Ester Hernandez (born 1944) is a Chicana visual artist known for her pastels, paintings and prints primarily depicting Chicanas/Latinas. Her artwork captures time, and makes sense of the complex world we live in. She aspires to create a visual dialogue for women’s role in this new multi-cultural millennium.
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Hernandez is a San Francisco visual artist best known for her pastels, paintings, and prints of Chicana/Latina women. Her work reflects the political, social, ecological, and spiritual themes born from community pride, a commitment to political action, and an abiding sense of humor.
As a solo artist and member of Las Mujeres Muralistas, an influential San Francisco Mission district Latina women mural group in the early seventies, her career has marked her as a pioneer in the Chicana/Chicano civil rights art movement.
Ester was born and raised in California, on the western slopes of the Sierra Nevadas in central San Joaquin Valley, known for its natural beauty and paradoxically the ongoing struggle of farm workers. One of six children of farm worker parents, she developed her great respect for, and interest in, the arts through family and community involvement. Both her mother and her grandmother continued the family tradition of embroidery from their birthplace in North Central Mexico. Her grandfather was a master carpenter who made religious sculptures in his spare time, and her father was an amateur photographer and visual artist. The combination of this rich cultural and creative background of her childhood and the politically charged world of U.C. Berkeley in the early 70’s helped Ester develop her socio-political artistic identity and her consistent commitment to political activism.
Ester’s work has appeared in numerous solo and group exhibitions in the U.S. and internationally. Her artwork was recently featured in the inaugural opening of the Museo Alameda -- Smithsonian in San Antonio, Texas. Her work is in permanent collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Library of Congress, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Mexican Museum in Chicago, Cheech Marin and the Frida Kahlo Studio Museum in Mexico City. Stanford University has acquired her artistic and personal archives.
Hernandez has said that creating art is the most important thing she does. From early childhood, she explored the organic materials surrounding her. Her first artistic impressions came after playing in the soft clay and sandy earth. She was amazed by its plasticity and ability to capture a moment in time.
Hernandez explores and works with a variety of mediums. She allows the subject matter to determine whether the work is public or is personal. The use of painting and pastels reflect her more personal work that allows her to explore ideas and materials freely and more directly. In the words of art critic, Amalia Mesa Baines:
Continues Mesa Baines, “As with her artwork of her close friend and artistic madrina (godmother) the late legendary Tejana singer Lydia Mendoza, she subverts, re-contextualizes, and transforms culturally traditional images into a series of feminist icons, elevating their status to that of role models.”
Hernandez says she loves making art because, “It is a challenge to see the world in a new way. There is great joy and satisfaction of physically making contact with a surface or material to give form to my ideas.”
She has drawn inspiration from the political prints of Guadalupe Posada and Francisco Goya, the drama of German Expressionism, and in particular, the colors, perspective, line and use of space by Japanese artists. In 2007, The San Francisco Foundation created a short video of Hernandez explaining her process.
As integral to her art as the mediums in which she works is the geopolitical contexts in which she lives. Her art is her way to contextualize the world around her and her subject matter:
Hernandez often chooses the medium of screen printing when she has a socio-political image that she wants to disseminate to the four directions and to make artwork that is affordable. She states that she enjoys the concept of positive and negative and the magical surprises of delicate textures and sensuous bold areas of color she can create through the print process.
Take, for instance, her iconic (and much censored by California’s agribusiness) screen print “Sun Mad.” From an insider’s perspective, she illustrates the deadly impact of pesticides on farm workers, consumers and the environment. From a socio-political perspective, Hernandez brings a particularly American flavor to the Latin American protest poster. Her participation in the Latin American Posters: Public Aesthetics and Mass Politics retrospective "traces four decades of Latin American social and political history during a time of widespread crisis and unrest."[1]
Most recently, she used her artistic skill to address the increased attacks on immigrants and their legal status with a work that protests SB1070 by creating an image of La Virgen de Guadalupe as a wanted terrorist. She recently spoke with reporter Maria Hinojosa about it on Latino USA on July 23, 2010.
Her installations are made for public venues because of the amount of space that is required. This medium allows her a rare opportunity to explore 3D and work with a variety of non-traditional art materials, telling a story in a very different way. She states that her installations were a direct offshoot of her family Day of the Dead altars that were specifically created to honor and welcome her ancestors during their temporary visit on November lst and 2nd.
Hernandez celebrates the ability of women to adapt and recreate themselves in new circumstances and environments. Latinas play multi-dimensional roles in contemporary society – from goddesses and divas to farm workers to truck drivers.
As such, her main interest and focus continues to give visual form to the inner and outer interaction between the world and themselves.
Smithsonian American Art Museum