Salomon Huerta Saturday, July 10, 2010
Salomon Huerta creates art to destroy it. Then he creates it again, and destroys it again. Once more he creates it, and at last it's done. In the Zocalo Public Square program "Salomon Huerta: Ego, Destruction, and Facebook," Claremont Graduate University's David Pagel interviews Huerta on his creative process and its meaning. The style of the Tijuana-born/Boyle Heights-raised painter tends toward portraits of bald heads viewed from behind, or closeups of masked Mexican wrestlers, hiding the subject's identity and inspiring a desire to see what cannot be seen. Huerta paints nondescript suburban houses, too; a place to live, but not a place to call home. Museum of Contemporary Art, 250 S. Grand Ave., dwntwn.; Wed., July 14, 7:30 p.m.; free, resv. recommended at zocalopublicsquare.org. (Originally published in L.A. Weekly, July 9, 2010.)
posted by Derek Thomas @ 1:23 AM,
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