
and the endless need to produce."
Jo-Anne Echevarría Myers was Born in New York City
to two artist parents. She has always lived on an island except
for the years when she attended Syracuse University and Philadelphia
College of Art. Thereafter, she launched a 35-year exploration of
provocative possibilities focusing on critical social and political
issues. Her books are in numerous collections including The Whitney
Museum of Art Library, The Museum of Modern Art Library, Visual
Studies Workshop in Rochester and the National Museum for Women
in the Arts.
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Diana
González-Gandolfi
Patagonian Waters, 2003
Encaustic and Pigment Sticks
10 ¾ x 8 ¾ x 1 ½
Minimum bid: $850 |
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Diana Gonzalez Gandolfi has been exhibiting her work in
one-person and group exhibitions both in museums and galleries throughout
the United States since 1978. A painter and printmaker, she is currently
represented by the Simon Gallery in Morristown, NJ and Cervini Haas/Gallery
Materia in Scottsdale, AZ. Her work is in numerous private, public
and corporate collections, including The Hunterdon Museum of Art,
The Noyes Museum, The Jersey City Museum, The Montclair Art Museum,
Johnson & Johnson Corporation, Rutgers University, IBM, Fidelity
Management Corporation, NJ Department of Treasury, the Bank of Boston,
and the Newark Public Library.
She has received awards, fellowships and residencies from various
institutions, including two Boston Museum of Fine Arts Traveling
Fellowships, a New Jersey State Council on the Arts Distinguished
Artist Award and Fellowship for Printmaking, three New Jersey State
Council on the Arts Painting Fellowships, a Rutgers Center for Innovative
Print and Paper Fellowship and a Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Residency
Grant to the Vermont Studio Center.
Throughout the past thirty five years, she has taught visual arts
at Curry College, The Boston Museum of Fine Arts, The Massachusetts
Prison Art Project, Art To People, The Printmaking Council of NJ,
Artworks, and other community programs in Massachusetts, New York,
and New Jersey.
A native of Argentina, she trained as an artist in the United States
and holds a BFA degree from Tufts University, a Diploma and Fifth
Year Graduate Certificate in Fine Arts from the Boston Museum School
and an M Ed in Art Therapy from The Institute for the Arts and Human
Development at Lesley University.
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Humberto
Guanipa
The Great Faith, 2006
Signed silk screen, 25 x 38
Minimum bid: $300 |
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"My paintings are full of passionate colors and interesting
forms. I work to create a consistent look throughout the work, uniting
figurative and abstract elements. The overall effect is unique because
of the brilliancy of colors and the deceptively clear composition
of the art. It is the type of art that forms a bond with the viewer
because of its immediacy and multiplicity, which enables the viewer
to read it in different ways: one can appreciate the expansive color
application or to read them as philosophical statements about life
and love. I work to give my paintings a powerful presence, creating
strong sentiments, often through metaphoric images."
Humberto Guanipa was born in Venezuela. Upon joining in
the Venezuelan Air Force in 1973, he studied mechanical, technical
and architectural drawing. This led to art studies in Porlamor,
Margarita Island, followed by three years at the Arturo Michelena
School of Fine Arts in Valencia, Venezuela. He relocated to New
York during the 1980s. Since then, Mr. Guanipa has exhibited his
art in solo and group shows in galleries, museums, universities
and libraries in Venezuela, Connecticut, New Jersey and New York
City. He now works in his studio in Linden, New Jersey.
Artist Website: http://www.fearonlovetoart.com/index.php
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Noé
Hernandez
Untitled, 2005
Acrylic on linen, 42 x 29
Minimum Bid: $200 (SOLD) |
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As a young artist in Mexico City, Noé Hernández
studied fine arts under Jaime Amado, a well-known Mexican Artist,
including drawing, oil painting, and pastel. He immigrated to the
United States in 1989 and experienced first-hand the challenges
of being a Latino immigrant in the U.S. Through community involvement,
he became acquainted with the immigrant community and the Chicano
artistic movement in Los Angeles and San Francisco. He moved to
New York City in 1991 and immersed himself in the diverse artistic
communities in the city. His work has been exhibited in Los Angeles,
New York, New Brunswick (NJ), Newark (NJ), New Haven (CT), Chicago,
Mexico City, Paris, and Cape Town, South Africa.
