• Home
    • Get the Podcasts
    • About
      • Contact Latinopia.com
      • Copyright Credits
      • Production Credits
      • Research Credits
      • Terms of Use
      • Teachers Guides
  • Art
    • LATINOPIA ART
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Film/TV
    • LATINOPIA CINEMA
    • LATINOPIA SHOWCASE
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Food
    • LATINOPIA FOOD
    • COOKING
    • RESTAURANTS
  • History
    • LATINOPIA EVENT
    • LATINOPIA HERO
    • TIMELINES
    • BIOGRAPHY
    • EVENT PROFILE
    • MOMENT IN TIME
    • DOCUMENTS
    • TEACHERS GUIDES
  • Lit
    • LATINOPIA WORD
    • LATINOPIA PLÁTICA
    • LATINOPIA BOOK REVIEW
    • PIONEER AMERICAN LATINA AUTHORS
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Music
    • LATINOPIA MUSIC
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Theater
    • LATINOPIA TEATRO
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Blogs
    • Angela’s Photo of the Week
    • Arnie & Porfi
    • Bravo Road with Don Felípe
    • Burundanga Boricua
    • Chicano Music Chronicles
    • Fierce Politics by Dr. Alvaro Huerta
    • Mirándolo Bien with Eduado Díaz
    • Political Salsa y Más
    • Mis Pensamientos
    • Latinopia Guest Blogs
    • Tales of Torres
    • Word Vision Harry Gamboa Jr.
    • Julio Medina Serendipity
    • ROMO DE TEJAS
    • Sara Ines Calderon
    • Ricky Luv Video
    • Zombie Mex Diaries
    • Tia Tenopia
  • Podcasts
    • Louie Perez’s Good Morning Aztlán
    • Mark Guerrero’s ELA Music Stories
    • Mark Guerrero’s Chicano Music Chronicles
      • Yoga Talk with Julie Carmen

latinopia.com

Latino arts, history and culture

  • Home
    • Get the Podcasts
    • About
      • Contact Latinopia.com
      • Copyright Credits
      • Production Credits
      • Research Credits
      • Terms of Use
      • Teachers Guides
  • Art
    • LATINOPIA ART
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Film/TV
    • LATINOPIA CINEMA
    • LATINOPIA SHOWCASE
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Food
    • LATINOPIA FOOD
    • COOKING
    • RESTAURANTS
  • History
    • LATINOPIA EVENT
    • LATINOPIA HERO
    • TIMELINES
    • BIOGRAPHY
    • EVENT PROFILE
    • MOMENT IN TIME
    • DOCUMENTS
    • TEACHERS GUIDES
  • Lit
    • LATINOPIA WORD
    • LATINOPIA PLÁTICA
    • LATINOPIA BOOK REVIEW
    • PIONEER AMERICAN LATINA AUTHORS
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Music
    • LATINOPIA MUSIC
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Theater
    • LATINOPIA TEATRO
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Blogs
    • Angela’s Photo of the Week
    • Arnie & Porfi
    • Bravo Road with Don Felípe
    • Burundanga Boricua
    • Chicano Music Chronicles
    • Fierce Politics by Dr. Alvaro Huerta
    • Mirándolo Bien with Eduado Díaz
    • Political Salsa y Más
    • Mis Pensamientos
    • Latinopia Guest Blogs
    • Tales of Torres
    • Word Vision Harry Gamboa Jr.
    • Julio Medina Serendipity
    • ROMO DE TEJAS
    • Sara Ines Calderon
    • Ricky Luv Video
    • Zombie Mex Diaries
    • Tia Tenopia
  • Podcasts
    • Louie Perez’s Good Morning Aztlán
    • Mark Guerrero’s ELA Music Stories
    • Mark Guerrero’s Chicano Music Chronicles
      • Yoga Talk with Julie Carmen
You are here: Home / Blogs / RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 03.08.24 De La Torres Brothers “Upward Mobility”

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 03.08.24 De La Torres Brothers “Upward Mobility”

March 9, 2024 by wpengine

The  de la Torre Brothers  Exhibition “Upward Mobility” Breaks New Creative Ground

De la Torre brothers’ Olmec Moon Landing. Photo by Ricardo Romo.

The de la Torre Brothers’ art exhibit Upward Mobility at the McNay Art Museum is a breathtaking perspective that combines sensational blown glass, electrifying lenticular montage, stupendously designed wallpaper, the precocious grouping of a lavish dining table, as well as brilliant use of found objects.  The focus, according to the artists, is on the “threads of opulence and consumption.”

De la Torre brothers’ “Nopalero.” Photo by Ricardo Romo.

Einar and Jamex de la Torre apply their thirty years of artistic experience to fabricate this dazzling installation. Raised and educated in Guadalajara, Los Angeles, and San Diego, these brothers are borderland artists who have experienced and witnessed  a sense of alienation which they view as a “common predicament in our human condition.”

