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Julio César Morales | Contrabando


April 2 — May 28, 2011

PRESE RELEASE

San Francisco — Contrabando is a multi-media exhibition that references the larger sociological phenomenon in which immigrant economic strategies come to infiltrate urban landscapes. The adaptive nature of immigrants is seen the world round and throughout time, but Morales focuses on the ingenuity and entrepreneurial spirit of the Latin American immigrant labor force in California.

Contrabando is a study of the realities and consequences of exploited labor that simultaneously aims to record the living history of labor. Morales is interested in the way consciousness shifts as it moves between languages, cultures, and political systems.

Included in Contrabando is the on-going series Undocumented Interventions, a project that utilizes hand-colored watercolor on paper paintings to depict human trafficking documented through smuggling themselves into the United States. The images are culled both from the artist’s memory of growing up in the Tijuana/San Diego area and actual photographs from the U.S. Customs website. The paintings are an archive of the multiple adaptations and customizations that have taken place when people alter vehicles, piñatas, washer/dryers, and various equipment as they attempt to cross the border.

Another project called Narquitectos, takes its name from architects in Mexico that are commissioned by drug cartels to create tunnels underneath the Mexico/US border. Inspired by documentation of discovered sites, the resulting pencil drawings read as blueprints that reveal the location and adjacent tunnel. A series of wood architectural models depicting the above and below ground scenes accompanies the renderings.