Dr. Kelli Morgan, Curator and Visual Artist, Amber Robles-Gordon in Conversation

Dr. Kelli Morgan, Curator and Visual Artist, Amber Robles-Gordon in Conversation

"These amazing and accomplished thinkers will be engaging in a discussion about the impressive visual presentation and critical investigations present Amber’s current exhibition on view at our gallery: soveREIGNty: Acts, Forms, & Measures of Protest & Resistance."

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FEATURED

Crawl Space: July 2022

FEATURED


July’s First Saturday events will feature extended exhibitions worth a second look

Northern Mariana Islands, Political, Spiritual,

Tinney Contemporary will be sticking with its June show through July 9. I reviewed Amber Robles-Gordon’s Sovereignty exhibition for the Scene — it’s a prime example of how artists can incorporate political and social content into a body of work while also making art that’s formally striking. We’ve seen lots of messaging about social and political issues in the contemporary art of the 21st century. However, much of that work will never be remembered or reconsidered — timely art is rarely timeless. Robles-Gordon’s work is visually successful irrespective of its critiques of the U.S. policy toward — and governance of — its populated territories and the District of Columbia. I’ve seen powerful political art and dim political art, and I often question whether visual art is an effective medium for political messages. But the work in Sovereignty is formally distinctive. Tinney Contemporary will be open this Saturday from 2 to 8 p.m.

https://www.nashvillescene.com/arts_culture/visualart/crawl-space-july-2022/article_4d18f0c8-f6e7-11ec-a1b5-8f437edaf809.html

Millenium Arts Salon & AU Museum: A Conversation between Amber Robles-Gordon & Dr. Tuliza Fleming

Millenium Arts Salon & AU Museum: A Conversation between Amber Robles-Gordon & Dr. Tuliza Fleming


On November 13, 2021 the Millennium Arts Salon provided a salon talk featuring Artist Amber Robles-Gordon in an interview with Interim Chief Curator of the National Museum of African American History and Culture, Dr. Tuliza Fleming, at the American University Museum.

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THE BEAUTIFUL: Poets Reimagine a Nation. THE BEAUTIFUL features the nation's' foremost poets and revolutionizes our ideas of beauty and belonging.

Greetings,

Please consider supporting this project! THE BEAUTIFUL: Poets Reimagine a Nation. THE BEAUTIFUL features the nation's' foremost poets and revolutionizes our ideas of beauty and belonging. I'm so pleased that DanaTeen Lomax choose my artwork "By Intricate Design" as the cover art.

Blessings!

Invite beauty in!

In the chaos of a constantly shifting world, we can turn to the poets. They invite us to re-envision beauty and challenge conventional ideals.  They ask us to co-create just and equitable communities. And they show us how. This multicultural, multi-generational anthology redefines beauty in order to sustain and protect it.

In THE BEAUTIFUL, truth-telling, mentorship, activism, art-making, and sustainability practices inspire communal responsibility and help us reimagine beauty in surprising ways.

THE BEAUTIFUL contributors include:

