- This event has passed.
Aliento corporal/Corporeal Breath Closing Celebration
October 12 @ 2:00 pm - 7:00 pm
Big Ramp
2024 East Westmoreland Street
Philadelphia,PA19134United States
Aliento corporal/Corporeal Breath
Evan Dawson
Lucia Garzón
Joseph Lazaro Rodriguez
Noemi Nieves-Hoblin
José Ortiz Pagán
Cesar Viveros
September 14 – October 12, 2024
Closing Celebration: October 12th 2-7pm
“Another reason for reconsidering and the necessity of re-affirming the spiritual in art, or the spiritual possibilities
of art, if you want to put it more modestly, is that we have not only not awakened from the nightmare of the
materialistic attitude in art as well as society, but materialism has become a plague, indeed, the reigning ideology
in both.” -Donald Kusbit, “Reconsidering the Spiritual in Art”
Big Ramp is pleased to announce Aliento corporal/Corporeal Breath, a group show curated by William
Schwaller that explores the interstices of the body and the spiritual in contemporary artistic practices. At a
moment in time when culture is as secular and materialistic as it has ever been, the artists and the work in this
exhibition offer timely reminders of the millenary relationship between art and spirituality. While materialism and
capitalism are certainly omnipresent forces that artists rightfully and variously reject, the artists in the show are
also exploring the spiritual dimension of artistic practice itself or turning to the spiritual in order to reclaim
ancestral knowledge and beliefs that colonization and displacement sought to eradicate. Skeptical of earlier,
postmodern parody and satire levied against organized religions or the capitalistic marketing of spiritual
lifestyles by influencers, the artists in this show present their own earnest visual languages of individual and
collective spirituality.
The artworks in this show are not just representations of religious or spiritual beliefs, these works function as or
approximate the experience of spiritual objects, and thus relate or refer to the body. They are the products of
meditative habits and are objects to be worn, touched, or manipulated. At the same time these works are
rooted in contemporary aesthetic practices where unorthodox and meaningful material choices betray the
hybridity of these objects and the transculturation at work in our globalized art communities. Joseph Lazaro
Rodriguez’s colorful sculptures and wall pieces are engaged in a practice of care and devotion. The artist
wraps biomorphic forms, sometimes resembling body parts, with surgical netting and colorful compression
bandages. For Rodriguez, these abstract compositions serve similar functions as folk retablo shrines and
ex-voto paintings: to honor and commemorate miraculous events or spiritual intercessions. The altar is
similarly an archetype within Cesar Viveros’s small and large scale sculptures. His work reclaims both the
subjects and forms of indigenous Mexican and Mesoamerican cultures and their functionality as altars or
censers, which may be activated and adorned for ceremonial events. Noemi Nieves-Hoblin draws upon her
Puerto Rican cultural heritage in the production of contemporary vejigante masks as a means of exploring the
complexities of cultural and racial identity and the impacts of colonization, which in the case of the vejigante is
intertwined with Christianity’s coercion of indigenous peoples and crafts. Puerto Rican culture and spiritual
practices are also at the core of Jose Ortiz Pagan’s work. His Barreras series act as reliquaries in the form of
sea urchins. These works remind us that reliquaries, shrines, and ex-votos are all vehicles for narrative, they
tell the stories of those who made them. Here the reliquaries’ content are not so much powerful spiritual
objects, but materials that speak to the histories and difficulties of Puerto Ricans on Borínquen and across their
peregrinations and displacements. Lucia Garzón mines the iconography and DIY aesthetic of home shrines
and altars. Garzón’s meticulously and whimsically crafted rug exemplifies her capacity to imbue humble objects
and materials with significance that is, perhaps, only known to her and her family. Echoing the purposeful, and
yet playful, material decisions of all the artists, Evan Dawson’s works derive from the artist’s desire to create
habits and routines that result in a studio practice of regularly making work with readymade materials from his
daily life, but that also generates a meditative and quasi-spiritual practice.
