Saturday, January 24, 2009

Museum of Contemporary Art in San Diego shows Javier Ramires Limon ~ Cerca Series


SAN DIEGO, CA - The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego opened Cerca Series: Javier Ramírez Limón at its La Jolla location. The exhibition, curated by MCASD Assistant Curator, Lucía Sanromán, features photographic works by the Tijuana-based artist Javier Ramírez Limón, and will be on view through May 10, 2009. Javier Ramírez Limón is the fifth recipient of MCASD's annual purchase award honoring regional artists of exceptional promise.

Ramírez Limón mines the ground between photography as straight journalistic document and as a source for conceptual and poetic interrogation. He attains this through breaks and alterations in the image's representational façade that take various forms: textual application, digital manipulation and, as for this Cerca Series, the pairing of two independent bodies of work to create a third.

The exhibition presents two documentary photography series that--separately and using distinct photographic techniques and conventions--document different moments in the process of migration and adaptation of Mexican communities in the Southern United States. Ramírez Limón's color portraits in the series Mexican Quinceañera (2006-2008) capture central characters in real festivities celebrating the 15th-birthday of adolescent women living in San Diego County, the equivalent to Sweet 16 parties in the United States. These images are brought together with black-and-white landscape photos from the series De Altar al Sásabe (2007) taken in an area of the Sonoran desert known as Altar, a remote and dangerous region where illegal migrants and drugs are smuggled north.

Ramírez Limón conceptualizes these pairings as a form of infiltration of the social and ethnographic content of one series into the other. This transforms the new pairings into a temporal narrative about migration but also a more allusive and open-ended reflection upon the subject. The landscapes infiltrate or seep into the cultural discourse of the Mexican Quinceañera series, becoming a backdrop to that celebration and its characters, while offering a shorthand social history of a community. Ramírez Limón's work insinuates a suggestive and intimate mode of observation upon a social phenomenon whose face is dominated by stereotypical media representations.

Javier Ramírez Limón lives and works in Tijuana. He studied photography in Mexico City and New York and has exhibited in biennials, festivals, and solo and group exhibitions, including Encuentros Abiertos de Fotografía (Buenos Aires, 2000); Reconstrucción de Familia at Fluss Gallery (Viena, 2000); In this place at Art in General (New York, 2004); Viva Mexico at Zacheta National Gallery (Varsovia, 2007); Laberinto de miradas, Nueva Foto Documental Iberoamericana (Mexico City, 2008); and Proyecto Cívico at Centro Cultural Tijuana (Tijuana, 2008).

Visit The Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego at : http://www.mcasd.org

SOURCE: AKN

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