BY Andrea Torres |ย THE RIDER
In of โIslands and Unicorns,โ artist Eduardo Ibarra comments on the scarce attendance at an exhibit in McAllen.
โParece que nomas sus hermanitos y hermanita fueron, una vecina y uno que otro acarreado.โฆ Luego te quieren cobrar 7 dolares la entrada, mejor me compro 6ย taquitos en el Stripes,โ the piece states.
The artwork is part of Eduardo Ibarraโs exhibit โFalse Flag: Operation Amalgam Rant,โ which opened Tuesday at Art Gallery at Rusteberg Hall in Brownsville.
Isamar Ibarra, an art education freshman was among 60 attendees.
โSomething I really enjoyed are the little QR codes,โ theย freshman said about the works. โIt makes it more personal, I know that heโs used it before in other exhibits but this one makes it more personal like the songs.โ
Some of the pieces are embedded with QR codes, which provide a specific link to a video that is part of the story or statement the piece is making.
This is Eduardo Ibarraโs first exhibit since 2007; he received a bachelorโs degree in painting from the Kansas City Art Institute.
โThe overall message is for people that know the people that I am talking about to have a good laugh while they are reading the messages,โ he said. โSome people wonโt get it because they donโt know the people I am talking about.โ
For this show, Eduardo Ibarra said he considers himself to be a contemporary, regional and folk artist.
โWhat that means is just in this area that this work would work,โ he said. โIt wouldnโtย work anywhere else, itโs tailor-made for this area.โ
The pieces displayed have words written with red and black acrylic paint. Some have names of people, places or concepts written in red for the viewer to think of it as it stands out.
Asked what advice he has for aspiring artists, Eduardo Ibarra replied: โBe original. Do things that nobody else has done. I mean, itโs hard because thereโs so much information out there. Itโs hard to not, you know, utilize things that already exist.โ
The free exhibit continues through Sept. 30. Gallery hours are 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 1 to 5 p.m. Friday.
Three exhibits opened Sept. 1 in Edinburg.
Art Lecturer Marilyn Carrenโs mixed-media solo exhibit, โBabel,โ continues through Sept. 22 in the Visual Arts Gallery, located in room 1.201 in the Visual Arts Building, 2412 S. Closner Blvd. Admission is free. The gallery is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday.
In the Charles and Dorothy Clark Gallery is โVaqueros,โ a print exhibit by the late Mexican artist Ernesto Icazas. The gallery is located in the Liberal Arts Building South. Access to the exhibit is by appointment. To reserve a time to visit, call 665-3480.
UTRGV School of Art Director Susan Fitzsimmonsโ bronze sculptures and paintings will be on display until May 31 in the lobby gallery of the Performing Arts Complex. Gallery hours are by appointment or when the PAC is opened during performances of the Patron of the Arts.
For more information on the Edinburg galleries, email gallery Director and Associate Art Professor Maria Elena Macias at elena.macias@utrgv.edu and for the Rusteberg gallery, email Alejandro Macias at alejandro.macias@utrgv.edu.