The artist Jesse Treviño in his studio in 2017. He was known for large-scale paintings that were photorealistic yet dreamlike. Credit..Alma E. Hernandez/San Antonio Express-News
By Alex Williams
New York Times
Jesse Treviño, a lauded Mexican American artist who lost the use of his dominant right arm in a land mine explosion as a soldier in the Vietnam War, but who went on to conjure vast murals and dramatic paintings with his left arm that were displayed in three presidential libraries and the Smithsonian Institution, died on Feb. 13 in San Antonio. He was 76.
The death, in a hospice facility, was confirmed by Anthony Head, the author of the 2019 book “Spirit: The Life and Art of Jesse Treviño.” Mr. Head said that the cause had not been determined, but that Mr. Treviño had been hospitalized for pneumonia in recent months and had had cancer but was in remission.
Mr. Treviño became famous in San Antonio and beyond for his large-scale paintings depicting the hard realities and soaring aspirations of the Chicano culture of his home city. Though they were rendered in a photorealistic style, they were nevertheless exuberant, even dreamlike.
His art is hard to miss; “Spirit of Healing,” for instance, which portrays a boy holding a dove as an angel watches over him, is a nine-story mural made from hand-cut tiles that adorns the exterior of the Children’s Hospital of San Antonio.
“San Antonio was his muse and his canvas,” Mr. Head said by phone. “The Hispanic population on the West Side, and the artists who were from there, had never been seen in museums and galleries before, so he set out to do just that.”
While Mr. Treviño once had ambitions to become a globe-trotting artist, he ultimately found the inspiration he needed at home.
“All my time as a kid, absorbing the things in my community that were eventually going to be a big part of my painting — there is so much there,” he was quoted as saying in Mr. Head’s book. “I could work the rest of my life and never do it all.”
Those efforts were certainly recognized locally. Mayor Ron Nirenberg of San Antonio referred to Mr. Treviño as “an American hero” on Twitter after his death. Texas Monthly magazine called "Señora Dolores Treviño", a painting of his mother, “one of the best paintings of an artist’s mother since Whistler’s.”
But Mr. Treviño’s reputation ultimately spread far beyond his home state. In 1987, he presented a painting of the Alamo to President Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office. In 1998, Hillary Clinton, then the first lady, invited him to an international exhibition in Santiago, Chile, as the American artist representative. His work is in the collections of the presidential libraries of Lyndon B. Johnson, George H.W. Bush and Reagan.
One of his most celebrated works was “Mi Vida” (“My Life”), a haunting 14-by-8-foot autobiographical mural that he painted on a black wall of his bedroom in 1972, while still mired in depression and anger over his gruesome war injuries.
The painting, a swirl of objects including a Purple Heart medal, a pill, a can of Budweiser beer, a pack of cigarettes and an image of the artist in combat fatigues, appeared in a 2019 exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, “Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965-1975.” (The show also presented works by Yoko Ono, Edward Kienhoz, Claes Oldenburg and others.)
“Here you see the personal and political meet,” the critic Holland Cotter of The New York Times wrote of “Mi Vida.”
Jesus Treviño was born on Dec. 24, 1946, in Monterrey, Mexico, the ninth of 12 children of Juan Treviño, a mechanic and truck driver, and Dolores (Campos) Treviño, a homemaker. He adopted the name Jesse when he entered elementary school.
The family moved to San Antonio when he was 4, and two years later his drawing of a dove won a contest sponsored by the Witte Museum in San Antonio. He continued to take home art prizes throughout high school, and after graduation he earned a scholarship to the Art Students League of New York. He was studying there when he got his draft notice in 1966.
While on a mission in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam in February 1967, Mr. Treviño was racing to board a helicopter under sniper fire when he stepped on a mine. The blast sent shrapnel through his torso and limbs and hurtled him into the air before he landed face down in a rice paddy.
“He was thinking he was going to die,” Mr. Head said. “He began bargaining with God to live, and when he was on the chopper he received morphine and began to have these visions of San Antonio and his family. With this combination of trauma, shock and the medicine, he asked himself, ‘If I had a second chance, what would I do?’ And it was, ‘I would paint the people and the places of San Antonio, my home.’”
The death, in a hospice facility, was confirmed by Anthony Head, the author of the 2019 book “Spirit: The Life and Art of Jesse Treviño.” Mr. Head said that the cause had not been determined, but that Mr. Treviño had been hospitalized for pneumonia in recent months and had had cancer but was in remission.
Mr. Treviño became famous in San Antonio and beyond for his large-scale paintings depicting the hard realities and soaring aspirations of the Chicano culture of his home city. Though they were rendered in a photorealistic style, they were nevertheless exuberant, even dreamlike.
His art is hard to miss; “Spirit of Healing,” for instance, which portrays a boy holding a dove as an angel watches over him, is a nine-story mural made from hand-cut tiles that adorns the exterior of the Children’s Hospital of San Antonio.
“San Antonio was his muse and his canvas,” Mr. Head said by phone. “The Hispanic population on the West Side, and the artists who were from there, had never been seen in museums and galleries before, so he set out to do just that.”
While Mr. Treviño once had ambitions to become a globe-trotting artist, he ultimately found the inspiration he needed at home.
