Tag Archives: Florida

PRDream mourns the passing of Little Ray Romero

Little Ray Romero:
Master Rumbero
June 18, 1923 – August 16, 2006

A percussionists’ percussionist, this master rumbero lived a life of music spanning more than six decades. Born Hernan Romero in Ponce, Puerto Rico on June 18, 1923, Little Ray played with legendary bandleaders and musicians in both the Latin music and American music scene. His percussion solos have become standard rhythmic patterns for young percussionists today. Little Ray passed away peacefully in Florida surrounded by his family on Wednesday, August 16, 2006 at 10 p.m.

Kicking off his career in the late 30s with Puerto Rico’s leading songstress, Ruth Fernandez, Little Ray began playing bongos before picking up the congas. His conga playing was influenced by Chano Pozo whom he met while Chano was performing with Dizzy Gillespie. During the 40s, Little Ray performed with the legendary Xavier Cugat Ochestra before joining the U.S. Army. After his army tour, he played with Noro Morales, Joe Locco, Jose Curbelo, and Miguelito Valdes. By the 50s, he was performing in Puerto Rico and composed part of the percussion section for Cortijo y su Combo when the great Puerto Rican percussionist Rafael Cortijo organized his first band in the early ‘50s.

He went on to become an essential part of the legendary percussion section organized and fronted by Tito Rodríguez. However, he was noticed by Eartha Kitt and recruited to play with her orchestra from 1952 to 1956.

Little Ray Romero went on to back up Sammy Davis, Jr. and Dean Martin. By the late 60s and early 70s, Little Ray could be heard with the orchestras of Eddie Palmieri (on the Live in Sing Sing recording), Frankie Dante and Orchesta Flamboyan, Ray Baretto (on the Lps: Indestructible, Guarare, The Other Road, & Baretto Live Tomorrow where he plays the bata drums), and Machito just to name a few.

The 80s saw Little Ray give back to the younger generation through education. He taught at the Drummer’s Collective, the Johnny Colon Music School and Boy’s & Girls Harbor Conservatory for the performing Arts.

An exemplary family man, a good musician and a great percussionist are the three things Little Ray Romero embraced in his long road through life.

He was the recipient of the first Living Legends tribute at The Point CDC in the Bronx under the direction of Angel Rodriguez in New York in 1997. On Thursday, October 2nd, 2003 the community in East Harlem that saw Little Ray grow up honored him with a tribute at the Julia de Burgos Cultural Center that was formerly P.S. 107 where Ray went to elementary school. Ray Barretto, Rene Lopez, Jimmy Delgado and many others were present. Little Ray was presented with a proclamation from the City of New York that recognized the many important contributions made to the cultural soul of this nation through the music of Little Ray Romero.

Ray Romero is survived by his wife Lucia Romero, his sister Irma Rosen, his four children Stephanie Soffi, Elaine Romero, Little Ray Romero, Jr., and Isabel Santiago, eight grandchildren and one great-granddaughter.

He will be flown to New York to be viewed in the neighborhood where he was raised in East Harlem known as El Barrio on Sunday, August 20, 2006 at the Ortiz Funeral Home, 141 East 103rd Street
Between Lex. and Park Ave. 212-876-1913 from 2 to 10 p.m.

Elaine Romero who was with her father and prepared him for the transition has asked all who knew Ray to bring the gift of music and that in lieu of flowers, donations to defray the cost of the funeral should be sent to:

Lucia Romero
35 East 10th Street
Brooklyn, NY 11218

Aurora Flores

Little Ray Romero

Island crisis could fuel more Puerto Rican migration to U.S.

by Jorge Duany, Ph.D., Guest Writer
Orlando Sentinel (Oct 15, 2009)

The signs of Puerto Rico’s acute socioeconomic crisis are everywhere.

The Island’s economy is expected to decline by 5.5 percent this year. Local consumer debt reached almost 23 billion U.S. dollars in 2008. The unemployment rate was 16.5 percent in July 2009. Since 1996, 45,000 manufacturing jobs have been eliminated. For the first time in years, the poverty rate increased during the current decade. The massive layoffs by the Commonwealth government have caused public dismay. Many people are extremely worried about keeping their jobs and paying their bills, taxes, insurance, and mortgages.

One of the traditional strategies in the face of economic difficulties in Puerto Rico has been emigration. An increasing number of Puerto Ricans is seriously considering that alternative, despite the recession of the U.S. economy.

During the current decade, at least one-quarter of a million Puerto Ricans has moved to the continental United States. According to the Puerto Rico Community Survey, nearly 428,000 residents of the Island relocated to the mainland, while about 224,000 returned from abroad between the years 2000 and 2007. According to the Puerto Rico Ports Authority, the net passenger movement to the United States totaled around 297,200 persons between 2000 and 2009. In 2008, 51.6 percent of all persons of Puerto Rican origin lived outside the Island.

Aside from the massive resurgence of the Puerto Rican exodus, the latest census statistics confirm the migrants’ changing settlement patterns. In 2008, the state of Florida had the second largest number of Puerto Rican residents (744.4 thousand), after New York (1.1 million). Between the years 2000 and 2007, five of the ten leading destinations of Puerto Rican migrants were in Florida: Orange, Miami-Dade, Broward, Hillsborough, and Osceola counties.

During the same period, 38,257 residents of the Island resettled in Orange County, the center of the Orlando metropolitan area, which has displaced Philadelphia and Chicago as the second concentration for Puerto Ricans in the U.S. mainland. Other popular destinations for the migrants are Hamden County, Massachusetts; Philadelphia; the Bronx in New York; Hartford and New Haven, Connecticut.

On average, contemporary Puerto Rican migrants are younger, better educated, more skilled, and more likely to be bilingual than the Island’s population. Still, it is exaggerated to characterize the entire new migrant flow as a “brain drain,” since the bulk of the migrants has a secondary education and a blue-collar or service job.

At the same time, a growing proportion consists of highly qualified professionals, including medical doctors, engineers, nurses, and teachers. Among the main motivations for this continuous exodus are the gaps in wages, working conditions, and opportunities for professional development on the Island and in the United States. Furthermore, many migrants are seeking a better “quality of life,” referring especially to public services, housing costs, safety, and tranquility.

Finally, the most recent census estimates allow a comparison between the living conditions of Puerto Ricans on and off the Island.

In 2008, Puerto Rico’s unemployment rate was 14.8 percent, compared to 10 percent for Puerto Ricans in the United States, 9.3 percent in Florida, and 10.4 percent in Orlando. The median income for Puerto Rican households on the Island ($18,190) was less than half than in the United States ($39,039), Florida ($41,892), and Orlando ($39,778). In turn, Puerto Rico’s poverty rate (45 percent) was much higher than for Puerto Ricans in the United States (24 percent), Florida (17.5 percent), and Orlando (16.2 percent).

Given such wide discrepancies in employment opportunities, income levels, and other economic indicators, the new migrant wave will probably persist, until living conditions on the Island improve substantially. Let’s hope that happens soon.

Jorge Duany is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras. He is currently the Wilbur Marvin Visiting Scholar at the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University. He earned his Ph.D. in Latin American Studies, with a concentration in anthropology, at the University of California, Berkeley. He also holds an M.A. in Social Sciences from the University of Chicago and a B.A. in Psychology from Columbia University. He has published extensively on Caribbean migration, ethnicity, race, nationalism, and transnationalism. His most recent coedited book is “How the United States Racializes Latinos: White Hegemony and Its Consequences” (2009).

NiLP FYI: Puerto Rican Nationalism and Statehood

Note: The Natural Resources Committee approved the Puerto Rico Democracy Act of 2009 on the future political status of Puerto Rico last week. This bill was submitted by the island’s resident commissioner, Pedro Pierluisi, who is a member of the pro-statehood New Progressive Paty (PNP). The other three Stateside Puerto Ricans in Congress have not endorsed this bill.

According to this proposal, voters would choose between keeping the island’s commonwealth status, adopted in 1952, or to opt for something different. In the latter case, a second plebiscite would let them decide whether they wanted statehood, independence or independence with a loose association to the United States.

Two of the island’s main parties oppose the proposal as having a pro-statehood bias, and a similar bill that the committee approved in October 2007 has since died. Last week’s committee debate marked the 68th time that the House has debated a bill related to Puerto Rico’s status. Puerto Ricans voted to maintain the island’s current status and rejected statehood in nonbinding referendums in 1967, 1993 and 1998.

Residents of the U.S. Caribbean commonwealth are barred from voting in presidential elections, and their Congressional delegate cannot vote.

We have reprinted below an interesting analysis supporting the statehood position that we thought would be helpful in promoting further debate on this status issue. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of NiLP on this subject and we will seek disseminate commentaries on the other status options.

—Angelo Falcón

Puerto Rican Nationalism and the Drift Towards Statehood
by Arienna Grody, Research Associate
Council on Hemispheric Affairs (July 27, 2009)

Near the Caribbean islands of Hispaniola and Cuba lies another, smaller island, the inhabitants of which have never experienced sovereignty. The arrival of Christopher Columbus [Colón] to its shores in 1493 heralded an era of enslavement and destruction of the native Taíno population at the hands of the Spanish colonial system. Four centuries later, the decadence of the Spanish royalty had significantly weakened the once-formidable imperial structure. The Spanish-American War of 1898 became the capstone of the demise of the Spanish empire and the Treaty of Paris ceded control of several Spanish-held islands to the United States. Of the territorial possessions to change hands in 1898, Puerto Rico is the only one that persists in a state of colonialism to this day.

“Puerto Rico has been a colony for an uninterrupted period of over five hundred years,” writes Pedro A. Malavet, a law professor at the University of Florida who has studied the subject extensively. “In modern times, colonialism – the status of a polity with a definable territory that lacks sovereignty because legal [and] political authority is exercised by a peoples distinguishable from the inhabitants of the colonized region – is the only legal status that the isla (island) has known.” Puerto Rico’s legal and political status has not, however, precluded the development of a national ethos. On the contrary, Jorge Duany, a professor of anthropology at the University of Puerto Rico in Rio Piedras, explains that Puerto Ricans “imagine themselves as a nation [although they] do so despite the lack of a strong movement to create a sovereign state.” Furthermore, this perception of a unique Puerto Rican identity had already developed and become established under Spanish rule. Puerto Rican cultural nationalism has persisted through various stages of history, through drives for independence and efforts at assimilation. This puertorriqueñismo is apolitical. In fact, some of the strongest cultural nationalism is exhibited by Puerto Ricans living in the United States.

Nevertheless, the lack of association between puertorriqueñismo and sovereignty, or even of a clearly mobilized independence movement with widespread support, does not diminish the necessity of finding a just and permanent resolution to the question of the status of Puerto Rico.

American Imperialism Called to the Colors

In 1898, the United States won Cuba, Guam, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico from Spain. As U.S. troops invaded Puerto Rico, they proclaimed that their intentions were to overthrow the ruling Spanish authorities, thereby guaranteeing individual freedoms for the inhabitants. However, as Michael González-Cruz, an assistant professor at the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez, writes, “the occupation and recolonization of the island did not improve basic rights such as health or labor conditions but rather reinforced the barriers that increased social inequalities among the population.” Although the U.S.’ initial promises of liberation and democracy won the support and assistance of many anti-Spanish Puerto Ricans, it soon became clear that “the United States’ interest in conquering land did not extend to accepting the colonized people as equals.”

Far from promoting the democratic republican ideals associated with the U.S.’ own independence movement and its aftermath, the new colonial regime on the island promptly instituted military rule. It “sought to consolidate its military and economic authority by repressing any activity that might destabilize it or threaten its economic interests.” U.S. military forces protected landowners against the tiznados, or members of secret societies dedicated to the independence of Puerto Rico, rendering the landowners dependent on their presence and rejecting any movement towards sovereignty for the island. Additionally, the period was marked by media repression and censorship as “journalists were systematically pursued, fined and arrested for reporting on the behavior of the troops of the occupation.” These were the first signs that island residents were not going to be treated as the equals of mainland Americans, but they were by no means the last.

The Insular Cases

According to writer, lawyer and political analyst Juan M. García-Passalacqua, the Insular Cases – the series of Supreme Court decisions that ultimately determined the relationships between the United States and its newly acquired territories – “made it clear that the paradigm was the governance of the property of the United States, not of a people.” This point is illuminated by the fact that the Insular Cases primarily addressed tax law. In De Lima v Bidwell (1901), the Court determined that Puerto Rico was not a foreign country – at least for the purpose of import taxes. But in Downes v Bidwell (1901), it held that the island was not part of the U.S. per se. Malavet points to the fact that it gave Congress “almost unfettered discretion to do with Puerto Rico as it wants” as the biggest flaw in the Downes decision.

The decision was neither undisputed nor unqualified. For example, Justice Edward Douglass White concurred, but on the condition that “when the unfitness of particular territory for incorporation is demonstrated the occupation will terminate.” Justice John Marshall Harlan II (best known for his dissent in Plessy v Ferguson (1896)) dissented emphatically, arguing that “the idea that this country may acquire territories anywhere upon the earth, by conquest or treaty, and hold them as mere colonies or provinces, – the people inhabiting them to enjoy only such rights as Congress chooses to accord them, – is wholly inconsistent with the spirit and genious, as well as with the words, of the Constitution.”

Despite these warnings, however, Congress (with the assent of the Supreme Court) continued to construct Puerto Rico as a dependent colonial possession, a status from which, more than a century later, the island has yet to escape. The civilian government introduced under the Foraker Act (1900) was appointed primarily by the president of the United States. The Jones Act (1917) can be said to have bestowed or imposed U.S. citizenship on Puerto Ricans. But this citizenship does not include the full rights guaranteed to citizens in the fifty states. In the case of Balzac v Porto Rico (1922), the Supreme Court held that personal freedoms, while considered a constitutional right on the mainland, were not legal entitlements on the island because of its status as a territory merely “belonging” to the United States, rather than as an “incorporated” territory. Malavet maintains that Balzac “constitutionally constructs the United States citizenship of Puerto Ricans as second class,” affirming Congress’ colonialist agenda and denying Puerto Ricans both the right to self-determination and the option to assimilate on equal grounds.

Americanization

Before Puerto Rico’s destiny to be a colonial possession indefinitely had been sealed, the United States instituted a policy of Americanization, centered on linguistically assimilating the islanders by establishing English as the language of public school instruction. Malavet has described this Anglo-centric agenda as “the most obvious effort to re/construct Puerto Rican identity,” which was made possible by the early view of Puerto Ricans as “overwhelmingly poor, uneducated people who could nonetheless be ‘saved’ by Americanization.” As Amílcar Antonio Barreto, Associate Director of Northeastern University’s Humanities Center, points out, clearly “an implicit assumption underlying Americanization was the presumed superiority of Anglo-American socio-cultural norms and the concurrent inferiority of Puerto Ricans.”

