Showing posts with label Jacques De Beaufort. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacques De Beaufort. Show all posts

Monday, February 6, 2017

New Work by Rolando Chang Barrero: US Heroes at Palm Beach State College-E

US HEROES
An installation of three Paintings

US HEROES were painted as a response to the ignorance and insensitivity of the liberal left in The United States of America towards the Cuban population that arrived seeking asylum from the of the most notorious murderers in Cuba.

The 3 paintings of t-shirts are always exhibited upside down and all remarks and chants associated with them are turned into interrogative sentences questioning their value and purpose in a dictatorial regime.


US HEROES Serie Part 1: Che Guevara

"10” 

A Group Exhibition


Art Gallery at Eissey Campus
Palm Beach State College-BB building
3160 PGA Boulevard
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida 33410

Opening Reception:

Tuesday, February 14th, 2017 | 5:30-8:00 PM

Exhibition Dates:
February 10-March 17, 2017

An Exhibition Organized By Karla Walter and Jacques de Beaufort 
present works representing a variety of media, methods, and visual approaches.
All artists are presently working and contributing to the vital and diverse 
South Florida art scene.



Palm Beach Gardens—Rolando Chang Barrero will be exhibiting the first installment of US Heroes: Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, Raul Castro  a series of paintings which concentrates on the three mass murderers of the Cuban revolution. The challenges and questions the slogans that are used to support their assent to hero status in the United States. This series explores the phenomena of idolatry and “hero creation” in the United States by the media and American t-shirt industry. This industry creates human billboards which inadvertently rationalizes human suffering (e.g. the mass murders and executions by Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, and Raul Castro). 

"I refer to all of my individual works as “pages from the journal of my life,” a vast documentary of experiences, thoughts, commentaries, and such. Thus, as pages of any personal journal-- some entries are unfinished drafts for a larger essay, some are very personal notes, and others are reactions to events and situations.  When a secret is shared, it ceases to be a secret A thought written will at some point be a thought read. I paint for those that prefer to read painting, I make film for those that prefer to read film, I take photographs for those that prefer to read an image [be it black and white, or color]. 

My current journal entries are a series of interrogatives presented in three levels.

Level one, questions the political slogans associated with the subject simply by changing the exclamation point to a question mark.

Level two, the title of the series “ U.S. Heroes”  purposely challenges the viewer into a conversation about his or her interpretation of patriotism and heroism.

Level three, allows the viewer to embrace or deflect the importance and impact of how we consume and later share our beliefs , credos, stances, and/or lifestyles via tee shirts, bumper stickers, and more recent within 144 allowable characters on twitter.”
-Rolando Chang Barrero 


"Patria o Muerte?” [motherland or death?] 40” x 60” (courtesy of Rolando Chang Barrero)


“Uno Dos Tres! Seremos como El Che?” [1,2, 3 we're going to be like Che?] 40” x 60” (courtesy of Rolando Chang Barrero)












Friday, December 13, 2013

New Times! Palm Beach Artists Unite....Shop Creative Saturday!

Ian Witlen

New Times! 

In an example of ethical consumerism, and aligned with the same thinking that fires the locavore movement, two of Palm Beach County's most visible alternative arts entrepreneurs are urging aesthetically adventurous, socially conscious holiday shoppers to "Shop Small, Shop Creative" this Saturday. They ask we patronize "the various art hubs, shops, districts, and galleries that promote emerging artists."

Shop Small is the brainchild of Boynton Beach artist/gallerist Rolando Chang Barrero and Lake Worth artist/gallerist Jacques de Beaufort
It involves open houses at Barrero's ActivistArtistA Gallery Saturday afternoon and de Beaufort's Unit 1 that evening, including a nightcap of live local music from Delray Beach's Smith Sundy, in an acoustic set, and Lake Worth's electronica-oriented Astrea Corporation.
Acting under the umbrella of the Florida Arts Association (applying for 501(c)3 status, and which Barrero hopes will grow into "a statewide resource for emerging artists") Shop Small also touts Vape Trends (Delray Beach), Spot Coffee (Delray Beach), Art-Sea Living(Boynton Beach), The Glass Mermaid (Boynton Beach), Coastars Coffee (Lake Worth), and Harold's Coffee (West Palm Beach), all of which will be open and featuring the work of local artists.
Barrero has committed to price the work at his gallery at half off usual prices, with similar bargains from the many resident artists adjoining his space in the Boynton Beach Arts District. He says "a good deal" of work on display there and at Unit 1 will go for $25 to $50, with nothing priced more than $500.
De Beaufort denounced the prohibitively high prices of most art and "the architecture of suburbia" for its inability to support local artists. In a Shop Small manifesto of sorts he wrote:
Think of it this way, if you don't have the requisite $142 million to buy a Francis Bacon triptych, there's probably going to be a drawing or collage with bacon in it...or at least some sort of depiction of an animal to buy, and probably for around $142 dollars or less. And lots of people at the show will like Bacon, I mean who doesn't?
Shop Small Shop Creative. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., on Saturday, December 14, at ActivistArtistA Gallery, 422 West Industrial Ave., Boynton Beach, 7 p.m. to 12:30 a.m. at UNIT 1, 1202 Lucerne Ave., Lake Worth. Visit activistartista.com.
Fire Ant -- an invasive species, tinged bright red, with an annoying, sometimes-fatal sting -- covers Palm Beach County. Got feedback or a tip? Contact Fire.Ant@BrowardPalmBeach.com.

Thank you SE!