In NYC
Mar 22 - Apr 20, 2018
Press release for exhibition In NYC
Ramiro Gomez
In NYC
March 22 – April 21, 2018
Opening Reception: March 22, 6-8 PM
P.P.O.W is pleased to announce In NYC,
Ramiro Gomez’s first solo exhibition in New York City. A painter with a deep
interest in depicting the people whose labor often goes unrecognized and
underappreciated by society, Gomez creates pristine domestic scenes and
landscapes, populated with subjects whose work is essential to creating and
maintaining those very spaces. While
Gomez is best known for his depiction of workers in his West Hollywood
neighborhood, for this exhibition he turns his attention to New York City, with
a series of paintings that capture the oftentimes invisible labor that goes
into making the city a functioning and sustainable place.
The son of undocumented Mexican immigrants who have since become U.S.
citizens, Gomez experienced firsthand the ways in which certain occupations are
reduced to invisibility and, though essential, are written out of the primary
narrative of a family, building, or public space. While he was a live-in nanny
for a family in the Hollywood Hills, he felt the full effect of what it was
like to at times be invisible, an experience that became formative to his work
and which continues to drive much of his subject matter. Much of Gomez’s work
is concerned with the ephemeral—his art captures fleeting moments in time that
would otherwise be forgotten or go unnoticed—a gardener watering a lawn, a
housekeeper sweeping a floor, or a laborer lifting a package onto a truck.
Gomez gained wide recognition for his work in the 2017 Whitney Biennial, in
which he painted the laborers and workers who play an essential behind-the-scenes
role in the functioning of a museum. In December of 2018 he continued this
performative project at P.P.O.W’s booth at Art Basel Miami Beach.
For In NYC, Gomez wandered the
bustling streets of New York, taking photos of the many laborers whose work is
vital to sustaining a functioning city—from yard workers who keep parks lush
and pristine to babysitters minding children to janitors picking up trash—and
turning them into the subjects of his paintings. From the start of his career,
Gomez has created works on non-traditional art materials, often selecting
salvaged cardboard or discarded lumber to use as his canvas. Cardboard, in
particular, became central to Gomez’s practice, as it is one of the most
accessible and disposable materials. This material resonated with Gomez as an
apt metaphor for the precarious nature of the position that many domestic
laborers, many of whom Gomez worked alongside with as a nanny, find themselves
in. The exhibition will feature works created on these salvaged materials,
including a series of portraits painted on cardboard, which Gomez cuts out and
glues onto canvas.
This exhibition continues Gomez’s interest in capturing the way this
‘background’ labor transforms a city, as through these paintings, he brings his
subjects to the foreground of the scene, elevating them from underrepresented
laborers to revered subjects. Through his depiction of subjects who turn away
from the viewer, Gomez brings to light the way in which society creates a
division between labor and a culture of shame, as well as calls attention to
this ‘invisible’ aspect of labor by way of, as Lawrence Weschler writes, “Recognizing
workers, acknowledging to them that they are worth being recognized.”
Gomez first gained recognition for what is now described as his Hockney
series, works that reimagine David Hockney’s iconic Los Angeles paintings to
represent subjects previously omitted from the story—gardeners, housecleaners,
movers, valets, and nannies. Gomez perceives himself as both an insider and an
outsider, a tension that he explores in his work. Even while now being formally
invited into commercial and institutional spaces, Gomez retains the guerrilla
nature of his work, creating an interruption in the space he inhabits and
encouraging viewers to consider aspects of their everyday lives that are not
often depicted in visual art.