reflections
Artist Ivelisse Jiménez explores language, memory and plastic in New WorldMuseum installation
Looking at Detour I, the first work in Ivelisse Jiménez new five-piece installation at the New World Museum, takes one back to mid-century New York City, as figures like Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg eased the art scene out of the Abstraction Expressionism of the 1950s and into the vibrant Pop of the next decade.
A collection of painted canvas, drawings, commercial prints, colorful sheets of translucent plastic and yellow industrial tape, Detour I fuses a sense of deep philosophical introspection with the hectic mass-produced images that invade our lives today as much as they did when Andy Warhol silkscreened Marilyn Monroe's face onto canvas in the early 1960s.
"There are always gaps and detours when somebody tries to explain something, all these asides," Jiménez explained. "That's not just with verbal language, but with art as well."
"My main interest with this show is the impossibility of language," Jiménez told CultureMap as she worked to install the show on Monday. "There are always gaps and detours when somebody tries to explain something, all these asides. That's not just with verbal language, but with art as well."
Detour I instant captures viewers' attention with forms that appear vaguely familiar — enlarged pieces of college-ruled notebook paper, a distorted drawing of a woman's leg while wearing a high heel shoe, a field of black and white stripes reminiscent of an American flag. But it's the manner in which these familiar everyday shapes are gently twisted and rearranged by the artist that makes Jiménez's work feel so warm and personable.
Educated in New York, where she launched her art career in the late 1990s and worked during most of the last decade, Jiménez returned to her native Puerto Rico three years ago. The change, the artist noted, drastically changed the manner and pace in which she works, but has had less impact on the outward formal appearance of installations than one might expect.
"I live and work in the country these days," she explained. "In Puerto Rico, I think I'm more willing to be introspective and more will to venture into new terrain thematically. In New York, the city tends to push you to stay current, but in the country I can focus more on smaller, everyday life experiences and memories."
With the five Detour pieces, she said has allowed more of herself to seep into the work. "While I was inspired by broader things like language and ideas of 20th-century philosophers like Jacques Derrida, I feel the content of these works is much more personal for me than it has been in the past."
Detour will be on view at the New World Museum from April 11 through May 20. An opening reception is scheduled Wednesday from 7 - 10, with margaritas and tacos from the popular food truck by Armando's, the Tex-Mex hot spot owned by New World founder Armando Palacios.