En la Guarida de las Monstras Divinas: Moises Salazar Tlatenchi
April 5th, 2024 – May 5th, 2024
Gallery Hours: Thurs – Sat: 12pm – 6pm & Sun: 12pm – 4pm
Latchkey Gallery is pleased to announce the opening of En la Guarida de las Monstras Divinas, a solo exhibition presenting new works by Moises Salazar Tlatenchi (b. Chicago, Illinois, 1996). It will run from April 5th, 2024 – May 5th, 2024, at 173 Henry Street, as well as the opening reception on Friday, April 5th, from 6:00pm to 9:00pm.
En la Guarida de las Monstras Divinas pairs marginalized narratives of queer discovery, rejection, and acceptance, with popular narrative construction and ancient Aztec deities. The monomyth (Hero’s journey) overarches the three spaces in the exhibition, going from the watchful unknown, to the discovery and unification of self, and lastly joining and fostering communities.
The initial space is dedicated to self-discovery. An experience laced with beauty, vulnerability and understandings of judgment, eyes and darker colors lace the arched paintings, and snakes run throughout the space. The serpent is a representation of the Aztec deity Quetzalcoatl, associated with themes of creation. Guardia, a painting in this collection, uses dark blue and hot pink tufting to characterize and shade the figure, who stands naked. The fearful quiet present in these works alludes to the stereotypical ‘call to adventure’, stepping into a cold and unforgiving space of change and upheaval.
A mural of two uniting figures centers the exhibition, and references the natural fusion and zoomorphic reference present in Aztec deities. This large and overarching structure of understanding the world comes back to the experience in varying ideas of oneself. Salazar uses this medium to align the abyssal experience of revelation and rebirth in a larger than life and supernatural context, whilst also acknowledging heritage. This style plays into the dramatic, while also illustrating an irreversible understanding of self. Additionally, recurrently present in this peice is multi-color tufting, simultaneously creating shade, composition, and texture.
Lastly, the wanderer enters a space of community, tied to the narrative idea of the ‘gift of the goddess’. Salazar portrays ideas of chosen family as the biblical Garden of Eden, and ties paradisiacal themes into use of soft colors, reorienting the myth to extend its arms to those who grow into themselves. The figure grows as well, going from scared and unsure to a surrounded mother of the next generation.
Salazar’s paintings involve breaking down ideas of material and self, using varying colors and textures to compose self-influenced portraiture. Adorned with unique and contrasting use of tufting, sequins and extensive hand-placed beads, representation of these faceless figures creates stability and surface for an identity that is not always welcome, and allows the audience to align themselves with scenes usually kept behind closed doors.
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