San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

GETTING TO KNOW ROXANA VELÁSQUEZ

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Throughout her decade as executive director of The San Diego Museum of Art and her many years in leadership of the top museums in Mexico, Roxana Velásquez has been focused on making the art world accessible to people of all background­s.

Even before the coronaviru­s pandemic led to the shuttering of many indoor gathering spaces, she was mindful of geography, illness or other factors that may keep people from visiting a museum. So she was more than ready for the challenges brought forth by COVID-19, but is also planning for the days when we can all visit the museum in Balboa Park again in the future.

Before joining The San Diego Museum of Art, Velásquez served as executive director of El Palacio de Bellas Artes, Museo Nacional De Arte and Museo Nacional de San Carlos, all in Mexico City. She joined the Name Drop San Diego podcast to discuss Mexico’s contributi­ons to the art world, how she fell in love with art and what art teaches us about humankind. Read excerpts here or listen to the full episode in your favorite listening app. On how she got into art: I’m really very fortunate because I was surrounded by art since I was born. I grew up in Mexico City and of course the art there is all over, it’s on the streets. I had the real fortune to have parents who loved and understood very well the relevance of art. They appreciate concerts and piano. I studied piano, classic piano, as my siblings did. That was a regular thing to do. And attending museums and visiting pre-columbian ruins and temples or 20th-century masterpiec­es was our every week. There was no option. The schools also took you to museums. That was part of the curriculum. It comes from my parents, from the place I was educated and grew up, but also comes from the real, fundamenta­l Constituti­on of the country.

In the Mexican Constituti­on, the culture and art is a right to every citizen.

On curation:

First of all, you start by seeing, what do you have in your collection? What are the strengths? Because not every museum has the same quality of the same amount of things. The San Diego Museum of Art is the — with a capital ‘T’ — the museum of art for San Diego, and it was created by our founders having the Spanish and the Hispanic art in mind. So if you see our building and you see Velásquez and Zurbarán and Rivera and El Greco carved in the facade and if you always take a little minute to think, this was inspired in Salamanca, Spain, in the university. There was a will to make understand­able the richness of the Hispanic culture. I had to build on that strength. With those names, we’re one of the best collection­s of Spanish art outside Spain. You should know that, and of course, we should all be so proud because it’s been recognized as such. There are books published — I participat­ed in all of those — and it’s about San Diego having that.

On what art teaches you about humankind:

Artists are in a special category. They are seventh heavens, if you think of Dante or classicism, literature. They are in the upper scale of the thinkers. That’s the way we have been presented. What I have learned through art is exactly the opposite. The artists are regular people, common human beings as you and me and anybody with a special talent and capacity to see things.

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