Americanization, although focused primarily on English language instruction to facilitate assimilation, included persecution of the independence movement. Significantly, Puerto Ricans, who had developed a national identity under Spanish rule, rejected the efforts at forced cultural substitution. According to Barreto, the Americanization project “endow[ed] the Spanish language with a political meaning and a social significance it would not have held otherwise,” laying the foundation for a cultural nationalism centered on the Spanish language and heritage.

Economic Dependence

Not only was the U.S.-imposed government unresponsive to cultural demands of the population, it allowed American corporations to control the island’s economy and exploit its resources, effectively plunging it into long-term dependency.

One of the most fateful decisions the government made was to promote sugarcane as a single crop. The dominance of sugarcane production undermined the coffee and tobacco economies in the mountain areas, allowed sugar corporations to monopolize the land and subjected workers to the cane growing cycle, forcing them into debt in the dead season and exacerbating the problems of poverty and inequality already present on the island. Furthermore, “the island became a captive market for North American interests.”

The economic policy of the early 20th century was a disaster for Puerto Rico. Its accomplishments were limited to widening the gap in Puerto Rican society, intensifying poverty on the island and creating the conditions of dependency on the United States from which it has yet to escape.

The Independence Movement

The American indifference to Puerto Rican cultural objectives, political demands and economic needs led to an initially determined drive for independence. One of the most prominent figures of the independence movement was Pedro Albizu Campos. A lawyer and a nationalist, he gained recognition when he defended the sugar workers’ strike of 1934.

The 1934 strike was a response to the wage cuts imposed by U.S. sugar corporations. Faced with a reduction of already marginal incomes, the workers organized a nationwide strike that paralyzed the sugar industry. Albizu Campos took advantage of his position as the primary advocate of the strikers to link the workers’ demands to the struggle for independence.

Albizu Campos based his argument for independence on the fact that Spain had granted Puerto Rico autonomy in 1898, before the Spanish-American War and before the Treaty of Paris. Therefore, he contended that Spain had no right to hand over Puerto Rico to the United States as war plunder. Unfortunately for Puerto Rico, autonomy does not equate to sovereignty. Sovereignty is not a condition that Puerto Rico has ever experienced. But there has been a significant push for an independent Puerto Rico. Nevertheless, this movement has been consistently and violently repressed.

In 1937, a peaceful protest in support of Puerto Rican independence was organized in Ponce. Shortly before the demonstration was to begin, then Governor General Blanton Winship revoked the previously issued permits. Police surrounded the march and, as it began, opened fire on the activists, leaving 21 dead and 200 wounded. The Ponce Massacre is one of the better known examples of the use of violence to silence the independence movement, but by no means was it an isolated event.

Assimilationism

The United States, despite its disregard for the Puerto Rican people, placed a high premium on the use of the island for military purposes. This was highlighted by the location of both the Caribbean and South Atlantic U.S. Naval Commands in the 37,000 acre naval base Roosevelt Roads, which closed in 2004.

The obvious alternative to independence is statehood, an option which entails a certain degree of assimilation. González-Cruz posits that “the extreme economic dependency and the U.S. military presence provide favorable conditions for Puerto Rico to become a state.”

As Governor of Puerto Rico in the 1990s, Pedro Roselló of the Partido Nuevo Progresista (PNP) proposed instituting a form of bilingual education, allegedly because of the advantages associated with both bilingualism and speaking English, but more plausibly to boost the island’s chances of becoming a state. In 1976, President Gerald Ford declared that it was time for Puerto Rico to become fully assimilated as the 51st state. But there was strong opposition, not only from island independentistas, but from American politicians, some of whom were determined to refuse Puerto Rico admission to the union without instituting English as the official language of the island.

In the 1990s, there was lingering xenophobic objection to Puerto Rican statehood as well as echoes of the linguistic intolerance exhibited in the 1970s. The American intransigence on language and assimilation is likely what pushed the Roselló government to try to institute bilingual education on the island.

“Because of the uncertainty of the status question, the proannexationist government […] steered the island toward a neoliberal model in which statehood would not generate additional costs for the United States,” writes González-Cruz. They catered to the U.S. Congress as much as possible in order to try to direct the future of the island toward full incorporation into the United States.
However, this assimilationist push for statehood, embodied by the proposed education reforms was flatly rejected by the population. The Partido Independentista Puertorriqueña (PIP), may have never been able to garner more support than what it needs to barely survive, but assimilation is also perceived by many modern islanders as contrary to the needs, desires and interests of the Puerto Rican people.

Puertorriqueñismo

Puerto Ricans favor neither independence nor assimilation in crushing numbers. They are reluctant to forego the benefits of U.S. citizenship and unwilling to give up their identity as Puerto Ricans. Malavet argues that “cultural assimilation has been and positively will be impossible for the United States to achieve.” This is because Puerto Ricans perceive themselves as “Puerto Ricans first, Americans second.” Yet, in spite of this apparently strong nationalist sentiment, Puerto Ricans reject legal and political independence. In the words of Antonio Amílcar Barreto, “Puerto Ricans are cultural nationalists [but] the island’s economic dependency on the United States […] outweighs other considerations when it comes to voting.”

“Culturally speaking, Puerto Rico now meets most of the objective and subjective characteristics of conventional views of the nation, among them a shared language, territory, and history,” writes Jorge Duany. “Most important, the vast majority of Puerto Ricans imagine themselves as distinct from Americans as well as from other Latin American and Caribbean peoples.”

This cultural nationhood emerged in the 17th and 18th centuries. As more Spaniards were born in Puerto Rico, they developed a distinct criollo cultural identity, inextricably linked to the island. Towards the end of the 19th century, the criollos began to push for greater independence from the distant fatherland. In March 1898, the first autonomous government was established under Spanish rule. Despite its imperfections, the autonomous charter indicated the growing nationalist sentiment on the island. Unfortunately, the United States invaded the island before it was ever granted independence.

Nevertheless, this criollo culture was sufficiently strong and entrenched to withstand the onslaught of the Americanization effort. One side effect of the attempted imposition of American culture and values was the development of a puertorriqueñismo largely defined in terms of anti-Americanism. Rather than simply creating a unique Puerto Rican identity, early nationalists defined Puerto Ricanness strictly in contrast to Americanness. Thus, “Puerto Rican nationalism throughout the 20th century has been characterized by Hispanophilia, anti-Americanism, Negrophobia, androcentrism, homophobia, and, more recently, xenophobia,” writes Duany. To a large extent, this accounts for the rejection of English (or even bilingualism) in favor of Spanish, which is perceived as an important part of contemporary Puerto Rican identity. Even Puerto Ricans living in the United States are often not considered real Puerto Ricans by island nationalists.

Nationhood

Duany describes a nation as “a ‘spiritual principle’ based on shared memories and the cult of a glorious past, as well as the ability to forget certain shameful events.” It is not inextricably linked to statehood. As legal scholar and political leader of the Puerto Rican independence movement Manuel Rodríguez Orellana explains, “Even before the phenomenon of the political unification of nations into states, the French were French and the English were English. Michelangelo was no less Italian than Mussolini.” It is this separation between the concepts of nation and state that allows Puerto Ricans to assert their Puerto Rican nationalism without demanding independence, instead defending their U.S. citizenship.

Although Rodríguez Orellana describes puertorriqueñismo as a “political act on the colonial stage,” it has generally lost its political undercurrents. As Rodríguez Orellana himself says, “the daily life of Puerto Ricans runs, consciously or unconsciously, along the track of their national identity.” Puerto Ricans are always Puerto Ricans. This is not a political act, but a cultural fact. Although independentista intellectuals like the relatively early and highly influential scholar Manuel Maldonado-Denis worry that “the colonization of Puerto Rico under the American flag has meant the gradual erosion of [Puerto Rican] culture” and argue that “Puerto Rico is a country that is threatened at its very roots by the American presence,” the evidence is to the contrary. In fact, migration “has produced an affirmation of puertorriqueñismo as a nationality in the continental United States that is stronger and may be more important than the development of it on the island.” Puerto Ricans clearly continue to exhibit a strong sense of cultural identity and nationalism in spite of their failure to connect it to independence.

A Century of Colonialism

In the words of Maldonado-Denis, “Puerto Ricans are a colonial people with a colonial outlook,” meaning that neither the Puerto Ricans on the island nor Puerto Ricans in the United States have yet achieved “a true ‘decolonization,’ either in the political or in the psychological sense of the word.” In spite of Puerto Rican complacency and in spite of the fact that the United States has managed to design “a process of governance that hides Puerto Rico in plain view,” the colonial relationship that persists between the two polities cannot last forever. 111 years after the acquisition of the island, the time to decide the future of Puerto Rico is overdue.

The Future of Puerto Rico

Malavet identifies the three legitimate postcolonial alternatives for Puerto Rico as independence, non-assimilationist statehood and “a constitutional bilateral form of free association,” arguing that “it is unconstitutional for the United States to remain a colonial power […] for a period of over one hundred years.” The territorial status is only valid as a temporary, transitional status. It must lead to either independence or incorporation.

Given the unacceptability of Puerto Rico’s current colonial legal and political status, the question becomes: what is the best viable option for Puerto Rico?

Independence

García-Passalacqua writes that, “with the reemergence of all sorts of nationalisms, [sovereignty] has become the logical aspiration of any and all peoples in the new world order.” There is no reason why this wouldn’t be true for Puerto Ricans. The $26 billion drained from the island by U.S. corporations each year is sufficient justification to push for separation from the United States. The unequal treatment of island residents, embodied by the phrase “second class citizenship,” provides further grounds for dissociation from the imperial power. Additionally, Puerto Ricans self-identify as a nation.

There appears to be no reason for Puerto Rico to continue as anything other than an independent nation-state. In this vein, then Governor of Puerto Rico, Anibal Acevedo Vila, spoke before the UN General Assembly last year, accusing the Bush administration of denying the island its right to chart its own course and demonstrating a sense of frustration with the aimless direction in which the United States has dragged Puerto Rico. This seems to imply preference for autonomy, if not sovereignty. But while Puerto Ricans certainly insist upon their autonomy, there is no such consensus on independence – that option has never garnered more than five percent of the vote in any of the status plebiscites.

Statehood

Puerto Ricans are not ready to give up their ability to hop across the blue pond on a whim. Despite the fact that the United States continuously exploits the island – its resources and its people – , most Puerto Ricans perceive the benefits of their relationship to the United States as outweighing the costs.

Puerto Rico is “consistently losing its ability to achieve self-sustaining development, and the current economic course” makes it less likely that there will ever be “any significant degree of political and economic sovereignty.” Furthermore, the presence of U.S. military bases on the island reduces the likelihood that the Pentagon would easily let go of the valuable strategic outpost. The greatest opposition to Puerto Rican statehood would come from xenophobic American politicians arguing that Puerto Ricans are inassimilable.

This combination of factors could tilt the balance in favor of statehood over independence. Because Puerto Ricans perceive their economic interests as being tied to their connection to the mainland, they are likely to opt for a status that allows them to maintain the current relationship virtually unaltered. While the majority of island intellectuals may advocate independence, it is important to note that the majority of islanders are not intellectuals.

A New Proposal

Last month, Pedro Pierluisi presented a new bill in the Committee of Natural Resources in the U.S. House of Representatives, seeking authorization from Congress to allow Puerto Rico to conduct a series of plebiscites to determine the preferred future status of the island. However, the bill does not commit Congress to act on the results of the plebiscites and, although it presents Puerto Ricans with and opportunity to choose a reasonable permanent status, it also allows them to perpetuate themselves in an unacceptable state of colonialism indefinitely.

Malavet writes that “perhaps the biggest harm perpetrated by the United States against the people of Puerto Rico can be labeled ‘the crisis of self confidence.’ This form of internalized oppression that afflicts the people of Puerto Rico leads them to conclude that they are incapable of self-government. Under this tragic construct, Puerto Ricans believe that they lack the economic power to succeed as an independent nation – that they lack the intellectual and moral capacity for government.” This U.S.-imposed inferiority complex will almost certainly lead Puerto Ricans to vote against independence if given the option. They have consistently expressed no desire whatsoever to be categorized as a sovereign state.

Because Puerto Ricans do not connect their cultural nationalism to sovereignty and because of the island’s extreme dependency on the United States, the most likely eventual outcome for Puerto Rico will be statehood. Although this is not necessarily the ideal status for the island, it is undeniably preferable to its current second-class existence. What is most important is that the island ceases to be a territorial possession. In the words of Manuel Maldonado-Denis, “colonialism as an institution is dead the world over. Puerto Rico cannot – will not – be the exception to this rule.”

The Hope of a Nation

With any luck, Congress will pass Pierluisi’s bill (or a more forceful version that pushes for change) and Puerto Ricans will be given the opportunity to vote on their future. In spite of the strong cultural nationalism that permeates contemporary Puerto Rican society, the economic benefits of statehood are likely to be the most influential factor in a status vote.

Statehood entails a certain degree of assimilation. For instance, Puerto Rican athletes will now have to compete for spots on the U.S. Olympic team before heading to the international event. This absorption into the United States certainly erodes the sense of Puerto Rican nationhood as Puerto Rico is no longer able to represent itself as a specific entity on a world stage. However, this should not hugely effect the continuation of a thriving Puerto Rican culture distinct from American culture.

Moreover, there are definite advantages to becoming a state, not least the expansion of Medicare and the ability to vote. If the territory joins the Union, it will be nearly impossible for the U.S. to rationalize the perpetuation of the poverty currently found in Puerto Rico.

And if the population decides that the economic benefits of statehood do not outweigh the cultural costs, perhaps the shock of losing their Olympic team will spark a widespread Puerto Rican independence movement.

THE INCOMPLETE LATINO VOTE:

PUERTO RICO AND THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
By Angelo Falcón

Hispanic Link News Service (March 2, 2008)

The increasing interest in the role of the Latino vote in the Democratic primaries for United States president has opened up an important opportunity to educate the U.S. public about the Latino community. We have, hopefully, dispelled the myth that Latinos will not vote for a black for president. We have, in the process, also demonstrated that the Latino vote should not be taken for granted by the Democratic Party establishment, as the Clinton campaign now apparently views Latinos as her last best hope to revive her flailing campaign.

When talking about the Latino vote, reference is made to the fact that the Latino population in the United States now stands at 44 million. This figure is incorrect. There are actually 48 million Latinos in this country, if you include the four million living in the U.S. territories of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands and others.

These are all U.S. citizens, mostly Puerto Ricans, with a significant number of Dominicans.

One could argue that they should not be included in the Latino population count when discussing the presidential election because, although U.S. citizens, these four million do not have the right to vote for president. But they can and do vote in the nominations process of the two major parties, so they are relevant to a discussion of the role of the Latino vote in selecting the next president of the United States.

Take the case of Puerto Rico:

Island Puerto Ricans will be holding their caucus and convention on June 7, making it the very last race for the nomination before the party conventions this summer. In the Democratic Party, Puerto Rico has a delegation of 63, which is larger than that of 24 states. If the party upholds its sanctions against Florida and Michigan for violating party rules in the scheduling of their primaries, Puerto Rico’s convention delegation will be larger than that of 26 states.

