Alex Donis

Last updated
Alex Donis
Born
Chicago, Illinois
NationalityAmerican
Education California State University, Long Beach
Otis College of Art and Design
Known forVisual arts, Painting
Notable work"My Cathedral" (1997)

Alex Donis (born 1964, Chicago Illinois) is an American visual artist. [1] [2]

Contents

Biography

Donis was born in Chicago, Illinois. Donis attended California State University, Long Beach for his undergraduate degree, and obtained his graduate degree from Otis College of Art and Design in Los Angeles. [3] His work is known, partially, for the many attempts to censor his exhibitions. [2]

Notable art

Donis' exhibition titled My Cathedral, was held at the Galeria de la Raza in San Francisco in 1997. [1] The solo exhibition featured light-box paintings, including his painting titled, Jesus and Lord Rama (1997). This painting and another titled, Che Guevara and Cesar Chavez (1997) were destroyed in an act of vandalism at the exhibition. [3] The destroyed paintings illustrated each of the two titled figures kissing each other, such as Jesus kissing the Hindu god, Lord Rama and Che Guevara kissing Cesar Chavez. [1] [3] In media reports, Donis stated that after the exhibition was vandalized, around 200 people from various different communities came together to have a discussion about homophobia. [3]

Donis' 2001 solo exhibition at the Watts Towers Arts Center, in Los Angeles, was titled WAR. [3] Donis was an art instructor at the Watts Towers Arts Center. [2] In media reports, it was stated that the exhibition was removed due to threats of violence by local gang members. This claim was not proven. It seemed that a community group members found the content objectionable, "pornographic" and "too homoerotic". [3] [2] The images illustrated the war in Los Angeles between peace officers such as the Los Angeles Police Department and community youth perceived as gang affiliated. [3] Images included Popeye and Captain McGill (2001), [3] Officer Moreno and Joker (2001), [1] Lucky Dice and Officer Gates (2001), [4] and Young Crip, Young Blood (2001). [3] When the exhibition was removed, and at the request of the artist, the Watts Towers Arts Center placed the following sign on the empty walls which read, "War is Cancelled". [4] The removal of the exhibit sparked public outrage and news coverage, which caught the attention of the ACLU. [5] The exhibition was moved to the Frumkin/Duval Gallery in Santa Monica. [2] In 2024, his work was included in the group show Xican-a.o.x. Body at the Pérez Art Museum Miami, Florida. [6]

Related Research Articles

Harry Gamboa Jr. is an American Chicano essayist, photographer, director, and performance artist. He was a founding member of the influential Chicano performance art collective ASCO.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gronk (artist)</span> American painter (born 1954)

Gronk, born Glugio Nicandro, is a Chicano painter, printmaker, and performance artist. His work is collected by museums around the country including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Judy Baca</span> American artist and academic

Judith Francisca Baca is an American artist, activist, and professor of Chicano studies, world arts, and cultures based at the University of California, Los Angeles. She is the co-founder and artistic director of the Social and Public Art Resource Center (SPARC) in Venice, California. Baca is the director of the mural project that created the Great Wall of Los Angeles, which was the largest known communal mural project in the world as of 2018.

Diane Gamboa has been producing, exhibiting and curating visual art in Southern California since the 1980s. She has also been involved art education, ranging from after-school programs to college and university teaching. Gamboa has been "one of the most active cultural producers in the Chicana art movement in Los Angeles." She actively developed the Chicano School of Painting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Enrique Chagoya</span> Mexican-born American painter, printmaker and educator

Enrique Chagoya is a Mexican-born American painter, printmaker, and educator. The subject of his artwork is the changing nature of culture. He frequently uses shocking imagery, irony, and Mesoamerican icons to convey his point in his artwork. Chagoya teaches at Stanford University in the department of Art and Art History. He lives in San Francisco.

Liz Cohen is an American artist, known as a performance artist, photographer, educator, and automotive designer. She currently teaches at Arizona State University (ASU), and lives in Phoenix, Arizona.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alice Bag</span> American singer

Alicia "Alice" Armendariz, also known as Alice Bag, is an American punk rock singer and author. She is the lead vocalist and co-founder of the Bags, one of the earliest punk bands to form in Los Angeles in the mid-1970s.

<i>Guerrillero Heroico</i> Photograph of Che Guevara

Guerrillero Heroico is an iconic photograph of Marxist revolutionary Che Guevara taken by Alberto Korda. It was captured on March 5, 1960, in Havana, Cuba, at a memorial service for victims of the La Coubre explosion. By the end of the 1960s, the image, in conjunction with Guevara's subsequent actions and eventual execution, helped solidify the leader as a cultural icon. Korda has said that at the moment he shot the picture, he was drawn to Guevara's facial expression, which showed "absolute implacability" as well as anger and pain. Years later, Korda would say that the photograph showed Che's firm and stoical character. Guevara was 31 years old at the time the photograph was taken.

