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The art of Aydee
López Martínez reflects a deeply personal introspection on
the events of her life. Born in Mexico but raised primarily in Los Angeles,
she originally thought of herself as Mexican until she revisited family
members in her homeland. It was then that the duality of her Chicana identity
was impressed on her in purely personal terms: I remember being embarrassed
when someone pointed out my accent in English and angry when people from
my native Mexico made fun of my broken Spanish. This in-between status,
combined with her strict upbringing in the midst of a much more liberal
U.S. culture, produced a feeling of oppression from which the young López
Martínez retreated into a private world by drawing. As she grew
her talent became evident, but as she continued to draw pictures of the
beautiful women she had seen in U.S. popular culture, she grew ever more
frustrated: In reality I looked nothing like those women I drew. López
Martínez credits her family with saving her from self-destructive
depression in her midteens and with helping her to formulate a new and
more positive image that was soon reflected in her art. In time, far from
denying or being embarrassed by her Chicana identity, she began to take
great pride in it and to paint and sculpt images that reflected that pride.
Pursuing the serious study of art, she received an A.A. degree from Glendale
Community College in Glendale, California in 1992 and a B.F.A. from California
State University, Los Angeles, in 1999. By that time she had already begun
to exhibit her work.
Sadness,
Madness, Anger, Hate, provides a gamut of visages and their underlying
emotions. Evocative of the colorful masks of Mexican folk art and the
masks of other cultures (there is a totemic and decorative element of
the South Seas in these visages), the series seems to communicate a kind
of emotionally utilitarian quality. Here is a repertoire of faces to
wear. In both this work and Afraid of What is Out There, the tension
between vulnerability and concealment and between unprotected individualism
and the armaments of culture (as evoked especially by the designs of
the masks and of the box in the latter work) are prominent thematic elements.
About
Self Help Graphics
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Lot 70
New and Improved Coatlique 2000
16"x24"
Mono Silkscreen
Estimated Price:
$1200-1500

Lot 113
Sadness, Madness, Anger, Hate!
Serigrpah
20"x22"
Estimated Price:
$450-600

Lot 183
Out there, someday, maybe I’ll have it all together
Oil Pastel
17"x22.5"
Estimated price:
$700-1000
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