In the past, Puerto Rico’s was a winner-take-all system, but party rules have changed so that it is now supposed to be proportional. While the smart money had been that Clinton could count on all of these delegates, recent events are reflecting the Obama tsunami. The presumed solidity of the Puerto Rican delegation in this regard is crumbling.

Most recently, Puerto Rico Governor Aníbal Acevedo Vilá has endorsed Barack Obama, and it appears that Obama has raised more contributions than Clinton in Puerto Rico. The notion, advanced by Michael Barone and other analysts, that Puerto Rico would deliver all of its delegates to one candidate and could be decisive, inasmuch as it would be the last contest in a long nominations battle, is not panning out.

Despite this, the very idea that a territory (or, as I like to call it, colony) like Puerto Rico even has the possibility of determining who would be the candidate for president of a major U.S. political party is deliciously ironic, given that its residents, all U.S. citizens, do not have the right to vote for U.S. president or voting members of Congress.

In this inequity, they are joined by another million U.S. citizens in the territories of the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, Samoa, the Northern Mariana Islands and other smaller islands, as well as the District of Columbia. (Some will note that it is perhaps no coincidence that these are areas populated overwhelmingly by people of color.)

So in this very exciting presidential election, it is important that we also understand there are over 5 million U.S. citizens in the territories (colonies) and the District of Columbia who continue to be disenfranchised. The so-called “Latino vote” is diluted by this inequality, as is its potential impact. Of course, none of the presidential candidates are raising this issue.

Angelo Falcón is founder and president of the National Institute for Latino Policy, based in New York City. A political scientist, he teaches at the Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs. He is the author of the Atlas of Stateside Puerto Ricans and co-author of the book, Boricuas in Gotham: Puerto Ricans in the Making of Modern New York City. E-mail him at afalcon@latinopolicy.org.

7th Annual NYC Brides March Against Domestic Violence, Wed 26 sep

New York Latinas Against Domestic Violence
c/o Violence Intervention Program, Inc.
P.O. Box 1161 New York, NY 10035
(212) 410-9080
www.nylatinasagainstdv.org

For Immediate Release
September 25, 2007

Contacts:
Antonieta Gimeno (646) 672-1404, cell 917-981-1625
Janice Cruz (646) 672-1404

Seventh Annual NYC Brides’ March Against Domestic Violence
Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Scores of “Brides” and Supporters Will March Through Manhattan and the Bronx to Remember Gladys Ricart and Other Victims of Domestic Violence
For the seventh year in a row, scores of women dressed in wedding gowns, along with men dressed in black, will march through the streets of Washington Heights, the South Bronx, and East Harlem to raise awareness about the devastating effects of domestic violence on Latino and other families and communities.
Marchers will start gathering at 9 a.m. in front of the offices of the Dominican Women’s Development Center at 251 Fort Washington Avenue where they will hear from some of the march organizers. The six-mile march will begin promptly at 10:30 a.m. and will end after 3 p.m. in East Harlem at the Bonifacio Senior Center, 7 East 116th Street with a speak-out and closing ceremony (see attached march route).

The Brides’ March, also known as The Gladys Ricart and Victims of Domestic Violence Memorial Walk, is an annual event that was started in 2001 to remember Ms. Ricart, who was murdered by a former abusive boyfriend on the day she was to wed someone else, and all the other women who have been killed or injured in domestic violence incidents (see chronology of events attached). Because the wedding dress, the emblem of happiness and everlasting love, has been forever tainted in the Latino community by Gladys’ murder, it is a strong symbol for the New York Latinas Against Domestic Violence (NYLADV), the main organizers of the March.

Marchers will be joined by Josie Ashton, a Dominican woman from Florida who originated the idea for the first march, after being strongly moved by the murder, slanted media coverage, and some community members’ insensitive response to Ms. Ricart’s murder. Ms. Ashton resigned from her job and sacrificed more than two months of her life away from her family to walk in a wedding gown, down the East Coast, from New Jersey to Miami, in an attempt to draw attention to the horrors of domestic violence.

Local government officials and community figures including Manhattan Borough President Scott M. Stringer, Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrion, NYS Senator Erik T.  Schneiderman, Assembly Member Adriano Espaillat, Commissioner Yolanda Jimenez from the NYC Mayor’s Office to Combat Domestic Violence, Council Members Melissa
Mark-Viverito, Robert Jackson and Miguel Martinez, will also join the marchers and speak during the day’s events.

Dozens Of Deaths And Hundreds Of Thousands Of Domestic Violence Incidents Reported Each Year In New York City.
According to the NYC Mayor’s Office to Combat Domestic Violence, there were 71 family related homicides in 2006 as of December 31, 2006. Family related homicide includes intimate partner homicide as well as homicide committed by other family members and includes children who were killed as a result of family violence. 83% of these cases had no known prior police contact and 6% of these cases had a current Order of Protection. At present, there are 2,081 domestic violence emergency shelter beds citywide, a 35% increase since January 2002.
In addition, according to the Mayor’s Office, the police responded to 221,071 domestic violence incidents in 2006; this averages to over 600 incidents per day. And teen dating relationship abuse continues to be a problem as well. The City Domestic Violence Hotline received 9,462 calls from teens in 2006.
Rosita Romero, Executive Director of the Dominican Women’s Development Center said “domestic violence is not a women’s problem; it is a problem that affects the entire family and our society as a whole. It is also connected to other types of violence in our society. We have to find better ways of relating to each other as human beings; on a more equal level and with more kindness and compassion. We need to educate ourselves more about this pandemic to make a bigger commitment to prevent it and eradicate it.”
Josie Ashton who will address the marchers during the rally at the Bonifacio Senior Center stresses that “we continue with our commitments to every woman, man and children to work hard every day to fight domestic violence. Our hope is that our government and members of our community will do the same.”
A partial list of sponsors for the 2007 NYC Annual Brides’ March include:

New York Latinas Against Domestic Violence, the Ricart family, Josie Ashton, Nuevo Amanecer, Violence Intervention Program, Dominican Women’s Development Center, The National Latino Alliance for the Elimination of Domestic Violence, Northern Manhattan Improvement Corporation, Assembly Member Adriano Espaillat, National Dominican Women’s Caucus, Anthony Diaz from Fortune Society.
A partial list of participating individuals and organizations include:

Bronx Borough President Adolfo Carrión, Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, State Senator Eric T. Schneiderman, Congress Member Charles B. Rangel’s Office, Seny Tavera Special Counsel to Lieutenant Governor David Patterson, Crucita Medina Martinez, Bonifacio Senior Center, NYC Mayor’s Office to Combat Domestic Violence, NYC Mayor’s Office on Immigrant Affairs, New York City Police Department, New York City Department of Sanitation, Assembly Woman Noemi Rivera, Council Member Miguel Martinez, Council Member Robert Jackson, Council Member Helen Foster, Council Member Melissa Mark-Viverito, Jorge Abreu from Heritage Health Housing, Reverend Luis Barrios from the San Romero de las Americas Church, Reverend Hector Laporte, Lucy Pizarro of Levántate Mujer, Planned Parenthood, CONNECT, In Motion.

PRdream mourns the passing of Andrés Marrero

A pioneer in the art world, he sought to establish an international platform for Puerto Rican artists. Early on, Marrero saw the role the web might play and collaborated with PRdream, most recently in a “Conversatorio on trends in Puerto Rican Art” during CIRCA 2007 that involved Galerias Prinardi in San Juan and West Palm Beach, and MediaNoche in New York City. We extend our deepest condolences to the Marrero Family. Please read below.

*****

“El arte fue su vida”, dijo enfática la curadora Judith Nieves sobre su esposo Andrés Marrero, galerista que falleció el pasado martes en la noche y cuyo cuerpo será cremado mañana luego de una ceremonia de despedida que tendrá lugar a las 5:00 de la tarde en la Funeraria Amador, situada en el Sector Molinari, en Hatillo.

Complicaciones derivadas a su padecimiento de leucemia causaron su muerte el martes a las 10:45 de la noche mientras estaba recluido en la Unidad de Cuidado Intensivo del Hospital Universitario.

A Marrero, de 59 años, le sobreviven su esposa Judith y sus hijos Carlos Andrés y Benjamín.

Hoy iniciará su velatorio en Hatillo con un servicio religioso a las ocho de la noche. La familia respetará los deseos del galerista y esparcirá sus cenizas en el Río Jayuya.

Integrantes del mundo de la plástica en el País coinciden en que los esfuerzos de Marrero -desde que comenzó a laborar con el arte puertorriqueño como marchante en la década del 70- siempre estuvieron dirigidos a darle altura al mismo y a establecer el valor del entonces incipiente mercado.

Abogado y propietario de Galerías Prinardi desde 1992, su relación con el arte evolucionó gracias a Taller Andrés, espacio que abrió en el 1980 en la Avenida Muñoz Rivera. Desde esa época impulsó el arte boricua en esferas locales e internacionales y se mantuvo en el difícil escenario plástico de modo consistente.

Desde su espacio impulsó la carrera de artistas consagrados, como por ejemplo la del Maestro Rafael Tufiño, al tiempo que brindó foro a manifestaciones callejeras como el grafitti. Hace poco, apoyó el nacimiento de la primera feria de arte en la Isla, Circa Puerto Rico.

Sylvia Villafañe, presidenta de la Asociación de Galerías de Puerto Rico, describió a Marrero como “un pilar en el mercado del arte”.

“Su solidez se basó en mantener un espacio adecuado de galería de arte para la venta de obras y el desarrollo de los artistas plásticos puertorriqueños. Fue un pionero de los años 70 cuando el proyecto de las galerías de arte era bien poco conocido y aceptado en Puerto Rico. Ocupará un lugar prominente en la historia del arte de la Isla”, agregó Villafañe.

Oriundo de Jayuya, Marrero colaboró de modo directo con el nacimiento y el desarrollo de la valiosa colección de arte puertorriqueño de la Cooperativa de Seguros Múltiples.

“Andrés fue como un maestro para nosotros” dijo Juan Lugo, curador de la Colección de la Cooperativa, “nos brindó todo su apoyo, nos ayudó a definir el marco conceptual de la colección, a desarrollarla y siempre iba más allá, independientemente de si uno le compraba la pieza a él o a otra persona. Fue una persona puntal en la misión de darle jerarquía y valor al arte puertorriqueño”.

A inicios de este año, Marrero anunció a los medios el establecimiento de Galerías Prinardi USA en West Palm Beach, Florida desde donde buscaba fortalecer el posicionamiento internacional de la plástica puertorriqueña.

CIRCA 2007 – Conversatorio, Friday, March 30, 1PM

CIRCA 2007
Conversatorio de las Galerías Prinardi con la cooperación de PRdream.com

Prinardi and Prinardi USA Mission Statement and Webcast Intro:

Prinardi is an international fine art gallery, whose founders have 30 years of experience. Located at the historical Normandie Hotelin San Juan, P.R. The seven floors gallery specializes on Contemporary American, European, Caribbean, and Latin American Art. Recently we expanded our operations to the beautiful city of West Palm Beach in the United States, giving birth to Galerias Prinardi USA.

Our main goal is to create an international center that encourages appreciation and understanding of art and its role in society, through
direct engagement with artists from different regions of this earth common to all. The intensity of our Goal is fully expressed in the title of our opening show in West Palm Beach,” the Universality of Art, Unifying cultures”.

Galerias Prinardi which is at the CIRCA 07 art fair, in collaboration with its partner gallery, Galerias Prinardi USA, and with the wonderful cooperation of PRdream.com, are proud to be part of this interesting web cast that speaks of the “Archipelago of Art”.

This time we have invited three distinguished artists from the Achipelago Boricua to represent us at Circa 07: Diogenes Ballester,
Martin García and Carlos Santiago.

From within the Archipelago of Florida, USA, comes the Caribbean/Cuban experience. During this webcast and from South Florida in West Palm Beach Prinardi USA will be presenting our show, “Voices of the Caribbean ” with it’s center piece being “Cafetera” an inspiration and creation of Cuban-American Artist Cesar Santalo. “Cafetera” speaks of the Archipelago experience from the Cuban culture experience and how the world perceives it.

In this occasion in following up with our mission of offering the production of audiovisual materials such as DVDs, Television Documentaries and Internet Streaming Video presentations all done a part of an effort to build a solid documented audiovisual library for future generations of Art Collectors, Institutions, Artists and for the public in general to share.

CIRCA 2007

The Fair

The second edition of Circa Puerto Rico, the first international art fair in Puerto Rico and the Caribbean, returns to the Puerto Rico Convention Center, this time during spring of 2007, from March 30th to April 2nd.

Circa Puerto Rico Features a select group of some of the most exiting contemporary galleries in the world. Circa Puerto Rico brings the best of modern and contemporary art to local and international audience of collectors. Featuring such as “In the Spot” a curetted cutting edge artist section, “solo” in which individual artist present special projects, “District Circa” where Art publications present their last editions, and a section for non profit institutions.

The fair also acts as a leader in the island’s art community where an important group of collectors has emerged in the past few ears in response to a burgeoning and dynamic artistic community and a prominent museum and gallery scene.

Set in spectacular San Juan, Circa Puerto Rico combines the best of international art with a stimulating program of cultural events which include: exhibition openings, art workshops, panel discussions, guided visits, book presentations, concerts, performances and video art, for every one from specialized professionals to the general public.

Statement PRdream.com/ Judith Escalona, Moderator

An archipelago exists geologically and later becomes defined politically. Lines are drawn, partitioning a land to make it belong to this country or another with all the historical and cultural consequences. Here today we are positing an archipelago of art — that transgresses or exceeds the political and geographical limits established through time.

Just for the moment then, let us speak of an art archipelago extending from Puerto Rico to Spain, encompassing Palm Beach, Florida and El Barrio, New York City — la cuna de la diaspora puertorriquena — utilizing the web and applying this technology towards artistic ends.

Who are the inhabitants in this archipelago? What kind of art are they producing? What are their cultural references, themes and perspectives? What are their formalistic explorations or aesthetics? ….

IDEA OF THE EARTH BEING SEEN FOR THE FIRST TIME BY MAN AND THE IDEA OF IMAGING THE EARTH AS ONE WORLD WE ALL INHABIT. THIS IDEA OF GEO+GRAPHY
–THE EARTH AND GRAPHICS OR IMAGING OR AESTHETICS IN AN INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT WHICH IS ONE WORLD OF WHICH THIS ARCHIPELAGO IS A PART.

MediaNoche, our gallery, is devoted to new media — digital art in all of its manifestations. Unique among the galleries of New York, it offers exhibition space and residencies to artists working in new media. MediaNoche is a project of PRdream.com, the premiere web site on the history, culture and art of Puerto Rico and the Puerto Rican Diaspora. For more information go to: http://www.medianoche.us and http://www.prdream.com.

