Wednesday, 25 November 2015

Brownsville Opening and Presentation

We framed 25 pieces from the YayBig Southwest collection for an exhibition at the Art Museum of University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, in Brownsville -- November 3rd - 27th, 2015.

We also showed 23 loose pieces in 2 smaller print rakes, and a large print by Irving Herrera from Oaxaca.

Zeke Peña attended the opening, and gave a presentation to the students.




Opening
Tuesday, November 3rd


Large print by Irving Herrera,
of Oaxaca

















THE PRESENTATION


Zeke Peña giving a slide presentation 
to the printmaking students 


Photo of a corner of the the printmaking studio


Simple printmaking materials --
for making relief prints --
Linoleum block, knifes, wooden spoon, printing baren


Zeke printing with a spoon,
during the print demonstration
on November 3rd


Rubbing the baren over the paper by hand,
to make a print
(Zeke signing prints in the background)






Yay!




This print was originally done for the 


Other fresh prints,
from blocks that Zeke cut


A variety of other prints by Zeke Peña,
by a variety of printing techniques


Thanks to Professor Alejandro Macias
who runs the Rusteberg Art Gallery
at the University of Texas, Rio Grande campus.


Article in The Rider  by Monica Gudiño --
Official Student newspaper 
of the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley.
(page 5 on ISSUU)



Picture from follow up article 
in The Rider, by Monica Gudino,
about the print show

Wednesday, 21 October 2015

Brownsville-- University of Texas

Selected framed and loose prints from the YayBig Southwest collection will be shown in the art museum at the University of Texas -- Rio Grande Valley, November 3rd - 25th.

Zeke Peña will be giving a workshop affiliated with the exhibition.


The opening reception for the exhibition "YayBig Southwest" opens Tuesday, November 3 at 6 pm at The Gallery at Rusteberg Hall (UTRGV-Brownsville). Please join us. Refreshments will be served


"Printmakers without horses: Southwest artists don't get the attention they deserve. Perhaps that's because it takes five hours to drive from El Paso/ Juarez to either Tucson or Albuquerque, and eight hours to make Austin. Therefore, we started buying local prints, and showing them in pop-up galleries throughout the region. The idea was to annoy and inspire our peers, and push for a stronger creative dialogue in the desert. This collection started as a modest exchange between Tucson and El Paso. While most contemporary artists look toward the east and west, New York and San Francisco, for inspiration and cues, artists here also feel a strong pull south, from the gravity of Mexican art. Therefore, we included some prints from Oaxaca. The viewers can decide for themselves if there is any unity of vision amongst Southwestern artists or if we are being torn apart in three directions.

.

Earlier I dropped off 25 framed prints, and some loose ones
in Brownsville, Texas


César Martinez's exhibition preceded ours.  I was fortunate enough to attend his opening.  What a hard show to follow!


at his Brownsville opening
Oct 6, 2015



Tuesday, 13 October 2015

Desert Triangle

YayBig Southwest spun off into a commissioned project -- Desert Triangle Print Carpeta. The object is to show prints!

I commissioned 30 artists in the Southwest, to give me editions of 50 large prints (22 x 30 inches). The artists keep 25 prints, plus earn a fee.


Almost half of the prints, 12, were made in Mexico:


10 prints were made
at Taller 75 Grados in Mexico City
(the first 7 showing)


made his print in Oaxaca


made his print at La Ceiba Grafica
in Coatepec (near Xalapa)


We are showing the first 18 prints in Patzcuaro (until the 18th of October). Then we will be showing the prints in pop-up galleries in Mexico -- Oct 30th, in Mexico City at Taller 75 Grados, and Nov 1st and 2nd, in Oaxaca at Process Ediciones.





More exhibits planned in the future.

Friday, 2 October 2015

Taller 75 Grados

We had some silkscreen prints made at Taller 75 Grados in Mexico City last July (for the Desert Triangle Print Carpeta), and bought some masterpieces by Mexican artists while we were down there:







(Oscar Dominguez)





































I saw a bunch of street posters supporting women's causes by Mujeres Grabando Resistencia, and exhibited as Vivas Nos Queremos:


Wall of these posters 
n Mexico City


"Matarme te hizo mas hombre?"
I had seen these street posters in Juarez earlier this year


More of these women's causes street posters,
pasted on the wall outside at the prepa 


The street posters seemed to be created in



I also bought some relief prints next to Bellas Artes, where Mario Martinez, from Puebla, was selling them on the street:








In Xalapa I saw some prints by Zamer, in a hipster pulqueria (La Otra).  While I did not buy any of those prints (yet), I thought that the pulqueria was the perfect print gallery:







I was in Xalapa after making a lithograph at La Ceiba in nearby Coatepec.  Later Manuel Guerra flew down to La Ceiba to make his lithograph for the Desert Triangle Print Carpeta project.

While in Mexico, I also went down to Oaxaca to see Francisco Delgado make his print for the Desert Triangle Print Carpeta project.