Chicana artistic sensibilities are bordered. They emerge in a borderland of ambiguity and flux. #anzaldua #latorre
#YolandaLopez also contributed images of La Virgen that affirmed the mulitplicity of #Chicana(@) identity
As an art historian I was most drawn to Latorre’s assertion that the language that contributes to the binary separation between artist and intellectual must be rejected in order to disrupt the subject/object binary that underlies it. Art history that is committed to radical change must contribute to dismantling such structuring principles but must at the same time affirm cultural-historical specificities. The opening up of art history to interdisciplinary and creative experimentation is crucial if we are to maintain its relevance to experiences beyond those privileged to accept the cannon without complaint. I think that art historical treatments of Chicana art represent a crucial case study in experimental approaches that destabilize monolinear narratives of art history while respecting the parameters of identity politics. How personal is the political and how political is the art history?
How do we negotiate the need to maintain the specificity of Chicana identity when it is characterized by slips and fissures that generate multiple meanings and experiences across time? I found it interesting that while Chicana artists working in the 1970s felt alienated by second wave feminism and sought to forge images that they could better relate to, it is possible that Latin@s of my generation might feel a break, in turn, from this tradition. Recognizing that I am not Chican@ and that this certainly contributes to the distance I might feel from this artwork (and that I should not necessarily seek to identify with these images,) I do feel it is important to appreciate both the value and the limitations of these representational vocabularies. These artists certainly contribute to the affirmation of Chicana identity against its erasure in male-dominated discourses of Chicanidad and Latinidad, yet I am interested in the limitations of this art in perpetuating symbolic economies that are no longer as relevant to Latin@s of my generation. Unfortunately we face the paradox of contemporary art that embraces dispersion and flux to such a degree that the specific is no longer visible. What kinds of images/performances/gestures/language exist in the space between roses and pomegranates and the white cube?