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Chicana painter Judithe Hernandez's subversive female archetypes offer her perspective on the historical and contemporary roles of women
As the fifth and only female member of the art collective Los Four, Judithe Hernandez (born 1948) was a figurehead of Chicano/a art in California. She began her artistic career as a muralist in the 1970s, executing commissions for Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers Union, and at the Ramona Gardens Housing Project in East Los Angeles. Her paintings and pastel drawings place women against vague, dreamlike backgrounds, clothed in traditional garb or surrounded by animals, gesturing beyond the picture plane while gazing solidly at the viewer. Art historian Margarita Nieto writes that Hernandez "speaks of woman hidden in her masks of roles...enhanced by a subconscious precognition of a mythic past." Beyond Myself, Somewhere, I Wait for My Arrival represents the first comprehensive evaluation of Hernandez's 50-year career, and how it has informed Chicano/a artistic practices today.
This book was published in conjunction with Riverside Art Museum/The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture
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Chicana painter Judithe Hernandez's subversive female archetypes offer her perspective on the historical and contemporary roles of women
As the fifth and only female member of the art collective Los Four, Judithe Hernandez (born 1948) was a figurehead of Chicano/a art in California. She began her artistic career as a muralist in the 1970s, executing commissions for Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers Union, and at the Ramona Gardens Housing Project in East Los Angeles. Her paintings and pastel drawings place women against vague, dreamlike backgrounds, clothed in traditional garb or surrounded by animals, gesturing beyond the picture plane while gazing solidly at the viewer. Art historian Margarita Nieto writes that Hernandez "speaks of woman hidden in her masks of roles...enhanced by a subconscious precognition of a mythic past." Beyond Myself, Somewhere, I Wait for My Arrival represents the first comprehensive evaluation of Hernandez's 50-year career, and how it has informed Chicano/a artistic practices today.
This book was published in conjunction with Riverside Art Museum/The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture