Friday, September 25, 2009

Isaí Mireles, MFA Gradaute Exhibition, Art House, October 2-29, 2009



















Isai Sallum Mireles

I paint, primarily, using traditional techniques. Light, color, composition and space are my main concern, much more so than content. It's not what you paint; it's how you paint it. Everything around us, including ourselves, has its own purpose, its own importance. And yet none is more important than the other. It's all connected. In my work I attempt to express something more than the physical aspects of the subject. It is not my intent to portray accurately what I see but rather to allow what I see to show itself to me. I am constantly amazed how color, design and subject matter can evoke emotion. My aim in art is to explore color and movement on large or small canvas, depicting color in certain areas to evoke a sensation of movement. I love to capture the essence of motion as a harmonious flow between vertical and horizontal dimensions. The expression is of utmost importance. This expression is the language I have chosen, forged by what I've learned from life and brief moments of revelation and hopefully it comes from the heart. What I call art is my small attempt to show how I perceive these inexpressible things as they manifest themselves in me. My part is to freely and joyously paint and let the results take care of themselves. I feel that successful painting just happens and the end result cannot be anticipated and should be very surprising to the painter. The more the painter can “not paint” so to speak, the more space becomes available for this communication to take place. It is a kind of effortless accomplishment whose success is not measured by the work itself but rather in what is stirred or evoked in the viewer. Possibly, the real joy of painting and art is that it has the power to wake up the sleeping artist within each of us, thus creating new possibilities for seeing and appreciating the beauty around us.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Expressions Graphics of Oak Park, Illinois at the Art House in McAllen, Texas

Participating member/artists:

Rene Arceo
Carlos Barberena
Arturo Barrera
Carol Friedle
Beverly Keys
Janet Schill
Laura Myntti
Steve Fisher
Jill Kramer
Ruth Patzloff
Claude Villeneuve
Benjamin Varela
Reynaldo Santiago







March 6th - 27th, 2009
Artist Reception: Friday March. 6th,
from 6-10 PM

McAllen ARTWALK
Join us every first Friday of every month from 6 -10 PM and enjoy art works by local and international artists beginning September through May.

The Art House is always open to the public Mondays through Fridays from 12:30 to 4:30 PM, and by appointment. (956) 688-6461

Mayra Brown, Gallery Director
Reynaldo Santiago, Curator

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About the Artists


Beverly Ruth Keys
As a baby boomer growing up near the Chicago Stockyards, Beverly developed an interest in art at a young age, due to her parents creative endeavors. She earned Bachelor Degrees in Art and Psychology from Illinois State University, and later an MBA in Human Resource Management from the Illinois Institute of Technology.
She supported herself by working in educational, clinical, and business settings for many years while also pursuing her artwork, and is an active member of Expressions Graphics of Oak Park, IL. She has recently begun to devote all her time to her art career and has curated her first international political print portfolio: "Pipelines and Borderlines".


Ruth Patzloff is a teacher with specialization in art and PE. Has taught art in public school in Denmark for 7 years and 3 years in a private school in Nepal. Worked 3 years with immigrants in Denmark. Went to art school in Norway with emphasis on drawing and painting. Came to the US in 2000 and joined Expressions Graphics in 2002. Worked with Janet Schill on a fish print collaboration in 2005, where printing on fabric was explored. Works with young children in a Montessori pre-school.



