Chuck Ramirez: Deeply Superficial
Special Events | Press Release
Alex (Piñata Series), 2002
digital durst print
Courtesy of the artist and Finesilver Gallery, San Antonio
Working primarily with large-scale photography, Chuck Ramirez's oeuvre includes prints and sculptural installations that are charged with metaphors of ethnicity, gender, sexuality and religion. Using typography and digital imaging technology, his work deconstructs the media world by isolating and recontextualizing familiar objects and texts as a means of exploring the human condition. Always personally relevant and charged, Ramirez's photographs and installations explore cultural identity, mortality, physicality and consumerism. Photo-based, graphically direct and multileveled, his work also references the mixed blessings of identity-oriented, ethnic art.
Ramirez's work is particularly effective in its synthesis of personal history and narrative with pressing social issues. Drawing from personal and popular imagery – his grandmother's kitchen, his artist friends, and Brady Bunch graphics – he uses the familiar to explore how social issues impact his individual life. While earlier work investigated the complexity of Latino identity and visibility, queer politics and the AIDS crisis (Ramirez is an HIV+ gay male), in his more recent work, Ramirez resurrects waste — photographing such things as filled garbage bags, dying flowers, and battered, empty piñatas — reflecting on the fleeting nature of human existence while imposing the will to survive.
Ramirez has shown extensively throughout the United States, Mexico and Europe. Solo and group exhibitions include the Bronx Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; El Portal del Arte Contemporáneo (ARCO) Madrid; Centro de la Imagen and Galeria O Lamm, Mexico City; Galeries Khadrberlin, Berlin; Arlington Museum of Contemporary Art, TX; Center of the Visual Arts, Denver; the Austin Museum of Art at Laguna Gloria, Austin, TX; the Institute of Visual Arts, Milwaukee; Blue Star Art Space, San Antonio; and the Elizabeth Dee Gallery, NY. He was selected for an ArtPace residency in 2001 by Jerome Sans, an independent curator and co-director of the Palais de Tokyo, Paris. He currently resides in San Antonio.
SPECIAL EVENTS
Opening reception with gallery talk by the artist (joint opening with Vincent Valdez)
February 15, 2006, 4:00 – 6:00 pm
Visual Arts Gallery
For more information about special events associated with this exhibition, please call the gallery information line at 765.658.4336
Events
Opening reception and talk by curator Nato Thompson, Friday October 3, 6-8 pm
Felipe Dulzaides: Nothing Happens, Twice
Opening reception with talk by the artist
Wednesday, October 8, 4-6 pm
Percussion at Peeler
Wednesday, October 15, 6:30 pm
"PERCUSSIONS SANS FRONTIERES"
The percussion studio presents contemporary solo and chamber music, composed and improvised, in conjunction with the Peeler Art Gallery exhibition, "Experimental
Geography", and with the 2009 ArtsFest theme of "Art and Borders."
General Information
Tu - F: 10 am - 4pm
Sa: 11 am - 5pm
Su: 1 - 5pm
Closed:
During University breaks and holidays
Location:
DePauw University
10 West Hanna Street
Greencastle, IN 46135
Click for Directions
For more information, please call: 765.658.4336
The galleries are wheelchair accessible.
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