Monday, October 5, 2020

TABLE OF CONTENTS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Vito Acconci [USA]
"Becoming a Fan of Vito Acconci" (on Acconci's 2017 death and our short friendship) by Douglas Messerli
Terry Allen [USA]
"Tall Tales" (on his LA Louver Gallery show, The Exact Moment It Happens in the West: Stories, 
      Pictures and Songs fromt he ‘60s ‘til Now) by Douglas Messerli 
Carlos Almaraz [b. Mexico / USA]
"Seeking Identity" (on Playing with Fire: Painting by Carlos Almaraz) by Douglas Messerli
Eleanor Antin [USA]
"Magnificent Obsessions" (on Antin's book An Artist's Life by Eleanora Antinova) by Douglas Messerli
"On Credit" (on Antin's performance Before the Revolution) by Douglas Messerli
"Reclaiming the Past" (on Antin's Historical Takes) by Douglas Messerli
"Lives and Portraits" (on Antin's What time is it? at Diane Rosenstein) by Douglas Messerli
Arakawa and Madeline Gins [USA]
"Architectural Delusions" (on the death of Madeline Gins) by Douglas Messerli
Bahc Yiso [Korea]
"Happy Happy" (on Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea) by Douglas Messerli
Morton Bartlett [USA]
"Games of Life" (essay on Bartlett) by Douglas Messerli
Beckmann, Max [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
George Henry Boughton [USA]
"The Age of Wonderment" (on the Hudson River School painters) by Douglas Messerli
Geta Bratescu [Romania]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
Andre Breton [France]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
Charles Burchfield [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Chris Burden [USA]
"The Sculpture That Flies" (on Burden's Ode to Santos Dumont) by Douglas Messerli
"A Shot in the Arm, Fast Cars, and Urban Light" (on the death of Chris Burden) by Douglas Messerli
Enrique Castrejon [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Marc Chagall [Russia/France]
"Stage Struck: Marc Chagall's Theatrical Designs" (on Chagall: Fantasies for the Stage) by Douglas       Messerli [link] 
Cho Jeong-Hwa [Korea]
"Happy Happy" (on Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea) by Douglas Messerli
William Christenberry [USA]
"A Homespun American Proust" (on Christenberry's work) by Douglas Messerli
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Thomas Cole [USA]
"The Age of Wonderment" (on the Hudson River School painters) by Douglas Messerli
Stuart Davis [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Richard Deacon [England]
"A Sculpture of the Small Writ Large" (on Deacon and Sui Jianguo) by Douglas Messerli
George Deem [USA]
"Altering Time" (on Deem's book and life) by Douglas Messerli
Charles Demuth [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Alejandro Diaz [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Lecia Dole-Recio [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Otto Dix [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Ascher B. Durand [USA]
"The Age of Wonderment" (on the Hudson River School painters) by Douglas Messerli
William Eggleston [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Merion Estes [USA]
"Pattern Recognition: Merion Estes Brings New Life to an Old World" by Douglas Messerli [link]
"Stubborn Beauty" (on Estes' show Unnatural Disasters) by Douglas Messerli
Walker Evans [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Sam Falls [USA]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
Lyonel Feiniger [USA/Germany]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Carlee Fernandez [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Christina Fernandez [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Francesca Gabbiano [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Charles Garabedian [USA]
"Geometry Moon" (on Garabedian's "re:Generation") by Douglas Messerli
"The Moment Before They Became History" (on Barabedian's "Sacrifice for the Fleet") by Douglas  
     Messerli
Frank Gehry [Canada/USA]
"How Should a Building Look?" (on the Frank Gehry show at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Régis François Gignoux [France, lived USA]
"The Age of Wonderment" (on the Hudson River School painters) by Douglas Messerli
Gimhongsok [Korea]
"Happy Happy" (on Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea) by Douglas Messerli
Ken Gonzales-Day [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Tm Gratkowski [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Margaret Griffith [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Gronk [USA]
"Painting Theater" (on Gronk's Theater of Paint show) by Douglas Messerli
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Carl Grossberg [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity" at LAMCA) by Douglas Messerli
George Grosz [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity" at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Kurt Gunter [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity" at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
James Hampton [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Ira Joel Haber [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Marsden Hartley [USA]
"How I Got It: Marsden Hartley's Portraits of Love" (on Hartley's Berlin paintings) by Douglas Messerli
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Thomas Heatherwick [England] and Heatherwick Studio
"Imagining the Ordinary: Heatherwick Studio at Hammer Museum" by Douglas Messerli
Michael Heizer [USA]
"Rock of Ages" (on Heizer's Levitated Mass) by Douglas Messerli
Thomas Hill [USA]
"The Age of Wonderment" (on the Hudson River School painters) by Douglas Messerli
David Hockney [England/USA]
"Happy Birthday, Mr. Hockney: Self-portraits and Photographs" (on a Hockney celebration at the
     Getty Museum) by Douglas Messerli
"Inside Art: Changing Perspective" (on Hockney's "Painting and Photographer" at LA Louver, by     
    Douglas Messerli
Jenny Holzer [USA]
"The Feminist Scent" (on Eau de Cologne at Spurth Magers, Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
Edward Hopper [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Channa Horwitz [USA]
"Statement by the Artist"
Pierre Huyghe [France]
"Through a Glass Darkly" (on Huyghe's retrospective at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Alison Saar [USA]
"Bitter Earth" (on Saar's show, "Topsy Turvy" at LA Louver) by Douglas Messerli
Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Susamu Ito [USA]
"Pocketful of Miracles" (On Ito's photography show at the Japanese American National Museum in
     Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
Margaret Keane [USA]
"Identity Theft" ("Keane on Film," Tim Burton's Big Eyes and Keane) by Douglas Messerli
Klaus Kertess [USA]
"Believing in the New" (Kertess obituary) by Douglas Messerli
Edward Kienholz and Nancy Reddin Kienholz
"Pounding the Television Screen" (on Kienholz Televisions) by Douglas Messerli
Soo Kim [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Phyllis Kind [USA]
"Giving the Gallery Its Due: On the Death of Phyllis Kind," by Douglas Messerli
KIMsooja [Korea]
"Happy Happy" (on Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea) by Douglas Messerli
Barbara Kruger [USA]
"The Feminist Scent" (on Eau de Cologne at Spurth Magers, Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
Christopher Grant La Farge [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art," by Douglas Messerli
