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Artworks
Chuck Ramirez American, 1962-2010
Careyes: White Venus, 2007/2022Pigment inkjet print34 x 30 in
86.4 x 76.2 cmEdition of 3The Careyes Series comes from Ramirez’s time visiting the Pacific coast of Mexico. He observed how residents reused consumer objects like cracked plastic bottles and broken brooms. Ramirez writes that...The Careyes Series comes from Ramirez’s time visiting the Pacific coast of Mexico. He observed how residents reused consumer objects like cracked plastic bottles and broken brooms. Ramirez writes that photographing these repurposed objects act to reflect on how “consumer culture permeates every aspect of our daily lives” and how Americans are not only “responsible for a significant portion of the world’s waste, but they are slow to any significant reforms in their consumption practice.” Through this series, Ramirez pushes the viewer to consider the American consumer culture and its environmental impact.
Curator and writer Elizabeth Ferrer states, “His portrayal of America was neither cynical nor nihilistic; rather, it was doggedly real, palpable, and to the point. Ultimately, Ramirez had a knack for the creation of an irreverent people’s art, one that amplified the material object from inert form to a quirky expression of lived reality and, often, of optimism. Ramirez’ work even bears little relation to the many Latino photographers who have staged images for the camera in order to evoke family histories, cultural legacies, and political activism. Within the corpus of Latino photography, Ramirez, in fact, is a unique figure. He approached his medium idiosyncratically and was never bound by notions of what it should be or say." - "Every Picture Tells a Story, Chuck Ramirez: All This and Heaven Too," McNay Art Museum, 2017.Exhibitions
Chuck Ramirez: Minimally Baroque, Ruiz-Healy Art, and Blue Star Contemporary, San Antonio, TX; curator: Victor Zamudio-Taylor, 2011
Publications
Exhibition Catalogue, Chuck Ramirez: Minimally Baroque, Ruiz-Healy Art, and Blue Star Contemporary, San Antonio, TX; curator: Victor Zamudio-Taylor, editor: Anjali Gupta, 2011, p. 39 (illustrated)
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