Some of his recent endeavors include a commission in 2001 for the
Policy Project in South Africa by the United States Agency for International
Development to design a painting depicting the role that global
faith communities play in the fight against HIV/AIDS . Also in the
same year, He was commissioned by La Nueva Esperanza in Washington
DC, to teach different drawing and painting techniques to a diverse
group of Latino/a teenagers, to use art as a tool to reinforce their
cultural identity. In 2004, he was commissioned by the Fundación
Segundo Montes and La Nueva Esperanza to do a mural and
give workshops to a group of adolescents in El Salvador about the
revolution.
He currently lives in Ridgeway, Virginia.
Artist Website: http://www.gratisweb.com/noe/hernandez.html
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Cristina
Hoyos
Identitys Witness, 2007
Watercolor and mixed media, 24 x 30
Minimum bid: $350 |
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Hoyoss compositions are visionary journeys depicting
fragmented figures in metaphysical spaces in luminous colors that
enhance their rarefied, dreamlike imagery. The addition of organic
material such as leaves, in some of her smaller mixed media works,
adds to the poetry that makes Cristina Hoyos an appealing and compelling
painter of personal dreamscapes.Andrew Loomis, Gallery
and Studio Magazine, Sept-Oct 2001.
Originally from Colombia, Cristina Hoyos is a postmodern
Surrealist who explores the theme of the witnessing through the
ubiquitous image of a mysterious eye that appears in many of her
paintings, collages and drawings. Since 2001, her work has been
exhibited at the Montserrat Gallery and the Colombian Consulate
in New York City, as well as the Edison Art Society, Perth Amboy
Gallery, and Middlesex County College in New Jersey.
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Ezequiel
Jiménez
Simple After, 2006
Mixed media
18¼ x 33
Minimum Bid: $600 |
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"My artistic horizons were defined from the start of my
vocation. I knew from very early on that I did not want to be an
artist whose paintings are used only to adorn or fill empty, tedious
or unsophisticated space. Through painting, I have been able to
find myself and communicate in spiritual form with others."
"Terencio's phrase, I am a man, and nothing that
concerns a man do I deem a matter of indifference to me" expresses
my basic existential preoccupation. In a world of constant convulsions,
I have a human commitment to document what I see and feel. This
puts no subject matter off limits to me. Pain, loneliness, anger,
injustice & hope have often motivated me to face a blank canvass.
My spirit reacts, twists, reflects, and finishes doing the essential:
expressing itself with vigor onto the canvas."
"I have a commitment to humanity from which arises the
subject of all my paintings. I map out for the casual and often
unsuspecting observer a spiritual awakening or transcendence that
might normally be overlooked or go unnoticed. As an artist it is
my intention is to provoke. I watch closely for the viewers
reflection, surprise, question and ultimately understanding."
Ezequiel Jiménez, artist and cultural activist, was
raised in the city of Santiago de los Caballeros in the Dominican
Republic. Jimenez began painting at the age of 12, finding in art
a mode of self-expression that was free of the censorship of conventional
thought and opinion. In 1986, he entered the School of Architecture
at the Universidad Tecnológica de Santiago (UTESA) and, soon
afterwards, studied painting with Rosidalia García at the
Casa de Arte in Santiago, and later with the abstract expressionist
painter Jose Baez Ferr. From 1987 to 1989, Jimenez directed graphic
arts and stage design at the Centro Cultural de Santiago and served
as a consultant to the fine arts department. In 1993, he moved to
New York City where he attended the Art Students League of New York.
