Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Chicanitas: Small Paintings from the Cheech Marin Collection to open at the Snite Museum of Art

August 30, 2011 by  
Filed under Art Events & Exhibitions

SOUTH BEND, IND.- The Snite Museum of Art presents Chicanitas, Small Paintings from the Cheech Marin Collection on view beginning Sunday, September 4, 2011.

This exhibition showcases 65 paintings by 26 painters represented in Cheech Marin’s noted collection of Chicano art. Marin, the entertainer well known for his work in movies, television, and improvisational comedy, has been acquiring art for more than 20 years, and he has amassed one of the most renowned collections of Chicano art in private hands.

Ricardo Ruiz La Envidiosa 2009 580x388 Chicanitas: Small Paintings from the Cheech Marin Collection to open at the Snite Museum of Art
Ricardo Ruiz, La Envidiosa 2009

The Chicano art movement arose in California in response to the political, cultural, and labor causes of the mid-1960s to mid-1970s. Inspired by the struggles of migrant farm workers led by labor organizer César Chávez, Chicanismo evolved into a general political and cultural revolution within the United States, stressing political self-empowerment, an assertion of cultural pride, and an affirmation of ethnic identity among Americans of Mexican heritage.

The Cheech Marin Collection includes a number of widely exhibited works from the 1980s and 1990s by such first-generation Chicano artists as Carlos Almaraz, Margaret García, Frank Romero, and Patssi Valdez, whose artistic careers began during the Chicano civil rights movement. Many in this generation were political activists, creating posters, graphics, and murals in the monumental tradition of Diego Rivera. Others convey Chicano experience through scenes of daily life in the barrio, expressive portraiture, and surrealist-influenced dreamscapes with a keen psychological edge.

Collector’s Statement
The paintings herein are whole, entire and complete unto themselves. There is great power in clarity, and the featured artists have distilled the essence of their individual visions into a format that speaks clearly the message that they want to convey … in other words “size doesn’t matter” – it’s what’s inside the frame that counts.

There is something about the intimacy of a small painting that draws you in and implants itself is the warmth of your memory. For the collector, the small paintings are the ones that remain with them throughout their lives. They are the paintings that are always in their bedrooms or their kitchens or whatever room in which they spend the most time. The owners know every square inch of these paintings and can almost see them in the dark.

In Chicanitas, several young artists are getting their first national exposure. These paintings are their calling cards and they speak with eloquence, style, and clarity. Enjoy!

Related posts:

  1. Landmark Exhibition of John Marin’s Revolutionary Watercolors in Major Art Institute Exhibition
  2. Recent Gifts from the Emilio Sanchez Foundation on View at the Snite Museum of Art
  3. Contemporary Chinese Paintings from the Allen Memorial Art Museum on View at the Akron Art Museum
  4. Exhibition of Contemporary Art from Pakistan to Open at Pacific Asia Museum
  5. Oakland Museum of California Acquires Historic “All of Us or None” Poster Collection

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