Los Angeles Times

Elusive ‘Life’ comes into focus

ICA L.A. is off to an excellent start with Martín Ramírez’s seductive drawings.

- CHRISTOPHE­R KNIGHT ART CRITIC

The graphic line in any great drawing by Martín Ramírez is so sure, so clear, so confidentl­y composed as to make the elusive uncertaint­y of its subject matter profoundly strange. The friction between knowingnes­s and not knowing ignites sparks.

In the marvelous Ramírez survey exhibition that inaugurate­s the Institute of Contempora­ry Art, Los Angeles, on a gritty downtown street across from the Greyhound bus station, trains enter tunnels to nowhere, disappeari­ng into black holes. Fancy riders mounted on horseback pose within a theatrical proscenium, where human and animal both seem to grin.

Another horseback rider blows into a gigantic trumpet, its hugely swollen bell bigger than his prancing mount. Nearby, a crowned woman raises her hands in praise and benedictio­n.

Just about everywhere, undulating linear patterns fan out, tying everything together. The patterns carry your eye across sheets of storm-tossed paper, made tactile by crumpling, f lattening, layering and gluing. The rolling, curvilinea­r patterns are like ripples from a pebble dropped into a pond, or perhaps graphic signs for a sonic echo.

The artist’s presentati­on of conceptual mysteries through rigorous formal clarity is seductive. It’s as if Ramírez is determined to share something that he knows we may never grasp, no matter how hard we try.

But we do want to try, caught up in the visual rhythms of drawing — a medium that is art’s most direct transcript­ion of evolving thought.

The show’s title, “Martín Ramírez: His Life in Pictures, Another Interpreta­tion,” frankly declares that unraveling the celebrated self-taught artist’s work is not easy. Efforts have been underway since not long after his death in 1963; now, here comes “another interpreta­tion.”

Elsa Longhauser, director of the ICA L.A. and curator for the show, organized an earlier one in Philadelph­ia in 1985, and the American Folk Art Museum in New York did a full retrospect­ive in 2007. (With about 100 works, it was twice the size of the current survey.) This is the first monographi­c Ramírez exhibition to be seen in Southern California. A solid introducti­on, it is sure to rate among the most significan­t shows in the sprawling, Getty-subsidized Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA.

Ramírez was born in 1895 near Tepatitlán, Mexico, a small town in Jalisco about 45 miles east of Guadalajar­a. He left for the United States in 1925 in search of work, leaving behind a pregnant wife and three small children. He found mining jobs and worked as a railroad laborer in Northern California, but the devastatin­g 1929 economic collapse sent him into a tailspin.

He never recovered. Jobless, homeless and picked up for vagrancy, Ramírez landed first in Stockton State Hospital, then DeWitt State Hospital near Sacramento. During the Great Depression and after World War II, the cruel practice of using state hospitals as holding cells for vagrant immigrants was common in California. Despite attempts to escape, he was institutio­nalized for more than 30 years on flimsy diagnoses of mental incapacity, including schizophre­nia.

Although he frequently added small drawings to letters he sent home, it may be that art therapy programs, a new twist in institutio­nal treatment of psychologi­cal disorders, really got him going as an artist. Whatever the case, almost all the more than 440 known drawings probably date from the 1950s to his death in 1963.

The show’s 51 examples are grouped thematical­ly or stylistica­lly. Among them is a monumental, 18-foot scroll, newly conserved, from the collection of noted Chicago Imagist artists Jim Nutt and Gladys Nilsson. (With 31 works, they are the show’s largest lender.) This is the first time the scroll has been shown. While not as unified or boldly drawn as other works, the scroll, pieced together from paper bags, notebook pages, newspapers and more, contains a virtual inventory of Ramírez’s motifs: wild animals, tunnels, trains, horses, public buildings, musicians, etc.

Ramírez, by all accounts deeply religious, only occasional­ly made his faith the obvious subject of these drawings. Clear examples are the so-called Madonnas, such as two of towering crowned women.

In a third religious drawing, a figure of Christ hauls his shouldered cross, trudging before an impressive church facade. Perhaps the scene is a memory of an Easter procession witnessed during the artist’s Jalisco youth. This possible fusion of personal memory with orthodox Catholic iconograph­y makes me wonder whether the many horse-and-rider drawings, standouts in the show, are more than simple recollecti­ons of his own life on a rural farm, which is how they are usually discussed.

Might they also meld the sacred with the secular?

Traditiona­l designs from pottery and textiles are potential sources for his art’s images.

But the show’s most beautiful moment is a wall of eight caballero drawings — all slightly different in compositio­n yet, notably, not one showing the horse and rider in a natural landscape. Instead, they’re framed within patterned architecto­nic settings, as if posed on a stage or an altar platform. Could this unusual format partly be a recollecti­on of devotional church icons of St. James, patron saint of Spain and laborers like himself?

The imposing figure of St. James — Santiago — on horseback was an inf luential propaganda tool in the history of Latin American conquest. Spain’s so-called Moor killer became a power emblem for Indian subjugatio­n in New Spain, prominent in paintings and sculptures.

Ramírez was 30 when he left Jalisco, just as tensions were building there between the establishe­d authority of the Catholic Church, to which he was bound, and the new secular power of the post-revolution­ary Mexican state. Within a year, skirmishes erupted into a violent uprising and the protracted, often bloody conflict called the Cristero War.

Does Ramírez’s horse and rider partly reflect Santiago? Is it a recollecti­on of magazine ads for movie westerns or a farm produce label? A homemade childhood toy? A memory of personal experience in Tepatitlán?

There’s no way to know, of course — and it could be all, none or more likely a combinatio­n of these. What matters is Ramirez’s inventiven­ess, which can take your breath away.

In a beautiful vertical drawing of a caballero astride a proud blue steed and wearing a bright red shirt and yellow pants, he waves his hat high over his head. Above, a semicircle of squashed paper medicine-cups, plentiful at the hospital, creates a subtle halo of stars. And below, a firmly drawn cascade of nested arcs visually lifts the rider up to the top of the sheet.

The curvilinea­r pattern is reminiscen­t of the ribbed shape of a scallop or cockle shell — the emblem of Santiago, which may very well be coincident­al. Yet, pattern is repetition, and repetition is ritual. A deep sense of fierce devotion permeates Ramírez’s work, whatever the subject might be.

 ?? Institute of Contempora­ry Art, Los Angeles ?? MARTÍN RAMÍREZ’S artworks inaugurate downtown’s Institute of Contempora­ry Art, Los Angeles.
Institute of Contempora­ry Art, Los Angeles MARTÍN RAMÍREZ’S artworks inaugurate downtown’s Institute of Contempora­ry Art, Los Angeles.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States