San Juan, PR – Palm Beach, FL – El Barrio, NYC

i-Chat: March 30, 2007 at 1 – 3PM

OUTLINE FOR i-CHAT

1. Introduction about the conversatorio by Judith Escalona,moderator 3 min

2. General introduction about each artist in CIRCA: Prinardi Gallery in Puerto Rico, Andrés Marrero, Director, CIRCA 07 Curator Celina Nogueras 6 min

3. General introduction about each artist in Mallorca, Spain. Joan Miro Foundation — 6 min

4. General Introduction about artist in Palm Beach, Florida Prinardi Gallery in West Palm Beach 6 min. Palm Beach Post Art Critic

5. Discussion: 30 min

6. Closing Remarks – NYC – 2 min.
Closing Remarks from Spain — 3 min
Palm Beach — 3 min
San Juan Andrés Marrero, Director — 3 min

7. Closing and acknowledgements — NYC – 1 min

About the Artists

Diógenes Ballester is a visual artist working on paintings, drawings, carvings, engravings and installations. In his work he address ideas related to oral history tradition, ritual, mythology, cultural identity, archeology of memory, and political trans-nationalization.

Diógenes works have been exhibited in the United States, Europe, Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean. Last year, he presented a simultaneous exhibition at The National Museum of Catholic Art and History in New York City and The Museum of the History of Ponce in Puerto Rico. In this exhibition he incorporates the re-appropriation of cultural artifacts of Ponce and Spanish Harlem to his installations as a way of accessing the past and re-interpreting its presence.

Diógenes recent awards and honors have been the Individual Artists Grant, The New York State Council for the Arts, 2006; Artist-in-Residence Grants, The Museum of the History of Ponce, 2006; and
Artist-in-Residence Grant, The Museum Archive Caribbean University in Puerto Rico, 2007. The Museum of the History of Ponce honored him with a panel discussion on The International Day of Museums and a web cast conversation transmitted between The Caribbean University, the Center for Puerto Rican Studies at Hunter College and PRDREAM.COM in New York City. He is currently working at his studio in New York City.

Diógenes Ballester is a visual artist working on paintings, drawings, carvings, engravings and installations. In his work he address ideas related to oral history tradition, ritual, mythology, cultural identity, archeology of memory, and political trans-nationalization.

Martin García

Soy Martín García-Rivera, nací en Arecibo, Puerto Rico en el año 1960. Realizo estudios formales en arte desde la escuela superior Trina Padilla de Sanz, en la Universidad de Puerto Rico, Río Piedras y la Maestría en Pratt Institute (New York). Actualmente ejerzo la cátedra en artes visuales en la Universidad de Puerto Rico.

Desarrollo mi obra plástica en los medios del dibujo, la pintura y el grabado. He expuesto mis grabados y dibujos en bienales y trienales de prestigio en Europa, América del Sur, Asia, Centro América y el Caribe. He obtenido premios en eventos celebrados en Rusia, Italia, Estados Unidos, Macedonia, España, Suecia y Puerto Rico.

Mi obra representa y es consecuencia de mi identidad como Puertorriqueño.

Actualmente planteo conceptos del dibujo clásico desde el Renacimiento al Expresionismo, asi puedo fundir ideas sobre el laberinto urbano y su tragedia social impuesta a toda nuestra civilización: la violencia, los valores religiosos, el mito, producto del sincretismo cultural y la búsqueda de identidad.

Es la representación de la figura humana eje central de mi expresión.
Las figuras que empleo son metáforas visuales de mis pensamientos acerca de la identidad racial, política, religiosa y diferentes estados psicológicos que adoptamos durante nuestra vida.

El cuerpo humano lo represento en diferentes estados variados de integridad destacándose en ellos el contenido de movimientos, dinamismo y monumentalidad. Como parte de mi proceso de búsqueda tomo apuntes del natural (asi continúo una tradición de más de cinco siglos), también me apropio de imágenes de los medios de comunicación. Utilizo los elementos figurativos sin preocuparme tanto de su significado literal. En ocasiones represento partes deformes y completas del contorno anatómico como una combinación de componentes abstractos y representativos.
Me obsesiona realizar formas simples, llenas de fuerza…energía.

Igualmente en este proceso de búsqueda reinterpreto y replanteo motivos clásicos del arte, distante de su interpretación histórica y del tema.

Todo lo que he observado y estudiado, el mito histórico y el mito cotidiano se añejan en búsqueda de una completa nueva realidad visual, una mitología del presente.

Carlos Santiago, Was born in Peñuelas, Puerto Rico in 1978.
He had his first formal training in the arts in his native town and later moved to San Juan where he graduated from the School of Visual Arts. In 2002 he was awarded the Alfonso Arana’s Scholarship. While attending his grant in Paris, France he studied at the Daniel Fischer workshop and participated in art groups as Le Rat du Champ, and Plástica Latina.

At present, Carlos paintings, drawings and photo montages works are mainly bases on current events. His works are inspired by the emotion generated in him by everything and anything that surround him. His themes include intimate feelings as well as universal fears as war, hunger, violence and how humanity struggle to live a fulfilling life despite its situations and environment. His work has been exhibited in the Caribbean, Latin America, the United States and Europe. It is considered to be a form of expressionism, where his use of intense color with a rhythmical brushstroke places him among the most prominent young artists of the island.

Cesar Santalo was born in Baltimore , Maryland in 1970. At the age of seven he moved to Miami , FL. From a very young age, Cesar has shown to be passionate about art and its creation. By the age of sixteen, he had won many prestigious national art awards and scholarships; including regional and national winner of the Scholastic Art Awards. That same year, the young artist was awarded the Dante Fascell Congressional Art Award and had his work exhibited in the White House. He later received the Art Innovations National Winner at the college level. As a student, Cesar learned from great masters such as Felix Ramos, Ricardo Irisari, Felix Decosio and Manolo Canovacas, His professors are very respected and renowned in their field. Cesar would later attend Pratt Institute in Brooklyn , NY., where he would receive his Bachelors Degree and graduate with honors in Drawing and Painting. During his time in New York he taught at Pratt Institute’s Saturday Art School .

Essays

DIÓGENES BALLESTER:
SEEKING ARTISTIC AND CREATIVE TRANSNATIONALISM

by Shifra M. Goldman

The artist, like the writer, has the obligation to be of use; his painting must be a book that teaches; it must serve to better the human condition; it must castigate evil and exalt virtue.
Francisco Oller 1

Puerto Rican culture is part of my art. My people are descendants of Spaniards, Africans, and Taínos. My formation included the Spanish language with African rhythm and cadence within a Catholic-African spiritualism, between troubadours and their improvised décimas in the vibrant colors of a Caribbean island, facing a sea that incited me to discover the promise of new worlds. These are my roots. And my roots are always present in my art.
Diógenes Ballester 2

Introduction:

Though circumstances and their expression in both art and literature have changed immensely since the days of Puerto Rican painter Francisco Oller (1813-1913), his concepts as well as his art continue to be revered by artists of his nation to this day. Artists and intellectuals of the 19th and early 20th century had to grapple with the effects of colonialism, extreme poverty, strict rules of censorship and the lack of training centers and museums to develop and exhibit their work.

Not until 1950 were conditions favorable for such an undertaking. 3 At that time, the Centro de Arte Puertoriqueño (CAP) was established and definitively changed the direction of Puerto Rican art, aesthetically and thematically. Nevertheless, the underlying philosophy of Francisco Oller remains pertinent to this day: Puerto Rico remains a colony- of the United States rather than Spain; there is still poverty; and censorship still serves as a means of controlling critical expression.

The generation of artists preceding Diógenes Ballester (listed in endnote #2) can testify to these truisms. And, indeed, Puerto Rico remains a colony whose highest ruling official is the Governor, and whose population is split between becoming an independent country or joining the United States as its 51st state.4 Puerto Rico won its independence from Spain with the help of the United States in 1898, as did Cuba and the Philippines, but never achieved national sovereignty as did the others at various times.

Some Pertinent History: The Four Floors

José Luis González’s poetic metaphor of Puerto Rican history and culture, “El país de cuatro pisos” (The Country of Four Floors),5 slices not only through time but through politics, mythologies and class interests, bringing them all together in the present struggles for liberation. As such, it offers a verbal analogy to Ballester’s complex and layered pictorial constructions and lends insight to their iconography.
Speaking in the present tense, González is careful to delineate the three-tiered structure of contemporary Puerto Rico composed, top down, by the U.S. imperialist presence, the dominated upper classes of Puerto Rico, and the lower classes exploited by both. Toward this end, he separates culture into “elite” and “popular,” the latter of which had been studied by dominant class intellectuals only as folklore, thus making invisible the true signification of popular culture in Puerto Rican history.

The “four floors” of the book’s title begin with three historic groups: the aboriginal Taíno Indians whose resistance to Spanish enslavement caused their extermination; the African slaves in the Caribbean and throughout Latin America; and the Spanish conquerors. Contrary to common scholarship, González considers the most important (for economic, social and therefore cultural reasons) to be the Africans. They survived and became carriers not only of their own religious, social and artistic beliefs, but of aboriginal cultural elements due to interchanges between the two most oppressed groups of the social pyramid.

During the first two centuries of conquest, the Spanish population was in a state of flux, therefore the Africans (who could not leave) formed the most stable resident population and their (popular) culture is the first that is “American.” 6 Metaphorically, then, the “first floor” of Puerto Rico is African/Taíno. It is revealing that the earliest acknowledged artist of importance, José Campeche of the 18th century, was the son of a slave nourished by popular culture.

In Spanish Harlem ( New York City), the Puerto Rican artists adopted emblems of the Taíno presence in many of their artworks to give credit to the importance of the first Native Americans of the Caribbean. The politics of African slavery also set the groundwork of all American continental history until the end of the 19th century by which time the European practicioners who had imported slaves by the millions, decided that slavery was no longer a pofitable system. This was started by England and eventually swept the American continent. The last Latin American colony to insist on continuing slavery was Brazil – the largest of Latin American countries – which was conquered by the Portuguese, ruled by the emperor of Portugal, and finally by his son who set himself up as emperor in the New World until he was displaced by the abolition of slavery in 1889, which brought an end to the imperial colonial status of Brazil.

It should not be imagined, however, that the abolition of slavery as an economic structure that had penetrated the entire Western World, aided and abetted by national rulers in Africa, was slowly abolished by anti-slavery forces. A key factor, in my opinion, is the advent of industrialization in Western Europe whose capitalists found it more profitable to set up “industrial slavery” within their own borders and in their colonized Eastern and African nations. Why import slaves for agricultural empires when “wage slaves” were already on hand and employable in factories, mines, and other industries? European peasants were forcibally moved to the cities in great numbers, as the writings of Charles Dickens, and many other authors, testify. In Haiti and the Caribbean, and in many areas of Latin America, however, agricultural production continued well into the 20th century, but it was structured to function as wage labor.

Pertinent to our history as well is the factor of developments in Haiti and the Spanish-speaking Caribbean nations. Too complex to be summarized here, an insightful view of the strong African presence throughout the Americas – economically, socially, and culturally – can be found in the book, Dictionary of Afro-Latin American Civilization, published in 1980 by a professor of Latin American civilizations and linguistics. The imbedded aspects of African languages, religious beliefs, and customs, from the days of slavery to this day, present an astonishing revelation and explain more about modern artists of the Caribbean (for the purposes of this paper) and the Americas as a whole, than many volumes on the subject.7 This information is of particular interest to us, since Diógenes Ballester is the great grandson of Haitian refugees who fled to Puerto Rico and settled at the Playa de Ponce where the family resides to this day. His father (now deceased), from whom he inherited his name, was present in the 1937 Massacre of Ponce during which supporters of Puerto Rican independence scheduled a peaceful demonstration for that independence and for the release from jail of Pedro Albizu Campos, an ardent fighter against U.S. colonial rule. The U.S. colonial governor, General Blanton Winship, ordered the police to fire on the crowd, killing and wounding over 100 people.

Don Pedro Albizu Campos (1891-1965 ) 8 also commanded seven languages – knowledge acquired in seven years of education in the United States and was a good friend of Ballester’s grandfather, Clemente Sagarra, who was descended from the original Haitian refugees that settled in Ponce. Thus our artist, Ballester, has been immersed in the history of Puerto Rico since childhood and, when grown, found it necessary to visit Haiti and also exhibit his work there. Apart from social/political history, it should be noted that Diógenes was educated as both a Puerto Rican and a Catholic – the predominant religion of all Latin Americans under Spanish rule. He considers himself an Afro-Catholic and invokes spirituality from both sources through the titles and visual content of his works of art.

After Haiti (the earliest nation to eliminate slavery on the American continent) came Mexico, which decided on this course after its 1810 revolution against Spain. It is also a matter of historical interest that Simón Bolívar of Venezuela (after whom the nation of Bolivia is named) went to Haiti for shelter and collaboration in his struggle for the liberation of South American colonies from Spain, and was a guest of the first nation which arose against Napolean and the explotation of African slaves. By 1804, the new free Haiti was established and ruled by former African slaves – setting a pattern and model of liberation for the rest of the Americas.

Puerto Rico: Second and Third Floors

The “second floor”of Puerto Rico was constructed and furnished by waves of 19th century immigration including revolutionary refugees from Latin America as well as numerous Europeans. If the first contingent brought ideas of independence to the island, the second expropriated the dominant status from the old landowners. The “third floor” was constituted by the U.S. conquest of Puerto Rico which imposed its cultural paradigm on a population which had not had time to fuse its segments into a national synthesis.

Puerto Rico: the Fourth Floor

The “fourth floor” – and my imaginary “fifth floor”(that of Puerto Ricans in New York) imposed upon José Luis González’s richly conceived housing structure without his permission or knowledge – was erected almost simultaneously. The former resulted in the spectacular and irreparably cracked structure of “late North American capitalism” in tandem with “Puerto Rican opportunistic populism” which weighted down Island society at the end of the 1940s. Organized by Luis Muñoz Marín, Popular Democratic Party leader, who became the first elected Puerto Rican governor, the hopeful expansionist development of “Operation Bootstrap” (manos a la obra) resulted in the modernization (within a dependency mode) that characterized the relations of many Latin American countries in the post-World War II epoch. Since 1917, poverty in the colony had already sent thousands of working class immigrants to the U.S. where they had citizenship but little more access to its privileges than U.S.-born African Americans. Those who were black or dark-skinned suffered racial as well as economic and ethnic discrimination. The eventually negative effects of “Bootstrap” economics can be found in statistics: from the 200,000 Puerto Ricans in New York City in 1948, the year of Muñoz’s election. Migration increased to 612,000 in 1960. The 1990 census might record close to one million. Thus the Puerto Rican population of economic exiles inhabits the “fifth floor” of the four-floor structure. They can, however, move freely between Puerto Rico and the United States which has immense consequences artistically, culturally and economically. Many Puerto Ricans are bilingual and a great many artists have studied in U.S. art schools, while simultaneously North American racism and xenophobia affected the position of all Puerto Ricans in the United States.