McNay art curator Rene Barilleaux saw a de la Torre exhibit several years ago and played a major role in bringing Upward Mobility to the San Antonio museum. He described the brothers as  “keen observers of the world around them.”  Barilleaux noted that their creative approach is additive, “continually combing and expanding meaning using imagery drawn from  a range of influences including Aztec mythology, Catholic iconography, German Expressionism, Mexican vernacular arts, and more.”

Harriett and I were fortunate to see a de la Torre gigantic glass tower at The Cheech Museum in Riverside, California last spring. The art column, nearly 25 feet tall, was one of the outstanding artistic pieces in the museum. Two San Antonians, Tomas Ibarra-Frausto and Eduardo Diaz, first introduced the de la Torre brothers to the Chicano art community two decades ago.

De la Torre brothers’ “The Charmer.”  Photo by Ricardo Romo.

The first room is dedicated to the artists’ blown glass sculptures, a craft that Einar [b. 1963] and Jamex [b.1960] first perfected while studying at California State University Long Beach in the early 1980s. The brothers were born in Guadalajara and moved to Los Angeles at a young age. Over the past forty years as artists, they have moved back and forth from their homes and studios in Ensenada, Baja California, and  San Diego, California.

Einar and Jamex de la Torre. Photo by Ricardo Romo.

In a  recent essay, art critic Betti-Sue Hertz commented on the artists’ work which highlights the brothers’ abilities to use their “craft as a means for achieving a levity of humor, a critique of power, and an embrace of symbols and iconography that defies lexicons and canons.” A glass sculpture titled “El Nopalero” and a figure with a lobster head holding a snake titled “The Charmer” intrigues museum visitors. I quickly learned that the exhibit must be seen numerous times because the imagery is vast, complex, and highly ingenious.

De la Torre brothers’ “Banquet Table.”  Photo by Ricardo Romo.

To reach the second room, the brothers created a narrow wall passage where both sides are filled with collage wallpaper featuring baroque images.  Much like the European artists of the 17th century, the brothers included works for the collage from found objects, mounted deer heads, figurines, and baroque architectural paper images.

In the second room, which represents the largest part of the exhibit, the artists placed a long banquet table in the middle of the room. The curator described the installation as one reminiscent of a decadent dinner party. The wall description of the installation stated that the artists were disturbed by established aesthetics “being supported by wealth and greed at a time when inequality is reaching frenetic levels.” The artists addressed this theme in their work with an “expression of opulence, angst, and outrage.”

De la Torre brothers’  Banquet Table detail.  Photo by Ricardo Romo.

De la Torre brothers’  Mexico City digital image of Paseo de la Reforma traffic circle in motion.  Photo by Ricardo Romo.

The table is set with elaborate dishware and crystal wine glasses, some spilling over. Several of the elegant chairs surrounding the table are draped with luxurious furs and jackets of the illustrious guests who may have just deserted the table. The celebration appears to have been chaotically interrupted by the mayhem of numerous small animal figures that appear to have taken command of the table.

Several of the works in the second room of Upward Mobility also demonstrate the artists’ baroque theme through the use of vibrant colors, layered textures, and intricate details.  Two dynamic elaborate and unusual chandeliers hang over the dining table.  The brothers placed a pig figure with a top hat  on the table with dollar signs on its belly to support the narrative of society’s reverence of “opulence and consumption.”   Several deer heads adorn the walls, and large taxidermied animals walk along the tops of room dividers.

De la Torre brothers lenticular print with Vladimir Putin. Photo by Ricardo Romo.

The third room employs two large lenticular prints and a distinct digital visual on the floor supported by an amazing ceiling projection of the Paseo de la Reforma with Mexico City traffic flowing at rapid speed. Visitors to the museum will experience an uneasy sensation walking on the visual as traffic flows endlessly beneath their feet.

De la Torre brothers’ lenticular print with Godzilla image.  Photo by Ricardo Romo.

On the wall, a lenticular print includes  Russian dictator Putin standing on a military tank while over his shoulder is an image of Mexico City’s main cathedral.  The Russian leader, with a Frankenstein-like jaw,  is shown with intercontinental missiles as the fingers of his hand. A broad highway stretches from the bottom of the painting to Putin’s chest suggesting that violence and destruction seem to lead to the dictator.

In the two main lenticular prints in this room, the brothers continue to follow the baroque tradition in the use of allegory.  Their works tell a story and project a message.  The art has movement, emotion, and drama in the portrayal of Putin alongside a two-headed Godzilla knocking down the Empire State Building.  Images include space aliens, fire, destruction, and chaos– a reminder that Putin, like Godzilla, is set to destroy the civilized world.

 

 

The fourth and final room of the exhibit is titled “Colonial Atmospheres“  and visualizes a large Olmec head as a spaceship on the moon. The futuristic story behind this installation is to envision a highly advanced Olmec society that has traveled to the moon.  The Olmec head, depicted as a space vessel, features black and white televisions for eyes that follow you around the room and auto hubcaps as landing pads. Worn automobile tires on the floor in various sizes represent moon craters that visitors walk through.