Introduction Juan Felipe Herrera

Editor’s Note Dana Teen Lomax

Sāmoa ‘i Sasa’e/American Samoa

Dan Taulapapa McMullin

Guåhan/Guam Evelyn San Miguel Flores

Northern Mariana Islands

Joey “Pepe Batbon” Connolly

Puerto Rico Julio César Pol

U.S. Virgin Islands Tiphanie Yanique

Alabama Jacqueline Allen Trimble

Alaska X’unei Lance Twitchell

Arizona Felicia Zamora

Arkansas Dana Teen Lomax

California Jaime Cortez

Colorado Jovan Mays

Connecticut Rayon Lennon

Delaware Gemelle John

Florida Nicole Brodsky

Georgia Jericho Brown

Hawai‘i No‘u Revilla

Idaho Janet Holmes

Illinois Sarah Rosenthal

Indiana Marianne Boruch

Iowa Akwi Nji

Kansas Megan Kaminski

Kentucky Kristen Renee Miller

Louisiana Megan Burns

Maine Stuart Kestenbaum

Maryland Linda Pastan

Massachusetts Eileen Myles

Michigan Rob Halpern

Minnesota 신 선 영 Sun Yung Shin

Mississippi E. Ethelbert Miller

Missouri Dorothea Lasky

Montana Prageeta Sharma

Nebraska Matt Mason

Nevada Vogue Robinson

New Hampshire Kate Greenstreet

New Jersey Cortney Lamar Charleston

New Mexico Arthur Sze

New York Jennifer Firestone

North Carolina Dorianne Laux

North Dakota Denise K. Lajimodiere

Ohio Amit Majmudar

Oklahoma Joy Harjo

Oregon Douglas Manuel

Pennsylvania Raquel Salas Rivera

Rhode Island Sawako Nakayasu

South Carolina Marcus Amaker

South Dakota Lee Ann Roripaugh

Tennessee Ama Codjoe

Texas Ching-In Chen

Utah Craig Dworkin

Vermont Camille Guthrie

Virginia giovanni singleton

Washington Sally and Sam Green

Washington, D.C. Sarah Anne Cox

West Virginia Marc Harshman

Wisconsin Oliver Baez Bendorf

Wyoming David Romtvedt

Cover Art by Amber Robles-Gordon

Book Design by Roberta Morris

Gualala Arts is a Mendocino-based nonprofit whose mission is to promote interest and participation in the arts. Since 1961, Gualala Arts has served Sonoma and Mendocino County coastal residents and visitors with year-round programs of art, music, theater and education. Gualala Arts operates with 12 members on the board of directors, an executive director and management team including: events, office, operations, project and publicity.  Gualala Arts is also supported  hundreds of dedicated volunteers.

Hyperallergic

Washington, DC — Seven “flags” hang in Amber Robles-Gordon’s show at the American University Museum: one for each of the five unincorporated United States territories in the Caribbean, one for the District of Columbia, and one to signify the artist’s place in between those locales.

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Bmore Art

People, food, and horticulture are among the things that move. Amber Robles-Gordon’s use of the Ficus Elastica is part of the symbology that reverberates throughout her exhibition, Successions: Traversing US Colonialism, on view at the American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center in Washington, DC, through December 12, 2021. The Ficus Elastica—colloquially known as the rubber tree—has its roots in South Asia, though it was later nativized in the West Indies through the rubber trade. Dear reader, among your houseplants you are likely to find the genus of the rubber plant.

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“Successions: Traversing U.S. Colonialism” on Exhibit at American University Museum

“USVI Spiritual, Moko Jumbie: Walk Tall and Heal Forward” Mixed Media on quilt, (back of “USVI Political”) 2021 (Courtesy of Amber Robles-Gordon)

Amber Robles-Gordon’s “Successions: Traversing U.S. Colonialism” has a dual purpose. It consists of her “Place of Birth and Breath” solo exhibit viewed first in her native Puerto Rico in 2020, and it has evolved into a component exhibit, which is an exploration of the historical underpinnings of U.S. Colonialism.

Robles-Gordon is a mixed media visual artist whose solo exhibit at the American University Museum opened in August and can be viewed Fridays through Sundays, from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. until Dec. 12.

What began as a quest, “to heal my five-year-old self: to empower her to fight for herself, her language and her culture,” the exhibition took on “the intersections of language, culture, institutional racism, anti-blackness and their immeasurable impact within the U.S. territories,” said Robles-Gordon.

A native-born Puerto Rican with family from St. Thomas, St. John, Puerto Rico, Tortola and Antigua, Robles-Gordon created a visual discussion of the historical and political plight and resilience of the District of Columbia, where she resides, and the five U.S. territories that her two-sided quilts represent. They embody the artist’s creation of a political study of the territories and on the reverse side, a spiritual and cultural study.

Robles-Gordon’s early love of art and creativity moved her delight with fabrics, quilts and found objects to the discovery that these could and would be her artistic narrative.

A writer uses words to express; my medium of expression is my art, she said. “I use a myriad of materials according to what I’m trying to convey in a particular project or a particular narrative. It’s very essential that I match up with what I’m trying to convey,” Robles-Gorden said.