Jill Kramer
A native of Cleveland, Ohio, Jill Kramer received her BFA in printmaking from Kent State University. Jill produces hand colored block prints that depict landscape scenery observed from her travels. She teaches various print workshops and classes in her area to both adults and children. Jill is a member of Expressions Graphics, The Illinois Artisan Program and the Chicago Printmakers Collaborative. She currently lives and works from her home studio in Oak Park, Illinois. More of Jill's work can be seen on her website: www.jillkramerstudio.com

Carlos Barberena was born in Granada, Nicaragua. (1972).
A self-taught artist, he currently lives in Oak Park, IL, USA. He has had solo shows in Costa Rica, Mexico, Nicaragua and United States of America, and his work has been shown in various Art Fairs, Art Biennials, Museums and Galleries in many places including Argentina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Costa Rica, Germany, Italy, Spain, USA, Mexico, Nicaragua, the Dominican Republic and Venezuela. He has created many installations in public spaces in Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Venezuela. His work is included in private and public collections, among them the Lia Bermudez Museum in Venezuela, The Printmaking Workshop (Taller de Formación y Producción Gráfica), in Patzcuaro, Mexico, the National Gallery (Galeria Nacional) of Costa Rica, the Cultural Museum of the Caribbean (Museo Cultural del Caribe) in Venezuela, the Praxis Gallery in Nicaragua.

Artist statement.
Since 1990, art has given me the freedom to travel over the ocean of my memories, permitting me to express my sentiments and through this, dig deeply into the vastness of human knowledge, knowledge which has helped me to better understand the world that surrounds us. With my work, I seek to be a vector of change, collecting images that pertain to our collective memory and that, in certain form, make reference to painful events in the history of my country and of the world. I have never become inactive or esthetically dead before the period in which we are living, I have reacted without fear in order to say what needs to be said in the moment in needs to be said, although because of this, some, related to the infrastructures that make art a business, have tried to curtail my freedom by censuring my work.


RENÉ HUGO ARCEO
Born in Cojumatlan, Michoacan, Mexico in 1959, Arceo moved to Chicago in 1979. Studied fine arts at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1981-85). Participated in dozens of group and solo exhibitions in the United States, Mexico, Canada, Poland, France, Nicaragua and Spain. Some of his solo exhibitions include: México: Museo de Arte Francisco Goitia, Zacatecas and Galería Gabriel Flores of the Universidad de Guadalajara (1990), Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Alfredo Zalce, Morelia and Museo José Guadalupe Posada, Aguascalientes (1991), Palacio de la Cultura, Tlaxcala (1992), Palacio de Gobierno de Morelia (2004).

United States: Expressions Graphics Gallery, Oak Park, IL (2007), La Llorona Art Gallery, Chicago, IL (2001 & 2007), Indiana University Southeast, New Albany, IN (2002), Casa Michoacan Gallery, Chicago, IL (2007), Concordia University’s Art Gallery, River Forest, IL (2007).
Poland: Galería BWA, in Zamosc (2002) and Academickie Centrum Kultury, in Lublin (2002).
France: Association Pour L’Estampe et L’Art Polulaire Gallery, Paris, France (2006).

Arceo has received acquisition prizes and scholarship grants from the city of Chicago, the state of Illinois and Arts Midwest Foundation to promote and show his artworks in Mexico, the USA, France and Poland. His artworks are in private and public art collections including:

México: Museo Nacional de la Estampa, Ciudad de México; Universidad Autónoma de Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala; Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Alfredo Zalce, Morelia. United States The Illinois State Museum, Springfield, IL.; Laumeier Sculpture Park, Saint Louis, MO; Purdue University Galleries, Lafayette, IN; University of Wisconsin-Whitewater, WI; Western Illinois University-Macomb, IL; Greater Lafayette Museum of Art, Lafayette, IN; Western Michigan University-Kalamazoo, MI; National Museum of Mexican Art, Chicago, IL; Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ; Concordia University, River Forest, IL; El Paso Art Museum, El Paso, TX; Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, IL.
Poland Galería BWA, Zamosc and Academickie Centrum Kultury, Lublin.


Janet Schill started her print making as an undergraduate at Southern Illinois University. She continued her studies and received her MFA from Northern Illinois University in 1996. Her experience in printmaking includes woodblock, linoleum, etching, and screen printing. She starting working with Expressions Graphics in 1991. There she helps artists run editions, and teaches print making to children and adults and also designs and prints her own work. One things she loves to do is work with Expressions Graphics outreach program. Janet demonstrates printmaking techniques to special needs kids and adults. She takes great pride in her work as a teacher helping other people learn about printmaking. In her current capacity, she is in charge of special projects including art education outreach programs and guest artists. She is also a board member, and past president.