A major figure of the Caribbean Baroque school, his
art wrestles with the fundamental conflicts of the human spirit.
For Jimenez, art and the artist are embedded in everyday life: in
the suffering, aspirations and triumphs of humankind. Art provokes,
nourishes and stretches the imagination, revealing the landscape
of human possibility. Jimenez is a founding member and the president
of the Union of Dominican Visual Artists, based in New York City.
His art is widely reviewed in New York and DR art press. Since 1987,
Jimenez work has been included in 39 group exhibitions.
Artist Website: http://www.ejimenezart.net/index.html
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Maria Lau
Bicicleta, 1998
Gelatin Silver Print- Infrared, 11x14 (16x20 framed)
Minimum Bid: $300 (SOLD) |
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As an American of Cuban -Chinese descent, Laus cultural background
and familial separation instilled in her at an early age the paramount
importance of cultural preservation. Her artwork and vision are
often an exploration in identity and a reflection of her multicultural
heritage. Her most notable works concerning Cuba is an authentic
fusion of visual styles and mediums that form a narrative of her
personal history. She views the Cuba series as a long-term documentary
project, originally inspired with the ideal of documenting a Cuban
lifestyle she could not be a part of as a child, but often dreamt
of.
Ms. Laus work can be found in permanent and private collections
nationwide.
www.marialau.com
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Mariana
Maldonado
Stillness and Harmony I, 2007
Acrylic on canvas
25 x 30
Minimum Bid: $950 |
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"In my Still Life Abstractions, I am fascinated
with the nature of line and the emotional element of color. In these
paintings, I incorporate what appear to be recognizable still life
elements that seem to appear and intertwine between foreground and
background. I like to play with the lyrical elements of line, form,
color and balance to arrive at a composition that conveys simplicity
and complexity intertwined. "
"My paintings play with the idea of reality as a dream
or subconscious memory that is not always defined but a metaphor
for what we wish it might be. Lines and colors cross boundaries
creating intimate relationships of harmony. However, as intimate
as the relationships appear to be, each element has an individuality
of presence that unifies and strengths the overall effect of the
painting much the way each instrument in an orchestra is vital to
the totality of a musical composition."
"My work is influenced by the cubist paintings of Picasso,
the minimal paintings of Parisian artist Mondrian, the color-fields
of Rothko and the line work of Cuban artist Amelia Paláez.
It is the energy and imagination of these master painters that fuels
my creativity. Through my art, I try to challenge the viewer to
see more, question more, imagine more."
Mariana Maldonado was born in Quito, Ecuador, spent her
childhood in New York City and has resided in the Ramsey/Mahwah
area of New Jersey for over 25 years. Her passion for painting started
in childhood and continues to this day. As an adult, Ms. Maldonado
attended various universities focusing on Art History and experimented
with various artistic disciplines including: painting, sculpture
ceramic, and mixed media collage. She selected painting as her medium
of choice and turned her love of painting into a professional career
in 1989. Since then, Ms. Maldonado has been considered an accomplished
and prolific painter. She participates in various galleries and
exhibits in numerous juried exhibitions both in the tri-state area
and in her native Ecuador. Ms. Maldonados artwork is in the
permanent collections of the William Paterson University and the
International Center of Art & Poetry, Quito, Ecuador, as well
as in numerous private collections in both the US and in South America.
Artist Website: http://www.artvue.com
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Maria
Mijares
Last Waltz, 1981
Giclee on canvas, 6 x 9
Minimum bid: $100 (SOLD) |
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"On Thanksgiving Day 1976 THE BAND held their
final concert in San Francisco where they had begun sixteen years
before. My friend Vicki and I were able to watch rehearsals with
the greats of rock and roll in an empty Winterland Theater the day
before the show was filmed by Martin Scorsese. Two years after,
The Last Waltz was showing in a Paris cinema, offering respite from
site-seeing, and bringing it all back home. The painting,
completed in 1981, was a personal souvenir of a souvenir."