Many artists from the Island move back and forth between their country and the U.S. – particularly to East Coast states and Chicago, with perhaps the largest number in New York. Such is definitely the case of Diógenes Ballester, who changed his residence in 1981 and established his home and studio in a section of New York City bordering both the wealthy businesses and Anglo cultural locations of Central Park on the East, and the impoverished dwellings of Harlem which houses African Americans who migrated to New York from the South after the Civil War, but most particularly after World War II began, and jobs were available. The working class Puerto Ricans live in the area known as Spanish Harlem. As we have seen, the name is not a coincidence. Since Puerto Ricans, like other peoples in the Caribbean, reflect a great intermixture with African peoples of the New World, it is natural that they should feel close to the U.S. African population.

In addition, New York’s African Americans, under the leadership of W.E.B. Du Bois, had established not only a political structure in New York, but a powerful and inspirational artistic structure in visual arts, literature, and music. Many historians feel that African-American music (blues, jazz, etc) became the primary original music of the United States replacing a complete dependency on European sources. In additon, white North American musicians like George Gershwin, drew on African American music to create an original fusion that reconstitured the classical music of the United States. It is also well-known that African American music became very popular in France in the early 20th century, opening the doors to all of Europe. Finally, African American musicians of the United States absorbed the rhythms and instruments of Cuba which were also based on strong African sources, and completed the transferences and transnationalisms to which we have been referring. By the late 20th century, not only Puerto Ricans, but large migrations of Cubans and Haitians as well as Dominicans, brought the artistic presences of the Caribbean to the eastern United States. By the time of this reading, the presence of the visual art forms of all these nations is well known in the United States through numberless exhibitions.9

Diógenes Ballester: His Life as an Artist

My first knowledge of and contact with Diógenes Ballester commenced when I attended a graphics Biennial in San Juan. in 1986. Wandering around the exhibition and its premises, I was struck by an amazing homage to a young Puerto Rican artist who was being honored by a sizeable group of people who had just cut a ribbon to open his exhibition to the public. I no longer recall the work presented since Puerto Rico celebrated these events regularly, and I attended many. But I do recall his youthfulness, his friendliness, and his seriousness. In the 1990s, attending New York regularly as a Board member of the College Art Association, I never failed to visit both Harlem and Spanish Harlem, in addition to the more traditional art museums. I quickly learned the nomenclature of Spanish Harlem artists of all varieties: “Ricans, Neo-Ricans, Nuevo Yoricans, Nuyoricans,” and so forth. In addition, as an homage to the Taíno Indians, were terms such as “Boríncan, Borícua, etc. If the name of “Haiti” was adopted from the Taíno language, the term “Borícua” served the same purpose.

Taller Borícua; Museo del Barrio

In fact, the earliest artist-groupings in New York were the Taller Borícua and the Museo del Barrio (neighborhood museum). Both were organized in 1969 as cultural outposts for the Puerto Rican community. Rafael Tufiño, a major printmaker and painter from the Island, designed the first Workshop silkscreen poster. Tufiño worked with Nuyorican and Island artists to translate to New York the collectivist and community service principles of San Juan. Located in Spanish Harlem and boasting outdoor exhibitions, classes for the community, and cultural activities of all sorts, the collaboration between Island and migrant artists is unique.

The main themes of Puerto Rican art can be seen as well in works by Taller artists. Still lifes of tropical plants, the banana as the staff of life ( a focus almost certainly from African sources), and evocations of the aboriginal Taíno Indians, set up important prototypes for Nuyoricans, while one artist’s personal “spirit traps” laid claim to a lost indigenous heritage. West African deities hybridized with Catholic saints, or the ritual attending a child’s burial among African-descent peoples, reactivited another cultural source. Political themes remain cogent to the present. Some works detail abuses of the Island itself and the destructiveness of U.S. military exercises there. Another political expression turned into an art form was the invasion of the Statue of Liberty in the New York Bay by artists who hung a Puerto Rican flag around the sculptured head. A photograph of this event was turned into a color print by Juan Sánchez in 1986. To the photograph he added a large Taíno emblem – of the sort often used by New York’s Puerto Rican artists. Alienation, loneliness, the split and fractured identity, and the search to recover a whole vision of self and existence are the themes of some works, while self-portraits portray interior states of mind. 10

Diógenes in San Francisco: 1995

Like many Puerto Ricans, Ballester has shuttled back and forth between Puerto Rico and the United States, obtaining his art degrees in Puerto Rico and in the United States. Trained in the traditions of realism and surrealism, interested in abstract expressionism and conceptual art, Ballester slowly transformed his art into organic abstraction in which figurative and landscape elements play a role in dynamic and powerful works on a monumental scale. That an active social consciousness is at work is evident:

I use symbolic imagery and organic abstractions to depict the themes of struggle, vulnerability and volition. Intense colors, layers of paint, thick impasto, scratched and blended surfaces create depth, movement and dramatic contrasts which translate the experience of living within the urban landscape of human existence and interchange. 11

At the same time that he reaches outward to U.S. training and formal experimentation (such as computer-generated imagery, film, etc.) Ballester keeps himself firmly anchored in Puerto Rican culture and spiritual beliefs. He remembers that his father made vejigante masks (painted and horned, of papier-mâché) to accompany the brilliant costumes for the famous festivals in Ponce that celebrate Santiago Matamoros (St. James, the Moor Killer). It was in the Ponce Museum that he was exposed to a wide selection of Old Masters, as well as modern and contemporary paintings where Baroque masters Velázquez and Caravaggio, influenced his work, particularly his fascination with chiaroscuro. As an Afro-Puerto Rican, Ballester accepts his country’s cultural celebrations without yielding ground on the manifestations of racism whether they occur in Puerto Rico or the United States.

Caught between two cultures, one of which treats him as the “Other,” Ballester takes these struggles into paintings like “The Anxiety of Life in the Midst of Conflict,” “Struggle Against Racism,” “Confrontation,” “The Struggle Against Alienation,” “Vulnerability: Tied and Liberated Being,” “Portrait of Existence,” “Powerless,” and, finally, “Looking for Structure,” “Compressed Energy,” and “Spiritual Celebration.” In the titles alone, one finds the dialectical ebb and flow between doubt, insecurity, alienation, on the one hand, and the exaltation of the spirit, the energy to transcend the dichotomies between anxiety and hope, between the intellectual and the emotional, on the other. “I live and work in intertwined worlds;” says the artist, “I live and work under the never-ending influences of history, mythology and oral traditions; I live and work in a continuous culmination of today’s diversity.”

Ballester conceives his work in terms of monumental images that push at the borders of his piece, large or small, like that of a frustrated muralist. Many of his paintings are fragments of much bigger ideas that seem not to be exhausted when he finishes creating one. In fact. his working technique is additive: the paintings grow from one sheet of paper or linen to two, four, eight or sixteen, covering an entire wall in his cramped studio. In the process of growth, he changes and overpaints what is no longer compatible with the total composition. The artist’s medium is physical and visceral. He employs the ancient and difficult technique of encaustic – hot wax painting that comes down to us from ancient Greece, that vanished during the medieval and Renaissance periods in favor of tempera and oil paint. Revived in the 18th century, and again in the 20th, its effects, its visual and physical properties, and its range of textural and color possibilities, make it highly suitable for contemporary styles not adequately served by traditional oil painting or the new synthetics. Molten colors are applied with bristle brushes and palette knives; the surface can be opaque or transparent, can be textured in many ways, or can be lightly polished with a cloth to bring out a dull, satiny sheen. If kept warm, free-flowing manipulations may be carried out.

“Paint cooks in Diógenes’ house morning, noon and night,” describes fellow artist Antonio Martorell, “in pots brimming with cadmium yellow, Sienna red, cobalt blue, Prussian and ultramarine blue, Spanish whites and Ivory, blacks, all of them richly mixed pigments spiced with melted virgin wax and applied, still scalding, to the hungry linen.”Adds the artist, “When I stand over my encaustic mix heating in the melting pot, I can see and smell the blending of the crystal damar varnish with the stand oils. I watch and breathe in the fragrant bees’ wax as it coheres with the dry pigment or oil colors. When I apply the mix on the linen surface I am drawn in by its matted mystic magnificence.”

Sensuality is the final aspect to consider in the work of Ballester. It is implicit in his choice of painting techniques and explicit in the work itself. Luminous shadows, convoluted fleshy forms that turn in on themselves like body parts, rotundities, sweeping gestural shapes and stroked surfaces, cavities and bony structures, breast-like forms, warm earth colors and patches like seas and skies, areas bathed in light and shadow, are characteristic.

The encaustic, “Spiritual Symphony” (1994), is an excellent example of his highly suggestive abstract imagery which remains vitalistic and corporeal in form and color. Its origins may lie with pulpy plants, or with fragments of a human body. It either case, they are anchored to the earth below, and the sky above. The artist may be expounding Catholic or animistic spirituality, or both – like varied instruments in his symphony.

“María del Mar” (1993),“Magic of the Camándulas” (or Rosaries) and “The Priest” (both 1994) recognizably articulate the conductors of the symphony: the goddess of the sea, (María/Yemayá, to give her Catholic and Afro-Caribbean names), and those with spiritual power (female and male) who conduct the religious rituals of Puerto Rican espiritismo. To imaginatively record rites he has personally observed in his homeland, Ballester returns to the representational mode for the figures, who emerge arrayed in spectacular vestments.

Diógenes in Paris: Internationalization. the Transnational Americas

In 2000, the Taller Borícua of New York, of which Diógenes Ballester was (and is) an active and enthusiastic member, undertook to celebrate the thirtieth anniversary of its incorporation in 1970 with a collectable edition of the Alma Portfolio, one of 100 computer-generated prints on archival paper using archival inks, each print measuring 36”x24”. Headed by Rafael Tufiño, the artists included Diógenes Ballester, Marcos Dimas, Gloria Rodríguez, Fernando Salicrup, Juan Sánchez and Nitza Tufiño. Each work is a diptych with the full print on the left, and a detail to the right with a column for the poetry by Pedro Pietri, Héctor Rivera, María Boncher, Mariposa, Jesús “Papoleto” Melendez, Tania Niomi Ramírez and Juan Sánchez.

A most important element of this portfolio was its experimental character. Fernando Salicrup, having worked for many years with computer-generated digital printmaking, was in a position to assist the artists with this new technique for the portfolio. A clue to the importance of digital production as a new graphic form can be measured by the fact that the 1998 Puerto Rican Biennial, under the guidance of Jury President, Diógenes Ballester, devoted an international panel discussion to the topic which was broadcast on the Web under the auspices of the on-line Puerto Rican magazine, El Cuarto Quenepón.

In the course of discussion, various techniques employed in Europe, the Americas and Asia, were detailed. Examples such as the combinations of graphics with photography, with video, with the use of layering (digital collage), with the digital manipulation of the photographs themselves, with the combination of digitals with traditional graphics like mezzotint, with printing on canvas, on aluminum, on Plexiglas, and on acetate, with the registration of movement, with the use of large scale images beyond the possibilities of traditional graphics, etc. Though not mentioned in the presentations, billboards in the United States have been produced digitally for a number of years, and artists have been transferring their own work to outdoor billboards – like the late Cuban artist from New York, Félix González Torres, and Los Angeles Chicano artist, Daniel Martínez – have replaced street murals with billboards. The ability of computers to create imaginary worlds not bound by reality – as demonstrated by Steven Spielberg’s movies – is also available to computer graphics. What is of central interest for our present discussion, is the portfolio entry of Diógenes Ballester. Accompanied by poetry written by his wife, Maria Boncher, which follows below in first person for the artist himself, Ballester produced a double work of art reflecting his experiences in Paris for a period of about two years.

Diógenes Ballester in Paris

I walked today / from arc de triomphe / flanked on either side by international banks / guardians of post-industrial multi-national finance capital / past the grand palais / the petit palais / through the gardens to the Louvre…I continue eastward…chic speciality stores / reminders of the homogenized existence / that is rendering paris/new york/london/tokyo / indistinguishable… I think /of sandal-strapped feet / interacting with materials / that bind the land.

While living temporarily in Paris, Diógenes Ballester’s digital work created, over a base of disparate architectures – domed, flat and framed buildings – a vision of stone monuments, rock-formed circles and the drawing of a medley of human beings, as well as an Indian profile, and three versions of a black woman kneeling in a loose white skirt. In short, a scene where Paris meets the Caribbean. A poignant man’s head in a lower corner, gently contained in a frame of letters reading “Playa de Ponce,” records the artist’s loss of his father. A maze of photographic segments and violent linear evocations push at the boundaries of the work but are held down by the architecture and by fresh earth below in which rests a straw basket – a memory, perhaps, of Haiti. Red and blue circles seem to be either traffic signs, or computer signs when one has trangressed the rules. The poetry diptych positions a photograph of a young woman in a black coat and umbrella (his wife) against a muted image of Parisian architecture. The poem itself is superimposed over the image.

The tremendous importance of this visit by Ballester to the former artistic capital of the Western world (until it was replaced after World War II by New York)12 is that he not only had the opportunity to review the artistic palaces of Paris – where one can review the great masters of European art over the centuries – but that he also had an opportunity to meet living master artists of Latin America – many of whom had made their homes in France during the 20th century. Visiting or living in France (and other parts of Europe such as Italy or Germany) was de rigueur for many Latin American, as well as North American artists even when they returned to their native countries after the experience and training. A number, however, remained in Paris or other cultural centers – though frequently visiting their native countries for reinvigoration and for exhibition.

Ballester’s personal contact with some of these artists left a powerful impression. As a Latin American himself, he could now identify with the entire continent, and thus with the entire world of artistic production during the 20th century which, in the New Millennium, is becoming truly transnational for the first time in the field of artistic production.

FINAL COMMENTS: THE KEEPER OF HISTORY — HOLDER OF DREAMS13

We must accept the fact that the term “African American” is an unrecognized truism for the entire continent. In fact, there is not a single nation in the Americas, from Canada to Uruguay and Argentina that does not have an African-descent population, particularly on their Eastern shores. As a result, the islands of the Atlantic Ocean not only boast such populations, but maintain a myriad of cultural manifestations of distinctly African derivation.

To be finally considered in this brief history – without which we cannot understand or entertain the visual arts of the Americas – including that of Diógenes Ballester who comes from a long history of African America forebears – is the fact that the Europeans, who invaded all parts of the Americas as well as lands in the Pacific Ocean, did not bring many women with them. Thus we have the creation of caste systems in the colonial period which have been recorded in many paintings which meticulousely rendered images of the various intermixtures, known generally in Spanish (and other languages) as mestizaje (mingling, mixing). These paintings, (titled “caste paintings,” undertook to structure society so that power resided with “pure” Europeans, and later with the “creoles” who were born in the New World but did not mix with its native or imported people of color.