John La Farge [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Louise Lawler [USA]
"The Feminist Scent" (on Eau de Cologne at Spurth Magers, Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
Jacob Lawrence [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Abram Lerner [USA]
"A Quiet Realist" (on Lerner's death) by Douglas Messerli
Wyndham Lewis [England]
"Vorticist Lewis / Vorticist Pound" (on Lewis and Pound's Vorticist movement) by Douglas Messerli
Roy Lichtenstein [USA]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
"Tuten Gives Us a Look Inside His Old Friend Roy Lichtenstein's Studio" (interview with Tommaso Speretta) by Frederick Tuten [link]
Sandra de la Loza [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Anna Maria Maiolano (Italy/Brazil)
"Walking on Eggs" (on the Anna Maria Maiolano show at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angles) by Douglas Messerli
Vivian Maier [USA]
"God's Spy" (on Finding Vivian Maier and her photography) by Douglas Messerli
John McLaughlin [USA]
"The Gift to Be Simple" (on John McLaughlin Paintings: Total Abstraction at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli [link]
Robert Mapplethorpe [USA]
"Robert Mapplethorpe: Beauty, Power, and Sex from the Outside (on Mapplethorpe's The Perfect   
      Medium) by Douglas Messerli
Agnes Martin
"Moving Forward While Being Asked to Stand Back" (on Agnes Martin at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Enrique Martínez Celaya [b. Cuba / USA]
"Interview with Lita Barrie"
"The Vast Chasm of Life" (on Lone Star installation by Martínez Celaya) by Douglas Messerli
Michael C. McMillen [USA]
"Elsewhere" (on Outpost show by McMillen at LA Louver) by Douglas Messerli
Henri Michaux [France]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
Louisa Davis Minot [USA]
"The Age of Wonderment" (on the Hudson River School painters) by Douglas Messerli
László Moholy-Nagy [Hungary]
"Proliferation of Wonders" (on Maoholy-Nagy: Future Present at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Jim Morphesis [USA]
"Trouble in Paradise" (on Morphesis' exhibition Wounds of Existence) by Douglas Messerli
Julio Cesar Morales [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Ed Moses [USA]
"A Different Kind of Light" (on Ed Moses: Drawings from the 1960s and 70s) by Douglas Messerli
Grandma Moses [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Lee Mullican [USA]
"Dreamer of the Cosmos" (on the Mullican show at LACMA, "The Abundant Harvest of the Sun" by Douglas Messerli
Matt Mullican [USA]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
Chris Natrop [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Rebecca Niederlander [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Chris Oatey [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Ruben Ochoa [USA]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Echiko Ohira [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Minoru Ohiro [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Georgia O'Keffe [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Claes Oldenburg [born Sweden, USA]
"These Things" (on the Oldenberg show at the Walker Center) by Douglas Messerli
Catherine Opie [USA]
"Lives and Portraits" (on Opie's Portraits at the Hammer Museum) by Douglas Messerli
Nam June Paik [b. Korea / USA]
"What Are You Thinking Buddha?" (on a memorial tribute to Nam June Paik) by Douglas Messerli
Gordon Parks [USA]
"When Gordon Parks Photographed the Live of a Brazilian Boy and Sparked Debate" (on the Flavio photographs at the Getty Museum of Art) by Douglas Messerli [link]
Roland Penrose [England]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
Ezra Pound [USA]
"Vorticist Lewis / Vorticist Pound" (on Lewis and Pound's Vorticist movement) by Douglas Messerli
Phranc [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Herbert Ploberger [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Astrid Preston [USA]
"Pixelation Breathes Life into Landscape Painting" (on "Upside Down World") by Lita Barrie
Noah Purifoy [USA]
"No Contest" (on LACMA show Noah Purifoy: Junk Dada) by Douglas Messerli
Robert Rauschenberg [USA]
"Screwing Things Up" (on Rauschenberg's death) by Douglas Messerli
Roland Reiss [USA]
"The Fiction of Flowers" (on Reiss' Floral Paintings and Miniatures) by Douglas Messerli
Rejlander [Sweden/England]
"At the Core" (on the Getty Museum show Reljander: Artist Photographer) by Douglas Messerli
Rembrandt van Rijn (the Netherlands)
"The Rembrandt Variations" (on Rembrandt: A Decade of Brilliance [1648-1658]) by Douglas Messerli
Marco Rios [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Larry Rivers [USA]
"In the Mood" (on Rivers' career and his biography) by Douglas Messerli
Steve Roden [USA]
"Secret Abstractions" (on Roden's "A Year without Painting") by Douglas Messerli
"When the Body Becomes a City" (on Roden's "ragpicker" show) by Douglas Messerli
Frank Romero [USA]
"Reimagined Landscape: Frank Romero's Los Angeles" (on Romero's show Dreamland) by 
     Douglas  Messerli [link]
August Sander [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
George Scholtz [Germany]
"Art as Voyerusim" (on New Objectivity at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia [USA]
"Exploring New Forms of Artistic Expression" (on Segoiva's show at CB1 in Los Angeles), by
      Douglas Messerli
Christian Shad [Germany]
"Art as Voyeurism" (on New Objectivity at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Cindy Sherman [USA]
"The Feminist Scent" (on Eau de Cologne at Spurth Magers, Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
Susan Sironi [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Joseph Stella (b. Italy/USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Paul Strand [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Do Ho Suh [Korea]
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1860 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
"Happy Happy" (on Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea) by Douglas Messerli
Sui Jianguo [China]
A Sculpture of the Small Writ Large (on Sui and Richard Deacon) by Douglas Messerli
Don Suggs [USA]
"Natural History" ("Thermal Paintings and Paradise Prints" show) by Douglas Messerli
Tam Van Tran [USA]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks) by Douglas Messerli
Rosemarie Trockel [Germany]
"The Feminist Scent" (on Eau de Cologne at Spurth Magers, Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
James Turrell [USA]
"Beyond Light" (essay on Turrell's LACMA retrospective) by Douglas Messerli
Kent Twitchell [USA]
"Kent Twitchell’s Magnanimous Monumental Portrait of Ed Ruscha: An Iconic Landmark of L.A.’s Historic Downtown Art District" by Lita Barrie
Patssi Valdez [USA]
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
Carl Van Vechten [USA]
"The Camera Turned Upon the Wild Beasts" (on Van Vechten's photography) by Douglas Messerli
"Just Jolly" (on the homoerotic photography of Van Vechten) by Douglas Messerli
Grant Wood [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Tom Wudl [USA]
"Illuminated Flowers" (on art by Tom Wudl) by Douglas Messerli
Andrew Wyeth [USA]
"The Iconography of the Church in Modernist American Art" by Douglas Messerli
Peter Zumthor [Switzerland]
"Architectural Dreams--and Nightmares" (on Zumthor and other architects planning for Los Angeles structures) by Douglas Messerli

