The Palo Alto Art Center is honored to present Treasures from The Mexican Museum: A Spirited Legacy from September 26, 2009 through April 18, 2010. The Mexican Museum in San Francisco is the first and the oldest-operating museum outside of Mexico to exhibit Mexican and Mexican-American art and culture. The collection at The Mexican Museum represents a treasury for the passionate voice of a vibrant people: it has collected over 12,000 objects spanning thousands of years of art and culture in the Americas. While the collection highlights featured in Treasures from The Mexican Museum: A Spirited Legacy demonstrate diversity in terms of their represented histories, identities, and influences, their grouping in the context of this exhibition points to a continuum of shared emblems, motifs, or spirit.
 Rufino Tamayo, Untitled (Dog), 20th c. Lithograph 22 x 30", Collection of The Mexican Museum, Gift of Bernard and Edith Lewin | | The Mexican Museum was founded in the heart of San Francisco's Mission District in 1975 by Bay Area artist and visionary Peter Rodriguez with the intent to exhibit Mexican and Mexican-American art. It relocated to the city's Fort Mason in 1982. After presenting over 150 exhibitions in 2006, it closed its exhibition program to prepare for a future building project. During this period of economic uncertainty, the Palo Alto Art Center and The Mexican Museum are galvanizing their communities to focus on the future. Both organizations are independently planning projects to expand their facilities in order to better serve their publics with compelling art and education programs. |
With the exhibition
Treasures from The Mexican Museum: A Spirited Legacy, the Palo Alto Art Center provides a wonderful opportunity to view a wide representation of The Mexican Museum's five focal areas of acquisition: Pre-Conquest (Pre-Hispanic or Pre-Columbian) Art; Art of Colonial Mexico (1521-1821); Modern and Contemporary Mexican and Latino Art; Arte Popular (Folk or Popular Art,) and Chicano Art.
In the Art Center's East and Glass Galleries, the installation groups objects from the five focal areas of The Mexican Museum's collection with the following themes: Iconic Portraiture & the Individual, Art of the Fantastic, Memories of Community, and Emblems of Spirituality. Such groupings signal an important universality, ultimately reflecting the philosophy of The Mexican Museum: the soul and spirit of the arts and culture of Mexico and the Americas are fundamentally linked. Highlights in Emblems of Spirituality include ritual figures and miniature stone masks from the Ancient Americas in West Mexico and Peru, along with personal objects of devotion from Colonial Mexico that meld Pre-Conquest, indigenous traditions with Spanish Catholicism. Iconic Portraiture & the Individual includes emotionally-charged prints by Mexican masters, who include José Clemente Orozco, José Guadalupe Posada, Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and Rufino Tamayo-all artists who revolutionized the arts in Mexico. Prints and paintings by Jean Charlot, Miguel Covarrubias, Carmen Lomas Garza, Rosa Rolando, along with sculptures by the Aguilar Family in Mexico strike a universal chord in Memories of Community. Art of the Fantastic reveals persistence of symbols since Pre-Conquest times with magical Nahuales, sorcerers who are human/hybrid creatures, in polychrome ceramics by Candelario Medrano Lopez and multiple color lithographs by Maximino Javier. This section additionally represents in-depth, donor collections within the museum through fabulous Day of the Dead figures from the Paul S. Sherrill Collection, spirited canine figures from the Rosa and Miguel Covarrubias Collection, and zoomorphic, or anthropomorphic, vessels from the Nelson A. Rockefeller Collection of Mexican Folk Art. | |  John Valadez, Rebalado, 1989 Pastel, 68 x 32", Collection of The Mexican Museum |
The Palo Alto Art Center's West Gallery is dedicated to vibrant paintings and pastels on paper by Latino/a artists, many of whom are pivotal figures of the Chicano movement in the San Francisco Bay Area and Los Angeles. While physical space cannot fully accommodate the hundreds of Chicano/a works in the collection of The Mexican Museum, the gallery aims to celebrate the museum's role as one of the leading institutions in the country to document the achievement of such artists through both its exhibitions and collections.
The Palo Alto Art Center is honored to present highlights from the collection as a spirited legacy for all of us to enjoy. Treasures from the Mexican Museum: A Spirited Legacy initiates for The Mexican Museum "Renacimiento: The Mexican Museum Today," a campaign to share the wealth of art that it has collected over the past thirty four years.
Treasures from the Mexican Museum: A Spirited Legacy has received special support from Lois Santos and the Wells Fargo Foundation. Additional support has been received from Garden Court Hotel in Palo Alto, Shari Ornstein and Alain Pinel Realty.
