
In most U.S. museums, Latinx and Chicanx art continue to be under-represented — if they are represented at all. But this will no longer be the case at the Blanton Museum of Art in Austin, Texas, which has received a massive gift that is likely to make its collection in that area one of the biggest in the country.
Gilberto Cárdenas and Dolores Garcia have given 5,650 works of Latinx and Chicanx art to the Blanton, which is located on the campus of the University of Texas, Austin. The majority of these works are set to remain in the holdings of the Blanton. Yet the Blanton also said it will work to distribute some of these pieces to other U.S. museums in an effort to grow the representation of Latinx art nationwide.
The gift is meant to complement the Blanton’s expansion of its Latino art initiatives: The museum is set to hire an associate curator of Latinx art using funding from the Mellon Foundation, and it will unveil two galleries specific to that area in March.
Cárdenas and Garcia, who are married, said in a statement, “The Cárdenas/Garcia collection at the museum will provide access to Latino art for the student body and faculty for discovery and research, in addition to serving asa resource for the Austin community. We are confident that the research undertaken by the curatorial staff and the exhibitions and publications that result will represent a valuable contribution to the body of knowledge and understanding of this aspect of American art.”
For 14 years, Cárdenas directed the Inter-University Program for Latino Research, while Garcia was a professor of sociology at UT Austin, where she sought to advance Latino studies.
Below, see artworks from their gift.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Antonia Guerrero, Lourdes, 2005.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Margarita Cabrera, VOCHO VW Beetle Sedan, 2004.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Maceo Montoya, Dawn (Or Despair), 2003.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Ester Hernandez, Sun Mad, 1982.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Yolanda López, Who’s the Illegal Alien, Pilgrim?, 1981.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Esperanza Gama, Untitled (Portrait of Frida Kahlo), 2002.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Connie Arismendi, La Morena, 1990s.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Claudio Dicochea, De la Corona y el Vaquero Enamorado, el Pachukis [Of the Crown and the Enamored Cowboy, the Pachukis], 2011.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Vincent Valdez, America’s Finest, 2012.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Xavier Viramontes, Boycott Grapes, Support the United Farm Workers Union, 1973.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Malaquías Montoya, Undocumented, 1981.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art John M. Valadez, Untitled, 1978.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Tony Ortega, Western Union Mar 4, 2008.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Dulce Pinzón, Minerva Valencia, from Puebla, works as a nanny in New York. She sends 400 dollars a week, 2005.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Delilah Montoya, La Guadalupana, 1999.
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Image Credit: Blanton Museum of Art Carmen Lomas Garza, Ofrenda para Antonio Lomas, 1995.