Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Latino Writers Collective Poetry Reading

In conjunction with the exhibition, The Voice That Reaches You,
Kansas City's Latino Writers Collective is pleased to present

A Poetry Reading
Featuring Gloria Adams, Jason Biggers, Maria Vaquez Boyd, Xanath Caraza, Carlos Duarte, Jose Faus, and Chato Villalobos among others

Hosted by Eljay's River Market Coffee House
412 Delaware Street, Kansas City, MO
Friday, January 16, 6:30 - 7:30 pm

An Open House will follow the reading
at Cara and Cabezas Contemporary
218 Delaware Street, Suite 208
7:30 - 10:00 pm

The Latino Writers Collective is a Kansas City-based nonprofit dedicated to exposing local audiences to Latino writers in the Heartland. www.latinowriterscollective.org

Photos from poetry reading




Gloria Martinez Adams was born in New Mexico and raised in Arizona. She has worked for several not-for-profit organizations for over 20 years, including the Kansas City Symphony and the Nelson Atkins Museum of Art. Currently, she is an Events & Community Relations Coordinator for Johnson County Nursing Center. Her work has appeared in The Mind’s Eye; Leaves of Green; Kansas City Hispanic News, Present Magazine, AQUI Magazine and has been heard over KC Currents on NPR. She is a founding member of the Latino Writers Collective and her work appears in Primera Pagina: Poetry from the Latino Heartland. “For years, I thought I was the only Latina in Johnson County; it was a good place to raise my family and my lifestyle was comfortable, so it was easy for me to disregard my first language and my roots. Later I began to want to understand the segregation in my early life and the causes of racial tension, then and now, so writing in a Latino voice came alive out of necessity,” she claims.

Xánath Caraza is a traveler, educator, poet, and short story writer. She has a Certificate for Overseas Teachers of English from the University of Cambridge, UK. Having attended graduate school at the School for International Training, she spent three years in Vermont. She also received an MA in Romance Languages from the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Furthermore, she has published her original work and essays in El Cid, La revista estudiantil del Capítulo Tau Iota de Sigma Delta Pi, La Sociedad Nacional Honoraria Hispánica, and Utah Foreign Language Review, University of Utah. Present Magazine, an online publication, The Anthology Más allá de las Fronteras, Ediciones Nuevo Espacio, published an award-winning short story of her work in 2004. Her poetry is part of the anthology: Primera Página: Poetry from the Latino Heartland, 2008. She was a finalist in the short story contest John Barry Award 2008. She has published in Mexico in newspapers a number of times. She also presented at the 4th Annual Tierra Tinta Conference on Latin American, Spanish, and Luso-Brazilian Literatures in Oklahoma, at the X Congreso de Literatura Mexicana Contemporánea in El Paso, Texas, and the Twenty-Ninth Annual Meeting of The Missouri Philological Association.

Growing up in El Paso, Texas, Jason Biggers began crossing borders early. Crossing back and forth between Mexico and the United States, and being Mexican-American himself, Jason learned that sometimes borders can be fixed and severe, but oftentimes they are blurry or even non-existent. Jason’s cultural hybridity has played out throughout his life as he has spent time living with people of different classes and cultures in the United States, Mexico, Canada, Germany and the Philippines. The cultures that Jason experienced in these countries, as well as the theme of blurring borders can be found in Jason’s art, poetry and music which is heavily influenced by graffiti, pop art, Mexican folk art and political comics. Jason uses different mediums of expression, working in commercial art, graphic design, illustration, poetry and music.

Maria Vazquez Boyd continues exhibiting, painting and illustrating across the country. Some of her works includes murals in Mexico. She is a graduate of the Kansas City Art Institute and returned to teach in the Design/Illustration Department. She taught at the Nelson Atkins Museum, worked for Hallmark Cards, and currently is the gallery coordinator for the Guadalupe Center and for The Writers Place.

Jose Faus was born in Bogota, Colombia and has been a long time resident of Kansas City. He received degrees in art and writing from UMKC. Jose is an artist/muralist and maintains Carido Studio. He is editor of Kansas City Hispanic News and founding member of the Latino Writers Collective.

