Hudson (Show)Room: Ricas y Famosas

Daniela Rossell
07.24.03


 

About the Artist

Daniela Rossell was born in 1973 in Mexico City, Mexico, and studied the
performing arts before beginning classes in painting at the National School of
Visual Arts (UNAM) in the early 1990s. Through a variety of media?lpture,
painting, performance, and photography? has consistently explored issues
of wealth and excess, body image and beauty.



While in college Rossell developed a photographic project that poignantly
confronts these issues? series became known as Ricas y Famosas.
Over the years she has taken thousands of images that feature the (mostly)
young and blond nouveau riche of Mexico in their opulent homes. Rossell
began by taking photos of her extended family to help pass the time she spent in
their world. She became intrigued with these documents of how people choose to
live and present themselves, and soon broadened her scope from her relatives to
their friends.



The project continued until 2002, when the artist published a book collecting
over seventy images. For Rossell the works are most potent in this intimate,
portable form. The viewer is able to sit on her own couch, flip back and forth
between images, and reflect upon how signs of taste and prosperity differ
depending on class and culture.



Daniela Rossell has had solo exhibitions at the University of Salamanca,
Spain (2003); Greene Naftali Inc., New York, NY (2000); and Galeria OMR,
Mexico City, Mexico (1996). Group exhibitions include: Mexico City: An
Exhibition about the Exchange Rates of Bodies and Values
at Kunst-Werke
Berlin, Germany (2003) and P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, New York, NY
(2002); Sublime Artifical at La Capella, Barcelona, Spain (2002) and the
Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, CA (2002). Rossell's work can also be
seen this summer in the 2003 Prague Biennial. The artist is currently based in
Mexico City, Mexico.



About the Exhibition

Ricas y Famosas features a selection of twenty color photographs from
Daniela Rossell's provocative series. The large-scale images are shown
unframed and adhered directly to the wall. Unlike their mode of presentation, the
people and homes captured are anything but modest: vaulted ceilings drip with
chandeliers and marble floors are dotted with animal skins and gilded furnishings.



Confronting the viewer from these spaces are the women and girls who reign
over them. Whether reclining on couches or lying on floors, full bosoms and
made-up eyes respond to the camera's dare to attract. The series could be
thought of as a record of the moment? sitters adopt the poses and postures
frequently seen on the pages of Cosmopolitan, Vogue, and other
fashion magazines. While commercial products are not the focus, these women
do seem to be in the business of selling something: perhaps themselves and
their lifestyles.



The lifestyles featured appear particularly extreme when juxtaposed with the
pervasiveness of Mexican poverty. Against such a backdrop, the series becomes
a study of affluence, taste, consumption, and greed?charged that some in
Mexico City feel the works have challenged the taboo against critiquing the upper
classes. Does the critique transcend cultural specificity? San Antonio is close
enough to the border that some may be familiar with the controversial nature of
the riches and status of those pictured. How does the series resonate differently
in Texas than it has in Mexico or would in Ohio?



The images in Daniela Rossell's Ricas y Famosas provide a window
into a world that many will never enter. The palatial houses and enticing women
raise questions about wealth and identity in Mexican culture. What are the
women trying to convey about themselves? Is there a culturally specific line
between honesty and ostentation?



Exhibition Dates

July 17 ?tober 19, 2003



Reception and Gallery Talk with Daniela Rossell

Thursday, September 18, 6:30-8:00 PM

As part of FOTOSEPTIEMBRE, Mexican artist Daniela Rossell will discuss her
work. Please join ArtPace for the talk and a reception following.



Brown Bag Lunch

Wednesday, October 8, 12:00-1:00 PM

Join us for a tour of Ricas y Famosas followed by conversation and a
lunch by Pecan Street Deli. Please call ArtPace to make reservations.



Catalogue

The Ricas y Famosas series is documented in Daniela Rossell's book of
the same title, which is available at ArtPace for $35.00. ISBN 3-7757-1236-4



Event Location

All events held at ArtPace, 445 N. Main Avenue. Free parking at N. Flores and
Savings Streets. ArtPace is open to the public Wednesday thru Sunday, 12-5
PM, Thursday 12-8 PM, and by appointment. There is no charge for
admission.



About ArtPace

ArtPace, A Foundation for Contemporary Art | San Antonio serves as an
advocate for contemporary art and as a catalyst for the creation of significant art
projects. We seek to nurture emerging and established artists and to provide
opportunities for inspiration, experimentation and education. Through our
International Artist-in-Residence Program, we invite nine artists annually to
participate in a two-month residency which supports the evolution of new ideas in
art. Our broad range of panels, lectures, artist talks, and studio visits cultivates
diverse audiences for contemporary art and provides a forum for ongoing
dialogue.




 

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