"Looking for beauty, I find it equally among the ordinary,
because I know that every random moment contains all the elements
for perfect harmony. I transform reality like Don Quixote. With
paint I savor and preserve existing wonder."
A Rutgers graduate, Maria Mijares has produced contemporary
realist paintings that have been awarded two Painting Fellowships
from the NJ State Council on the Arts, and other awards. Her work
has been exhibited nationally and abroad in museum, university,
corporate and alternative galleries. Mijares created four large-scale
porcelain enamel murals recently installed at street-level in the
Hudson-Bergen Light Rail Transit System at the Union City Bergenline
Avenue Station, featuring a clock tower marquee and 3 large murals.
"Maria Mijares is a supreme individualist living a life
of art as she alone conceives it. When she appears in one of her
own paintings, it is as a stark silhouette slouched against the
wall...But when she works it is the straight-edged, cutting silhouette
of her forceful mind which haunts her work and gives it shape and
meaning"David J. Wilson, Rutgers Alumni Magazine
Artist Website: http://www.mariamijares.com
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Claudio Mir
Fantasia Los Tres Príncipes, 1995
Archival pigment print, 11 x 17 (Limited Edition)
Minimum bid: $200 (SOLD) |
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"I am obsessed with the cultural rituals of the immigrant,
the calling cards, the trips back home, where we recognize ourselves
as familiar-strangers, the suitcases full of coconut treats in jars,
the salami traveling back and forth. The boxes and plastic containers
full of clothing, food, blenders, crock pots and the idea that we
are going to forget the life as it was before migrating and fully
integrate in the new country? Are we going to spend the rest of
our lives thinking in what we were, what could have been while engaged
in a process of change and creation of a new Dominican, Mexican,
Honduran etc? I am immerse in a search to find the Santo Domingo
that I left behind and that I thought only existed in my head, but
that I found in any corner of the new and globalizing Santo Domingo,
Washington Heights, New Brunswick, Paterson, Perth Amboy, etc."
Claudio Mir was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic.
He lives in the United States since 1985. Claudio graduated from
La Escuela de Arte Escénico in Santo Domingo with a degree
in acting. He also received a BFA in Visual Arts from Mason Gross
School of the Arts, Rutgers University. Claudio is an avid photographer
who integrates performance, video, film, music and photography in
his work. His photo and video work has been shown in New York, New
Jersey, Philadelphia and Dominican Republic.
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Julio
Nazario
Purple Heart, 1997
Photo Etching, 17 x 24 (Artist Proof)
Minimum bid: $500 (SOLD) |
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"My work reflects my experience of reality. As a human
being I have multiple experiences, each based on location and time.
The image of the Purple Heart is a reflection of the traumatic experience
in Vietnam. The image was formed on a metal plate using a photo
etching process. The size of the image reflects the depth of the
experience. The black and white reflects intensity of the experience."
Julio Nazario is Assistant Dean II for Outreach, Special
Projects, and Assessment in The School of Arts and Sciences Honors
Program, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. He oversees
and is responsible for co-curriculum program and activities. He
is a graduate of Mason Gross School of Arts, Rutgers University
with an M.F.A. in Visual Arts and Queens College (CUNY) with a B.A.
in Philosophy. He is a practicing artist and is currently in a traveling
group show Saturday to Sunday organized by Deb Willis,
curator and professor of photography at NYU. He has lectured on
Caribbean and American Cinema. This year marks his seventh year
at Rutgers. Nazario was adjunct Associate Professor in photography
at La Guardia Community College for 17 years and served as Instructor
of Photography at the International Center of Photography in New
York City for ten years. He served in the Vietnam War and was awarded
the Purple Heart.