GABRIEL ( Rodriguez ) TRINIDAD
Nace en la comunidad de Cuanacaxtitlan en la costa chica de Guerrero, Mèxico .Comunidad indìgena Mixteca , hace 27 años. Aunque estudiò de manera informal con algunos maestros de pintura , èl se considera autodidacta , ya que tuvo solo algunos perìodos de aprendizaje de tècnicas con maestros en Tixtla Gro. y en la cd. de Ometepec Gro. A partir de 2006 empieza a darse a conocer su obra , cuando decide salir de su regiòn a probar suerte a la ciudad . Obteniendo ese año el premio estatal de la juventud , en la categoria de artes en el Estado de Guerrero . Participando tambièn en diferentes proyectos en Chicago , como son en IV encuentro cultural guerrerense en Chicago . Y participaciòn en el portafolio BESTIARIOS Y NAHUALES , coordinado por Renè Arceo . En Mèxico ha participado en las comunidades indìgenas en las protestas sociales a travès del muralismo , al mismo tiempo que ha impartido cursos a los niños en diferentes comunidades.

NICOLAS DE JESUS
Nace Indio en la comunidad Nahua de Ameyaltepec Gro. Mèxico . 1960
De formaciòn autodidacta , solo con la herencia aprendida de sus padres en su comunidad de pintores y alfareros . En 1980 llega a Cuernavaca y empieza a mostrar su obra en exposiciones , llegando a participaren diferentes exposiciones en diferentes partes del mundo tratando de llevar el mensaje heredado de su herencia y cosmovisiòn prehispànica hacia otras culturas .

Actualmente continùa en las comunidades involucradas en conflictos sociales a reflejar a travès del arte la lucha que permita penetrar en las conciencias de los seres humanos para llegar a una liberaciòn de un sistema inmisericorde con los màs desvalidos.

Laura Myntti
Born in Minnesota, USA
Lives and works in Chicago and Ely, Minnesota Board of trustees for UNICEF, Women's board for the Adler Planetarium
Education :1984 Bachelor of Fine Arts, University of Idaho; Moscow, Idaho
1985 University of Paris - Sorbonne; Paris, France

MYNTTI ON HER OWN by Douglas Davis
Monsieur Manet has never wished to protect. On the contrary, the protest, which he never expected, has been directed against himself: this is because those who have been brought up in these /traditional/ principles will admit no others…

Before we seek the essential Myntti we need to consult the very history of art that she herself has consulted, as she has grown up or worked in a ring of cities and regions that stretches across most of the Western world. Though born in Minnesota, her formative years as student and artist unfolded in Moscow (Idaho), Boston, Paris, London, Helsinki, and New York. Along the way she moved precipitously from a commitment to architecture to drawing to painting. If at first she was captivated by figuration, she soon changed. She read and studied voraciously, focusing on Matisse and Van Gogh, on Kandinsky, Man Ray, and Max Beckmann. In Paris at the Sorbonne she studied French culture in its most advanced and contemporary phases and its existentialist theater. In New York and in London she touched contemporaneity, studying closely Roy Lichtenstein, Alice Neel, David Hockney, Joseph Cornell, and Helen Frankenthaler. In Helsinki she returned to her Finnish roots by investigating the softly soaring curves and nestled of the great Finnish builder, Alvar Aalto.

What emerged from all this was an acute self-consciousness, evident in every stroke she reveals to the public, that can only be called "Post-Modern." Myntti’s painterly passion for her subjects and her methods is always filtered through a clear awareness of who has come before her. Every time she addresses a nude body, a landscape, an arc of wallpaper, she has in her mind the artist who has visited here before, wielding some of the same skills, firing at some of the same targets. Undoubtedly she acknowledges them often in a comic vein. Often her surfaces are so flat, her patches of thick paint piled up so high, her cartoon characters so bold that they act as parody rather than feality. The originality she wrings out of this critical, skeptical awareness at once the glory and the burden of painting at the end of this century is an acutely seasoned originality. Perhaps post-modernism is modernism’s last, highly spiced afterthought.