“All my time as a kid, absorbing the things in my community that were eventually going to be a big part of my painting — there is so much there,” he was quoted as saying in Mr. Head’s book. “I could work the rest of my life and never do it all.”
Those efforts were certainly recognized locally. Mayor Ron Nirenberg of San Antonio referred to Mr. Treviño as “an American hero” on Twitter after his death. Texas Monthly magazine called "Señora Dolores Treviño", a painting of his mother, “one of the best paintings of an artist’s mother since Whistler’s.”
But Mr. Treviño’s reputation ultimately spread far beyond his home state. In 1987, he presented a painting of the Alamo to President Ronald Reagan in the Oval Office. In 1998, Hillary Clinton, then the first lady, invited him to an international exhibition in Santiago, Chile, as the American artist representative. His work is in the collections of the presidential libraries of Lyndon B. Johnson, George H.W. Bush and Reagan.
One of his most celebrated works was “Mi Vida” (“My Life”), a haunting 14-by-8-foot autobiographical mural that he painted on a black wall of his bedroom in 1972, while still mired in depression and anger over his gruesome war injuries.
The painting, a swirl of objects including a Purple Heart medal, a pill, a can of Budweiser beer, a pack of cigarettes and an image of the artist in combat fatigues, appeared in a 2019 exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, “Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965-1975.” (The show also presented works by Yoko Ono, Edward Kienhoz, Claes Oldenburg and others.)
“Here you see the personal and political meet,” the critic Holland Cotter of The New York Times wrote of “Mi Vida.”
Mr. Treviño’s autobiographical 1972 painting “Mi Vida” appeared in a 2019 exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, “Artists Respond: American Art and the Vietnam War, 1965-1975.”
Credit...Justin T. Gellerson for The New York Times
Credit...Justin T. Gellerson for The New York Times
The family moved to San Antonio when he was 4, and two years later his drawing of a dove won a contest sponsored by the Witte Museum in San Antonio. He continued to take home art prizes throughout high school, and after graduation he earned a scholarship to the Art Students League of New York. He was studying there when he got his draft notice in 1966.
“Los Piscasoros” (1986). Mr. Treviño’s paintings depicted the hard realities and soaring aspirations of the Chicano culture of San Antonio.Credit...via Treviño Family
“He was thinking he was going to die,” Mr. Head said. “He began bargaining with God to live, and when he was on the chopper he received morphine and began to have these visions of San Antonio and his family. With this combination of trauma, shock and the medicine, he asked himself, ‘If I had a second chance, what would I do?’ And it was, ‘I would paint the people and the places of San Antonio, my home.’”
To read entire article, click on link: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/03/03/arts/jesse-trevino-dead.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
12 comments:
Good writing.
Never heard of this guy, tho. Is there anything in Brownsville by him?
In my eyes this man, artist, and soldier puts Trumputo to shame. What a contrast in lives.
I can safely say NON of the city commissioners plus el enano pendejo know this famous brownsvillian. any bets? BOLA DE PENDEJOS
A HERO AND A WORLD FAMOUS ARTIST AND NON OF THESE PENDEJETES KNOW THIS PERSON.
no tienen verguenza!!!
How about naming a city street for this hero? Never happen he's mexican y pobre.
March 4, 2023 at 5:38 AM
you must be a gringo or a coco en el barrio everybody knows about this hero.
You can rattle all the medal of honors given to Hispanics and trumputo would still say, they are all murderers thieves and rapist, this is the racist republicans attitude and it will never change. FACT.
This also means todo los cocos!
Naming your child with a gringo name ain't gonna change NOTHING.
Wonderful artist- thank you for posting about him.. wish some of his murals were in Brownsville.. we need more artists like him
Bento E. Spinoza
@9:34 AM
What the fuck are you talking about?
Pierre Esparza
San Bene
March 4, 2023 at 11:06 AM
We need new city commissioners that are in sync with the citizens here not a bola de mamones that do whatever they want with our hard owned money.
This gentleman is a local hero and an artist that would out painted any body the city commission hired and he is a local. Do they care NO did they checked around for any local artist NO of course not.
THEY ALL HAVE TO GO DO NOT RE-ELECT NOBODY. EVER!!!SPECIALL THOSE ONES THAT WANT A DIFFERENT OFFICE.
March 4, 2023 at 9:34 AM
Is this person so upset cause he/she was given a shitty name.
Juan may he Rest in Peace and a big thanks for his Service to our Country in Vietnam.
March 4, 2023 at 3:40 PM March 4, 2023 at 9:34 AM
Sanbene? hahahaha jajajaja cocos.
Pierre? what is that a rock?
New high, a meskin with a french name WOW! se la llevo - idiota!
March 5, 2023 at 9:29 AM
SO YOU ENJOY YOUR GRINGO NAME AND ACT LIKE A GRINGO PINCHE COCO MAMON. LOS GRINGOS HATE MESKINS WITH GRINGO NAMES THEY LAUGHT AT YOUR ASS AND MAKE FUN. GRINGOS MAKE FUN OF ALL MESKINS WITH GRINGO NAMES. WHEN HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF A GRINGO WITH A MESKIN NAME? NEVER!!!
IT WILL NEVER HAPPEN THEY ARE ASHAME.
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