The other side of this pictorial culture and aesthetic is the strong maintenance throughout the Americas of cultural expressions derived, embellished, and constantly restructured by the repressed Africans and Native Americans. One of many people who have recorded and described these phenomena – which exist to the present and form the basis of hidden elements in contemporary aesthetics and practices – was Anita Brenner. A North American (born in Mexico in 1906) who spent many years of her life there, she wrote the book Idols Behind Altars: The Story of the Mexican Spirit, in 1929. 14

Stated briefly, her main idea concerned the preservation of pre-Christian religious images and practices by concealing them behind the enforced altars of the conquerors. The term “idols” is, of course a derogatory one; an idea for which Inquisitions were restablished, first in Europe, then in the colonized areas of the world. However it is well known that many indigenous peoples clothed their original “idols” behind the names, demeanors and dress of Catholic saints . Thus they could continue to be worshipped and celebrated without endangering the lives of those who carried on the celebrations. These practices are carried on up to the present.

In terms of Haitian, Puerto Rican, and Cuban peoples, as well as Brazilian – to mention but a few in the Americas and in Caribbean area – the artistic renderings of the “idols,” and the ceremonies that celebrate them, constitute the “idols behind altars.” Carnivals, festivals, processions, dramatic expressions, ceremonies, costuming, music, special clothing, and jewelry, full rich colors and abstracted forms, designate religious activities that predate Christianity, or absorb and restructure it. At the same time these practices are invoked, they also represent a defiance of conquest, slavery, exploitation, racism, and misery through the military and economic intervention of super-national powers and persons. It is to these peoples and ceremonies we must look for that which we encounter in the life and culture of Diógenes Ballester.

ENDNOTES

1. Cited by Puerto Rican artist Juan Sánchez: Rachel Weiss ( ed.) Being American: Essays on Art, Literature and Ldentity From latin America, New York: White Pine Press. 1991, p.96
2. Statement by artist in the 1986 announcement of the Exposición: Séptima Bienal del Grabado Latinoamericano y del Caribe. In this document, Carmen T. Lugo paid the artist the great tribute of adding his name (at 30) to the names of the most illustrious artists of Puerto Rico in the 20th century: Lorenzo Homar, Carlos Raquel Rivera, Rafael Tufiño, Antonio Martorell, Julio Rosado del Valle, Myrna Baéz, Nelson Sambolin, Francisco Rodón. Also included were color reproductions of our works by the artist: The Anxieties of life in the Midst of Conflict (1983); Predella (1984); La Lucha de la Mujer (The Woman Struggle, 1985); Lucha en Contra del Racismo/ Struggle Against Racism (1986), which illustrate his strong social sense – the struggles of women, against racism, anxieties and conflict, etc. The works themselves were powerfully rendered as semi –abstractions utilizing multiple techniques. To this revealing list of titles can be added others of different vintages: The Struggle Against Alienation; Portrait of Vulnerability; Loneliness of the Black Cloud; Spiritual Fluidity; Spiritual Celebration; The Anxieties of Life in the Midst of Conflict; and finally, as an entire category, The Keeper of History, Holder of Dreams, a most revealing and literary title which sums up the poetic tendencies of the Artist.
3. See Mari Carmen Ramírez. Puerto Rican Painting: Between Past and Present, the Squibb Gallery and others, 1987 – 1998, p.14
4. For a more complete history of these issues and their effects on Puerto Rican modern art, see Shifra M. Goldman, “ Under the Sign of the Pava: Puerto Rican Art and Populism in International Context, Dimensions of the Americas: Art and Social Change in Latin America and the United States, Chicago and London; University of Chicago Press, 1994, pp.416-432.
5. El país de cuatro pisos y otros ensayos, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico: Ediciones Huracán, 1980, pp. 9-90. I am indebted to Samuel A. Román Delgado for bringing this essay to my attention.
6. Point of clarification: the terms “America” or American” as used in this essay refer to the entire American continent. All references to the United Sates refer to “North America” to differentiate this country from the America which lies to the south. I raise this poit because the United Sates of America have appropriated the word to refer only to themselves.
7. Bejamin Nuñez ( and the African Bibliographic Center), Dictionary of Afro-Latin American Civilization, Wesport: Greewood Press, 1980.
8. Pedro Albizu Campos, a brilliant scholar, has been compared to predecessors for liberty like George Washington (U.S.A.), Simón Bolivar (Venenzuela), and Dr. Ramón Emeterio Betances, (Puerto Rico). He is considered the first great theoretician of anti-colonialism. Albizu received a chain of degrees in the U.S. in Humanities, Chemical Egineering, Military Science, and Law. He also commanded seven languages – knowledge acquired in seven years of education in the United States.
9. Many catalogues and Books can be found through galleries, college and universities as well as large libraries in major cities of the United Sates.
10. For an extensive survey of the Puerto Rican artistic presence in the barrio, see the essay by Diógenes Ballester titled “ Aesthetic Development of Puerto Rican Visual Arts in New York as part of the Diaspora: The Epitaph of the Barrio,” in the catalogue Homenaje Alma Boricua: XXX Aniversario, Nerw York:Taller Boricua, Museo de las Americas, 2001-2002, pp.28-29
11. Quoted by Shifra M. Goldman in the catalogue Spirits: Paintings by Diógenes Ballester, San Francisco Calif., Washington Square Gallery, 1995, p.7.
12. See Serge Guilbaut, How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art: Abstract Expressionism, Freedom and the Cold War, trans. By Arthur Goldhammer, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.
13. Title of exhibit for Diógenes Ballester at the Centro Gallery. Hunter College, New York, 2004
14. Anita Brenner, Idols Behind Altars: The Story of the Mexican Spirit, Boston: Beacon Press, 1929/1970.

Diógenes Ballester ends

Martín García

Recapitulaciones: Selección Retrospectiva de Martín García Rivera
Diciembre de 2005

El patrocinio institucional de la Galerías Prinardi y el olfato estético de la curaduría de Martín García Rivera, han permitido el espectáculo de esta selección de obras del artista que recorre los últimos 15 años de su creación plástica. Desde 1978, cuando tomó la primera clase formal de arte hasta hoy, le persigue la misma obsesión por la figura humana y durante estos 27 años, este soporte iconográfico ha sido el medio con el que Martín ha desarrollado su obra como grabador con tal autenticidad y calidad en el oficio, en su contenido y en su propuesta plástica, que ha sido premiada reiteradamente en innumerables eventos internacionales. Pero ese indudable y merecido reconocimiento internacional le ha costado el insilio en su propia tierra. Ostracismo sui generis porque se ejecuta sin salir del País y él lo acoge con la mansedumbre del Sabio, pues como Esquilo, nuestro artista sabe que sólo el que sufre, sabe… Y como sabe, llega a hacerse cómplice de Franz Kafka (1883-1924) en aquello de que para decir la verdad, hay que aceptar el exilio… Sin embargo, la profunda autenticidad y excelencia de su obra, revierte las consecuencias tópicas del que huye o es expulsado, pues, distinto al anonimato de la mayoría de los que lo sufren, el exilio de la obra de nuestro artista ha tenido una itinerancia mundial en la que se ha catapultado su difusión internacional y reconfirmado su excelencia, mientras que, en cambio, esa misma excelencia, llega a convertirse, paradójicamente, en su propio País, en un obstáculo que lo cerca, aislándolo, sometiendo su obra a una criminalización estética aparentemente inexplicable. Se trata de una manera de insilio maleficente pero honroso, orquestado por el liliputismo insularista, por aquellos que aún con haberes propios y meritorios, están resentidos por la envidia ante el estro y la enjundia de su obra, y por la dimensión sombría del mercado del arte, por los Torquemadas inscritos en su circuito, por el llamado árbitro tiránico como lo designó Enrique García Gutiérrez, o el Sistema del Arte como lo califica el transvanguardista Achille Bonito Oliva (1939): una poderosa fuerza perniciosa, ubicua y polifémica que con su mirada panóptica exige tácitamente obediencia a su Canon de rentabilidad, so pena de levantar o continuarle la condena. Pero la cimarronería sabia, valiente de García Rivera a su manera de la erótica del Poder y como si hubiera conocido a Michael Foucault (1926-1984), acepta, (no consiente) la osada criminalización a que se le somete, pues la entiende como realidad convenida y esperada de la lucha diaria con los bajos fondos de nuestra condición humana. Pero como nuestros oscuros fondos ni los inquisidores de la luz que los administran, lo intimidan, Martín se mantiene contumaz, auténtico a sí mismo, perpetuando, radiante y risueño, su verdad y su insilio. Y en esta breve recapitulación de los últimos 15 años de su obra que ahora exhibe la Galerías Prinardi, lo vemos viviendo auténticamente el dominio almirante de su nave y en esta noche de bitácora abierta, atestiguamos las etapas y desembarcos que el ha escogido de su travesía. Atento a las corrientes procelosas y a las hechizantes seducciones del trayecto, tratamos de trazar un posible mapa de este recorrido suyo que mantiene su proa dirigida a un destino abierto…

Primer desembarco
Animinchin (xilografía, 1990) es uno de los primeros desembarcos contestatarios frente a los Torquemadas del marketing que castigan a los que practican la herejía mortal de usar el papel, soporte pecaminoso por “caduco” e “inestable”, al que Martín agrega la blasfemia de manejarlo a grandes dimensiones, cosa que el Canon en su liturgia, sólo permite, so pena de excomunión, al lienzo, al óleo y al acrílico, reduciendo simultáneamente la posibilidad de que su obra sea objeto de consumo. Para esas fechas ya el grabado nacional no era generalmente promocionado y estaba siendo excomulgado por la mercadotecnia y por la incapacidad a la alta ganancia que lo aislaba por el alegado deterioro del soporte (papel) y por la incapacidad para la ganancia exagerada que significaba la multi-originalidad del grabado frente a la expectativa elitista de pagar un alto precio sólo por obras mono-originales. Sin embargo, aquí vemos en respuesta, una pieza de un preciosismo estético y virtuosismo técnico que parece inaudito realizar en unas dimensiones similares a las de un gran lienzo. Pieza hereje en esta ínsula miope, tanto para los mojigatos que conciben la impresión reducida a pequeñas dimensiones, como para los inquisidores del marketing. Sin embargo, ha sido exhibida este año (2005) en Versalles, en una colectiva de artistas Hispanoamericanos y franceses como instalación, mientras el pasado año (1994), obtuvo el Premio de Diploma en la Primera Trienal Internacional de Grabado de Bitola, República de Macedonia, y un premio especial en la Exhibición de Arte Internacional en Petrozavodsk, Rusia, mientras que en 1994, nos representó en la Bienal de Sao Paulo, también como instalación. Esta pieza, de raigambre animista subsahariana, demuestra que cada una de sus partes por separado, como todas ellas en conjunto, se sostienen incuestionablemente, como unidades de una fuerte propuesta plástica mayor, de un preciosismo estético, de un aplomo y una seguridad en la ejecución insuperables que ha revalidado con sendos premios internacionales. En todo caso, Manos Ancestrales (1989) como Piernas Ancestrales (1990) se concibieron inicialmente como piezas independientes, para luego convertirse en partes de una unidad más amplia que pueden asumirse como módulos simbólicos que se transformaron para el ensamblaje del Animinchin (1990) como expusimos en el catálogo de su obra titulada Imágenes en Fuga de 1994. Y que, como apuntamos también entonces, entroncan con las pinturas a escala monumental que exhibiera el alemán Anselm Kiefer en Filadelfia en 1988.

En esta sinopsis de su obra, merece mencionarse igualmente, el díptico gigante Lati-dos (xilografía, 1992), ganador del Premio en la Décima Bienal del Grabado en San Juan en 1993. Su condición de grabado en madera, como sus dimensiones de un grande lienzo, constituyen, junto con el Animinchin, otro gesto cimarrón frente al marketing, mientras son ambas, remate del proceso plástico del dominio del dibujo y del grabado previos, donde aparecen, en distinta concentración las raíces ancestrales de nuestra idiosincrasia. Late la madre, late el feto, laten ambos, en una simbología de equilibrada ecología planetaria, donde el encuentro de dos mundos, conmemorado ese año, se resuelve, como anticipo y realidad, en el mestizaje. Evidentemente, esta obra, se ejecuta, contra el poder panóptico del Polifemo globalizador, con las dotes sobradas que sostienen una obra de dimensiones cimarronas, semejantes a las que ejecutaron sus colegas Dennis Mario Rivera, Luis Alonso, Haydee Landín, Jesús Cardona, Consuelo Gotay, José Peláez, Marta Pérez García, José Alicea y Antonio Martorell para inaugurar el cascarón del Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico en el año 2000, a solicitud de la gestora del proyecto, la profesora Adlín Ríos Rigau. La comisión de estos grabados le incorporaba al Museo yema y clara, pero los miopes chics que lo controlan, lo han convertido, a lomo de un País depauperado, en huevo Fabergé, en caja de resonancia y espectáculo para adornarse.

Se destacan igualmente en esta muestra, Danzarinas Ceremoniales (1995) grabado ganador de un premio en el Decimotercer Premio Internacional de la Incisión de Biella, Italia (1996), distinción que revalida su importancia y calidad en la Segunda Trienal Internacional de Grabado de El Cairo en 1997 con un premio semejante. En esta xilografía se exponen dos planchas de evidente contraste plástico. Ambos desnudos femeninos, contundentes y macizos, en un evidente homenaje a nuestra africanía, están manejados para destacar el espacio positivo y negativo del campo pictórico. El de la izquierda, rodeado de la sutileza del fondo rayado de la veta, contrasta con la maciza saturación del cuerpo que el sutil gris del lomo del muslo, le otorga a la imagen, la voluminosidad de la escultura; mientras que, simultáneamente, la forma queda asiluetada por una línea blanca, quebrada en algunas zonas, difuminada por el frotado en otras, que la destaca del fondo y que ya para entonces, es anticipatoria del tipo de línea blanca que el artista desarrolla en 1995 y que retoma en el 2003, contrastando con la línea de trazo oscuro y expresivo, tan característica de su época anterior. El grabado de la derecha, por su parte, trasmite la total contundencia del volumen escultórico, ayudado por el fondo neutro que logra fortalecer su iconografía al aislarlo, mientras el rayado de la veta, usado como recurso expresivo, crea unas luces que el artista coloca estratégicamente en el pecho, el lomo del muslo, la parte lateral del otro, el glúteo y la cadera, para destacar aún más, la condición volumétrica de la imagen.

