Vincent Valdez, Untitled
From The
Strangest Fruit, 2013
Oil on canvas, 55" x 92"
|
In the United States , for most of us, the
concept of lynching seems so far removed from our day- to-day experiences.
After all, we have come so far from the barbaric days of the past, right? Wrong.
That racism is merely transmitted in other ways through subtle, and sometimes
not so subtle, aspects of our modern-day lifestyles. For certain, we are not a
country made up of thoughtful people who like to remember the past as it was
and learn from our mistakes.
Historically, we know all too
well the atrocities that African-Americans have tragically endured as a matter
of course in this country. And who could forget the 1915 abduction and hanging of New York Jewish-American Leo Frank by anti-Semites in Georgia? This happened even after
he was found not guilty of the rape and murder of Mary Phagan, one of the
young factory girls who worked for him. Jason Robert Brown based the stirring
Broadway musical Parade on his story that brought his experience to
the mainstream consciousness years after the fact.
Did you know that Latinos were
hanged in the United States ,
more specifically Texas ,
up until the Mid-20th Century? This is one of our country's dirtiest secrets. As a result of the media and mainstream American
society remaining tight lipped about the lynchings that began in the mid-1800s, few
people know about them. While buried, these acts became part of written Latino
history by way of community leaflets as well as traditional ballads called
"corridos."
Vincent Valdez, Untitled
From The Strangest Fruit, 2013
Oil on canvas, 55" x 92"
|
The victims of these hangings may
not have a musical telling their story coming to town anytime soon, but they are getting an art exhibition that
pays somber homage to the horrors they suffered. "The Strangest Fruit,"
opening on October 19 at Brown University 's David Winton Bell Gallery at the List Art Center is the brainchild of San Antonio-born and Rhode Island School of
Design-educated painter and muralist Vincent Valdez. Known
for his metaphorical realism, Valdez has created
an installation that metaphorically equates the unwritten deadly treatment
of Latinos in the past with the oppression and persecution their descendants feel
today in modern-day America .
All of the exhibition paintings feature images of people with whom Valdez has a personal
relationship. And while the ropes aren't there, he has strategically depicted
his subjects in positions that hint at the throes and aftermath of a death by hanging. "Slightly larger than
life-size, the figures float, decontextualized on a white background,"
says Valdez .
"The compositions become an ambiguous scene between hanging and ascension."
According to curators at the David Winton Bell Art Gallery, Valdez, at
the far end of the gallery "presents an adapted version of the poem
'Strange Fruit' by Abel Meeropol (aka Lewis Allan) written and performed in the
mid-to-late 1930s as a protest song that exposed racism and the lynching of
African Americans in the United States, capturing popular imagination through
recordings by singers such as Billie Holiday. The text stands as an transcribed
'corrido'....inscribing the
history of Latino lynching onto the wall of the gallery. The last line '…here
is a strange and bitter crop' echoes amongst the pained and contorted figures,
presenting them as subjective evidence of ongoing social and cultural
oppression."
"The Strangest Fruit" runs through December 8. The Gallery will present a symposium on
Friday, October 18 from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. in the List Art Center
Auditorium, followed by an opening reception at 6:30 p.m. For more information, visit http://www.brown.edu/bellgallery.
No comments:
Post a Comment