GROUP SHOWS
"The Age of Wonderment" (on the Hudson River School painters) by Douglas Messerli
"Architectural Dreams--and Nightmares" (on Zumthor and other architects planning for Los Angeles structures) by Douglas Messerli
"Art as Voyeurism" (New Objectivity: Modern German Art in the Weimar Repblic, 1919-1933 at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
"Building Art" (on Building Material: Process and Form in Brazilian Art") by Douglas Messerli
"Expression, Discovery, and Invention" (on Apparitions: Frottages and Rubbings from 1960 to Now") by Douglas Messerli
"Faith in the Arts" (on Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College: 1933-1957) by Douglas Messerli
"The Feminist Scent" (on Eau de Cologne at Spurth Magers, Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
"Full House: Artists from Latin America Imagine Home" (on Home--So Different, So Appealing) by Douglas Messerli [link]
"Happy Happy" (on Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea) by Douglas Messerli
"Roman Fantasies" (on Pompeii and the Roman Villa: Art and Culture Around the Bay of Naples) by Douglas Messerli
"The Science of Pleasures of What We See," (on LACMA's show "3D: Double Vision") by Douglas 
     Messerli [link]
"Soaring off the Surface" (on Paperworks at the Folk & Craft Museum, Los Angeles) by Douglas Messerli
"Unusual Appearances in Unexpected Places" (on Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA) by Douglas Messerli
"When 'Outliers' and 'Ousiders' Are No Longer Useful Categories of Art" (on Outliers and American Vanguard Art) by Douglas Messerli

