MARTIN RAMIREZ: THE LAST WORKS
- Where: American Folk Art Museum
- When: thru 04/12
- Address: 45 W. 53rd St., New York, New York, 10019
- Cross Streets: between Fifth and Sixth Aves
- Phone: 212-265-1040
- Website: Official Website
- Hours: Sat-Sun and Tue-Thu, 10:30am-5:30pm; Fri, 10:30am-7:30pm;
- Closed: Monday
- Transportation: B, D, F, V at 47th-50th Sts.-Rockefeller Center; E, V at Fifth Ave.-53rd St.
- Directions: via Google Maps
- Category: Museum, Solo Show
Brooke Davis Anderson, curator
Considered one of the self-taught masters of twentieth-century art, Martin Ramirez (1895 – 1963) created hundreds of drawings and collages of remarkable visual clarity and expressive power within the confines of DeWitt State Hospital in Auburn, California, where he resided for the last fifteen years of his life. Nearly one hundred of these drawings and collages were on view in the American Folk Art Museum’s 2007 retrospective of the artist.
An astonishing development during the run of that exhibition was the discovery of a group of previously unknown works: more than 120 works on paper were brought to the museum’s attention by descendants of a doctor at DeWitt, Dr. Max Dunievitz
In this newly found body of work, Ramirez explored the same subjects and themes as in earlier years—horseback riders, trains and tunnels, landscapes, Madonnas, and animals. However, it is the previously known work with a twist: the familiar motifs are tweaked in subtle ways, and scale and material, while similar, are animated by a greater use of color and a bolder exploration of abstraction. Ramirez’s singularly identifiable figures, forms, line, and palette reveal an exacting and highly defined vocabulary, and they also show Ramirez to be an adventurous artist who embarked on remarkably creative explorations through endless variations on a few themes. Ramirez commemorated in all of his works the landscapes of Mexico and northern California; he recorded the hardscrabble territory of immigration, of living between borders, countries, and cultures. Memory, immigration, dislocation, and isolation exist in each line of his drawings. As a “border artist,” Ramirez displayed a kind of wanderlust for his meandering journey, and each composition thus became a beguiling act of documenting and, ultimately, sharing a life lived.







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