Rafa Esparza
Rafa Esparza | |
---|---|
Born | 1981 Age 39 Pasadena, California, U.S. |
Alma mater | UCLA School of Arts and Architecture |
Known for | Performance Art |
Notable work | Staring at the Sun, de la Calle |
Rafael Esparza (born in 1981) is an American performance artist who lives and works in Los Angeles.[1] His work includes physically exhaustive performances and installations constructed out of adobe bricks. Esparza often works with collaborators, including members of his family.[2][3][4]
Esparza has shown his work in several public parks, nightclubs, sidewalks, galleries, and museums around the globe.[5][6][7]
Early life and education[]
Esparza was born and raised in Pasadena, California, and is the son of Mexican immigrants from Durango, Mexico.[1][8][9] His father, Ramón Esparza, worked in construction for over 30 years and used to make adobe bricks back in Mexico.[9] Later on, his father taught him how to make adobe brick as a way to reconcile their relationship after Esparza came out as queer.[1][3][9]
Esparza grew up interested in art, but it was not until he attended East Los Angeles College during his early twenties that he began to focus on performance art.[1] There, he was introduced to installation and performance art through the Latino art collective Asco.[1] His interest in performance art was further solidified when he attended UCLA, where he marked the campus with different art pieces.[1][9] He graduated UCLA with a bachelor's degree in fine arts.[1]
Work and career[]
Esparza's work reflects various themes such a politics, the environment, ethnicity and gender studies.[1] Inspired by his personal life, some of his work reflects issues with Chicano and queer histories like colonization, male sexuality, freedom, home and family.[1][3] Oftentimes Esparza attempts to critique social and racial issues within mainstream art and society by using his art as a way of "browning the white cube", and embodying working immigrant labor and bodies that pushed pass the narratives of traditional art spaces.[10] Esparza's projects typically involve collaboration around laboring and land.[11]
Esparza's Staring at the Sun was an solo exhibition at MASS MoCA, North Adams, Massachusetts where he covered the white gallery space with adobe bricks and featured a series of new paintings on the surface of the adobe, which included portraiture, landscape, and abstraction.[11] It was an effort to represent a brown space and create a narrative on the importance of land.[11]
In 2013, Esparza performed chino, indio, negro with Sebastian Hernandez at Perform Chinatown 2013.[4] chino, indio, negro was performed near the site of the Chinese Massacre of 1871 in response to that event.[4] That same year, Esparza performed El Hoyo with his brother, Beto Esparza, and fellow artist Nick Duran.[4] El Hoyo was performed at Human Resources and reflected Esparza's identity as a queer, working-class son of immigrants.[4]
Esparza performed in Dorian Wood's "O" video.[12] In August 2013, Esparza and Wood performed "CONFUSION IS SEX #3" at the Sepulveda Wildlife Basin. The piece was the third installment of a performance art series organized by Dawn Kasper, Oscar Santos, and Dino Dinco.[4] The Sepulveda Wildlife Basin, the location of "CONFUSION IS SEX #3," has in the past been used as a homeless encampment and a location for gay men to cruise for sex. In 2012, part of it was bulldozed by the US Corps of Army Engineers.[4]
For his participation in the 2016 Made in L.A. Biennial at the Hammer Museum, Esparza created "Tierra," a field of adobe bricks created from dirt from Los Angeles. The artist's sculptures and objects were buried and unearthed in Elysian Park, a historical site of early Latinx communities' displacement.[13][14][15][11]
Esparza has been awarded several grants. In 2014 he received an Art Matters grant and a California Community Fund Artist Fellowship and in 2015 he was the recipient of a Rema Hort Mann Foundation Emerging Artist Grant.[11][16][17] Esparza was included in the 2017 Whitney Biennial.[18] For the exhibition he created "Figure Ground: Beyond the White Field"; a gallery made of adobe bricks inside the museum.[5] The adobe room, which was made with dirt from Los Angeles River, was used as an exhibition space by other LA-based Latino artists that Esparza invited to participate.[19] In 2018, Esparza's collaborative exhibition and performance event de la calle was his first solo museum presentation at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.[20] Esparza used the museum's gallery for exhibition, production, and collaboration, where selected local artists and nightlife personalities worked collaboratively to produce works to display at the museum and for a performance.[20] The performance, *a la calle*, took place in the Fashion district of downtown Los Angeles Santee Alley.[21]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i "Artist Rafa Esparza is using 5,000 adobe bricks to make a building-inside-a-building in Hollywood". LA Times. 2015-07-23. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
- ^ Solis, Nathan (2015-03-04). "Con/Safos: Rafa Esparza's Outdoor Art Space | Los Angeles | Artbound". KCET. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c https://manpodcast.com/portfolio/no-247-rafa-esparza-william-pope-l/
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Albidrez, Chris (2013-08-07). "Rafa Esparza Transforms Audiences into Communities". KCET. Retrieved 2019-04-02.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Tewksbury, Drew (2017-05-03). "Performance Artist Rafa Esparza Is Fighting Invisibility, One Brick at a Time". L.A. Weekly. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ "Art review: At MexiCali Biennial, cannibalism is consuming theme". Los Angeles Times. 2013-01-28. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ "Whitney Biennial 2017: Rafa Esparza on His Work". whitney.org. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ "Sound file" (MP3). Archive.kchungradfio.org. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Rituals & Congregations Winter 2012" (PDF). Native Strategies.
- ^ "LA Artists and Nightlife Personalities Make Garments that Sparkle with Ingenuity". Hyperallergic. 2018-07-10. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Rafa Esparza staring at the sun". MASS MoCA. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
- ^ Dorian Wood, Queer Artist, Premieres 'O' (Video), The Huffington Post.
- ^ Knight, Christopher. "'Made in L.A. 2016': Hammer Museum biennial proves a thoughtful place to ponder the possibilities". LA Times. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ Radio, Southern California Public (2016-06-09). "Artist Rafa Esparza moves a load of earth for 'Made in LA' exhibition". Southern California Public Radio. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ Esparza, Erin Christovale and Rafa (2016-07-11). "Things Left Behind: Black Screen 16:9". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ "Art Matters Announces 2014 Grantees". Art Forum. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ "Fellowship for Visual Artists". California Community Foundation. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ Pogrebin, Robin (2016-11-17). "Here Comes the Whitney Biennial, Reflecting the Tumult of the Times". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ Quade, Kirstin Valdez (2017-08-17). "The Other Side of the Wall: A New Generation of Latino Art". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-05-14.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Rafa Esparza De La Calle". Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
- ^ Miranda, Carolina A. "Why artist Rafa Esparza led a surreal art parade through the heart of L.A.'s fashion district". latimes.com. Retrieved 2019-04-01.
External links[]
- 1981 births
- Living people
- Performance art in Los Angeles
- American performance artists
- American artists of Mexican descent
- Queer artists
- Hispanic and Latino American artists
- LGBT artists from the United States