Tampoco podemos prescindir de Refiguración I y Refiguración II (1999) y Metamorfosis (2000) con las que participó en la Tercera Trienal Internacional de Grabado de El Cairo en 1999, y en las que reasume y sintetiza de una manera nueva, tal y como indicamos en un artículo en la revista Boricua de Nueva York en el año 2000: los rasgos más destacados de sus grabados en pequeño formato de las últimas dos décadas entre los que se destacan aquellos de una sintonía expresionista hija de los maestros grabadores alemanes como Erich Heckel (1883-1970) y la secuela de alguno de sus continuadores, donde sus formas de líneas duras o quebradas y tensión sobrecogedora conforman el correlato plástico de una temática que, como la expresionista alemana en su momento, conforma una crítica patética del lado oscuro de nuestra condición humana y la angustia que produce y que en este caso, usan de base, el cuento surrealista de Kafka, Metamorfosis. Son ellos, plataforma donde la soberanía del trazo suelto propio de la pintura, semejante al gestual del expresionismo abstracto, se manifiesta aquí, sobreponiéndose y dominando sin obstáculos la dificultad que supone la resistencia de la superficie en un grabado de extracción. Se hace patente aquí, un feliz entrejuego entre el dominio técnico y la voluntad de arte (Kunstwollen) que lo dirige, constatando nuevamente, en este grabador de envergadura internacional, que esto que gozamos perceptivamente, solo puede hacerlo, quien puede, no quien quiere. Sobre su contenido, comentamos entonces: Acaso también éstas tres planchas manifiesten una especie de proceso, como el que manifestó en su serie Mascarada (1989), expuesta en la muestra de Humacao-Carolina, en la que describe los pasos de la aniquilación humana de una narcomaniaca. En cambio, García Rivera se coloca en su antípoda; no expone un proceso de aniquilación sino, en cambio, uno de liberación personal al afirmar su propia identidad o la colectiva; al demostrar (acaso) la especificidad cultural diferenciada de Puerto Rico, que como crisálida se enfrenta al país dirigente de la globalización homogenizadora, por su propio futuro.

Segundo desembarco
Menos de dos años después, para mayo del 2001, después de varias obras de acrílico sobre papel, nuestro artista se desdoblaba. Ponía un alto momentáneo a su producción perita y premiada de grabador, para internarse en el campo del color con la pintura de acrílico. Nuevamente, se mantenía on the move como es típico de los personajes de Kafka y del propio dinamismo interno del artista, pero este dinamismo no se gesta para hacerle cucasmonas al marketing, sino para encauzar un nuevo recurso plástico que le sirva de ámbito a su expresión propia. Pero como nada surge por generación espontánea, a estas obras le preceden exhibiciones de pintura desde la década de los 80. Una de 1980 y otra del 1985 en las que combinaba la estructura insoslayable de racionalidad inherente al dibujo con la pintura que, en su caso, ha tenido siempre hasta ahora como norte, lo esencialmente propio del pigmento: manifestar el espectáculo de sus cualidades sensoriales, incluso un hedonismo cromático que lo acerca a la Transvanguardia, heredado en alguna medida por la vía del expresionismo alemán de principios de siglo pasado asumido excelentemente. Por eso en el catálogo de la exposición Refiguraciones (2001), nominé a este binomio como una aventura Entre el Cielo y el Infierno, cosa que se sostiene sin duda también en el conjunto de obras que expone dos años después.

Tercer desembarco
En noviembre de 2003 el artista expone otra propuesta, en esta ocasión, desbordante, que nombró con el título general de Lenguaje Corporal. Al comentar las 12 obras de gran formato y continuo movimiento de dicha muestra, el que suscribe, añadía en un ensayo sobre dichas piezas que el balance entre lo apolíneo y lo dionisiaco evidente en ellas, no residía en los caminos trillados de la apariencia de las piezas. Evidentemente sobrecogedoras, exponen la cualidad tórrida y bien lograda del mejor lienzo expresionista, como un tratamiento miguelangelesco (y por ende), escultórico del cuerpo que él deserotiza, pues no es su interés seducirnos con esa potencialidad de nuestra condición humana para hacernos consumidores, sino para regalarnos un particular significado plástico y estético. En cambio, el balance entre la polaridad griega tan manida, reside a nuestro entender, en otro registro; en aquella instancia que, como expuse en anterior ocasión, es el resultado, parafraseando al mismo artista, de haberse perdido primero para poder descubrir lo universal que siempre entre los vivos se manifiesta como víspera. En una instancia donde queda disuelta la polaridad entre Apolo y Dionisio, entre el cielo y el infierno, para acceder a la antípoda del vértigo, donde el éxtasis es el soberano, a esa frontera ambivalente entre el cielo y la tierra donde se manifiesta la energía numinosa de la saga siempre inconclusa del verdadero proceso creativo, auténtico porque no copia resultados externos de los procesos ajenos, sino que se embarca en el proceso inédito de su propio viaje interior, hasta toparse con el umbral inédito de la fons vitae… De la Fuente de la Vida que se manifiesta siempre inalcanzable, como víspera perpetua. Y es ahí, al experimentar esa instancia, donde se entiende lo que ha dicho el intuitivo Gaudí (1852-1926): la originalidad es la vuelta al origen.

Cuarto y penúltimo desembarco
Si los anteriores comentarios pueden compendiar la exposición de 2003, la actual exposición de diciembre de 2005, es por su parte, ante el referente de aquella, y en medida considerable, un recorrido sinóptico y meditativo de las recaladas de los viajes anteriores, que el artista ha hecho a vela desplegada. Ahora, en cambio, parece recogerse en una especie de introspección autocrítica y estudiosa del catálogo o inventario de algunas de sus formas significativas previas. Conciente o inconscientemente, vuelve a sus maestros inspiradores, a sus propuestas adaptadas, exponiendo su rizoma de influencias. Me temo, que este recorrido centrípeto al rizoma de sus fuentes, provocará la colisión de las planchas internas de sus profundidades, de la que brotará un nuevo Tsunami plástico en el futuro, acaso como el intenso y arrollador que regaló en la exposición Refiguraciones (2001).

Ahora, mientras tanto, en esta selección retrospectiva, nuestro artista hace un recorrido (un nomadismo que terminaba con la noción de fronteras, como diría Bonito Oliva desde la óptica de la Transvanguardia) de apropiación o adopción por adaptación de aquellos artistas que ofrecen una experiencia formal enriquecedora o pertinente a su sintonía o prioridades plásticas y los adopta y adapta incluyéndose a sí mismo, demostrando en su adaptación, un proceso de encuentro con matices formales inéditos; con los que se ejercita para mantenerse en forma, para mantener en su bitácora, un recuento y dominio de distintos registros formales. Así, cultivando la figura humana como eje de mi obsesión visual, como dice el artista en su exposición en la Liga de Arte de San Juan en 1998, la cualidad escultórica y compositiva de la masa corporal de Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) se nos presenta en Función de su Efecto (1996), mientras recuerda a Edgar Degas (1834-1917) con sus toilettes en la pieza Tan Abstracto como Figurativo (2002) y a Francis Bacon (1909-1992) en el clima fantasmagórico de sus figuras inasibles y de evasivas distorsiones en tránsito (en fuga), con la obra Figura Enigmática (1991). Por su parte, la pieza Se Siente Acosado (2003), es una variante de su propia obra Lenguaje Corporal: Apolo de la Exposición Lenguaje Corporal (2003), pero en este último caso, la imagen resulta más suelta e intensa que la anterior suya, pues como ya lo ha expuesto en otras propuestas, exhibe un manejo expresionista más intenso de push and pull, entre la figura y el campo de fuerzas que rodea, penetra y reverbera el cuerpo desnudo que presenta en tensión y movimiento. Y con ese campo de fuerzas García Rivera confirma en su obra, lo que Pierre Francastel (1900-1970) identifica en aquel que era para entonces arte contemporáneo, campo de fuerzas que se alejaba y contradecía a la cosmovisión renacentista que tenía la caja estereoscópica como símbolo definitorio.

Correspondientes a la lucha de los campos de fuerza son las piezas Autodefensa con Amarillo (2002), Coraza Protectora con Amarillo (2002), En su Particular Pesadilla (2002) y Criatura Tímida en Amarillo (2002). Presenciamos no obstante, una propuesta estética más atenida a sutilezas detectadas por los entendidos, que al efecto y tensión más dramático y evidente de otras piezas de esta exposición (como por ejemplo, la Figuración: El Motivo (1998) en la vena colorista del expresionismo de Die Brücke pero con un manejo más abstractivo del desnudo) a la que se adscriben incluso, otras piezas de exposiciones anteriores. Nos referimos a un experimento formal en su caso, eficaz y logrado, entre dibujo suelto siempre, gestual y eficacísimo, y las manchas amarillas como zonas abstractas de contraste cromático y tensión formal. En el caso de la pieza En su Particular Pesadilla, a la concepción maciza y rotunda del cuerpo ejecutado con los mínimos elementos, le sobrepone la masa amarilla del trazo gestual que ocupa el espacio dejado a la luz en la esquina superior izquierda y su costado, compensada con el tenso balance cromático de otra mancha más limitada, diluida y menos intensa colocada en la esquina inferior derecha de la pieza. En contraste, el proceso manifiesto en la pieza Criatura Tímida en Amarillo, es el inverso: la mancha de pigmento se crea primero y se coloca soberana en el campo plástico como entidad autónoma, convirtiéndose en referente plástico inicial y en reto que obliga a descubrir o acomodar la forma o perspectiva corporal que mejor corresponda a enfatizar el campo de fuerzas. Con estas piezas, García Rivera entra en un proceso más intenso de simplificación formal, ayudado por un particular trazo diluido del dibujo, mezcla tinta china, acrílico y agua, hasta llegar a la frontera de la abstracción casi cubista, mientras el dibujo de trazos certeros y no menos espontáneos, entiende soberbiamente esa anatomía plenamente captada hasta llevarla a su máxima simplificación recapituladora. Todo ello para recalcar sobre el soporte, en este caso, el papel, una realidad plástica de una particular sutileza estética que coincide con la definición que hace Maurice Denis (1870-1943) en 1890 sobre el llamado arte contemporáneo de entonces. En la pieza que nos ocupa, esa sutileza estética que logra dentro de este campo de fuerzas, reside en la tensión plástica entre el elemento formal cromático y la representación corporal que en muchos de los episodios de la pintura expresionista de García Rivera, entendemos ha sido el logro de su propuesta estética unificadora.

Finalmente, quisiera aproximarme a un fenómeno constante en la plástica del artista que a estas alturas de su creación plástica no debemos dejar de puntualizar: nos referimos a la particular relación del artista con las formas que crea. Sobre el proceso al que intentamos aproximarnos, oigamos al propio García Rivera en 1998: Medito lo que quiero proyectar. Observo la figura e internalizo su forma; así permito que el trance, el instinto, el automatismo, sirvan de dirección sobre la superficie. Hay que perderse para poder descubrir. También para añadir más significado a este ritual, cierro los ojos dejando que el recuerdo, la memoria de la forma dentro y fuera de mí se refigure sobre la superficie (énfasis nuestro). El proceso creativo descrito por García Rivera, pone al descubierto, a nuestro entender, lo que Alfonso López Quintás (1928), desde una perspectiva antropológica define como un encuentro: un entreveramiento activo de dos o más realidades (persona con persona, persona con cosa) que son (ambos) centros de iniciativas que ofrecen ciertas posibilidades y pueden recibir las que son ofrecidas. Para ello, es imprescindible cancelar, en lo posible, las distancias, de modo que pueda establecerse un encuentro dialógico, es decir, un diálogo. Y para que lo haya, tiene que haber tanto cercanía como generosidad. La apertura a la generosidad, permite no solo la cercanía, sino, precisamente, por razón de ella, el descubrimiento de las potencias de aquel o de aquello que es objeto de mi apertura, con lo cual, las potencias que se develan, quedan asumidas por el receptor como parte de sus expectativas. Por ende, el otro (en el caso de una persona) o lo otro, (en el caso de un objeto) puede dejar de serlo por virtud de este acercamiento, para convertirse, según López Quintás, en campos de realidades, algo más flexible, delimitable que los objetos.

En la infinidad de los objetos con potencial de convertirse en campos de realidades, podemos incluir, naturalmente, a los géneros plásticos. En consecuencia, éstos pueden convertirse, además, en campos de realidades y por ende, en ámbitos de encuentro por ser fuente inagotable de posibilidades creativas. A nuestro juicio, en García Rivera, como en todo artista radical, los ámbitos de encuentro se manifiestan porque se aúnan tanto la aptitud, esa disposición o habilidad excepcional para manejar los medios plásticos, como el talento, esa capacidad de encontrar a través de ellos. En nuestro caso, la unión en ósmosis recíproca de ambas condiciones, el dominio técnico y la capacidad intuitiva (comprensión pre-racional), convierten el género plástico que García Rivera maneje (el que fuere) en un ámbito: en la instancia, donde según él mismo dice, se pierde para poder descubrir, y dónde se realiza, en consecuencia, un encuentro genuino, porque tanto la aptitud como el talento unificados osmóticamente, se convierten en la herramienta de proyección personal del mensaje. Mensaje que provoca a su vez, como él mismo dice de manera recapituladora, que la memoria de la forma dentro y fuera de él, se refigure en la superficie. Acaso pueda aplicarse aquí, lo que acota recientemente Teresa del Conde, crítica de arte mexicana, de que siempre hay un pensamiento inmemorial inscrito en ”nuestra fábrica interna” (frase de Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908-1961) en su Fenomenología de la Percepción). En resumen, Martín utiliza los recursos que maneja porque con ellos puede decir o trasmitir lo que quiere ya que con ellos, ha logrado el ámbito natural de expresión de aquello que descubre. Y, ahí, en el proceso de configuración de la obra de arte, se desdibuja la distancia entre forma y contenido y se hace patente, como lo entiende Arnold Hauser (1892-1978) y Georg Lukács (1885-1971), que el acto creador es la ejecución y no la visión (Peter Ludz (1931), recapitulando las ideas dialogadas entre Hauser y Lukács) pues los medios de representación pierden entonces el carácter de “instrumentos meramente neutrales”para convertirse en elementos constitutivos del acto creador mismo. Con lo que visión artística, contenido, forma y material se funden en una síntesis en el proceso de configuración de la obra de arte (ibid). Por eso, Martín, como Picasso (1881-1973), no se dedica a buscar sino a encontrar: Mi objetivo, ?dice el malagueño universal?, no es mostrar lo que busco sino lo que encuentro, e igual que el más grande latifundista de formas del siglo XX, García Rivera manifiesta, en los pocos lustros de su prolífera y esforzada producción, una dotación proteica, multi-forme para las formas artísticas que, a nuestro entender, parangona a nivel nacional, con el variado catálogo plástico de los octogenarios maestros Julio Rosado del Valle y Augusto Marín; y me arriesgo a pronosticar que puede ser el mismo cauce que parece seguir, con ingente espíritu y seguridad evidentes, la obra todavía breve y en auge del joven Carlos Santiago.