Chato Villalobos was born in Los Angeles, California, but has lived in Kansas City, Missouri, most of his life. Chato is member of the Latino Writers Collective and has been involved in the performing arts for over 15 years, including acting with the Coterie Theater and as a folkloric dancer with El Grupo Atotonilco. A Kansas City, Missouri police officer, Chato's current loves are writing poetry and youth advocacy.



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Tuesday, November 18, 2008

The Voice That Reaches You

Work by Victor Cartagena, Julio Cesar Morales, Sofia Jarrin-Thomas and Josue Rojas
On View from November 29, 2008 - February 6, 2009
Opening Reception: November 29, 2008 at 7pm
Scheduled Open House Hours:
December 19, 7 - 10pm
December 20, 11am - 6pm
January 16, 7 - 10:00pm
January 17, 11am - 6pm


The Voice that Reaches You features three artists: Victor Cartagena, Julio Cesar Morales, and Josue Rojas; and one journalist: Sofia Jarrin-Thomas whose work documents and interprets contemporary immigration and deportation stories. Showcasing video, installation, audio and painted works, this is a show that encourages close study and promotes dialogue.

Josue Rojas reveals the experience of young Salvadoran deportees, known as “DPs” in his series Los Disappeared. Coming out of San Francisco's Mission school, Rojas creates large paintings, brightly colored and rife with symbols of ethnicity, nation, and immigrant experiences. Rojas illustrates the merging of cultures that arises when young immigrants are forced to return to a homeland they don't know, creating a hybrid North-Central American identity. Prints of his original paintings will accompany video interviews and a wall mural unique to Cara & Cabezas Gallery. Rojas' bright and expressive approach is a sharp contrast to the delicate watercolors of Julio Cesar Morales. Morales’ challenging images draw from photos taken by US Border Patrol of attempted immigrations along the US-Mexico border. Morales' diagrammatical approach is tempered by the luminous and transparent quality of his watercolor, lending a sense of desperation and irony to the works. One such image from this series presents a child, hidden in a piñata in the shape of a Powerpuff Girl.

Through his multimedia installation series Invisible Nation, Victor Cartagena also seeks to give a human face to the often dehumanized issue of undocumented immigration. His piece, Labor Tea, utilizes found passport photographs from the 1970s and 80s to address the necessary humanity of this issue; the images are housed in tea bags, a powerful critique of the negation of the histories, identities, and agencies of im/migrant laborers that make up much of this country's invisible labor force. The result is a haunting depiction of the nature of memory, and a strong attempt to reclaim stories that have been otherwise erased and ignored. These visual artists' interpretations will mirror the journalistic endeavors of Sofia Jarrin-Thomas. A freelance journalist with a specific interest in radio, Jarrin-Thomas established El Salvador's Oral Histories Project. The project focuses on the Civil War in El Salvador and the resulting disapora. Jarrin-Thomas recorded interviews with Salvadoran emigrants living in Massachusetts. These audio works provide an excellent complement to the artistic questions raised by Morales, Cartagena, and Rojas. These are stories that challenge and haunt their listeners, as they force us to recognize the human toll of a very politicized war.
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Wednesday, August 13, 2008

History

It began as a conversation in a San Francisco arts venue in 2003. From disparate backgrounds, Paulo Acosta Cabezas, an entrepreneur originally from Central America, and Cara Megan Lewis, a visual artist with roots in the Midwestern United States, met on common ground through a shared interest in communicating ideas and sharing human stories through art exhibitions. In May 2004, Paulo opened Mamá Art Cafe and invited Cara Megan to contribute her skills to his exhibition program. She accepted the opportunity and has worked for his company for the last 4 years. Simultaneously, she continued to work at Fraenkel Gallery as a registrar and later went on to complete her Master's Degree in Curatorial Practice from the California College of the Arts.

Paulo often refers to the San Francisco venue as a laboratory, a space to cultivate a working relationship with his friends and family and explore the outcomes of this effort through the business of spices and coffee. Combining seemingly unrelated items, he brought together spices, coffee, and art. Coffee and spices are not only two of the oldest luxury items ever traded and formed the economic backbone of numerous ancient civilizations, but both also contribute to the basic building blocks of culture, food and drink. Communities form around food and the traditions and patterns surrounding cuisine. If a country's food, a basic necessity, is at the bottom of a country's cultural pyramid, fine art is at the top, being the ultimate expression of a country's political, social, economic and natural landscape.