Douglas Messerli | "A Man of Many Masks" (on Elsa Flores Almaraz and Richard Montoya's film Carlos Almaraz: Playing with Fire)

 

a man of many masks

Elsa Flores Almaraz and Richard Montoya (writers and directors) Carlos Almaraz: Playing with Fire / 2019

In reviewing the LGBTQ documentary Carlos Almaraz: Playing with Fire offered for the first time yesterday on Netflix, it’s hard to get past the fact that I am good friends with the major director, Almaraz’s wife Elsa Flores Almaraz and with several figures who appear in the film, including Cheech Marin, Los Angeles County Museum of Art director Michael Govan, and Dan Guerrero, as well as being acquainted with several others including John Valadez and Jane Livingston. Perhaps even more importantly, I am married to Howard N. Fox, the curator of the LACMA show Playing with Fire: The Paintings of Carlos Almaraz which occasioned the documentary and who appears throughout the film, including being the first voice you hear during this film’s 1 hour and 22 minutes run.

    I lived through the several years it took Howard to mount the art show and saw several earlier versions of the documentary as Elsa and Richard Montoya were struggling to complete it. If I was asked, accordingly, to answer whether or not I could be objective about the review I am about to write I’d have to admit that that would be impossible to know. I saw the love, caring, and worrying that went into the exhibition and the film from the very first moment Cheech and his wife invited LACMA’s Govan and his wife, then Curator of Contemporary Art Franklin Sirmans and his wife,  and Howard and me to dinner where the museum director lured Howard out of retirement to curate the show. 

