"Artist Adela Goldbard and Her Crew Are Building a Mexican Landscape Just to Burn it Down," by Peter Holderness, LA Weekly
Mexican muralist JosĂ© Clemente Orozco’s 1930 fresco, Prometheus, which places the titan in thick columns of fire, towers over a dining hall at Â鶹´«Ă˝. Across campus, Mexican City visual artist Adela Goldbard and her team are busy creating papier-mâchĂ© sculptures — cacti, trees, even a minibus — and preparing them all for the fireworks that will burn, spin and destroy them in a public spectacle later this year.
“It feels great, actually!” Goldbard says cheerfully, when asked if it’s difficult to work so hard creating crafts that will be incinerated as part of their presentation. “We know from the beginning that this is going to be destroyed,” she says, noting that they strive for a crafty perfection. “We put a lot of attention in the details, but the whole meaning of the work kind of comes together when it’s destroyed.”
Goldbard joins Isa Carrillo, Rita Ponce de LĂ©on and Naomi RincĂłn-Gallardo in a group show inspired by Prometheus, the first work by a Mexican muralist to be painted in the United States. “Prometheus 2017: Four Artists from Mexico Revisit Orozco,” opens August 29 at the Â鶹´«Ă˝ Museum of Art as part of Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA, the Getty's massive, multi-institution exploration Latin-American art and Latino art.
Goldbard splits her time between Mexico City and Chicago, where she is finishing an MFA at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, but she draws inspiration from the effigy-burning festivals popular in smaller Mexican towns as well. For the show in Pomona, she invited the artist collective Artsumex to join her and help construct the landscape and bus from reeds, using craft techniques native to Tultepec, a central Mexican town renowned for its effigies of bulls, Judas Iscariot and the national fireworks festival.
While Judas is burned in festivals to purge evil and punish a traitor, Goldbard and her team are preparing an idealized Mexican landscape to memorialize a space now marked by the violence of drug cartels, government troops, citizen responses and migrations.
In fact, the four Artsumex artisans — Amauri Sanabria, JesĂşs Sanabria, Eduardo PĂ©rez and VĂctor Rojas — had trouble getting visas to enter the United States, a critical delay in planning the project designed for Southern California. “My work could not be made without them,” Goldbard explains, describing the process of obtaining the visas as the first challenge of a work designed to be produced and executed in the United States.