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INDEPENDENTISTA, BABALAWO OR BOTH:

THE ART OF JUAN SÁNCHEZ

Curator: Nkiru Nzegwu

Juan Sánchez
Exhibition


Vieques
Courtesy: Juan Sánchez & Gladys M. Jiménez Muñoz


1898 RICAN/STRUCTION
MULTI-LAYERED IMPRESSIONS

(Automated Slide Show)


Exhibition Entrance
Courtesy: Israel Silva Merced & Gladys M. Jiménez Muñoz

 

 

Each generation must out of relative obscurity discover its mission, fulfill it, or betray it.

-- Frantz Fanon (1925-1961)

The artist, like the writer, has the obligation to be of use; his painting must be a book that teaches; it must serve to better the human condition; it must castigate evil and exalt virtue.
-- Francisco Oller (1833-1917)

Oil paint, canvas, paper, pastels, photographs, poetic images, symbols, and words-presented through tearing, cutting, pasting, and collaging-are what brings me closer to expressing these realities. It is a constant stimulus to aim towards self-realization in objective and subjective correlation with a people who are moving and evolving with the passion and convictions that reflect their inner strength.

My commitment is to express significant concerns and content through the investigation of aesthetic and formal practice. To search for racial, cultural, social and political definitions rooted in and erupting from a hostile environment is a necessity in my creative process. To dig deep into the history of the colonized and the colonizers, and to take back what is rightfully ours, is part of that process. The multilayering of this process also expresses the complexity of the reality of the Puerto Rican people. To be responsible and responsive to a culture challenged by genocide is to make art that serves progress and not reactionary forces; to take sides with the oppressed and not with the oppressors; to deal not only with protest but also with recuperation and regenerative healing; to take sides with victory in affirming life and not embracing death.

In these series of paintings and prints, you will notice images of children. Along with Taino petroglyghs of Boriquén, revolutionary figures, images of saints and African orishas, sacred hearts, leaves, Puerto Rican flags, and torn edges of the gritty urban-ghetto environment, there are boys and girls running, jumping, and playing. There are even images of myself when I was on and four years old, together with photographs of my beloved mother. I can't help but realize that my people's long and epochal history of heroism, patriotism, and violence has always been dedicated to the future of our children. This exhibition is testimony of the love and celebration of the Puerto Rican people and their capacity to move forward, assert themselves, and energize and enrich the present in their attempt to get rid of the evil empire's epidemic and become a free and sovereign nation. My art attempts to Rican/structure our reality so that we can confront the evidence. My art is also an act of faith.

-- Juan Sánchez (1998)

EXHIBITION INSTRUCTION

The exhibition environment is divided into two spaces, with thumbnails of the exhibits at the bottom of the screen. The images and text play in the upper part as you click on any of the images below. The text that accompany the images has been organized sequentially. The narrative moves from the left to right as you click the thumbnail in the order in which they have been arranged. Use the horizontal slider at the bottom off the thumbnail section to scroll to the end of the exhibition.

Lastly, to return to this page, just click the "back" arrow/botton that appears on the display screen after clicking the "back" thumbnail.

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© Copyright 2000 Africa Resource Center.  All rights reserved.
Citation Format:
Nzegwu, Nkiru (2000). INDEPENDENTISTA, BABALAWO OR BOTH: THE ART OF JUAN SÁNCHEZ. Ijele: Art eJournal of the African World; 1, 2. [http://www.ijele.com/vol1.2/index1.2.htm].



Vieques Exhibition