Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits

Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits

Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits

Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits

Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, EPMA.

Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits April 19 - August 7, 2019 Dede Rogers Gallery, El Paso Museum of Art Gloria Osuna Pérez (b. 1947, d. 1999) depicted people with deep, cinnamon-colored skin, making them appear more than portraits of friends and family. The artist, who painted but also worked with clay, called her paintings “supraportraits,” meaning beyond or above portraits. This exhibition, drawn from the El Paso Museum of Art’s collection and including key loans, features several of Osuna Pérez’s paintings, an installation, as well as original book illustrations that suggest for her the idea of a vessel was always present. Gloria Osuna Pérez may have turned to her own family and life for inspiration, but her images of people—children with elders, life-long friends—are universal. They speak to the vessels that bind people and community for us all. Support for this exhibition is provided by the El Paso Museum of Art Foundation.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, El Paso Museum of Art, Photograph by Alex Marks.

Uploaded by: Kevin Burns

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Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, EPMA.

Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits April 19 - August 7, 2019 Dede Rogers Gallery, El Paso Museum of Art Gloria Osuna Pérez (b. 1947, d. 1999) depicted people with deep, cinnamon-colored skin, making them appear more than portraits of friends and family. The artist, who painted but also worked with clay, called her paintings “supraportraits,” meaning beyond or above portraits. This exhibition, drawn from the El Paso Museum of Art’s collection and including key loans, features several of Osuna Pérez’s paintings, an installation, as well as original book illustrations that suggest for her the idea of a vessel was always present. Gloria Osuna Pérez may have turned to her own family and life for inspiration, but her images of people—children with elders, life-long friends—are universal. They speak to the vessels that bind people and community for us all. Support for this exhibition is provided by the El Paso Museum of Art Foundation.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, El Paso Museum of Art, Photograph by Alex Marks.

Uploaded by: Kevin Burns

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, EPMA.

Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits April 19 - August 7, 2019 Dede Rogers Gallery, El Paso Museum of Art Gloria Osuna Pérez (b. 1947, d. 1999) depicted people with deep, cinnamon-colored skin, making them appear more than portraits of friends and family. The artist, who painted but also worked with clay, called her paintings “supraportraits,” meaning beyond or above portraits. This exhibition, drawn from the El Paso Museum of Art’s collection and including key loans, features several of Osuna Pérez’s paintings, an installation, as well as original book illustrations that suggest for her the idea of a vessel was always present. Gloria Osuna Pérez may have turned to her own family and life for inspiration, but her images of people—children with elders, life-long friends—are universal. They speak to the vessels that bind people and community for us all. Support for this exhibition is provided by the El Paso Museum of Art Foundation.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, El Paso Museum of Art, Photograph by Alex Marks.

Uploaded by: Kevin Burns

Comments

Add a comment
Thank you for your comment

Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, EPMA.

Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits April 19 - August 7, 2019 Dede Rogers Gallery, El Paso Museum of Art Gloria Osuna Pérez (b. 1947, d. 1999) depicted people with deep, cinnamon-colored skin, making them appear more than portraits of friends and family. The artist, who painted but also worked with clay, called her paintings “supraportraits,” meaning beyond or above portraits. This exhibition, drawn from the El Paso Museum of Art’s collection and including key loans, features several of Osuna Pérez’s paintings, an installation, as well as original book illustrations that suggest for her the idea of a vessel was always present. Gloria Osuna Pérez may have turned to her own family and life for inspiration, but her images of people—children with elders, life-long friends—are universal. They speak to the vessels that bind people and community for us all. Support for this exhibition is provided by the El Paso Museum of Art Foundation.

Area: Central / Downtown

Source: Installation view, Gloria Osuna Pérez: Beyond Portraits, El Paso Museum of Art, Photograph by Alex Marks.

Uploaded by: Kevin Burns

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