Richard 'Ricky' Armendariz: The Dream Keeper

DoSeum, San Antonio, TX. Essay by Teresa Eckmann, Ph.D.
Teresa Eckmann, Ph.D., 2017

As the first artist competitively selected for the DoSeum’s AIR (Artist-in-

Residence) program, Richard Armendariz (b. 1967, El Paso) transformed the

museum’s Bobbie and John Nau Special Exhibits Gallery with The Dream Keeper

(March 4 - April 20, 2017), his immersive multimedia installation. Building a 22

x 22 foot tent from two-by-fours and bed sheets, Armendariz created a space for

self-reflection, an environment where a multi-generational audience could literally

and metaphorically “enter the work” to have what the artist has referred to as a

“user-friendly” experience with his art. Armendariz combined deliberate craft

with purposeful narrative, juxtaposing the rudimentary and inventive (rasquache)

with the well thought out, methodical, and meticulous, reminding participants

that in the seemingly ordinary, or everyday, they could encounter what is otherworldly,

magical, and extraordinary. The Dream Keeper, while a new direction for

Armendariz in scale and materials, conceptually is in keeping with his trajectory

of smart artmaking that reveals his vision of border syncretism; “a big menudo”

(soup) is how the artist has described that border experience defined by cultural 

mestizaje (mixing) and the co-existence of “high” and “low.” What has informed

Armendariz’ at once cross-cultural, Chicano, and Border approach to artmaking?