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Julio Cesar Ortiz
Rustic landscape (2003)
Oil on Canvas, 11" x 14"
Minimum Bid: $250 |
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Born in 1975 in a farming village in northern Honduras, near the Guatemalan border, Julio Cesar Ortiz discovered his artistic talent for drawing and painting in elementary school. Following high school graduation, Ortiz first developed his talents through three years of correspondence enrollment in the Modern Art School in Miami, where he earned a degree in drawing. He then studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in San Pedro Sula for two years and attended workshops and apprenticed with distinguished Honduran painters.
During that time, Ortiz worked primarily in oil on canvas, developing the techniques that characterize his primitivist personal style.
In 1994, at the age of 19, Ortiz was invited to mount his first solo (and first international) exhibition under the sponsorship of the Cultural House of Zacapa in Guatemala, where he exhibited twenty-five paintings demonstrating his proficiency in various styles: primitivism, romanticism, and impressionism. Back in Honduras, Ortiz participated in several collective exhibitions with other national artists.
In 1996 Ortiz immigrated to the United States and embarked on a new phase of his artistic career. In 1997 he received first place in the professional category in Plainfield's 34 Annual Festival of Art. Since then, his work has been exhibited at Mortimer Art Gallery in Gladstone, New Jersey; Rutgers University; and First Christian Assembly of Plainfield, NJ. Julio Ortiz presently resides in Plainfield, New Jersey.
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| Raphael
Montañez Ortiz
American Indian, 2007
Color print on vinyl, 96" x 61"
Minimum Bid: $2,000
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Tears of the Indies, 2007
Color Print on Vinyl, 90" x 81"
Minimum Bid: $2,000 (SOLD) |
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Ortiz incorporated indigenous elements to the process of deconstruction,
underscoring his awareness of indigenous cultural practice and its
possibilities as a model for contemporary aesthetics. In the creation
of his
earliest film works from the late 1950s, he hacks a film into pieces
while
chanting. Placing the pieces into a medicine bag, he then arbitrarily
removed each piece and spliced them together in a completely random
fashion.
In his video-film work from the early 1980s through to 1997 Ortiz
used an
Apple computer hooked up to a laser disc player through which he
scratched
(skipping the laser back and forth across the disc ) of appropriated
film
footage he had transferred to laser disc, creating a stammering
psychodrama
of fractured image, language and sound unraveling previously hidden
meanings
disconnecting one from all familiar sense of forward and backward
movement
in time and space.
Born in Brooklyn, New York in 1934, Raphael Montañez Ortiz
is a graduate of
Art and Design High School of New York City, and studied at Pratt
Institute, where he began as a student of architecture, decided
instead to
become a fine artist, and received his BFA and MFA at Pratt Institute
in
1964, finishing a doctorate in Fine Arts and Fine Arts in Higher
Education
at the Teachers College of Columbia University. Ortiz's works are
in such
collections as the Pompidou Centre in Paris and the Ludwig Museum
in
Cologne, Germany, the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum
of
American Art, the Everson Museum in Syracuse, New York, the Chrysler
Museum
in Virginia and the De Menil Collection in Houston, Texas.
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Mariam
Romais
Sala de Aula #2,
Shelter at an Elementary School, 2005
Huracán: In Wilmas Shadow series
Archival pigment print, 21 x 16 (Limited Edition)
Minimum bid: $600 |
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"We broke into the classrooms closet to see if we
could find something helpful. It was filled with glue, chalk and
a ton of newspapers. We used all the future piñata papers
to help dam the water coming in through the window slats. We needed
to stay dry, we didnt have any extra clothing."Journal
excerpt, Saturday, Oct 22.
"These images are remnants, traces of whats left
behind by the most intense hurricane recorded in the Atlantic Basin.
Rather than documenting the cause, photographing the subtle evidence
of destruction allowed me to cope with being witness to such catastrophe."
Miriam Romais is a New York based freelance photographer and curator.
