Luis Gutierrez | ‘Statement from the Outside’ | A short trip to Haiti
04.30.2009
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Phoenix-based Chicano artist Luis Gutierrez recently visited St. Croix from Arizona, to attend the Salt organized ‘Statement from the Outside’ dirty laundry show at Maufé Gallery in Christiansted on April 16. We wanted to see what a desert-based minority artist’s outlook on the islands would be, before setting foot here. The result is mesmerizing, colorful, and unafraid. Salt Gallery thanks Luis wholeheartedly for an excellent closing of the season here in St. Croix.
Click on the picture below to see the catalogue from the exhibit
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| Statement from the Outside |
We call ‘Statement from the Outside’ a dirty laundry show because the majority of the paintings were hung on a clothes line in the middle of the gallery (Clothesline Suite: 44 acrylic & lacquer on paper paintings, 8.5 x 11 inches, each).
Stephanie Schoyer was once again kind enough to take photographs during opening night.
On the back of the Clothes Line Suite, the visitors could find Gutierrez’ own statement about the exhibit. Here’s what he says:
‘When I was first asked to paint an exhibit about the Virgin Islands, I, being of Mexican roots, thought that the islands were named for the Virgin. Then my mind wandered when I learned it was for a long forg(ott)en saint. That’s when my imagination took hold. Out came all the myths and legends. Medusa mixed with Mermaids who mixed with the Virgin. Upon further research, I was smacked by first the history then the harsh reality. As you go past the title of the place, to the history of human trafficking and what commerce is founded on, in my world in Phoenix, what is happening now is the human trafficking of Mexicans across the US border. Today a big SUV replaced the slave ship. The human need for love and babies mixed with time will heal all wounds.’
Bruce Wilson and Mandy Thody of Haiti Community Support recently asked me to travel to Haiti and film the work they are doing there; among other things, a road-building project that will change the economics of several wretchedly poor villages. I will be in Haiti from May 2 until May 16 and will start post-production editing after I return, to complete a short documentary film about HCS. This will give Salt Gallery more opportunities to delve into film and add that to the up-coming redesign of the Salt Gallery site. Here’s something we did for the Facing Locality show at CMCArts about Christiansted street artist AJ Simmonds:
Thanks for reading this far and for all of you who attend and invest in the Salt Gallery exhibits.
Tomas Lanner


