Salvador Jiménez-Flores

Artist Statement

All over the world we identify people by their physical appearance. The residue of colonial labels still persists. As an artist of color, I might be forced to identify with one, many, or none of the labels assigned to me, such as Latino, Chicano, American, etc. The act of resistance starts when we fight against those who attempt to prevent us from growing. By reimagining what an alternative future could look like through my art I seek to resist labels put on myself and other people of color.

The move from a rural town in México to a major metropolis in the United States had a tremendous impact on my life and my art. At first art was merely a way of coping with the transition, but due to my limited English in those early years, art eventually became a tool for self-expression. In my work I document the journey of adapting to life in the United States all while looking back at what I left behind in México.

My work explores the politics of identity, the state of double consciousness, and the outlook of “the other.” I address issues of colonization, migration, history, cultural appropriation, and futurism. I create hybrid portraits that represent my anxieties of living in a constant state of double consciousness where I feel like my identity is divided into parts. The challenge of being bicultural and bilingual is that I live concurrently in two different worlds. I adapt to both worlds but adapting involves losing some part of myself in order to grow. I embrace these two worlds in my art melding visual and cultural references from both to produce artwork with a magical realism twist.

My work reveals this hybridity. I draw on elements of Afro-Futurism, Funk Ceramics and Robert Arneson’s satiric comedy and powerful ceramic self-portraits as much as the music and films by Sun Ra and Mexican singer-songwriter Rodrigo González, also known as the “Nopal Prophet.” I am drawn to how these artists created their own imaginary world through their art. I use these influences to create my own imaginary world of Rascuache-Futurism where I can articulate pre-Columbian, colonial, and post-colonial histories and aesthetics through ceramics.

Clay as a material has a physicality that immediately evokes the past and gives infinite possibilities to visually create a future. I use clay because its versatility and intuitive nature allow me to translate my ideas quickly into tri-dimensional forms. Through mainstream media and most science fiction content the future is typically imagined as white. People of color have been erased from the future. I am trying to imagine and create a future where the good guys look like me with the hope that others will be able to see themselves in this future as well.

Bio

Salvador Jiménez-Flores is an interdisciplinary artist born and raised in Jalisco, México. He explores the politics of identity and the state of double consciousness. Jiménez-Flores addresses issues of colonization, migration, “the other,” and futurism by producing a mixture of socially conscious installation, public, and studio-based art. His work spans from community-based work, drawing, ceramics, prints, and mixed media sculpture.

Jimenez-Flores is a member of The Color Network, an organization that promotes the advancement of people of color in the ceramic arts and assist artists develop, network, and create dialogue while maintaining a place for a database, resources, and mentorship. He is also a member of the Instituto Gráfico de Chicago, an organization inspired by the socio-political art of Mexico’s Taller de Gráfica Popular (The People’s Print Workshop) and use art as a platform to inform and generate community discourse about urgent social issues.

Jiménez-Flores has presented his work at the National Museum of Mexican Art, Grand Rapids Art Museum, Urban Institute of Contemporary Art, Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, and Museum of Art and Design amongst others. He served as Artist-In-Residence for the city of Boston, Harvard Ceramics Program, Office of the Arts at Harvard University, and Kohler Arts Industry. Jiménez-Flores is a recipient of Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grants and The New England Foundation for the Arts, Threewalls’ RaD Lab+Outside the Walls Fellowship Grant, and he is a 2021 United States Artist Fellow. He is an Assistant Professor in ceramics at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Salvador Jiménez-Flores es un artista interdisciplinario nacido y creció en Jalisco, México. Explora la política de la identidad y el estado de doble conciencia. Jiménez-Flores aborda temas de colonización, migración, “el otro” y futurismo al producir una mezcla de instalación con conciencia social, público y arte basado en el estudio. Su trabajo abarca desde el trabajo comunitario, dibujo, cerámica, grabado y escultura de medios mixtos.

Jiménez-Flores es miembro de The Color Network, una organización que promueve el avance de las personas de color en cerámica y ayuda a los artistas a desarrollar, establecer contactos y crear diálogos, mientras mantiene un lugar para una base de datos, recursos y tutoría. También es miembro del Instituto Gráfico de Chicago, una organización inspirada en el arte sociopolítico del Taller de Gráfica Popular de México y utiliza el arte como plataforma para informar y generar un discurso comunitario sobre temas sociales urgentes.

Jiménez-Flores ha presentado su trabajo en el Museo Nacional de Arte Mexicano, el Museo de Arte de Grand Rapids, el Instituto Urbano de Arte Contemporáneo, el Centro Bemis de Arte Contemporáneo y el Museo de Arte y Diseño, entre otros. Se desempeñó como Artista en Residencia para la ciudad de Boston, el Programa de Cerámica de Harvard, la Oficina de Artes de la Universidad de Harvard y la Industria de las Artes de Kohler. Jiménez-Flores recibió las becas para pintores y escultores de la Fundación Joan Mitchell y la Fundación para las artes de Nueva Inglaterra, la beca RaD Lab + Outside the Walls de Threewalls y es 2021-United States Artist Fellow. Es profesor asistente de cerámica en la Escuela del Instituto de Arte de Chicago.