The decision to dismiss her native language, Spanish, came as a result of the teasing and ridicule Robles-Gordon experienced as a five-year-old kindergartener at her school in Arlington, Virginia, far away from her birthplace of Puerto Rico. She did not look like a Latina girl that was familiar to her classmates, and hence developed the bullying of this little brown-skinned girl.

In time, Robles-Gordon realized the importance of embracing her language and her culture and the need to find ways to heal through her research and employ it through her art as the medium on her journey to healing.

Speaking of her years as an artist, Robles-Gordon’s journey toward healing is what she brings creatively in her discoveries about U.S. Colonialism, “I think that it’s a beginning. There’s not an end to my journey. It’s a part of my journey. I think I’ve done a hell of a job in starting it. I actually feel proud about it in my own life. That feels good,” she said.

Robles-Gordon made the universe know how important this part of her journey is. “I think I’ve done that,” she said.

“Successions: Traversing U.S. Colonialism” exhibits the component of Robles-Gordon’s body of work containing six quilts embodying the Commonwealth of the District of Columbia, and the five U.S. territories of Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, the Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa. The other component, “Place of Birth and Breath,” is the collage on canvas series created in 2020 and exhibited at the Universidad del Sagrado Corazon, (University of the Sacred Heart) in Puerto Rico.

“Place of Birth and Breath” is Robles-Gordon’s 10 mixed-media collage canvases that are a result of the visit with her mother to Puerto Rico where both women recaptured their roots, one of her childhood home, and the other of her birthplace.


“Isla del Encanto” collage, 18×24, 2020. (Courtesy of Amber Robles-Gordon)

A foundational symbology of the “Birth and Breath” body of work is the rubber tree that grows on the campus of the University of the Sacred Heart, which Robles-Gordon was introduced to while in Puerto Rico. “This tree appeared to be a literal fusion of past, present and future states of creation or sustaining an ecosystem. Throughout the series, are abstracted representations of the rubber tree – an entanglement of strong roots – as an example of its resiliency this tree most recently stood-fast to its native soil while 155 mph winds battered the campus,” Robles-Gordon noted.

Robles-Gordon shares her intricate ideas of how she layered her work depicting and interpreting the transitions of day to night and night to day. She relates to three major ethnic/racial groups – the Taino, the Spaniards and Africans, the stranglehold of the United States and the impact of the Caribbean Sea with its threat of hurricanes, scorching summer heat and lush landscapes.

Successions: Traversing U.S. Colonialism at American University exhibition closes on Dec. 12. The journey continues. The conversation continues. The healing continues.

See Amber Robles-Gordon’s website here..

Museums Review In the galleries: Artist’s works criss-cross the paths of U.S. colonialism

Museums Review In the galleries: Artist’s works criss-cross the paths of U.S. colonialism

Residents of D.C. are used to seeing the place as an almost-state, much like Maryland or Wyoming, yet not quite. Amber Robles-Gordon, a longtime Washingtonian who was born in Puerto Rico, has a different take. Her American University Museum show, “Successions: Traversing U.S. Colonialism,” groups D.C. with her birthplace and four other inhabited territories: Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa and the Northern Mariana Islands. She represents these disenfranchised territories on two-sided quilted banners, one face for “political” and the other for “spiritual.”

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Examining Black Existentialism through the Curatorial Lens

Join our panelists as they journey through texts by Octavia Butler and bell Hooks, Parable of the Sower and Salvation: Black People and Love. They will explore and discuss parallels and intersections between themes posited in these seminal texts and their own individual curatorial/artistic practices.

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Weaving Identity: A Conversation on Textile Practice in the 21 st Century

This panel explores the power of contemporary visual art through the practices of the Diaspora’s most preeminent artists who innovate through the use of textiles. The panel will also share how their works are impacted by black existential thought. Followed by Cocktails and Light Bites Vranken Pommery and Red Rooster.

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Successions video of conversation, between artist Amber Robles-Gordon and author Daniel Immerwahr

Successions video of conversation, between artist Amber Robles-Gordon and author Daniel Immerwahr

This candid conversation featured Daniel Immerwahr, author of "How to Hide an Empire: A History of the Greater United States" and visual artist Amber Robles-Gordon. They spoke regarding the threads of intersection between his book and her current solo exhibition at the American University

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