     The only thing I could say that might mitigate my utterly unobjective viewpoint is that, unlike Howard, I never met the artist who is the subject of his wife’s and friends’ celebration of his life. Yet we have to ask in this case what precisely was that life?  Carlos, always fascinated by the many masks that every individual daily displays, would never have allowed a single adorative viewpoint to express his more than complex manner of living. 

      After a quick arc of his childhood travels from his birth in Mexico City to his family’s move to Chicago where he lived in a community that was highly diverse, to their eventual settlement in Los Angeles, where the young boy found himself within a large Spanish speaking community of people from Mexico and Central and South America that in its every vastness and linguistic differences was highly separated from the rest of the fabric of the sprawling city, the film focuses in on Carlos the precociously charming kid.

     Early on, the young Carlos entered a newspaper-clipping competition for drawing and soon after was visited at his home by executives from the Walt Disney Studios interested in hiring him—he was age 9 at the time—later, as a young man, becoming the kind of person everyone who met him wanted to be around—in New York City he was described as having gone AWOL for two days after knocking on Robert Rauschenberg’s studio door.

     Yet even then he was also a man of extremes, a kind of haunted being, particularly in his early days, when he seriously embraced many different identities in an attempt to discover and satisfy his numerous passions. A short time after he and his friend Dan Guerrero left their Los Angeles homes to discover life in New York, Carlos explored his sexuality so radically that even his gay friend admits he was startled by some of the sexual events in which Carlos described himself as participating.

    The New York scene into which the two friends had descended, while obviously agreeable to the would-be actor and later theatrical agent Guerrero, was, in its conceptual and minimalist sensibilities of the mid-to late sixties (Carlos was in the City from 1965 to 1970) the polar opposite of the gifts of this, one might almost argue, romantic young artist. And in a world of primarily all-white males who controlled not only galleries and the museums but defined most of the artists themselves, a brown face, as the film describes it, was something difficult for the scene to assimilate. While he might be sought after as a sexual partner, his agitated and colorful grid compositions seemed to be statements in contradiction.

      Depressed by the reception he received and, perhaps, by the sometimes hostile and violent sexual scene he inhabited, Carlos begin to drink heavily, and by the time he returned to Los Angeles was a full-fledged alcoholic at age 29 who, after one night of drinking, was so psychotically disturbed and physically near-death that he was hospitalized for several weeks, at one point hearing the last rites being read over his body.

      When Howard first begin doing research on Carlos Almaraz’s work, he has startled by the fact that what had been written, whether by academics or journalists made utterly no mention of his homosexuality. He feared that perhaps Elsa was holding back some of the truths about Carlos’ life to accord with her and Carlos’ deep love and commitment to each other. In fact, when Howard asked her about this, Elsa openly laughed and said that she too had wondered about the omission, insisting that she welcomed a fuller evaluation of all aspects of her husband’s complex life.* Neither this film (nor Howard’s show), although both representing the artist in a positive way, could at all be described as a hagiography.

     Even when he was “reborn” after his near-death experience, Carlos took directions that no one might have expected. With Frank Romero, Robert de la Rocha, and Gilbert Luján (the group later adding Judithe Hernández), Carlos became one of the Chicano art collective Los Four, which brought their collectively-conceived notion of art and Chicano art in general into public attention, particularly when Jane Livingston (then a curator at LACMA) organized a show centering on their work, which was the first larger gathering of Chicano art in a major US museum. attracting many viewers who had never before felt welcome in a museum setting.

      Yet the group was fairly short-lived because of divisions between members, particularly regarding the difference between defining themselves as part of a group or from an individual perspective. Carlos, moreover, increasingly moved on to explore different political values. In one short period, Elsa somewhat humorously notes, Carlos was a Maoist, a Marxist, and a Trotskyite at one time. He traveled to Cuba, but didn’t like what he saw there.

       More important, only a year after his hospitalization, the artist became deeply involved with Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers, painting large banners not only for that union’s conventions but for Luis Valdez’s Teatro Campesino, which brought plays into the worker’s fields.

