Luis Jiménez, Gaspar Enríquez y la experiencia mexicoamericana

Luis Jiménez / El corazón de Luis de Gaspar Enríquez es una obra de arte fascinante. El díptico, actualmente en la exposición de Adquisiciones Recientes de la Galería de Retratos, está compuesto por un retrato de Luis Jiménez (1940 - 2006), pintado en el medio de acrílico con aerógrafo de Enríquez, y en un corazón de cerámica que descansa sobre un nido de bronce. En la pintura, la presencia de Jiménez se impone con calma sobre un fondo azul, con el hombro derecho levantado más alto que el izquierdo, como una montaña en pendiente. Un sombrero de paja corona su cabeza y unas gafas de sol reflectantes cubren sus ojos. La pieza escultórica es del tamaño de un verdadero corazón adulto. Es de color rojo oscuro y veteado, y en su centro se encuentra una imagen de Vaquero, la icónica escultura de fibra de vidrio de Jiménez de un vaquero marrón sobre un caballo azul que patea el aire con sus patas traseras. Desde 1990, la escultura original ha adornado el exterior del Reynolds Center, que alberga la National Portrait Gallery y el Smithsonian American Art Museum. El díptico es parte de la serie De puro corazón (Desde el corazón) de Enríquez, en la que Enríquez interpreta a los artistas-amigos que admira por su dedicación a su oficio.

Portrait of Luis Jaminez
Luis Jiménez by Gaspar Enríquez, 2003; National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; donated from the collection of Jerry and Michelle Wright (El Paso, Texas) December 1st, 2016, in honor of the National Portrait Gallery’s 50th anniversary. © 2003 Gaspar Enriquez
Red heart in a frame
El corazón de Luis by Gaspar Enríquez, 2016; National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; donated from the collection of Jerry and Michelle Wright (El Paso, Texas) December 1st, 2016, in honor of the National Portrait Gallery’s 50th anniversary. © 2003 Gaspar Enriquez

This artwork inevitably transports me to El Paso, the birthplace of Jiménez and Enríquez. The cobalt background, Jiménez’s orange t-shirt and angled torso, his wrinkled beige flesh, and the sunlit hat evoke the deep-blue skies, the ochre lowlands, and jagged mountains of this singular place. In 2014 I visited this westernmost city of Texas that borders the State of New Mexico to the North and West, and to the South Mexico’s Ciudad Juárez, state of Chihuahua. As my colleague and I drove to San Elizario to visit with Gaspar, my cellphone broke into fits, jumping between international service and its normal network.

On our way, the sight of the fence and the trench of the Río Grande that separate the US-Mexico border, the reservation of the indigenous community Ysleta Pueblo del Sur, and the confusing vision of buildings and monuments on either one country forming one skyline, made for a strong impression. It deepened as we arrived at Enríquez’s home, an adobe structure gracing the arid landscape like a giant white dove. These buildings, with their soft edges and slightly rough walls, are typical of the region. Enríquez’s house dates back to the mid-1700s when San Elizario was one of the most remote outposts of the Viceroyalty of New Spain. The town became part of the Republic of Mexico in 1821, and then of the slave-holding Republic of Texas in 1836. It was annexed by the United States annexed in 1845. By virtue of this last political transition, San Elizario became one of the oldest villages of the United States, tracing back its roots to the late sixteenth century. Concurrently, the Spanish, Mexican, Apache, Comanche, and Pueblo communities native to the Southwest (among others) became part of our cultural substrate.

Frontiers might be solid on a map, but connections on either side of the border run deep in this part of the country, where Gaspar once crossed the bridge to Mexico to visit his grandparents on local buses that went back and forth. As artists, the late Jiménez and Enríquez pay homage to this region, its history, people, and folklore. Enríquez does so through his choice to extensively portray his self-possessed Mexican American students and close friends. Jiménez, did so through his positioning of Tejano culture as integral to the United States, like in Vaquero, which asserts the Hispanic origin of the quintessentially-American cowboy. 

Gaspar Enríquez’s Luis Jiménez, El Corazón de Luis refuses to be only one thing. It is work on paper, a sculpture, a color study, a landscape, a portrait, and a symbol of the shared heritage of Jiménez and Enríquez and its central place in their art.