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Nicolás De Jesús: A Mexican Artist for Global Justice

Nicolás De Jesús: A Mexican Artist for Global Justice

Current price: $40.00
Publication Date: May 5th, 2022
Publisher:
Hirmer Publishers
ISBN:
9783777438443
Pages:
176

Description

This timely edition collects three decades of contemporary art by Nicolás De Jesús.
 
In this stunning selection, poetically subversive artist Nicolas De Jesús celebrates life and condemns injustice. De Jesús became known for his dazzling skeleton characters, depicted working, celebrating, walking the streets, or crossing borders etched on amate —a bark paper used in Pre-Columbian times to paint manuscripts. He also expressed his political commitments in powerful large-scale paintings and banners that tackle a wide range of urgent themes including immigration, human rights, and environmental instability. His artistic influences range from Mexican artistic traditions to international experience in cities like Chicago, Paris, and Jakarta.
 
De Jesús’s work also addresses crises as recent as the storming of the US Capitol, as well as the repression faced by migrants and Black Americans, and the disasters of COVID-19. Covering three decades of artwork, this book offers a challenge to the conventional definition of contemporary art and features essays by Felipe Ehrenberg, Patrice Giasson, Aline Hémond, Julian Kreimer, Caroline Perrée, and Pablo Piccato.

About the Author

Patrice Giasson is the Alex Gordon Curator of Art of the Americas at the Neuberger Museum of Art and teaches in the Department of Art History at SUNY Purchase College.
 

Praise for Nicolás De Jesús: A Mexican Artist for Global Justice

“De Jesús’s compelling story unfolds in the show’s excellent catalogue, revealing a restless artistic ambition rooted in a firm sense of time and place: his native region of Guerrero.” 
— Hyperallergic

“Nicolás de Jesús has wide appeal and will be a good addition to any public, academic, or specialized library, especially if the institution is dedicated to decolonizing their collection and has a strong collection in Latin American art.”
— ARLIS/NA Reviews