Blogs

Exhibiting Artist Highlight: Moises Salazar

Feb 02, 2022
Moises Salazar, Bttm, glitter on board, faux fur, yarn, and brooch, 25 inches x 31 inches

Moises Salazar’s Bttm is currently on view in Vernacular Glamour.  

Vernacular Glamour brings together a cross-section of contemporary Latinx artists working with the visual vocabularies of camp, popular culture, high fashion, and baroque painting and architecture through vernacular idioms. Engaging the materials and forms of ball culture, advertising media, spiritual practices, and street art, the eight artists in Vernacular Glamour mobilize the artifice and exuberance of glamour to address the complexities of everyday life.

Moises Salazar is a non-binary queer artist from Chicago, IL. Born queer and to immigrant parents has cemented a conflict within Moises’s political identity, which is the conceptual focus of their practice. Their work is meant to showcase the trauma, history, and current state that undocumented immigrants and queer folk face. By examining the intersections of race, ethnicity, nationality, gender, queerness and the history of the United States, Moises addresses the reality of the barriers that immigrants and queer individuals face with the intention to begin to dismantle the myths and stereotypes used to criminalize and dehumanize them. They received a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2020.

Moises’ Bttm can be viewed in Vernacular Glamour at the Kathryn Schultz Gallery until February 19, 2022. For more information, click here.

Moises Salazar | Vernacular Glamour Exhibiting Artist

Growing up in Chicago to immigrant parents has cemented a conflict of belonging and safety within my identity. Being first generation, I was thrown into a society that constantly challenges my rights as a U.S. American and targets my community because of their immigration status. I had to survive in a social space that had little regard for the complexities of growing up ethnically Mexican in a racialized society. Safety and security were things that were never a part of my experience while living in the Unite States. With fears of my family being deported I felt alienated by a country I had to pledge myself to. Furthermore, this alienation was reinforced by my queer identity. Being a body that has experienced violence, neglect, and homophobia within and outside my community has become the catalyst of my work. For this reason, the body has become my conceptual focus.

 Whether addressing queer or immigrant bodies my practice is tailored to showcase the trauma, history, and barriers these people face. Reflecting on the lack of space and agency they posses, I present my pieces in environments were they can thrive and be safe. The work I create is colorful, innocent, gentle, soft, and safe. The use of clay, paper mache, glitter and crochet are important in my work because of their cultural and personal value. The use of accessible material has always been important in my practice and in the cultural development of my communities. I use material and methods that have been passed down by generation in my family to showcase the importance of their experience and honor their endurance. My art is a vehicle to celebrate the majesty of cultural heritage contrasted with challenges of living safely in the United States as a member of the immigrant and queer communities.

See more from Moises

Instagram: @moises.salazar.tlatenchi

Website: https://www.moisessalazar.com/