On behalf of The Mexican Museum, we acknowledge a private donation that has helped make possible Treasures from the Mexican Museum: A Spirited Legacy.
The Palo Alto Art Center, Division of Arts and Sciences, City of Palo Alto is funded in part by grants from the Palo Alto Art Center Foundation; Arts Council Silicon Valley, in partnership with the County of Santa Clara and the California Arts Council.
ASSOCIATED EXHIBITIONS AT THE PALO ALTO ART CENTER
 Julían Acero, Lion Banks, 20th c. Mold-formed clay, painted with aniline dyes and varnish, 9 ¾ x 4 x 8 ½" each Collection of The Mexican Museum, Nelson A. Rockefeller Collection of Mexican Folk Art | | Ofrendas/Altars, November 1- November 8, 2009 Ofrendas/altars are traditional components to Dia de los Muertos/Day of the Dead. This Mexican holiday has ancient origins and is a joyous occasion celebrating the continuity of life with remembrances of departed ancestors whose souls are invited to return to join in festivities. Ofrenda/Altar: Herminia Albarrán Romero Herminia Albarrán Romero is a gifted Papel picado/ paper cutting artist, who learned the craft of forming squares of bright colored tissue paper for her altars in her native village of San Francisco in Tlatlaya, Mexico. Tejido de los Desaparecidos/Installation by Ester Hernandez The San Francisco artist Ester Hernandez created her installation after experiencing Day of the Martyrs in Guatamala in which families flew large kites as a means to communicate with ancestors, whose remains were missing due to forced displacement, disappearance, or genocide. In Mayan beliefs those lost souls may never rest, nor may the relatives, until their bodies are found. Ofrenda/Altar for the Community / Coordinated by Pilar Aguero-Esparza |
ASSOCIATED PROGRAMS AT THE PALO ALTO ART CENTER
Sunday, November 1, 2009, 12-5pm
Dia de los Muertos/Day of the Dead Fiesta!
Join us for a community celebration filled with music, art, food, storytelling and much more! Activities and events will take place at the Palo Alto Art Center, the Palo Alto Children's Library, Children's Theater, Junior Museum and Zoo, and the Main Library.
Wednesday, December 2, 7:30-9:00pm
"The Gift of Rosa and Miguel Covarrubias" / A lecture by Adriana Williams
Adriana Williams is an art historian recognized for her spellbinding account of Mexican cultural life in the publication Covarrubias. A longtime associate of Mexico's most distinguished artistic circles, she is a granddaughter of former Mexican President Plutarco Elías Calles and resides in San Francisco.
Free to the public: advanced registration advised
Sunday, December 6, 2009, 2-5pm
Holiday Family Day and Community Celebration
Free to the public
Sunday, January 31, 2010, 3-5pm
"Rufino Tamayo: A Modern Icon Reinterpreted" / A lecture Diana C. Du Pont
A former Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, and author of the critically acclaimed book and exhibition Rufino Tamayo: A Modern Icon Reinterpreted, Diana C. Du Pont will present an illustrated lecture on the famous Mexican modernist, whose graphics are represented in Treasures from The Mexican Museum: A Spirited Legacy.
Free to the public: advanced registration advised
April 4, 2010, 2-5pm
Community Celebration
Free to the public
RELATED EXHIBITIONS IN PALO ALTO AND SAN JOSÉ
SAN JOSÉ CITY HALL in partnership with History San José and Mexican Heritage San José
The Lost Murals of Miguel Covarrubias, September 22, 2009
SMITH ANDERSEN EDITIONS
440 Pepper Street, Palo Alto, CA 94306
650-327-7762
This blockbuster art exhibition that will feature, for the first time in the United States in over sixty years, the murals created by the Mexican painter Miguel Covarrubias for the 1939 Golden Gate International Exposition on San Francisco's Treasure Island. The exhibition presents rare examples of Covarrubias' artwork from the private collection of collector and Covarrubias expert Adriana Williams.
ENRIQUE CHAGOYA, October 7 - December 16, 2009
Artist Reception: December 5, 3-5pm
GUSTAVO RIVERA, January 13 - March 17, 2010
Artist Reception: January 30, 2010, 3pm-5pm
Art Center Hours: Open Monday- Saturday, 10-5pm; Thursday, 7-9pm; Sunday, 1-5pm
Admission is free to the public.
Visit our website: www.cityofpaloalto.org/artcenter
Information: 650-329-2366
Contacts:
Caroline Ocampo, Media Relations
650-269-0141
caroline.ocampo@cityofpaloalto.org
Signe Mayfield, Curator
650-329-2179
signe.mayfield@cityofpaloalto.org