Long-Term Survivor

Chuck Ramirez

Exhibition: Jan 14 – Apr 4, 1999


Since the AIDS crisis began over fifteen years ago, artists have responded overwhelmingly to this disease. The graphic activist works of the collective Gran Fury, the narrative assemblages of David Wojnarowicz and the meditative installations of Felix Gonzalez-Torres have placed AIDS into a cultural and visual context. At ArtPace, Ramirez continues this trajectory of art history in an installation of digitally enhanced photographic works, entitled Long Term Survivor. The individual pieces explore the rituals of sustaining life and desire in the context of the AIDS crisis. Images range from abstractions of erotic toys to day-of-the-week pill boxes to leather chaps. Ramirez also presents a video piece on three monitors that display a spinning chrome ring—a seductive form that recalls corporate logos—against a bright red wall. Working with materials and images that are part of his daily life—a life impacted by the AIDS crisis—Ramirez transforms the language and power of advertising into a call for action and compassion, expression and self-actualization.

Artist

Chuck Ramirez

San Antonio, Texas, USA

Chuck Ramirez (1962-2010) lived and worked as an artist and graphic designer in San Antonio, Texas. Primarily employing large-scale photography, the artist’s body of work includes prints and sculptural installations. His pieces investigate the rituals and forms of everyday life and are charged with metaphors of ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and religion. Ramirez’s involvement with Artpace dates back to 1999, when he first exhibited in the Hudson (Show)Room.
Ramirez’s spring 1999 Hudson (Show)Room exhibition, Long-Term Survivor, was an installation of digitally enhanced photographic works. The individual pieces explored the rituals of sustaining life and desire in the context of the AIDS crisis. Images ranged from abstractions of erotic toys to day-of-the-week pill boxes to leather chaps. Ramirez also presented a video piece on three monitors that displayed a spinning chrome ring-a seductive form that recalls corporate logos-against a bright red wall. Working with materials and images that are part of his daily life-a life impacted by being HIV positive-Ramirez transformed the language and power of advertising into a call for action and compassion, expression, and self-actualization.
Prior to the introduction of the WindowWorks program area at Artpace, Ramirez installed this street-facing façade space with a series of slim, netted Christmas trees during late 1999. Like the subjects of his photography, these seven freestanding trees featured everyday items such as spoons and forks. With this display, the artist posed the question: Where is the line between decorative and fine art?
In 2002 Ramirez was invited by guest curator Jérôme Sans, Co-director of the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, France, to be the Texas representative for the New Works: 02.1 International Artist-in-Residence cycle. For his Artpace residency, Ramirez used a commercial studio to produce 17 large-scale photographs of items referencing food. The first series of 12 images consisted of images of raw meat-a whole chicken, sausage links, a beef steak-laid bare on the artist’s signature sterile white background. Two photographs featured empty candy trays that represented unattainable fulfillment and desire. He also displayed two full-frame images of fruit cocktail and green peas. Taken straight from the can, these fruits and vegetables are magnified to epic proportions; the mixed fruit recalling the complexities of multicultural mixing, and the peas signifying the sameness of humankind. A final image of a plastic cup from a fast food restaurant bears the epitaph When I am empty, please dispose of me properly, a somber parallel between life and consumption.
Ramirez continued his involvement with Artpace well after 2002 as a fundraiser and advocate for contemporary art. During our 10th anniversary in 2005, he took part in Artists Salute Artpace, featuring an auction of works by several former resident artists. His donation, Godiva 2, similar to Double Chocolate displayed here, was a large photograph of an empty chocolate box. Both pieces feature golden trays that once held chocolates yet sit empty, their irregular grids signaling a past function as containers for something else. These poignant reminders of time’s inevitable passage reference the traditional still life. They now take on additional meaning as the San Antonio art community mourns the recent loss of this visionary artist.

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