Emigdio Vasquez

Emigdio Vasquez (1939 – August 9, 2014) was an American artist and muralist.

Early life

Born May 25, 1939 in the historical mining town of Jerome, Arizona, Emigdio is recognized as a pioneering Chicano artist. His father worked for Phelps-Dodge Copper mines; and in the early 1940s, his family moved to Orange, California. His interest in art was evident as early as grade school where he would replicate comic book styles to create his own comics based on stories his father told about the Mexican Revolution. In the late 1950s, he started oil painting; and by the mid 1960s, inspired by famous Mexican artist Diego Rivera, he painted his first mural in his parent’s patio – Pancho Villa on a horse.

Emigdio earned an Associate of Arts degree from Santa Ana College; and he transferred to California State University, Fullerton, where he received his Bachelor of Arts and a Master’s Degree in Fine Arts. In 1979, for his Master’s Degree thesis project, Emigdio painted an 85-foot long mural as a tribute to the Chicano working class - complete with figures modeled after his father as a miner and other relatives and friends as field workers and laborers.

Several groups recognized Emigdio for his contributions to art and culture. Including, in 2004, Emigdio was inducted into Santa Ana College Alumni Hall of Fame; in 2007, Cal State Fullerton University recognized Emigdio as one of the 50 most influential Hispanic graduates from its 50 years of existence; and, on May 25, 2013, his birthday, the city of Santa Ana Proclaimed that day as Emigdio Vasquez day.

Emigdio drew upon and transformed photographs and his plein air paintings into a body of work that documented and commented on the daily life of working people in the Barrio. With painstaking skills, he recorded the urban experience, unsentimentally and with dignity, neither glorifying nor criticizing. Emigdio painted over 400 works and 22 murals in Orange County. His work is often recognized as a ‘super-realistic’ style, with historical transitions and themes.

Vasquez taught in the art department at Santa Ana College, and managed major public arts programs for the Bowers Museum of Cultural Art, the California Arts Council, and the City of Santa Ana - including creating a 65-foot mural at the Orange County Transportation Center in Santa Ana. In 1996, he received an Artist Fellowship from the Adolph and Ester Gottlieb Foundation in New York.

The most recognized mural of Emigdio’s is the "Legacy of Cesar Chavez," which is located in the lobby of the Cesar Chavez Business and Computer Center in Santa Ana College. Some of Emigdio’s favorite subjects were Zoot Suites and Pachucos as well as street people and day laborers that reflected a time in history presented in his narrative style. He also enjoyed still life and landscape painting, as well as portraits of historical figures. His diversity of subject matter and style place him in a select class of artists that transcends the traditional "pigeon hole" description that most artists are assigned.

In an interview, Emigdio stated, "I consider myself a social realist painter because I like to paint the world that I perceive around me - an environment constructed of human and urban experiences of working class people. Through my art, I want to convey a powerful sense of the human struggle for dignity within the urban experience of 20th Century America."

Personal life

Vasquez is the father of six children. His daughter, Rosemary Vasquez Tuthill is an artist who paints still-life, portraits, and acrylics. His sons, Adolph and Higgy Vasquez are also artist. Adolph is an accomplished digital artist; and Higgy had assisted Emigdio on several mural projects. Together, Rosemary, Adolph, and Higgy are continuing Emigdio's legacy with a Paint and Party business where they emphasize painting for fun, so everyone paints the same thing at the same time using his or her own creative expression. Artist-led painting instruction is broken down in easy to follow, structured steps. paintpartyexperience.com

His late ex-wife, Rosie Lopez Schelerth, had written much about Vasquez's early life and their marriage in her autobiography Hi! My Name is Chicken. Vasquez's life story was recently featured in a documentary titled, The Cypress St. Mural: "El Proletariado de Atzlan." Produced by Chapman University with director, Katherine Bowers;[1] the documentary is about Vasquez's journey from his birthplace in Jerome, Arizona to Orange, Ca. where Vasquez's early interest in drawing led to a lifetime of fine art painting. Known as the "Godfather of Chicano Art," Vasquez painted over 24 large public murals in Central Orange County, Ca. and 400 fine art paintings.

Death

Vasquez died from pneumonia on August 9, 2014 in Newport Beach, California. He was 75 years old.[2][3]

References

  1. Chapman University,"The Cypress St. Mural: El Proletariado de Atzlan," produced and directed by Katherine A. Bowers.
  2. Rogers, John (August 13, 2014). "Pioneering Chicano artist Emigdio Vasquez dies". San Francisco Chronicle. AP.
  3. http://www.washingtonpost.com/entertainment/emigdio-vasquez-pioneer-in-chicano-art-movement-dies-at-75/2014/08/14/1ff18a74-23d7-11e4-86ca-6f03cbd15c1a_story.html

External links