Benjamin Varela (b. 1955 Brooklyn, New York, USA) is a Puerto Rican artist who has exhibited in Texas, Wisconsin, Illinois, Puerto Rico, Mexico, Spain, Chicago, Los Angeles and New York City. Benjamin has shown his artwork in the Bronx Museum in New York, Byron Roche Gallery in Chicago, the Mexican Printmaking Workshop in Chicago, and Coronado Studios in Austin. In addition, his work is in many public collections including the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center in San Antonio, Texas, the Romo Collection of Mexican American Art Prints at UT Austin, Texas, the Museum of South Texas in Corpus Christi, Texas and the Bronx Museum in New York, City. In 2007, he was San Antonio’s Tejano Conjunto Festival Poster winner. Moreover, he received a public art commission in Harlingen, Texas in which he completed in the summer of 2007. Currently, he is exhibiting in a theme group show called El Paso Museum of Fine Arts in El Paso, Texas. Other upcoming exhibitions are the Chicago’s group art show and exhibition with Pilsen Artists at Casa Michuacan and upcoming exhibition at the Art house in McAllen, Texas with printmakers from Expression Graphics in Oak Park, Chicago where he was once a former member invited to exhibit.

Reynaldo Santiago was born in 1956 on “Noche de San Juan”, A Puerto Rican holiday tradition, in Munchweiler, Germany. He was attracted to art in his early years and continues with the passion of art making in a variety of mediums, printmaking being his base in the development of other art forms. Rey has made the Valley his home and is one of the founding members of the McAllen Art Walk and the McAllen Art House. He is currently the Master of Fine Arts Director at the University of Texas – Pan American and teaches a variety of graduate and undergraduate courses including printmaking. He has an exhibition record that includes solo and group shows in Australia, Italy, Japan, France, Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico, Bulgaria, and the USA. His screen print posters can be found throughout Central and South American institutions of higher education. The most recent projects allude to immigration (legal or illegal), bird migration-freedom, and thresholds & windowpanes in Latin America.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Wilma Langhamer at the Art House February ArtWalk 2009

ARTIST PROFILE

Wilma Langhamer's artwork was featured on five READER'S DIGEST covers worldwide. The JAPANESE edition of Reader’s Digest featured her "Rose Balloon" on the cover with a half page article talking about her emerging success as an artist.
Living in south Germany, Wilma purchased her first set of oil colors at age 15. In 1974, she decided to make painting her career. Soon afterwards, her work was shown in exhibitions in Stuttgart and Munich, Germany . During this time, she met Carl Mohner, internationally-known movie star and artist who named her unique style "Romantic Realism" which is still true with her newest work.
Currently, Wilma Langhamer is living in McAllen, Texas, US and is working on a series of oil paintings to the themes of love and peace which she considers most important in life. She has worked with many charitable organizations in the past and will donate her talent again to raise funds for a good cause. Benefiting PRESIDENT CARTER'S humanitarian effort, the CARTER CENTER has auctioned 2003 and 2002 Langhamer originals considerable above the retail price.