Her dual nationality (U.S.Brazil) and fluency in both
Portuguese and English has given her an insight into the two cultures,
and become an important part of her artistic and socio-documentary
explorations. Her work has been exhibited in museums and galleries
throughout the U.S. and abroad. These include the Museum of the
City of New York, El Museo del Barrio and the Association of Hispanic
Arts (NYC); the Smithsonian Institution (DC); the Field Museum (IL);
the American Labor Museum (NJ); Society for Contemporary Photography
(MO); the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History and the University
of California-Berkeley (CA); Southern Light Gallery (TX); Light
Work (NY); South Florida Art Center (FL); Photographic Resource
Center (MA); the National Museum of Asian, African and American
Cultures, Prague, Czech Republic; and the Severoceske Museum, Liberec,
Northern Bohemia.
Her work is part of the book, video and HBO project, Americanos:
Latino Life in the United States (Little Brown & Co, 1999).
Romais has been published in the Motorcycle Safety Foundations
Guide to Motorcycling Excellence: Skills, Knowledge and Strategies
for Riding Right (Whitehorse Press, 2005). Other accomplishments
include a Puffin Foundation grant (1999); a residency at Light Work
(1997) and the Photographic Resource Center (1993); two grants from
the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation (1994, 1995); and a Bachelor of
Fine Arts from Rutgers University/MGSA, NJ (1990). Romais curated
several exhibitions, most notably the traveling exhibition Fire
Without Gold: Works by Photographers of Color (19901996),
featuring Dawoud Bey, Albert Chong, Carrie Mae Weems, Eli Reed and
other established artists. As a panelist/reviewer, she has served
with FotoFest in Houston; the Santa Fe Center for Photography in
NM; the Center for Photography in Woodstock (where she also serves
on the Board of Advisors); the New York Foundation for the Arts;
the New York State Council on the Arts; and the NYC Department of
Cultural Affairs.
Romais is the Executive Director and Editor for En Foco, www.enfoco.org,
a national non-profit photography organization that nurtures and
supports photographers of Latino/a, African, Asian, Native American
and Pacific Islander heritage through publications and exhibitions.
Artist Website: http://www.romaisphotos.com
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Juan Sanchez
Saint Ernesto de la Higueras, 2005
Digital Print, 34.5 x 28.5
Minimum Bid: $1,200 |
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Sanchez combines painting and photography with other media clippings
and found objects to confront America's political policies and social
practices concerning his parents' homeland of Puerto Rico. Sanchez
often specifically addresses Puerto Rico's battle for independence
and the numerous obstacles facing disadvantaged Puerto Ricans in
America. Sanchez has received many awards for his work, including
a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, a fellowship from
the National Endowment for the Arts, a Lifetime Achievement Award
from the National Hispanic Academy of Media Arts and Sciences and
the Pollack/Krasner Award. Sanchez has worked at Island Press twice:
first in 1990 and again in 1997. His 1997 IP work, Sol y Flores
para Liora, won a Grand Prize at the XII Bienal de San Juan
del Grabado Latinoamericano y Del Caribe in 1998. Other work by
Sanchez is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, El Museo del Barrio in New York, the Museum of Modern Art
in New York, and El Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña in
San Juan. Both Island Press prints are in the collection of the
Whitney Museum of American Art.
Juan Sanchez earned his BFA from Cooper Union in 1977 and his MFA
from the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers State University
of New Jersey in 1980. He currently teaches painting at Hunter College
in New York City.
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Yilis
del C. Suriel
Untitled
Lithograph form stone
12 3/8 x 17 1/8, edition 6, 2004
Minimum bid $115 (SOLD) |
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Behind most of my work I use the idea of fragmentary memory
to guide the imagery. My memory being so incomplete is often portrayed
by the space given within the paper. Through this space I try to
show the idea of fragility and impermanence of memory. I want the
viewer to be able to somehow interact within my sphere and my reality,
but also allowing a space for discomfort through the use of language
barrier. I allow the viewer to enter my world and understand a small
part of my discomforts. The use of dichos (sayings) within
my work has evolved to hold sarcastic connotations of the imagery
in the pieces.
