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Contact: Sabina Potaczek
NYUS RECENTLY REMODELED GREY ART GALLERY SHOWCASES MEXICAN ARTIST
"Nahum B. Zenil: Witness
to the Self"an exhibition of provocative works by one of Mexicos
foremost contemporary artists New York, NY (July 30, 1997)Ushering in the new season at NYUs Grey Art Gallery is a powerful retrospective exhibition of one of Mexicos leading contemporary artists, Nahum Zenil. "Nahum B. Zenil: Witness to the Self," the first solo museum show in the U.S. of this outstanding artist, opens on September 2 at the Grey. Some 60 works spanning Zenils entire artistic career of twenty yearsfrom the mid-seventies to the presentwill remain on view until November 1. Zenils highly original style, his creative use of sources in Mexican art, and his intrepid confrontation of current social issues all make his art compelling and highly relevant. Admitting to an obsession with self-portraiture, Zenil confronts a myriad of moral and ethical issues through depictions of his own body. "I have always felt the need for self-analysis in my work in order to accept myself and the way I live," Zenil has said, referring to his homosexuality. "I have always felt marginalized in my life and have experienced a great deal of solitude." Zenils collages, mixed-media works on paper, and paintings invoke traditional types of Mexican art. He re-interprets and re-invigorates the folk ex-voto (retablo) style that became popular in the nineteenth century. Other inspirations include the prints of Jose Guadalupe Posada, who depicted life in turn-of-the-century Mexico, and the art of Frida Kahlo. Like Kahlos, Zenils self-portraits are highly personal investigations into the states of the mind of their creator. Among recurring themes are his relations with his family (especially his mother), his past as a schoolteacher, his ambivalent feelings about Catholicism, and the realities of being a gay man in a conservative Latin culture. Zenil is an ardent supporter of gay rights in Mexico and plays a prominent role in the Círculo Cultural Gay, an organization active since the early eighties. "One of the most powerful messages implicit in almost all of Zenils work is that of tolerance and the need for acceptance of difference," notes Edward Sullivan, chair of the Department of Fine Arts at New York University and exhibition co-curator. "Nahum B. Zenil: Witness to the Self," was organized by The Mexican Museum in San Francisco and co-curated by Professor Sullivan and Clayton C. Kirking, director of the Adam and Sophie Gimbel Design Library at the Parsons School of Design in New York City. "This trenchant exhibition invariably self-referential, sometimes shocking, always compellingprovides not only greater insight into Zenils work," says Lynn Gumpert, director of the Grey Art Gallery, "but also into the social, political, and psychological circumstances of life in Mexico at the end of the twentieth century."
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The Grey Art Gallery and Study Center, located at 100 Washington Square East, is open Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, 11 am6 pm and Saturdays 11 am5 pm. The Gallery is open late on Wednesday nights, 11 am8 pm. |