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Chicago Art Department

EVENT
Exhibition Detail
Evita el Exceso
1837 South Halsted
Chicago, IL 60608


March 7th, 2009 - March 13th, 2009
Opening: 
March 7th, 2009 7:00 PM - 12:00 AM
 
Evita el Exceso ,Evita el Exceso
© courtesy of the artists and The Chicago Art Department
> QUICK FACTS
WEBSITE:  
http://www.chicagoartdepartment.org/
NEIGHBORHOOD:  
Michigan Ave/Downtown
EMAIL:  
connect@chicagoartdepartment.org
PHONE:  
312-226-8601
OPEN HOURS:  
gallery hours are by appointment
TAGS:  
modern, abstract, conceptual
> DESCRIPTION

The Chicago Art Department is proud to present "Evita el Exceso", new works by Tripa Co.

In the second coming of Tripa Colectivo, Mike Wilgus joins the experimental artist group in their continued exploration of culture and gender issues embedded in the mundane. This collective, co-founded by Jova Durán and Abraham Velázquez Tello in 2007, seeks to create support and representation for Latino and Chicago artists alike. Tripa's mission has been greatly aided by the Chicago Art Department, for which Velázquez is now a resident artist.

"Evita el Exceso"warns of the dangers of obsessive consumption. Information and object overload is deforming personal identity and violating the space of interaction between human beings. Relationships are mediated by materialism rather than being born out of real connections. The public space is controlled by rhetoric not reality. We are the overload. We are what we consume. We are the excess. Beware.

Jova "el grafista" Durán (b. 1984, Chicago) engages in painting on everyday life surfaces, many of which are assembled from salvaged materials. His work manifests itself as a reaction to alienation from the creative act in a culture that outsources the majority of its material production.

Abraham Velázquez Tello (b. 1985, Mexico City) experiments with a variety of media that allows him to investigate gender issues within the Latino community. His curiosity for seldom explored places continues with a new series of photographs from Mexico City in which he documents a new interpretation of old ruins.

Mike Wilgus (b. 1984 St. Louis) uses media that ranges from more traditional watercolors to contemporary sharpies and spray paint. He creates work that revolves around his obsession with culture, religion, consumerism, and the intersection of these phenomena.


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