Artist Bios:
Evan Dawson is a Philadelphia based interdisciplinary artist. His work has also been seen across Philadelphia at High Tide, Little
Berlin, Mascher Space, Pilot Projects and Atelier Gallery in Philadelphia; The Columbus Museum of Art and Sculpture Center, in Ohio;
Microscope Gallery and Art in Odd Places in New York City. He has also shown internationally in Nepal and Thailand. Evan holds an
MFA in Sculpture and Expanded Media from The Ohio State University.
Lucia Garzón is an interdisciplinary artist working in a range of media including wood, textiles, print, and video. Lucia graduated from
Tyler School of Art in 2018 with a BFA in printmaking. The main themes in Lucia’s work focuses on the intersection between personal
identity and immigrant values. Lucia was awarded the Joseph Roberts Foundation grant in 2019 along with a solo show at Da Vinci Art
Alliance. Lucia has been an apprentice at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, attended Acre Residency, and was an artist in residence
at University of the Arts ILab. Lucia currently lives and works in Philadelphia.
Joseph Lazaro Rodriguez is a Cuban-American, multidisciplinary artist. He uses his personal experiences and broad range of styles
and mediums to create paintings, drawings, sculptures, and large scale multi-channel video installations. He studied at Pratt Institute
and received an MFA from The Pennsylvania Academy of The Fine Arts in 2019. Rodriguez exhibited work at The National Liberty
Museum in Philadelphia and recently had his first museum solo exhibition in 2022 at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in
Philadelphia. He has also presented works at The Wassaic Project in Wassaic, NY, Anna Zorina Gallery, NYC, Regular Normal Gallery,
NYC, Gross McCleaf Gallery, GrizzlyGrizzly and Works on Paper Fine Arts Gallery in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and is privately
collected. Rodriguez received a Bachelor’s and Master’s degree in Nursing, and worked as a critical care nurse in large urban hospitals
focusing on cardiothoracic and heart transplant surgical populations in tandem with his studio practice before retiring in 2017. He
resides and works out of his studio in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Noemi Nieves-Hoblin is a Philadelphia based artist who began working in glass at Tyler School of Art and Architecture, where she
received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in glass in 2024. Her work utilizes glass as a canvas for narrative sculpture, inspired by personal
mythopoetic stories that are passed down orally. She uses glassblowing, flameworking and stained-glass processes to create work that
references the natural world and familial histories.
José Ortiz Pagán, a Puerto Rican multi-disciplinary artist based in Philadelphia, is renowned for his dedication to using art as a
powerful tool to address social issues. Throughout his career, he has initiated community art projects in the city, aiming to preserve
cultural presence and empower individuals and communities. Within his process is embedded the use of radical imagination and hope
as strategies for change. Ortiz-Pagán employs spirituality as a means of resistance, creating meaningful experiences that honor and
validate diverse communities within various diasporas. José Ortiz-Pagán’s significant contributions have been recognized through
prestigious awards such as the NALAC Catalyst for Change Fellowship and the Artworks grant from the Philadelphia Foundation and
the Forman Arts Initiative.His artwork has been featured in various exhibitions worldwide, including the Trienal Poligráfica in San Juan,
Puerto Rico, the International Printmaking Biennial in Taiwan ROC, and the Bronx Latin American Biennial.
Cesar Viveros is an artist born in Veracruz, Mexico. With more than 25 years of experience creating public art in the United States and
Mexico, he has been collaborating with the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program since 2000. His public work is inspired by the communities
he has worked with, and when exhibiting his “personal” work, Cesar likes to do so in public settings. Here, people interested in
syncretism studies, Mexican immigrants seeking to reconnect with their origins, researchers of vanishing cultural heritage, Hispanic
people curious about typical Mexican ancient celebrations that may differ from those in other countries, or the general public interested
in celebrations that define cultures can find a source of firsthand experience on pre-Columbian and “mestizaje” periods seen through
the eyes of an indigenous artist. Food justice workshops, sweat lodge ritual practices, Aztec dances and ceremonies, large-scale as
well as miniature altars for Day of the Dead celebrations, sculptures and reliefs, fresco painting, mosaic, and featherwork are some of
the signature elements of his work outside of murals.