Yilis del C. Suriel, born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic,
currently resides in Highland Park, New Jersey. She received a BFA
in printmaking from Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University.
She has been a teaching artist for the past 7 years throughout New
Jersey. Her work has been exhibited at Mason Gross Gallery, Kenkeleba
Gallery in New York and other venues.
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Raúl
Villarreal
Birthday Boy, 2007
Graphite & watercolor on burnt paper mounted on canvas, 16"
x 12"
Minimum bid: $400 (SOLD) |
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Raúl Villarreal is a visual artist living and working in
the New York metropolitan area. He was born in San Francisco de
Paula, Havana, Cuba in 1964. Villarreal migrated with his family
to Madrid, Spain in 1972, and two years later the family moved to
the United States, settling in Hudson County, New Jersey.
Villarreal has a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Graphic Design and Illustration.
In 2005, he obtained a Master of Fine Arts Degree from New Jersey
City University, with a concentration in painting and printmaking.
He has participated in 15 solo exhibits and over 150 collective
exhibits in the United States, and abroad. He has lectured numerous
times on his work and Postcolonial theories, and participated in
art several conferences.
Most recently, Villarreal finished collaborating with his father,
René Villarreal on a book project. Hemingways Cuban
Son, a manuscript based on his fathers 20 year friendship
in Havana, Cuba, with the famous American author will be published
by The Kent State University Press at the end of 2008.
Artist Website:
http://www.raulvillarreal.com/
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Karin Weyland
Cofradía tocando en la Iglesia Buscando el Santo
Digital Print in Sepia, 12” x 18”
Minimum Bid: $300 |
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Karin Weyland is a sociologist and visual artist residing in Dominican Republic. She received a Doctorate from the New School of Social Research and fellowships from the Organization of American States and Fulbright for her research on Dominican women and transnational migration. Weyland is the author of articles and essays in academic journals in Puerto Rico, Dominican Republic, and the United States. She is a contributor to various books, including La República Dominicana en el Umbral del siglo XXI: Cultura, Política y Cambio Social (1996), Mujeres Transformando la Vida (2001), Transnational Perspectives: Dominican Migration (2004), and Miradas Desencadenantes: Los Estudios de Género en la República Dominicana al Inicio del Tercer Milenio (2005).
As a visual artist, Weyland has produced several documentary films, including Congo Pa’ Ti: Identidad afro-latina en la cultura Dominicana (2004) and Vidas Paralelas: Mujeres migrantes negociando la aldea global (2006). Her photographic work has been exhibited in several individual and group shows and venues in the United States and Dominican Republic, including the Rutgers Center for Latino Arts and Culture (1998, 2004), Eli Marsh Gallery in Massachussets (1999), Galería Guérnica (2002), Casa de Teatro (2003), and Museo de Arte Moderno de Santo Domingo (2004).
Karin Weyland is president of Fundación Melassa, a non-for-profit organization that develops participatory research and education projects that document the lives of communities in the Dominican Republic.
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Upcoming
Events:
 
2008 AMARD&V Summer Camp
July 14-August 15
Monday-Friday, 9am-5pm
Greater New Brunswick Charter School
New Brunswick, NJ
Now running on its 12th successful year, the Artists Mentoring Against Racism Drugs & Violence: Healing Through the Arts Summer Camp provides New Brunswick children ages 10-16 with a wide range of integrated learning activities, including arts workshops, presentations on health and safety, career panels, as well as excursions to museums and outdoor sports activities.
The program is a collaboration between the Rutgers Center for Latino Arts and Culture, the RWJ University Hospital Community Health Promotions Program, the Suydam Street Reformed Church, and the Puerto Rican Action Board.
For more information or to register your child, please contact Rocio Castro at 732-932-1263 or email scastro@rci.rutgers.edu.
Spring calendar of events
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