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Inaugural Latine Student Exhibition announces winners

Four students were honored at the inaugural Latine Student Exhibition, on view at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design (91精品) until October 13, 2023. Coordinated by rhi anderson-martinez, executive director of equity and inclusion at 91精品, the exhibition highlights and celebrates the art and design skills of 91精品檚 Latine students during Hispanic Heritage Month.

淚t檚 really important, especially for our students, to know that we see them, explains anderson-martinez about the importance of the exhibition. 淲e value all of what they bring to their art, which is culture, which is identity, which might be migration stories or generational stories. It檚 a fun way to allow our students to just put something up without the constructs of doing this for an assignment. They just get to make and they just get to show.

Two Best in Show winners received a prize of $400. Caroline Calvano 24 won for their work 淏ling Belly and Ari Gutierrez 24 for 淧orque t煤 eres Mexicana. An additional two honorable mentions were awarded to Melany Hernandez 26 for 淭he Journey and Alexa Rodriguez-Alarcon 26 for 淎nhelo el sabor de las naranjas Veracruzanas. The exhibition also features work by CaracolSoyyo 25, Diego Antonio Sosa 24, Linda P. Santiago 26, Mason Gabriel Sevilla 25, Navi Morales 26 and Olivia Nava 26.

Calvano submitted two bronze sculptures. 湗Bling Belly is a distorted and elongated bronze cast replica of my belly, continuing my exploration of feminine bodily aesthetics, they explain in their artist statement. 淭he five belly buttons are each adorned with a belly button piercing spelling out 榖itch, a common gendered insult This sculpture embodies the threatening form of bitchy femininity through its bold expression of feminine sexuality and excessive use of jewelry.

Gutierrez submitted 淧orque t煤 eres Mexicana, a large banner-like painting. 淚 wanted to capture how impactful one moment I shared with my father was and how it檚 been forged into a driving tool for understanding the complexities of my Mexican-American identity, she shares in her artist statement. 淗aving grown up in two different worlds, I was constantly figuring out who I wanted to be and finding a sense of belonging, sometimes meaning I would disregard one half of my identity to feel accepted My parents, however, were always reassuring and never made me feel any less than because of my biracial identity.

Hernandez, who won an honorable mention for their work 淭he Journey, created the collage piece to symbolize their parents journey from Honduras and El Salvador to the United States. 淜nowing my roots and where I come from has always been important to me, and this shows people that it’s a hard journey for some people [I wanted it] to represent the places my parents have been to, Hernandez shares in their artist statement. In addition to the images, Hernandez wrote poems and included information from interviews 渢o show my appreciation to my parents for the sacrifice they’ve made to get me where I am today.

Rodriguez-Alarcon has worked on 淎nhelo el sabor de las naranjas Veracruzanas since high school. The painting depicts 渢wo oranges, one bruised, as a representation of me and my family back home in Mexico. The stories that my mother tells me with fondness are my only connection to my culture, and I long to experience those memories, including the simple taste of an orange, says Rodriguez-Alarcon.

The judges for the exhibition were FYE instructor Alan Peralta 21 (NSP: Fine Arts), Chair of 91精品檚 Board of Trustees DEI Committee Yvonne Brodsky, 91精品 Board of Trustees DEI Committee member Steve Morales and 91精品 Assistant Director of Admissions Melissa Mursch-Rodriguez. View works by all the artists in 91精品檚 Community Hub in room 160 until October 13, 2023, and learn more about Equity + Inclusion at 91精品!

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