Inferno Gallery will present their first exhibition of the fall semester, Violette Bule: "CAN - YOU - DREAM - AMERICA." Bule is a Venezuelan, Latinx, Houston-based artist who uses her work to open up dialogue about current social and political issues in the U.S.
"CAN - YOU - DREAM - AMERICA" engages with the multilayered reality of migration in the U.S. This project invites spectators to acknowledge a seemingly irresolvable tension between migration, acculturation, and profit - whether individual or systemic, cultural, identity, material or otherwise. Each piece establishes a bond between the individual perspective and a larger context of oppression, violence, hysteria, and deception - oftentimes-inescapable features of the American Dream.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view until November 9.
Inferno Gallery will present their first exhibition of the fall semester, Violette Bule: "CAN - YOU - DREAM - AMERICA." Bule is a Venezuelan, Latinx, Houston-based artist who uses her work to open up dialogue about current social and political issues in the U.S.
"CAN - YOU - DREAM - AMERICA" engages with the multilayered reality of migration in the U.S. This project invites spectators to acknowledge a seemingly irresolvable tension between migration, acculturation, and profit - whether individual or systemic, cultural, identity, material or otherwise. Each piece establishes a bond between the individual perspective and a larger context of oppression, violence, hysteria, and deception - oftentimes-inescapable features of the American Dream.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view until November 9.
Inferno Gallery will present their first exhibition of the fall semester, Violette Bule: "CAN - YOU - DREAM - AMERICA." Bule is a Venezuelan, Latinx, Houston-based artist who uses her work to open up dialogue about current social and political issues in the U.S.
"CAN - YOU - DREAM - AMERICA" engages with the multilayered reality of migration in the U.S. This project invites spectators to acknowledge a seemingly irresolvable tension between migration, acculturation, and profit - whether individual or systemic, cultural, identity, material or otherwise. Each piece establishes a bond between the individual perspective and a larger context of oppression, violence, hysteria, and deception - oftentimes-inescapable features of the American Dream.
Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on view until November 9.