       So conflicted were Carlos’ many activities that artist and gallery friends both argued that he must sacrifice some of his political work to devote time to his own painting. When he successfully did that, painting the first of what might almost be described as autobiographical representations of unexpected relationships between the individual and fate in his famous works depicting car crashes, some friends saw the move as a kind of abandonment of his political and social commitments.

       These beloved works, however, revealed another side of his passion, as, along with his “Echo Park Series” paintings, Carlos committed himself slathering paint so thickly upon the canvas as if, as Fox puts it, he were painting with butter, that one can only recognize the act as a sensual representation of something akin to pouring out one’s blood and guts upon the canvas, pulling and pushing color and paint across the surface in a manner that might almost remind us of a more realist-inclined Jackson Pollack. As the film suggests, of the abstract expressionists only Pollack remained of deep interest to Carlos.

      Carlos had also long been exploring his sexuality through women instead of simply with  men, eventually falling in love with Elsa Flores, in 1981 marrying her. In 1983 the couple had a daughter, Maya. Friends note how perfect they appeared to be for each other, allowing both of them as artists to create new works in the most joyful of an atmosphere Carlos had perhaps ever experienced.

      In the mid-1980s he and Elsa co-organized a remarkably successful show of his art at the Jan Turner Gallery in Los Angeles, allowing Carlos  to return on a short visit to New York, now with noted works and sales in his portfolio. 

      As Guerrero noted, observing the couple’s pleasure in each other’s company and the way they lovingly related to their beloved baby, it became clear that Carlos had now found what he had always been looking for.

      A brief mention that as a child he had been sexually abused by his uncle and a priest, is not to suggest that those acts were necessarily the cause of his homosexuality, but that they had, as Elsa has argued elsewhere, severe repercussions regarding his earlier sexual relationships with males.

      And now that Carlos was experiencing what might be described as his halcyon days, that had awarded him love and joys of family life and a new explosion of artistic expression, almost like one of the several car crashes he had painted, his own life seemed to be ready to be consumed by fate. For, as the 1980s came to a close Carlos discovered that he had contracted the then still misunderstood virus, AIDS.

     Fortunately, when tested, Elsa and Maya were both free of the disease. But, in order to protect their daughter, whose friends they were afraid might be fearful of house visits where it openly known, they kept the fact of his illness secret from most of their friends.

      Close friends and relatives knew he was extremely sick, but didn’t in these early days of AIDS truly comprehend the cause. For his part, Carlos painted more intensely that he ever had, producing works that, in my estimation, were some of the most narratively complex and theatrically conceived of his entire career.

       At first Carlos felt, Elsa states, a great deal of guilt, a feeling that because he had been a “sinner” he had suddenly lost all the joys he had finally been awarded, as if he were somehow being punished for his sexual activities. Yet, in the end, she assures us he was able to realize that his sexual desires were no sin and what had happened to him was not a punishment. “I’m so glad he was able to get there and not leave this earth feeling resentment or incomplete,” she confides. The artist died in 1989.

       In the final few moments of this powerful cinematic work, we see the opening of the Carlos Almaraz exhibition at LACMA in August 2017, the camera tracking us through the museum doors into various galleries both empty and filled with opening week celebrators, as if 28-years later this significant Los Angeles artist was finally coming home to where some of his earliest art had been shown. And in that sense, the documentary ends with a kind of uplifting message that suggests it simply took the art world a few decades to catch up with what Carlos had long been expressing so clearly in his art.

      Along with a large catalogue of pop-music accompanying the images, and the stunning use of his flip-books and fascination with cinematic animation, I’d argue that this was the best artist-based documentary in many years, made even more fascinating by its LGBTQ links. 

*I would also posit the idea that in the earliest days of his art it was still exceedingly difficult for anyone to bring up the issues of homosexual and bisexual behavior. What’s more, as Almaraz increasingly became associated with the Chicano movement, critics and friends alike played down the sexuality of the artists while centering their observations about the political and social contexts. The same thing happened to several black artists and writers of the Harlem Movement, notably Langston Hughes, whose estate still resists any mention of Hughes’ gay sexuality.

 Los Angeles, October 2, 2020

Reprinted from World Cinema Review and My Queer Cinema blog (October 2020).