Porque intuye y asume todo ello, García Rivera no cae en la tentación, como apunta Jean Baudrillard (1929), de la promiscuidad de todos los intercambios, y de todos los productos, distanciándose del esperanto estético que alienta la globalización, producto del travestismo que vive de la indistinción entre buscar y encontrar tal y como explicaba el que suscribe, en el catálogo de Estampas Taurinas de Augusto Marín (p.15). Por eso, es que no es el último en la línea de producción, y por ende, no cae en el travestismo de copiar búsquedas o resultados de otros, ni obedece al Canon de ningún centro de emisión, sino que como dice Gaudí está inmerso en la vuelta al origen. Y sucede que, por los ámbitos eficaces de encuentro que crea, es el primero, no el último, en el proceso semiótico de difusión de signos, como apuntamos en un ensayo para la exposición Lenguaje Corporal (2003). Por todo ello, Martín, el intuitivo, detecta y se mantiene a distancia de los cantos de sirena tanto de la Globalización como de la dimensión negativa del Sistema del Arte, pues no duda que uno es hijo del otro, y que ambos se retroalimentan de su propia promiscuidad y necrofilia. En consecuencia, nuestro artista, vinculado a la Vida, se sitúa como pocos en las artes plásticas nacionales, en las antípodas de estos gastados simulacros globalizadores que tienen a muchos creadores plásticos en esta ínsula como a perros sarnosos que se muerden el rabo. Y la lucha esforzada de Martín por su saludable inmunización defensiva, lo conduce a acceder a un ámbito de encuentro propio y cada vez, inédito, permitiendo en su obra la manifestación del kairós: del momento oportuno del desvelamiento estético que se manifiesta como la víspera permanente, nunca agotada, de lo que en última instancia es la Fons Vitae. Y es desde esa Fuente de la Vida, que lucha por abrevar en su Origen, que la obra de Martín García Rivera se devela como signo del arte mayor, regalo del talento del artista y del patrocinio profético de esta Casa. Porque como dijo Gustave Flaubert (1821-1880), El talento es una larga paciencia, y como dijo Paul Valéry (1871-1945), La mayor libertad nace del mayor rigor porque lo que se hace sin esfuerzo se hace sin nosotros…

Santiago Román-Ramírez
Noviembre de 2005
Martín García ends

Carlos Santiago: RAGING AND RATIONAL

By Dr. Rubén Alejandro Moreira
Translation by José A. Peláez

According to Octavio Paz, Picasso painted with the haste of a century coming to an end. Carlos Santiago, though beginning a new one, is caught in a similar vortex of production, of paintings that show a rapid maturity, along with an intensity and an aesthetic quality, surprising in a work developed in just a few months. In this show, initiated by Galerías Prinardi and intended to lay a bridge between Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic, there’s ample evidence of Carlos’ two seemingly contradictory but harmoniously integrated aspects of his soul: Rationality against rage, reason in a deadly duel with confusion.

If we follow closely the postulates from his earlier bestiary, we find ourselves at the center of human contradictions, conveyed with absolute conviction and a masterful composition constructed with a very loose brush-work. He follows that earlier work with paintings like: Gesture With Rabid Bitch and Bull (Gestual con perra rabiosa y toro), heartily (Con ganas), Digest it (Digiérelo) and With Spurs Showing (Con las espuelas por fuera), all done in 2004. There’s a clear difference in the atmosphere of each of these works, and though violence is a common theme to all of them, they’re diverse in their visual approach. Gestural With Rabid Bitch and Bull, presents the figures of such animals, coexisting among free-form color patches. You can sense the turbulence in the figures, heads formed by nervous strokes, the tits, the fangs and legs almost blurred deliberately, creating a movement or tension. The atmosphere is definitely one of struggle, antagonistic from every angle you look at it. Different genders, different species, but the same rage.

With Heartily, Santiago puts irony and distance between the painting and the spectator. A lone black bull in the midst of a red field: Brute force, charging beast… the artist not only expresses confrontation and challenge within the bull-ring but perhaps sexual premeditation. Every contest is a libidinous undertaking. On the more ironic side, we find a painting like Digest it. The only apparently digestible thing in this work is a banana at the bottom of the painting. The rest of the composition is an atmosphere in between grey and white, invaded by slight patches that recall flies. From a plastic point of view, a dialogue between the figurative and the abstract is established, just as in so many other of Santiago’s work. In a very stark, almost neutral composition, virtually the only figurative object, the banana is questioned by the more abstract part of the painting. Santiago’s rationalization is imposed on us, making us realize the more intellectual aspect of his work.

Rage emerges within the context of this exhibition with sharp edges. With Spurs Showing, is another painting symbolic of the constant fighting and bickering with which we live in our contemporary Puerto Rico. As in other paintings of his personal bestiary, Santiago employs
roosters as his main characters. Here the birds appear to compete in a race, sights set on a distant point, the whites, yellows and reds in turmoil, all with a defiant stance. Even if they’re only running, the very visible spurs suggest that a confrontation may ensue. They can also be symbolic of what has become the Puerto Rican national sport: Politics. That may very well be, because these paintings were manufactured right before elections.

The political stance in the work of Carlos Santiago is tightly linked to dignity. Rage in these paintings is the manifestation of dignity violated, and thus they become an ethical pronouncement. But this proposition is buried within metaphors, rich with interpretations, that we have to sort to get to the essential. Opposed Paths ( Caminos contrarios) is a very simple statement: Two figures, one standing in an upright position, the other upside down in a kind of visual oxymoron. Santiago is not concerned with the novelty that could arise from a confrontation between our world and the characters in the painting. It’s just that they travel through different worlds, and that’s the way it is. A more emotional reaction is elicited from Thus We Are (Así estamos). Two figures appear tied upside down, watched closely by fierce dogs. This torture scene is not an isolated circumstance but a depiction of our modern way of life. The average citizen is tied, violated, tortured and constantly watched by the Global Positioning System, by computers and tapped telephones, suffering the aggression of a world that has immobilized and alienated him even from himself. The fact that the painting is virtually colorless, serves to emphasize that this is an undeniable occurrence, because it’s right in front of us in “black and white”.

The rest of the paintings in this show are as passionate, with a mix of the visual and the existential. Anguish (Angustia), Joe Pigeon Never Played (Joe Paloma nunca jugó), When Painting Overtakes Me (Cuando la pintura me invade) and Watched by the Ghosts (Los fantasmas acechan), all done in 2004, reveal the introspective side of this young artist expressionism. Though this movement
has been characterized with more or less conventional tendencies among the more avant garde trends, it has led to explorations in terms of color treatment, atmosphere and distortion of the body, that nurtured exceptional artists since the last half of the XX century up to our days. Carlos may very well be one of these. From Spengler to Heidegger and Sartre, anguish has been a sentiment that embodies not only fear of the unknown, but of those things which we cannot state clearly. Expressionist artists such as Ensor, Münch, Kierchner and Kiefer have all dealt extensively with a feeling of anguish.

In the aforementioned paintings by Santiago, transpires an aura of distress that, because of it’s materialization in these works, is therefore vanquished. Joe Pigeon Never Played, kind of reminds us of Palés Matos, but instead of the drowsiness and dryness of Topografía, the main character is surrounded by things that instead of cheering him, seem to engulf and suffocate him. The anguish of the artist is a point of departure for change, to take a closer look of his own reality. When Painting Overtakes Me, points to the artist more as a passional victim than as a mythical hero. The organic abstraction and the gestural blemishes have taken over the central character, or at least seem to be establishing a dialogue that has the effect of decentralizing him.

Because reason and rage have an exact duel in this exhibition, Santiago tells us in Watched by Ghosts, that the past, be it distant or recent, not only influences him but helps him to rationally measure all the violent expressions precipitated by life. If an artist has a vision of a hell, he must be faithful to it, even if it is a reflection. The reflexion, though, is rational because it exposes the reincarnation of an incessant struggle up to the last breath of life.

Carlos Santiago end

Cesar Santalo

The Art of Controversy
BY VANESSA GARCIA
Special to The Miami Herald
It was a teenage job dishing out ice cream that led Cesar Santalo to learn what it meant to be a Cuban in Miami.
”I’ve never been to Cuba, but when I was 15 I worked at the Carvel on 87th and Bird, next to La Carreta,” says Santalo. “That’s where I was really exposed to these old Cuban guys who talked all day, “que si Castro this, que si Castro that. And WCUBA was on all day long.”
Santalo, who had moved to Miami from Baltimore with his parents when he was 8, seared those afternoons into his soul. Twenty years later, those conversations are the cornerstone of his most recent art installation.
A collage artist, Santalo’s latest work is called 46, named for the number of years Fidel Castro has been in power. The installation, which has attracted the attention of Miami art dealer Bernice Steinbaum, is made up of two narrow free-standing wooden walls that Santalo built, painted black, and filled with 92 Cuban cafeteras (coffee makers), which he drilled into the makeshift walls. From those Cuban cafeteras comes the blare of Cuban radio and recordings of Castro’s speeches.
”That sounds horrible, daddy,” says Angela, Santalo’s 6-year-old daughter.
Later, Santalo will explain that his installation is meant to sound horrible.
His work — one of six installations he has created — is designed to reflect the discord between the Cuban exile community and Cubans who never left. The two communities, however, have a common bond: the cafetera.
On one side of the six-foot wall are 46 rusted Cuban cafetera tops — meant to look like megaphones through which the audience can hear Castro’s speeches. On the other side are 46 new cafetera bottoms — meant to look like speakers, and through which the audience hears live Cuban exile radio stations: Radio Mambi, WCUBA, and Radio Paz.
When 46 was shown at the Wesley Center at the University of Miami last May, it caused quite a stir.
Santalo recalls walking into the gallery to check on the installation and finding it turned off. He asked the guard, who told him Cuban visitors were coming in and shutting it off, saying they “couldn’t stand the voice of that criminal, Fidel.”
Others, however, had a different take.
“A young woman walked into the exhibit who worked in the maintenance department. She said she stopped outside the gallery in the hallway, out of respect, because she heard the Cuban National Anthem being played.”
”You have to walk through it to really get the whole effect,” Santalo says.
”I see both halves of the cafetera,” he says, standing in the middle of the two black sound walls at his South Miami home, raising his voice to get his point across above the noise. ”This is what I’ve heard my whole life. When you walk through, one side is saying something and the other something else, but you can’t understand either,” he says. “Both sides do not want to accept the other’s reality.”
‘GENTLE’ COMEDY
Santalo, now 35, has just completed his master of fine arts thesis at the University of Miami.
”Cesar has a gentle and hysterical comedy,” says Brian Curtis, one of four to oversee Santalo’s MFA thesis, “which often seemingly derailed the direction of [in class] critiques but later brought them back. It made for a delightful two years.”
Santalo is a senior designer, animator and illustrator for Univision Network as well as an adjunct professor of illustration for the University of Miami and a freelance graphic designer.
And ”an awesome, awesome dad,” adds Carmen Santalo, his wife. (They have three children — two boys and a girl.)
It makes sense that Santalo’s chosen art medium is the collage.
”Even the installations are collage for me,” Santalo says.
Santalo names Romare Bearden as one of his influences — Bearden was a mid-20th century collage artist who worked during the Harlem Renaissance, depicting the lives of the people of the Manhattan neighborhood.
Much of Santalo’s inspiration for his collage portraits came from a group of city kids he taught while studying at Pratt Institute in New York, where he received his bachelor’s degree in fine arts.
‘These were kids who their grandparents would bring in on Saturdays for a program called Saturday Art School. I had them do a self-portrait project and I took pictures of them to help them. Years later, I was looking through my files and found them. `Wow, these are great.’ ”
From far away, the collages are colorful portraits, sometimes looking as if done by brush. A closer look, however, reveals Santalo’s artistry: Photos of J.Lo and J.C. Penny slacks make up bodies; J. Crew plaid makes for facial shading; pictures of rims turn to bling — even Tupac makes an appearance.
Last year, Florida A&M University selected one of Santalo’s Untitled collage portraits for an award.
”We were looking for something with vibrancy and color, but also something that represented the different cultures that are part of our university,” explains Harris Wiltsheri, assistant professor of art at FAMU, and former program administrator for the Art in State Buildings program. “The image is of a person of color and we have a history as a black university.”
Santalo says he couldn’t have been more pleased. ”I was so proud when they bought the piece,” he says. “I don’t exactly look like the person who makes my work.”
Santalo is bespectacled, and simple of dress. He drives a Volvo. Yet, he can relate to the cultures he has lived in.
Take his collages called The Guajiros — Guajiro translates loosely into ”country boy” and refers, in some of the collages, to the older generation of Cubans in Miami — the ones that inhabit corner cafeteria/restaurants like La Carreta next to the Carvel.
”Those early Guajiros I made are people I grew up with,” Santalo says, pointing to a 2001 piece called Guajiro de la Ciudad (The City Guajiro). For this collage, he used a Starbucks paper cup and masking tape. He made the cigar the Guajiro is smoking out of sandpaper. ‘The sandpaper says `fine’ on it, like a fine cigar, but I didn’t notice that until later,” he says with a laugh.
For Carmen, the best pieces are those that relate to his Cuban roots. ”I like those because I can see a piece of him in them,” says Carmen, also a Cuban American.
Santalo will tell you that sometimes his kids name his paintings. Later, as he points to the Untitled piece purchased by FAMU, and talks about the racial tensions within the piece, his daughter chimes in: “Actually dad, that’s not a black guy, that’s a rainbow guy.”
”Yeah,” Santalo laughs, “a rainbow guy.”

University of Puerto Rico Recruiting U.S. Puerto Rican Students

UPR busca estudiantes latinos

Por The Associated Press

(11:02 a.m.) Se realizarán charlas en Estados Unidos para los que quieran obtener un grado universitario en la Isla.

SAN JUAN — La Universidad de Puerto Rico (UPR) y la Administración de Asuntos Federales de Puerto Rico (PRFAA, en inglés) arreciarán esta semana en Estados Unidos una campaña en busca de jóvenes puertorriqueños o latinos que deseen estudiar en la isla.

“Los latinos continuamos rezagados en la obtención de grados universitarios. El aprovechamiento académico de nuestros jóvenes es imprescindible para el desarrollo socio-económico y político de nuestras comunidades”, señaló hoy Eduardo Bhatia, director ejecutivo de PRFAA, cuya sede principal está en Washington.

El programa en el que podrían estudiar los jóvenes es bilingüe y se ofrece en los recintos universitarios de Humacao, Cayey y Río Piedras.

Bhatia destacó que al 2003, tan solo 13.1% de los boricuas mayores de 25 años que residen en los Estados Unidos tenía un bachillerato, en comparación al 34.8% de los blancos, 18.5% de los afro-americanos y el 59% de los asiáticos.

En términos de estudios graduados, el panorama es aún más precario: tan solo 3.1% de los puertorriqueños mayores de 25 años había obtenido diploma de estudios graduados, en comparación a los blancos (8.7%), afro-americanos (4.1%) y asiáticos (15.6%).

Esta semana, la UPR y PRFAA realizarán charlas sobre el programa bilingüe en Connecticut y Massachussets. En octubre y noviembre, las charlas se moverán a Pennsylvania, Nueva Jersey y Florida.

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