Patssi Valdez is an American Chicana artist. She is a founding member of the art collective Asco. Valdez's work represents some of the finest Chicana avant-garde expressionism which includes but not limited to painting, sculpture and fashion design. She lives and works in Los Angeles, California.

Willie F. Herrón III is an American Chicano muralist, performance artist and commercial artist. Herrón was also one of the founding members of ASCO, the East Los Angeles based Chicano artists collective . 

Laura Aguilar was an American photographer. She was born with auditory dyslexia and attributed her start in photography to her brother, who showed her how to develop in dark rooms. She was mostly self-taught, although she took some photography courses at East Los Angeles College, where her second solo exhibition, Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell, was held. Aguilar used visual art to bring forth marginalized identities, especially within the LA Queer scene and Latinx communities. Before the term Intersectionality was used commonly, Aguilar captured the largely invisible identities of large bodied, queer, working-class, brown people in the form of portraits. Often using her naked body as a subject, she used photography to empower herself and her inner struggles to reclaim her own identity as "Laura" – a lesbian, fat, disabled, and brown person. Although work on Chicana/os is limited, Aguilar has become an essential figure in Chicano art history and is often regarded as an early "pioneer of intersectional feminism" for her outright and uncensored work. Some of her most well-known works are Three Eagles Flying, The Plush Pony Series, and Nature Self Portraits. Aguilar has been noted for her collaboration with cultural scholars such as Yvonne Yarbo-Berjano and receiving inspiration from other artists like Judy Dater. She was well known for her portraits, mostly of herself, and also focused upon people in marginalized communities, including LGBT and Latino subjects, self-love, and social stigma of obesity.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nao Bustamante</span>

Nao Bustamante is a Chicana interdisciplinary artist, writer, and educator from the San Joaquin Valley in California. Her artistic practice encompasses performance art, sculpture, installation, and video and explores issues of ethnicity, class, gender, performativity, and the body. She is a recipient of the 2023 Rome Prize.

Sandra de la Loza is an American artist living and working in Los Angeles. She is the founder and only official member of the Pocho Research Society of Erased and Invisible History (2001), a collaborative project working with artists, activist, and historians to investigate place and memory through public interventions.

Christina Fernandez is an American photographer. She is an associate professor and co-chair of the photography department at Cerritos College.

Yreina Cervantez is an American artist and Chicana activist who is known for her multimedia painting, murals, and printmaking. She has exhibited nationally and internationally, and her work is in the permanent collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, The Mexican Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum, and the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art.

Barbara Carrasco is a Chicana artist, activist, painter and muralist. She lives and works in Los Angeles. Her work critiques dominant cultural stereotypes involving socioeconomics, race, gender and sexuality, and she is considered to be a radical feminist. Her art has been exhibited nationally and internationally.

Celia Álvarez Muñoz is a Chicana mixed-media conceptual artist and photographer based in Arlington, Texas.

Jay Lynn Gomez is an American painter based in West Hollywood, California. Her artwork addresses social justice issues, focusing specifically on topics of immigration, race, and labor. Much of her work highlights the efforts of unseen laborers who maintain landscapes and produce luxury products.

Justin Favela is an American mixed-media artist who is known for making large-scale installations and sculptures in the piñata style or medium. His work references pop culture, art history, society, cultural commentary, and his own Guatemala-Mexican-American heritage that is rooted in growing up in Las Vegas, Nevada. His works often celebrate his identity as a queer person of color raised in the Southwest United States while challenging the ideas of Latinidad and cultural appropriation.

Isabel Castro, also known as Isabel Castro-Melendez, is a Mexican American artist born in Mexico City. She was raised and still resides in Los Angeles, California. Aside from being an artist, Castro's career includes curatorial work, education, journalism and photography.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Meyer, Richard (2003). "Alex Donis: An Introduction". Theatre Journal. 55 (3): 581–583. doi:10.1353/tj.2003.0130. ISSN   1086-332X. S2CID   191448055.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Thought-police brutality: out artist Alex Donis discusses his sexy new paintings--which the city of Los Angeles says are too controversial to display. (Art). - Free Online Library". www.thefreelibrary.com. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Donis, Alex (2015-10-01). "How to Make a Paint Bomb: Alex Donis Recalls My Cathedral and WAR". QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking. 2 (3): 68–74. doi:10.14321/qed.2.3.0068. ISSN   2327-1574. S2CID   177082711.
  4. 1 2 Meyer, Richard (2008-02-25), "Who Needs Civil Liberties?", A Companion to Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Studies, Oxford, UK: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, pp. 87–105, doi:10.1002/9780470690864.ch5, ISBN   9780470690864 , retrieved 2022-03-03
  5. Germann, Kaitlyn (14 April 2022). "Censorship: Seeing Alex Donis". OutWrite. Retrieved 15 April 2022.
  6. "Xican-a.o.x. Body • Pérez Art Museum Miami". Pérez Art Museum Miami. Retrieved 2024-09-18.