• 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 / RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 2.24.24

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 2.24.24

February 24, 2024 by wpengine

On February 15, 2024, La Universidad Autonoma de Mexico (UNAM) opened Jorge Rojo’s stimulating exhibit “Trece Años en San Antonio,” (Thirteen Years in San Antonio). The title is a reference point for Rojo who views his 2011 arrival in San Antonio as transformational. His search for a new career led him to study culinary arts, open a restaurant, and cultivate an untapped passion for painting.

Jorge Rojo, “Fusion de 2 Culturas.”  2019.  Courtesy of  La Universidad Autonoma de Mexico [UNAM]. Photo by Ricardo Romo. 

Jorge Rojo grew up in Guadalajara, Jalisco, one of Mexico’s most beautiful and artistic cities.  His mother Maria Teresa Orozco was a painter and introduced Jorge to the arts. He recalled that as a young child, his mother called on him to take notice of what she was painting. He credits his mother with teaching him how to observe.

Rojo’s family also encouraged him to visit Jalisco’s museums and learn about the Mexican historical painting tradition. Guadalajara, founded in the mid-1540s, is Mexico’s second-largest city with a metro population of nearly five million.  Rojo reminded me that one of Mexico’s most famous painters, José  Clemente Orozco, resided in Guadalajara for much of his life and today several of Orozco’s most famous frescoes are located in buildings around the city. [Rojo’s mother has a distant kinship to José Clemente Orozco].  A visit to the Guadalajara would not be complete without seeing Orozco’s famous fresco at the Cabana Hospice, a former 19th-century orphanage now a UNESCO World Heritage site and home to one of Orozco’s most famous murals, “Man of Fire.”

Jorge Rojo at his Ro Ho Restaurant. Photo by Ricardo Romo.

Rojo left Guadalajara in 2001 and opened a restaurant in Leon and Cuernavaca.  While he was in law school, he had a well-paying but uninteresting job with the City of Guadalajara serving in the City’s Morgue’s legal department.  His daily work with the dead led to a near career burnout and left a mark on his life. He arrived in San Antonio in 2011 to study culinary arts at St. Philip’s College in San Antonio.  Upon completing his culinary degree in San Antonio, he enrolled in the Fine Arts program at St. Philip’s to fulfill a long-time desire to explore painting.

Jorge Rojo, “Agave.”  2015. Courtesy of  La Universidad Autonoma de Mexico [UNAM]. Photo by Ricardo Romo. 

After Rojo completed his two Associate Degrees at St. Philip’s, he decided to remain in San Antonio and open a Mexican restaurant. His restaurant, Ro Ho, located north of downtown near the International Airport, specializes in pork and bread similar to that prepared in Rojo’s hometown of Guadalajara.

Jorge Rojo, “Max Fifi.”  2024. Photo by Ricardo Romo.

Rojo wrote, “Running a restaurant in the United States leaves little free time, but the desire to create serves as a guiding force in finding at least some free time.”  On one of my visits to Ro Ho, Chef Rojo had just finished baking several trays of freshly cooked “Birote salado” [baguettes]. Emperor Maximilian I introduced the baguettes to Mexico Maximilian I served as Emperor of the Second Mexican Empire from 1864 until his execution by military forces under Benito Juarez in 1867.

Jorge Rojo, “Juarez Chairo 2024.”  Photo by Ricardo Romo.

In the Ro Ho restaurant, Chef Rojo has two of his paintings, one of Maximilian and the other of Juarez facing each other.  The words “Fi Fi’ are painted on the Emperor while “Chairo” is painted on Juarez’s portrait.  The phrase Fi Fi is a political reference currently used for the Mexican elites,  and Chairo is a name reserved for the humble working class.

Jorge Rojo, “Cabeza Olmeca.”  2021.Courtesy of  La Universidad Autonoma de Mexico [UNAM]. Photo by Ricardo Romo. 

Rojo’s paintings at the UNAM exhibit present a historical overview of the period from the pre-Columbian era to the present century.  One painting, an Olmec head, adds a new twist to a popular Mexican ancient sculpture.  The artist placed flowers in outer spaces around the ancient Pre-Columbian object.  Giant stone Olmec sculptures are originally found in the Veracruz jungles.  These colossal sculptures made of basel stone range in weight from six to fifty tons. In addition to the artistic incorporation of flowers, Rojo added red-colored lips to the Olmec face in his painting.  Many viewers of these original mammoth objects in Veracruz’s museums may have assumed the sculptures were a tribute to a warrior or god, but the red lips in Rojo’s painting make us rethink these assumptions.

Jorge Rojo in his studio. 2024.  Photo by Ricardo Romo.

The powerful image of the Conquest portraying an Aztec warrior in hand-to-hand combat with a Spanish soldier, merits a thoughtful and comprehensive viewing. In the aftermath of the Spanish conquest of Mexico in 1521, European artists portrayed the battles with the Aztecs as one of David vs. Goliath with the Spaniards as the underdogs fighting much larger armies. These early paintings always depicted  Spaniards winning over the Indigenous forces. In Rojo’s painting, the Aztec warrior appears to be nearly victorious in battle.

Jorge Rojo, “Paseando Con Mis Conciencias.” 2023.”  Courtesy of  La Universidad Autonoma de Mexico [UNAM]. Photo by Ricardo Romo. 

Rojo adds humor to many of his works as in the painting of a calavera [skeleton] with a basket of baguettes balanced on his head on his way to make a bread delivery. The delivery boy is aided in his journey by an angel figure riding on his front handlebars while a devil figure rides on the back of the bike. Rojo is a bike enthusiast who has built his bikes and I am certain he has hoped he would ride with an angel when he speeds along in San Antonio traffic.

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

Filed Under: Uncategorized

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 6.20.25 REMEMBERING JESUS MOROLES

June 20, 2025 By wpengine

Latino Sculptor Jesús Moroles Remembered Born in Corpus Christi, Texas in 1950, Jesús Bautista Moroles, the renowned Mexican American artist and sculptor, created a name for himself through his brilliant monumental abstract granite works. At the time of his sudden and tragic death in 2014, Moroles had completed more than 2,000 granite sculptures worldwide which […]

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 06.13.24

June 13, 2025 By wpengine

Latina Artists Take Texas Culture to New York City The Ruiz-Healy Art Gallery in New York City presents Vast and Varied: Texan Women Painters, a group exhibition that includes works by Marta Sánchez , Eva Marengo Sánchez , and Ethel Shipton. The exhibit will be on view at the gallery from June 12 to August […]

MIS PENSAMIENTOS with ALFREDO SANTOS 06.13.25

June 13, 2025 By wpengine

Bienvenidos a La Voz Newspaper. As you know, there are so many things going on all around us today. The Trump administration is moving quickly to remake America into a vision that he believes will take us into the future, but the real question is who is “us”? The Make America Great Again movement doesn’t […]

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 6.07.25 iliana emilia Garcia celebrates Memory, Tradition & Identity

June 7, 2025 By wpengine

Latina Artist iliana emilia García Celebrates Memory, Traditions, and Identity The New York City art scene has become more interesting and engaging as the city’s museums move toward greater inclusiveness. This Spring, the Guggenheim allotted its entire museum space–all six floors–to Rashid Johnson, one of America’s most prominent Black artists. The Whitney Museum of Art […]

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