Since the opening of Mamá Art Cafe, Paulo has exhibited the work of dozens of artists and has welcomed hundreds of musicians to perform. This cultural program, which fostered local artists’ practices and introduced a local audience to talent from Latin America, built a foundation from which Cara and Cabezas Contemporary would come into being. Kansas City was chosen as the location of the new gallery, first because it is Cara Megan’s hometown and secondly because it is a city rich in cultural history with growing support for artistic production. Just as Kansas City and San Francisco have been historically important intersections for the arts, where cultures have commingled to create new practices, Cara and Cabezas Contemporary aims to become a crossroads for art from Latin America and the United States.

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Friday, August 1, 2008

Cara and Cabezas Contemporary Opens in Kansas City

Cara and Cabezas Contemporary is pleased to open a gallery space in Kansas City’s River Market with the exhibition, San Francisco Grown: Photographs by Daniel Cheek, Amy Regalia, and Michael McCauslin. As an introduction to the geographical region in which he opened his first arts venue in 2004, Paulo Cabezas and Cara Megan Lewis, director and curator respectively, have selected images of Northern California made by photographers from the Bay Area where Cara and Cabezas have been working together for the last five years.


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San Francisco Grown: Photographs by Daniel Cheek, Amy Regalia, and Michael McCauslin

August 15 - September 27, 2008
opening reception on august 15 at 7pm

San Francisco Grown: Photographs by Daniel Cheek, Amy Regalia, and Michael McCauslin posits the work of three photographers whose environmental and urban landscapes illustrate the relationship between human and nature and distill moments at which the two face off. Bringing to the foreground what might otherwise go unnoticed, the images favor the inconspicuous as opposed to the obvious subject in the picture plane. As the title of the show suggests, the flora of the Bay Area is the apparent over-arching theme shared by the set of images. Yet it is the documentation of nature's expression in relation to and in spite of human's attempt to control it that makes these images provocative.



Michael McCauslin, Untitled, 2006

In a digital world, where technology has increased the production of images and speed of accessing them, Michael McCauslin invites the viewer to slow down in the act of looking. A modern-day street photographer with work methods inherited from turn-of-the-century photographers such as Eugene Atget, McCauslin captures the minute details within a city’s street. The tool of choice is a digital camera, which facilitates a deliberate and spontaneous capture. McCauslin’s images are fueled by an emotional response to his surroundings. McCauslin is a teacher and teacher’s mentor for the San Francisco Unified School District. This is McCauslin’s third exhibition organized by Cara and Cabezas Contemporary.


Amy Regalia, Leavings # 3

Amy Regalia stumbled upon the subject of her series, Leavings, while on a separate self-appointed assignment in San Jose, California. The attention to craft employed by the creators of these pre-mulch piles of yard waste attracted Regalia’s eye. In an approach similar to that of Bernd and Hilla Becher, whose work classifies buildings of the same function, Regalia set out to make portraits of these organic refuse piles. In her process, Regalia paid careful attention to keeping certain factors consistent throughout the series, such as her distance from the sidewalk. Seemingly simple street-side scenes open up a complex layering of information about the lives of the residents, their practices, and what lies beyonc each fence. Regalia studied at California College of the Arts and has exhibited at San Francisco Camerawork, Southern Exposure, and the Oliver Arts Center.


Daniel Cheek, Pinnacles National Monument, CA 2007

Daniel Cheek has been traveling California back roads with his large-format cameras since his arrival from Michigan in 1998. Though often void of humans, his photographs always illuminate evidence of the human fingerprint on the land.  Taken with an 8 x 10 large format camera, the photographs exhibited are direct contact prints from his negatives rendering the sharpest, purest representation of his image. Cheek received his BFA from the Academy of Art College, San Francisco. His past exhibitions include showings at the Academy of Art College, Sutter Street Gallery, San Francisco; Northeastern Nevada Museum, Elko, 2006; and Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, 2006.









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