IMPORTANT COMMISSIONS:
43rd Annual Southern Spring Show Charlotte, NC Theme Poster "Flights of Spring" February 2003
White House Easter Egg Roll - wooden egg - 1984 & 1985
Neiman Marcus - 1984 Christmas Book cover & 9 note cards
National Christmas Pageant of Peace held annually on the White House Lawn - 1983
BMW Headquarters Munich, Germany - 10 vintage cars and vintage motorcycles
BMW Headquarters Munich, Germany - Rosenthal Collection Plate

Collections:
Eden Institute for Autistic Children and Adults
Opera Star Beverly Sills
White House Easter Egg Collection at Smithsonian Institution
BMW Headquarters Munich and Berlin, Germany
City of Munich, Germany

IMPORTANT PUBLICATIONS:
Reader’s Digest Cover - International Edition - January 1987 – mistitled
Reader’s Digest Cover - German Edition - August 1986 - "Castle Saumur"
UNICEF – note cards worldwide - 1986 - "Flower Balloon"
Reader’s Digest Cover - German Edition - May 1984 - "Zwillingsschwestern"
Reader’s Digest Cover - German Edition - August 1983 - "Harvest Dance"
Reader’s Digest Cover - International Edition - August 1983 - "Rose Balloon"
Southwest Airline Magazine - 1982
Houston Symphony Magazine (2 covers)
Leisure Magazine, Successful Attitudes, Houston Post, Notable Women of Texas, etc.
Southwest Art - December 1981- Cover and 8-page color feature

Exhibitions and Gallery Connections
McAllen International Museum, McAllen, Texas 2002
Juried Art Festivals in different parts of the United States - 1983 to 2003
Club at Cimarron, Mission, Texas - several years to 2003
Knightsbridge Gallery, Wichita, Kansas 1986
Reyn Gallery, New York, New York 1976 to1985
Phillips Gallery, Dallas, Texas 1978 to 1985
Neiman Marcus, Dallas and Houston, Texas 1984
Phillips Gallery, Palm Beach, Florida 1980
McAllen International Museum, McAllen, Texas 1979
BMW Gallery, Munich, Germany 1976

Monday, November 10, 2008

Omar Rodríguez & Vincent Valdez: Recent Paintings and Selected Prints Nov. 7 - Dec. 19, 2008

Vincent Valdez Born: 1977

Biography
Vincent Valdez was born and raised in San Antonio, Texas and is the youngest artist whose works are in the Chicano Collection exhibition. His first artistic influences came from the canvases of his late great-grandfather, an artist from Spain. Valdez began drawing at age three; as early as kindergarten, he realized his artistic abilities differed from others. While participating in a mural project at San Antonio's Esperanza Peace and Justice Center at age 10, Valdez decided art would be his career. He worked with his mentor, artist/muralist Alex Rubio, on murals around the Alamo City, eventually painting on his own. Upon graduating from Burbank High School, Valdez received a full scholarship to the International Fine Arts College in Miami, Florida. After one year, he accepted a full scholarship and transferred to the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island, where he completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in illustration. He has had one-person shows at the Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum, the San Antonio Art League Museum, and the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center in San Antonio, Texas. He is represented by Finesilver Gallery, also in San Antonio. He has also exhibited his work at Parsons University, Paris; the Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Smithsonian; and the Mexican Museum in Chicago. His work is included in the collection of Cheech Marin, and is part of the traveling exhibition Chicano Visions: American Painters on the Verge. Valdez exhibits and works on commissioned pieces and teaches art to middle school students in San Antonio.

Statement
A menacing mood permeates the form and content of my most recent work. As in the past, I am dealing with expressions that intertwine traditions and stereotypes with themes that are familiar to my generation. In developing these works, however, I came to see the figures not only as forms frozen in time but also as captives of a universal culture of sex and violence. Through the use of a foreboding palette of dark hues and dim light, I have tried to vest the figures with a keen self-awareness that is both evocative and erotic. In their gaze, one can read both a sexual longing and an explosive hedonism. By portraying forms with expressive and at times exaggerated gestures, I hope to reflect characters on the brink of an overwhelming sexuality or violence while offering a hint of the hidden pathos of everyday life.




Omar Rodríguez
"cañada #1"
4' x 5'
Acrylic on canvas
2008


Born in San Juan, Texas, El Valle, in 1958, Rodríguez, a corporate and military nomad has lived and traveled extensively throughout the United States, Europe, Africa, Mexico, and Latin America. His mom, a Pentecostal minister, and, dad, a career Air Force veteran.

