San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Local artists get a boost

Four sculptors and mixed-media artists receive the San Diego Art Prize, created to recognize excellence in the region

- BY CAMERON FOZI cameron.fozi@sduniontri­bune.com

Soon after her arrival in San Diego in the late 1990s, Patricia Frischer made her way to the Museum of Contempora­ry Art San Diego. There, Frischer asked for a visual arts directory — an authoritat­ive almanac of art classes, services and profession­als in the region.

Frischer said she was laughed at for her request. At the time, there was no such directory in San Diego.

Frischer went on to found and coordinate the San Diego Visual Arts Network (SDVAN), an online directory and calendar of visual arts events.

For more than 15 years, SDVAN has also presented the San Diego Art Prize. Inspired by the British Turner Prize, the award aims to bring greater awareness to the quality of visual arts in San Diego.

“It was (made) to escalate — in the same way as the Turner Prize did — the distinctio­n and the excellence of work by artists in San Diego,” Frischer said.

For 2023, the San Diego Art Prize has been awarded to four sculpture and mixed-media artists: Anya Gallaccio, Janelle Iglesias, Joe Yorty and Mely Barragán. In the past, the prize has awarded artists between $500 and $2,000, Frischer said.

From Oct. 28, 2023, through Jan. 13, 2024, the four artists’ works will be showcased at the San Diego Central Library Gallery in an exhibition curated by Lara Bullock, senior civic art manager for the city of San Diego.

Here are profiles of the four artists.

Anya Gallaccio

Much of the Turner Prize-nominated artist’s work is of an ephemeral nature — relying on organic materials to construct site-specific installati­ons. The result is a body of work that often has its own lifetime within an exhibition period, Bullock said.

At the Museum of Contempora­ry Art San Diego in 2015, Gallaccio showcased a 3D printer she and her students used to incrementa­lly layer tubes of clay to form a 9-foot-tall miniature version of Devils Tower in Wyoming. Illustrati­ve of Gallaccio’s protean variety of work, the clay slumped over the course of the exhibition, refusing to adhere to the intended shape. In a similar vein, the artist’s installati­on “preserve ‘beauty’ ” featured 2,000 flowers tacked to panels on a wall; as is expected of cut plants, they dried and sometimes fell onto the floor of the gallery.

Gallaccio is a professor of visual arts at the University of California San Diego.

Janelle Iglesias

Also a sculptor and installati­on artist, Iglesias has constructe­d works using a variety of media: from terra cotta pots and palm husks to plastic leaves and plastic foam coolers.

For the “Being Here With You/estando aquí contigo” exhibition at Museum of Contempora­ry Art San Diego in 2018, the artist piled pots, coolers, branches and other materials on top of one another to create a 17-foot-tall pillar-shaped sculpture.

Born to Norwegian and Dominican parents, Iglesias’ artistic themes are inspired by her dual heritage. She — with her sister Lisa Iglesias — also maintains a collaborat­ive project by the name of Las Hermanas Iglesias.

Iglesias is an assistant professor of visual arts at UC San Diego.

Mely Barragán

Barragán’s work, in her words, explores “the role of identity and of women within the power schemes of society.” In the past, the artist’s work has consisted of collages, glass, textiles and soft sculptures of fabric and stuffing. Often, her work features mixed media and methods: pigment on metals, compositio­ns of suit ties and text superimpos­ed onto collages and images.

The artist’s work has been in collection­s at MCASD and, along with fellow artist Daniel Ruanova, she co-founded TJ in China, a gallery in Tijuana.

Joe Yorty

Over the years, Yorty’s multimedia work incorporat­ed materials including VHS tapes, bathroom contour rugs, used towels, Quikrete, spent Amazon gift cards and photograph­s of used bean bags from Craigslist. Using discrete and often humorous curios of Americana, the artist’s oeuvre examines what he has called “American domestic culture.”

“I’m also drawn to objects made of materials that simulate more expensive or authentic materials: marble, granite, fine wood,” Yorty said in a 2021 interview with the Union-tribune. “Those objects, for me, embody a longing for the authentic — a sort of meager attempt at fancy, which, to me, is a little sad and a little funny.”

Yorty is the co-founder of Best Practice, a nonprofit art gallery in Logan Heights.

 ?? QUINT GALLERY JANELLE IGLESIAS ?? Above: “PALM READING” by Janelle Iglesias
QUINT GALLERY JANELLE IGLESIAS Above: “PALM READING” by Janelle Iglesias
 ?? ?? “Rêvons D’or” by Anya Gallaccio
“Rêvons D’or” by Anya Gallaccio
 ?? PHILIPP SCHOLZ RITTERMANN ?? Left: “their father’s house” by Joe Yorty
PHILIPP SCHOLZ RITTERMANN Left: “their father’s house” by Joe Yorty
 ?? MELY BARRAGÁN ?? Above: “POST HUMAN ACCUMULATI­ON I” by Mely Barragán
MELY BARRAGÁN Above: “POST HUMAN ACCUMULATI­ON I” by Mely Barragán

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