More happy news! I will have a piece, titled Al Norte in a Pink Cadillac in the Arte Diseño Xicago II: From the World’s Fair to the Present Day exhibit which will open on April 12, 2024 and run through August 11, 2024. The exhibit is curated by Cesáreo Moreno, Director of Visual Arts & Chief Curator of the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago. As stated in a newsletter from the National Museum of Mexican Art, "the exhibition is part of Art Design Chicago, a citywide collaboration initiated by the Terra Foundation for American Art that highlights Chicago’s artistic heritage and creative communities. Arte Diseño Xicágo II – From the World’s Fair to the Present Day is funded by: Art Design Chicago, Terra Foundation, Chicago Park District, Illinois Arts Council, and The Gelman Foundation." The following is a description of the exhibit which is posted on the Art Design Chicago website: "This exhibition examines the 1893 World’s Fair as a platform for expressions of cultural identity and reveals how many Chicago and Mexican artists had similar objectives. The exhibition features 19th-century works of art from both Chicago and Mexico by some of the leading artists participating in the World’s Fair, along with contemporary artworks by Mexican-born, Chicago-based artists whose art reflects their transnational experiences. Al Norte in a Pink Cadillac
Oil on Canvas 36 x 36 inches Many years ago, I began writing a series of "mini" vignettes about my family’s migration north from Mexico City to Kankakee, Illinois. These narratives are based on my childhood memories of that journey north, our arrival, and my early life as an immigrant child in the USA. As with many of my paintings, the narrative came first, then a collage that I created using deconstructed photos and images from our 1959 family passport, and finally, this painting.
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The image is a peek at the flower I painted in memory of Banaz Mahmod, a 20-year-old Iraqi Kurdish woman, who lived in South London, England prior to her murder. She was a victim of an honor killing that her father and uncle planned and her three cousins carried out. These perpetrators were later convicted of her murder and in prison. This piece titled She Was Banaz, will be part of a large installation that will “memorialize women around the world who have been violated, disappeared, or murdered”. Dolores Mercado, Assistant Curator, organized the installation, which will be part of the National Museum of Mexican Art's exhibit titled Día de Muertos, Living Presence; it is the museum's 37th annual Day of the Dead exhibition . The opening will be Friday, September 22nd from 6:00pm–8:00pm. It's a very popular exhibit and as always, a wonderful cultural experience. There will be traditional ofrendas as well as a variety of visual art pertaining to Day of the Dead. Día de Muertos, Living Presence September 22-December 10, 2023. National Museum of Mexican Art 1852 W 19th Street Chicago, IL 60608 I have had the pleasure of participating in the National Museum of Mexican Art's Day of the Dead exhibits on 3 previous occasions. The past exhibits in which I was involved were very "traditional" in content displaying a large variety of altars (ofrendas), as well as paintings, and sculptures, honoring the memory of the deceased. Día de Muertos: A Spiritual Legacy is just as traditional, yet inspired by the Mesoamerican shaft tombs in which individuals were buried with objects and gear for the next life. While the exhibit has ofrendas, and other works of art typically displayed in Day of the Dead exhibits, it also includes work with a slight variation. In my opinion, this work approaches the subject matter from the viewpoint of the departed by specifically exploring the question, "What would you take with you when you die?" Thirty artists were invited to participate—we were all given a “veliz”, a suitcase, to use in any way we desired in response to the question posed. The exhibit opened Friday, September 21, and will continue through December 9, 2018. Hope you can see the exhibit and support the National Museum of Mexican Art. About the Piece
Personally, I do not believe that when I die, I will simply cease to exist and although this belief is viewed as naïve by many, I have faith that when I take my last breath, my spirit will leave my body and instantly be in heaven with my memory intact—memories of my life and of those I have loved. Therefore, in response to the question: “What would you take with you when you die?”, I would take 3 intangibles: faith in my God’s promise of eternal life, memories of events and experiences of my life here on earth, and finally, love for family and friends. P.S. Special thanks to my brother Javier Acevedo, for helping me with power tool “challenges”, or my ineptitude. Here are more photos of my solo exhibit, Fragmentos: Pilar Acevedo, which was curated by the incredibly talented, Dolores Mercado, Associate Curator of the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago, Illinois. The exhibit ran from January 16, 2014 through July 13, 2014. I am extremely honored to have exhibited at this fabulous museum because: Today, the National Museum of Mexican Art stands out as one of the most prominent first-voice institutions for Mexican art and culture in the United States. We are home to one of the country’s largest Mexican art collections, including more than 7,000 seminal pieces from ancient Mexico to the present. Thanks to Staci Rybacek, I have some marvelous shots of my solo exhibit, Fragmentos: Pilar Acevedo at the National Museum of Mexican Art. The exhibit, which was curated by the very talented Dolores Mercado ran from January 16, 2014 through July 13, 2014. (Slide show) Here is a sneak preview of some of my art, which will be in Fragmentos: Pilar Acevedo. This exhibit, which was curated by Dolores Mercado, will be at the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago through July 13th, 2014. There will be a formal opening on Thursday, January 16, 2014, from 6:30 to 8:30 pm; however, it will open to the public on Thursday, December 26, 2013.
It is important to note that the formal opening on January 16 will be for three different exhibits: Galería sin Fronteras, As Cosmopolitans & Strangers, and Fragmentos. I hope to see you there! National Museum of Mexican Art 1852 West 19th Street Chicago, IL 60608 Phone: 312-738-1503 Hours: Tuesday through Sunday from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.; closed on Mondays and on major holidays This piece is a manifestation of a sketch I drew of a woman tossed in a desolate field, accompanied and comforted by an angel. I found the idea of the angel appealing but wanted something more powerful, consequently, it became a disembodied angel’s head on a box – a “talking head” communicating by visual means. He is disembodied because he is spirit, not flesh. The piece is an interactive assemblage employing found objects, an oil painting, and a papier-mâché and paper pulp sculpture. The box, which supports the angel’s head and wings, is a found object. The box’s door is of non-glare Plexiglas selected because it provides a slightly blurry view when an image isn’t directly beneath it. Inlaid in the Plexiglas is a round magnifier, which is intended to draw the viewer closer for a detailed examination of what lies on the back surface – an oil painting based on my initial sketch of a partially nude female, lying in a field, surrounded by skulls. The difference between my painting and sketch is that rather than being comforted by an angel, the woman is being groped by a demon – symbolic of the killer(s) responsible for murdering over 450 females in Ciudad Juárez. The door can be opened for a closer unhindered view. Rastros y Cronicas: Women of Juarez Exhibit – Co-Curated by Dolores, Mercado and Linda Xochitl Tortolero. To view a video about the issue, link to: http://vimeo.com/7595547 – Women of Juarez by Matthew Cunningham. |
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