Rodríguez returned to his South Texas roots in 1989. Rodríguez has no formal art training. He has been painting since 2001. Rodríguez works are reflections of his journey on earth, mortality, peace, spiritual beliefs, joys and sorrows. His heart and soul are exposed for all to see. Rodríguez’s technique is the frenetic random use of color while scraping his paint onto canvas with forks, knives, branches, digits, rocks and many other objects to create his images. He is constantly searching for what is beyond the superficial and approaches every piece as if it were his last. Beyond that, no eloquent artist’s statements nor esoteric explanations will be given.

Rodríguez is collected internationally, with his works in private, corporate, and academic collections. Rodríguez work was featured in Naomi Shihab Nye’s Is This Forever or What? showcasing selected Texas artists and poets. His portraiture work was shown in the 2006 Ford and Smithsonian exhibition of Retratos: 2000 Years of Latin American Portrait at the San Antonio Museum of Art. Seven of Rodríguez large scale abstracts are part of the University of Texas System permanent collection.

During the day, Rodríguez, a former senior executive at a Fortune 500 company, provides health care consultative services to businesses. In the desperation of the night, he paints. Rodríguez is married to legendary fashion designer Verónica Prida and father to sons, Jacob and Octavio(+). He and Verónica split their time between San Antonio, Plano, and Huatulco, Oaxaca.




"the welcoming #1"
45' x 72"
Acrylic on canvas
2008

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

El Realismo Mágico (The Magic Realism)

Screen Printing Workshop at the Art House Nov. 15th



Art In Progress
---by Tom O'Meara

The tranquillity of a large airy warehouse, where classical music plays softly in the background, and painters and trainees glide around pieces in progress, masks an intense force at work within. This is the studio of Sergio Hernandez, prolific artist and currently one of Oaxaca's most successful painters.

Virtually each year since 1980, he has produced or collaborated on an exhibition. He is in his studio at nine every morning and the earliest he leaves is eight at night. To relax, he runs in the morning, swims at his home in the evening and paints portraits outside of studio hours.

His appearance produces an illusory effect similar to his studio. What marks Hernandez out is his relaxed normality and lack of pretension. He possesses none of the affected quirks and marks of eccentricity we associate and expect from our artists. But when he opens his mouth the intensity is immediately apparent. Every conversation topic is related to his art.

He says he has always known, since he started painting as a child, that he would become an artist. It seemed like a natural progression. His parents, he explains, provided an artistic background, painting and working with wood.

He names Mexican painter Jose Guadeloupe Posada and German artists Enzo and Anfil Kafer as his major influences, but Oaxaca also provides him with a rich pool of inspiration. He cites the markets, attracted by the mythological backgrounds of the animals sold there. "I take them, paint them, transform them and place them in my art."

Like so many artists in Oaxaca he is inspired and influenced by the region's light, but also pays tribute to the colors of the Oaxacan earth and the Mixteca. Of Mixteca descent, Hernandez counts his ancestry as one of his major influences but doesn't think of himself as a specifically Mixteco artist or Mexican artist, simply, "a painter." This is not entirely true. Hernandez also works with ceramics and sculptures. In both mediums he is concerned with producing people and organic forms out of the shapes and textures of wood, plants and seeds.

His painting is a far more personal and biographical process. He draws on his own living experience and dreams, taking personal relationships between human beings, superimposing them on to animals and making mystical links.


"In producing art, the artist is breaking a mental state and is not passive but active."

Though personal experience is central to his art he is cagey about his love life. He professes that, "I don't believe in boyfriends and girlfriends." Instead he says that he finds people in the course of his life, meets them in the evening to paint them and then, "whatever happens after that nobody knows."

