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Consuelo Jimenez Underwood

Consuelo Jimenez Underwood

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Female
Birth
Age
76 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography


Consuelo Jimenez Underwood (born in Sacramento in 1949) is an Indigenous Chicana currently based in Cupertino, California.As an artist she works with textiles in attempt to unify her American roots with her Mexican Indigenous ones, along with trying to convey the same for other multicultural people.

Biography

Consuelo Jimenez Underwood was born in Sacramento, California to a Huichol (an Indigenous group in Mexico) father and Chicana (Mexican-American) mother. Her family, herself included, were all field workers in California, and due to her father's legal status, when said fields were raided by what was then known as the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), he would get deported more than once. Before solely pursuing art, she was an Adjunct Professor at the California College of the Arts in Berkeley (2007), Assistant Professor (1989-1996), Associate Professor (1996-2001), and Professor of Art at San Jose State University (2001-2009).

Jimenez Underwood was introduced to the uses of textile at a young age, she would watch her mother crochet and embroider. She has stated that making art through the use of textile allows her to have some recognition of her motheras well as of her culture, her father's indigenous roots. During her college education she decided to learn these traditions using textile to keep them alive and embrace like her indigenous ancestors did.

Education

Jimenez Underwood received her Bachelor's degree in arts (BA) in 1981 at San Diego State University where she also studied for her Master's degree in Arts (MA) in 1985. She then went on to obtain a Master's degree in fine arts (MFA) at San Jose State University in 1987.

Artworks

Borderlines

A series of multi media art installations within 2010-2017, Jimenez Underwood's Borderlines pieces involve paint, yarn, beads, barbed wire and more. Her use of barbed wire being an immediate tie to the border and the suffering it brings to the immigrants that cross it. These pieces are a depiction of the Mexico - U.S. border that she states she created in hopes of bringing awareness to the many dangerous effects that the border has and will continue to have as time goes on. The effects it'll have on the coming generations, the environment, the alienation it instills in humanity.

Flags

Another series, dated 1993 and 2013, her Flags are made of fiber, fabric, threads, leather, plastic, pins, and beads that create the merging of the Mexico and United States flags. Bright colors from the blue of the American flag to the green of the Mexican flag, the stars, and the eagle all make the use of both flags stand out and contrast one another. Combining the flags, through pieces or what appears to be a silhouette of both in "One Nation Underground" is with the intent of expressing her multiculturalism and that of others, embracing both cultures and inevitably combining them and all that comes with each individual country.

Virgen de los Caminos

Made in 1994 of cotton, silk, and metallic thread, Virgen De los Caminos (Virgin of the Roads) is now hung at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. This piece is a children's quilt with embroidered flowers, barbed wire, la Virgen De Guadalupe (a religious Mexican symbol), and almost invisible appearances of the word "Caution" accompanied by the silhouettes by John Hood that are also seen in C. Jane Run. Authors Jonathan Yorba and Cristina Serna suggest that the Virgin of Guadalupe is a guardian saint for the immigrants crossing into the United States from Mexico, with the images from Hood's road signs being embroidered in white onto the light colored fabric to express that immigrant families are ghosts, nearly invisible and somehow unnoticed by others.

Selected exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

  • Cultural Contradictions, Bade Museum, Berkeley, CA 1991
  • California Artists: Consuelo Jimenez Underwood, Triton Museum, Santa Clara, CA 1992
  • Tortilla Meets Tortilla Wall, InSite_05, Border State Park, Performance at United States/Mexico Border 2005
  • Mothers: The Act of Seeing, Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, NV 2015

Group exhibitions

  • California Art Show, California State Fair, Sacramento, CA 1981
  • 1984 California Works, California State Fair, Sacramento, CA 1984
  • Area Chicano Artists, Gavilan College, Gilroy, CA 1987
  • Emerging Artists From San Jose, San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA 1988
  • Three Traditions, Southwestern College Gallery, Chula Vista, CA 1989
  • Convergence-Connecting Threads, San Jose Convention Center, San Jose, CA 1990
  • Connections in Chicano and Latino Art, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA 1991
  • La Fe: Spiritual And Religious Expressions in Chicano Art, Galeria de la Raza/Studio 24, San Francisco, CA 1993
  • Rethinking La Malinche, Mexic-Arte Museum, Austin, TX 1994
  • Transformations!, UNAM Gallery, San Antonio, TX 1994
  • Choices! Recent Acquisitions, Oakland Museum of California, Oakland, CA 1995
  • The Renwick at 25, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC 1997
  • Common Threads: Textiles of the Americas, The Mexican Museum, San Francisco, CA 1998
  • The Art of The Spirit, Society for Contemporary Craft, Pittsburgh, PA 2000
  • The Renwick Invitational: Five Women in Craft, National Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 2000
  • Defining Craft I, American Craft Museum, New York, NY 2000
  • Arte Latino: Treasures from the Smithsonian American Art Museum (Traveling Exhibition) 2000 - 2002
  • Unfamiliar Territory, San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA 2002
  • Maestras IV Atelier XLII - 2003, Self Help Graphics and Art, Los Angeles, CA 2003
  • Illuminaciones: Days of the Dead and Indigenous and Colonial Expressions, Oakland Museum Of California, Oakland, CA 2005
  • Permanent Collection Gallery, Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC 2005
  • Mundo Latino, Women's Museum, Dallas, TX 2005
  • Likeness and Presence: Contemporary Religious Expressions, Self Help Graphics and Art, Los Angeles, CA 2005
  • Rooted In tradition, Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum , Chicago, IL 2006
  • Luce Foundation Center for American Art Inauguration, Smithsonian American Art, Museum, Washington, D.C. 2006
  • Illegal Entry, Galeria de la Raza, San Francisco, CA 2006
  • Preview, San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA 2006
  • A Declaration of Immigration, National Museum of Mexican Art, Chicago, IL 2008
  • Rastros y Cronicas: Women of Juarez, National Museum of Mexican Art, Chicago, IL 2009
  • Mirando Al Sur: Looking South, Woman Made Gallery, Chicago, IL 2009
  • She Made It!, Leonard and David McKay Gallery, San Jose Historical Museum, San Jose 2009
  • Looking Back, Looking Ahead, Euphrat Museum of Art, Cupertino, CA 2009
  • Adorned Cloth, Mills Building, San Francisco, CA 2009
  • Art In Embassies, US Department of State, Jerusalem, Israel 2012
  • The U.S.-Mexico Border: Place, Imagination, and Possibility, Craft and Folk Art Museum, Los Angeles, CA, in partnership with Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, a Getty initiative 2017
  • New threads, Laband Art Gallery, Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, CA 2018

Collections

  • Laguna Art Museum
  • Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Print Department
  • Mexican Fine Art Center Museum, Chicago, Illinois
  • Mexican Museum, San Francisco, California
  • Museum of Art and Design, New York, New York
  • National Museum of Mexican Art, Chicago, Illinois
  • Oakland Museum of California, Oakland, California
  • Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, District of Columbia
  • Self Help Graphics and Art, Los Angeles, California

Honors and awards

  • Honorable Mention by the California State Fair in Sacramento, 1981 and 1984
  • Emerging Talent by the American Craft Council in New York, 1987
  • 1993 Biennial Competition Artists Awards Nominee by The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation in New York, 1993
  • Master Artist Grant by the National Association of Latino Arts and Culture, 2017
  • Council of Fellows by the American Craft Council, 2018
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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