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Lawndale Art Center presents Jorge Galván Flores: Alkanzíyya opening reception

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Photo by Jorge Galván Flores

Alkanzíyya is a full-scale tableau featuring sculpture, painting and textile that re-imagines our material realities to present ideas about how all people might more easily traverse the planet. The gallery space becomes a site for enactments of emotional strategies for intervention and infiltration in the borderlands. The work thinks about the connections between citizenship and sexuality, specifically how personal desire might be linked to self-preservation and survival.

The etymology of the word Alkanzíyya, which in contemporary Spanish is spelled "alcancía" (piggy bank), reveals that the word comes from Arabic into Spanish and refers to a longing for treasure. Ominously, the same word can also be used to mean a ceramic pot full of tar that is lit on fire and then flung at enemies as a kind of ballistic weapon.

Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through February 27.

Alkanzíyya is a full-scale tableau featuring sculpture, painting and textile that re-imagines our material realities to present ideas about how all people might more easily traverse the planet. The gallery space becomes a site for enactments of emotional strategies for intervention and infiltration in the borderlands. The work thinks about the connections between citizenship and sexuality, specifically how personal desire might be linked to self-preservation and survival.

The etymology of the word Alkanzíyya, which in contemporary Spanish is spelled "alcancía" (piggy bank), reveals that the word comes from Arabic into Spanish and refers to a longing for treasure. Ominously, the same word can also be used to mean a ceramic pot full of tar that is lit on fire and then flung at enemies as a kind of ballistic weapon.

Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through February 27.

Alkanzíyya is a full-scale tableau featuring sculpture, painting and textile that re-imagines our material realities to present ideas about how all people might more easily traverse the planet. The gallery space becomes a site for enactments of emotional strategies for intervention and infiltration in the borderlands. The work thinks about the connections between citizenship and sexuality, specifically how personal desire might be linked to self-preservation and survival.

The etymology of the word Alkanzíyya, which in contemporary Spanish is spelled "alcancía" (piggy bank), reveals that the word comes from Arabic into Spanish and refers to a longing for treasure. Ominously, the same word can also be used to mean a ceramic pot full of tar that is lit on fire and then flung at enemies as a kind of ballistic weapon.

Following the opening reception, the exhibit will be on display through February 27.

WHEN

WHERE

Lawndale Art Center
4912 Main St.
Houston, TX 77002
http://www.lawndaleartcenter.org/exhibitions/coming-up.shtml

TICKET INFO

Admission is free.
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