Expecting To Fly-16
Lorraine |
There’s been a lot going on this year. One of the most
interesting events for me was the fact that Cornell University in Ithaca, New
York, took interest in my artistic work in the areas of visual art and
literature. Being a member of the Royal Chicano Air Force since 1973 (RCAF-a
renowned artist collective based in Sacramento, California) further peeked
their attention. As an artist that navigates three disciplines, the scope and
depth of Cornell’s interest in my work was important to me on several
levels.
Professor Ella Díaz, Cornell University and artist in lab coat, Lorraine García-Nakata 2013
In the Spring of this year, I was contacted by Professor Ella Díaz, with Department of Literature at Cornell University. Professor Díaz informed me of an exhibit
she was curating and asked if I would agree to lend for this exhibit two specific larges scale drawings of mine, a diptych entitled
“Facio Nova Omnia: Indigena/Colonial” and "Facio Nova Omnia: Indigena."
Son, Kanichi García-Nakata assisting installation of "Facio Nova Omnia" diptych, Photo: 2013
As the exhibition curator of “If Gender
Is A Kind Of Doing,” Professor Díaz focused on exploration of the female form and only
included the work seven female artists: Regina José Galindo Lorraine García-Nakata, Deborah Roberts, Rye Purvis, Laura lucía Sanz, Ana Teresa Fernández, and Elizabeth "oscar" Maynard. Unlike large group exhibitions that establish
a broad theme and involve many artists, Professor Díaz explored our work in more depth and in relation to the curatorial theme she had established. I particularly appreciated her astute curatorial statement that
was grounded in areas of her research. This is often absent in many exhibit curatorial
statements. So, I agreed to lend these pieces.
Artists included: Regina José Galindo, Lorraine García-Nakata, Deborah Roberts, Rye Purvis, Laura Lucía Sanz, Ana Teresa Fernandez, Elizabeth "Oscar" Maynard April 9-May, 2013 Mission Cultural Center Galleries, 2868 Mission Street, San Francisco, California
Exhibiting artists: Elizabeth
Oscar Maynard, Lorraine García-Nakata, Deborah Roberts, Ana Teresa Fernandez,
(Not Pictured): Rye Purvis, Laura Lucía Sanz, Regina José Galindo. (Artwork of Lorraine García-Nakata in photo)-Lorraine García-Nakata Photo Album 2013
Later in the year, Professor Díaz decided to initiate a
Cornell University Graduate Seminar solely dedicated to studying my work, both
literary and visual art. In just a few weeks, this graduate session will result
in nine separate academic research papers that have been authored by participating
Cornell graduate students. To support their research, I committed a significant
amount of time this summer compiling materials on my work and forwarding this information to
Professor Díaz for reference (images, descriptions, writings,
and other reference materials). Soon I’ll begin to see their
writings and I’m excited by the prospect. It isn’t often that an artist’s work
is explored within an academic setting and with this depth.
Recently, I received Professor Díaz’s own writing about my
work. In this writing, Professor Díaz reviewed the various artistic stages and related series
that I’ve created from the early period of 1970’s through 2005. In a note to Ella I
shared that it was remarkable to finally have someone really see, experience,
capture, and communicate important aspects of my work. I know the subject of
academic writing may seem dry, but to an artist, to me, it’s an important moment.
Specifically, the graduate research papers will be published electronically as
part of an upcoming on-line solo exhibition entitled “Lorraine
García-Nakata: Navigating By Hand” and organized by Betsy Miller Andersen, Director with the Museo Eduardo
Carrillo. This exhibit was organized in collaboration with Cornell University and will include examples of
my work, a curatorial statement authored by Professor Díaz, and will also
offer a link to the Cornell graduate research papers. I’m thrilled that these papers have been written and that they will be available for public view.
Along with Professor Díaz's Curatorial Statement for the "Navigating By Hand" exhibit, the additional research papers will provide an interesting lens upon which to view, digest, and experience
my work over time.
My next post will provide a link to this solo exhibition "Lorraine García-Nakata: Navigating By Hand." For
now, I share two excerpts from the curatorial statement written by
Cornell University Professor Ella Díaz:
“Having addressed childhood, adolescent rites of passage,
familial lines of descent, and the socio-historical diaspora, Lorraine’s
artwork also engages the spiritual realm and her faith and hope in it, despite
the unexplained and unknown factors of the afterlife."
“An introspective body of work on the components of identity
that comprise one’s world and make it worth living, “Navigating By Hand” offers
viewers the story of Lorraine García-Nakata. And if viewers look closely and
deeply, they will also find pieces of their own life stories reflected back”
Will chat with you again soon,
Will chat with you again soon,
Lorraine
music site: http://lgn1.bandcamp.com/ track/we-the-people?permalink
Copyright ©2013 Lorraine García-Nakata
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Lorraine García-Nakata/Lorraine García. This includes all rights now in
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to authorship, documentation, lectures, or any other creation or presentation
by Lorraine García-Nakata/Lorraine García in any artistic medium, print, audio,
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music site: http://lgn1.bandcamp.com/
web site: http://lorrainegn.com/
blog: lorrainegarcianakata.blogspot.com
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