De la Torre brothers’ “Aztec goddess Coatlicue.” Photo by Ricardo Romo.

To the left of the Olmec vessel stands the Aztec goddess Coatlicue dressed as an astronaut saluting a weathered flag.  The artists explained this scene as one that  “reimagines the history of the Mesoamerican people, not as victims of colonization and conquest but as colonizers themselves, taking them to its furthest frontier.”

Jamex de la Torre constructing a chandelier for the Upward Mobility banquet table installation. Photo by Ricardo Romo.

The images found in the de la Torre brothers’ work are a blend of Mexican, European, and American historical and popular culture that these artists proudly admit to reworking and repurposing. What is new to their recent work is lenticular prints in which the brothers place two central images joined as one. When the viewer moves, one of the images disappears and another image appears when viewed from a slightly different position.

Upward Mobility has many meanings including the brothers’  explanation of  a “collision of imagery, themes, and references that are established as our artistic language.”  The brothers elaborated,  “It is precisely this deep human anxiety and the tenuous balances we keep that we want to express in our works.”

_____________________________________________________________

Copyright 2024 by Ricardo Romo.  All photos copyrighted by Ricardo Romo.

 

 

 

Filed Under: Blogs, Ricardo Romo's Tejano Report Tagged With: De La Torre Brothers, Ricardo Romo's Tejano Report

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 07.03.25 BRILLIANCE OF ÁNGEL RODRÍGUEZ-DÍAZ

July 3, 2025 By wpengine

The Brilliance of Latino Artist Ángel Rodríguez-Díaz Among the major acquisitions by the prestigious Smithsonian American Art Museum in the 1990s was an Ángel Rodríguez-Diaz painting of famed Latina novelist Sandra Cisneros. Rodríguez-Díaz painted Cisneros in a black Mexican dress decorated with sequins and embroidery, and she “holds a patterned rebozo that snakes around her […]

MIS PENSAMIENTOS with ALFREDO SANTOS 07.03.25 NO KINGS DAY PROTESTS

July 3, 2025 By wpengine

THE NO KINGS PROTEST RALLY IN AUSTIN, TEXAS On a pleasant Saturday afternoon on June 14, 2025, Austin participated in a nationwide ‘NO KINGS” protest rally along with 2,100 other cities and towns and 5,000,000 others citizens across the U.S.A.. It’s estimated that the Austin rally, held on the Texas Capital grounds, drew over 20,000 […]

BURUNDANGA BORICUA DEL ZOCOTROCO 07.03.25 VIEQUES PARAÍSO AGRÍCOLA

July 3, 2025 By wpengine

Burundanga de Zocotroco José M. Umpierre Vieques Vieques es la Isla Nena del Archipiélago Borinkano que descansa a diez leguas al este de la Isla Grande;  cuenta con 132 kilómetros cuadrados, 33de largo por 7,2 de ancho, con una topografía de montes, colinas, pequeños valles y planicies costeras; abundan playas espectaculares, lagunas con algunos manantiales […]

BURUNDANGA BORICUA DEL ZOCOTROCO 07. 03.25 VIEQUES AN AGRO PARADISE (ENGLISH)

July 3, 2025 By JT

Umpierre Agro Vieques Vieques is the Nena Island of the Borinkano Archipelago that rests ten leagues east of the Isla Grande; it has 132 square kilometers, 33 long by 7.2 wide, with a topography of mountains, hills, small valleys and coastal plains; spectacular beaches abound, lagoons with some springs and ravines but insufficient to supply […]

More Posts from this Category

New On Latinopia

LATINOPIA ART SONIA ROMERO 2

By Tia Tenopia on October 20, 2013

Sonia Romero is a graphic artist,muralist and print maker. In this second profile on Sonia and her work, Latinopia explores Sonia’s public murals, in particular the “Urban Oasis” mural at the MacArthur Park Metro Station in Los Angeles, California.

Category: Art, LATINOPIA ART

LATINOPIA WORD JOSÉ MONTOYA “PACHUCO PORTFOLIO”

By Tia Tenopia on June 12, 2011

José Montoya is a renowned poet, artist and activist who has been in the forefront of the Chicano art movement. One of his most celebrated poems is titled “Pachuco Portfolio” which pays homage to the iconic and enduring character of El Pachuco, the 1940s  Mexican American youth who dressed in the stylish Zoot Suit.

Category: LATINOPIA WORD, Literature

LATINOPIA WORD XOCHITL JULISA BERMEJO “OUR LADY OF THE WATER GALLONS”

By Tia Tenopia on May 26, 2013

Xochitl-Julisa Bermejo is a poet and teacher from Asuza, California. She volunteered with No More Deaths, a humanitarian organization providing water bottles in the Arizona desert where immigrants crossing from Mexico often die of exposure. She read her poem, “Our Lady of the Water Gallons” at a Mental Cocido (Mental Stew) gathering of Latino authors […]

Category: LATINOPIA WORD, Literature

© 2025 latinopia.com · Pin It - Genesis - WordPress · Admin