The body of work he is most pleased with is El Circo, which was exhibited in 1998. He describes it as, "my best reflection of everything living and what it is to watch it as a spectator." A fascination with the circus as metaphor is rooted in a tragic aspect of Hernandez's own life. His grandfather, who he never met, perished in a vat of burning
oil while fooling around drunk on the tightrope of a circus that visited his Oaxacan village. As a child Hernandez never saw a circus; his family was too traumatized by the experience and it became a taboo subject. El Circo is, in some form, a reaction to this.

For the last five years he has been in therapy, analyzing concepts such as love and how human relationships work in different ways. He entered therapy, he says, not because he personally needed it, but "because I needed some answers about relationships because of my professional work." His therapy was abruptly paused, however, as his analyst died a few weeks ago.

Themes in his art have varied and developed, related to the countries where he has lived. Over the past two decades he has spent three months in Portugal, two years in Paris, two months in Florence and three months touring Jordan, Morocco, Egypt and Turkey.

Although Hernandez says he is religious, labeling himself as humanistic, it is not an explicit theme in his art. He describes both himself and his art as non-political. Hernandez believes that the primary responsibility of an artist is simply to "be creative" and though the artist possesses a responsibility to society, as does any human being, it does not extend beyond this.

Hernandez reckons: "In producing art, the artist is breaking a mental state and is not passive but active." He says that as he has gotten older his art has grown "more refined, more sober and more free."

"I'm working now on a series called Las Escaleras where you're going up and down in concentric circles and it's like a maze that finally reaches love." Hernandez is referring to a wider and more esoteric notion of love. He says he has been preoccupied for a long time with the visual image of trying to get to another metaphysical level and has found inspiration in Asian culture. Influenced by reading about the East and, in particular, India, he says that whereas with the west the "state of consciousness stops at a certain level," in the oriental tradition it progresses to another plain and beyond.



Hernandez reckons: "In producing art, the artist is breaking a mental state and is not passive but active." He says that as he has gotten older his art has grown "more refined, more sober and more free."

"I'm working now on a series called Las Escaleras where you're going up and down in concentric circles and it's like a maze that finally reaches love." Hernandez is referring to a wider and more esoteric notion of love. He says he has been preoccupied for a long time with the visual image of trying to get to another metaphysical level and has found inspiration in Asian culture. Influenced by reading about the East and, in particular, India, he says that whereas with the west the "state of consciousness stops at a certain level," in the oriental tradition it progresses to another plain and beyond.

Hernandez's painting style has been criticized as too reminiscent of Oaxaca's most famous artist, Francisco Toledo, and his skeleton images classified as Toledo rip-offs. To these accusations he simply replies: "I don't care." If he likes an influence he says he uses it no matter where it originates, and counters that the skeletons are heavily inspired by Posada rather than Toledo. He adds that he is influenced by Toledo but more in terms of certain painting techniques and types of paint he uses than any thematic material.

To critics of Oaxaca's art scene, who believe that it has seen its golden age and has now grown too stale and derivative, he replies: "I don't believe that it has reached its highest point."

He admits that Rufino Tamayo and Francisco Toledo signified something very important for Oaxacan art. But: "In reality I believe that the current situation has something to do with the galleries." He figures that the galleries in Oaxaca, by dictating what is displayed in Oaxaca on grounds of marketing and sales, have stifled development, and created the public perception of a specific, stagnant art scene.

As evidence of fresh ideas that do not receive requisite recognition he cites some young Oaxacan artists who are trying to do something different with installations. Hernandez is not the first to bemoan the lack of support Oaxaca's galleries provide to young artists.

However, he thinks the wider Mexican art world is in good health. His own future? He is planning to visit India for a month in September and then live in Madrid for two years. He'd also like to become more involved with cinema and use film as a medium. He has already made two short films, though they are yet to be edited. One is set in Chinatown in Havana, Cuba, and the other is about people in Marrakesh, Morocco, and what they hide.

And what does he believe he would have done if he hadn't become an artist? Hernandez pauses and laughs. "I don't know. Nothing good, I know that."