SAN ANTONIO, TX.- The San Antonio Museum of Art announced today that it has acquired seven photographs by pioneering American photographer Laura Aguilar. The works are drawn from three of Aguilars major series, including Clothed/Unclothed, Stillness, and Motion. Aguilars practice engaged with and challenged societal constructs relating to beauty, gender, sexuality, race, and class, shaping some of todays most critical art dialogues. She often leveraged her own experiences as queer, large-bodied, and Chicana to examine questions of identity and the ways it affects how we navigate and live in the world. Although she was immersed in the East Los Angeles Chicano art scene throughout the 1980s and 1990s and created an expansive body of work, Aguilars significant contributions to the trajectory of art and its role in wider conversations about social issues only came into national awareness in recent years and requires further scholarly study and critical attention.
The acquisition of photographs by Aguilar reflects SAMAs ongoing focus on diversifying its contemporary holdings, and especially its growing collection of photography. The acquisition also supports the vision of the Laura Aguilar Trust of 2016, which aims to place the artists work in public collections. Aguilars photographs are printed in limited-edition serieswith many works no longer availablemaking SAMAs acquisition particularly important to ongoing public access.
Lauras work is stunning in both its conceptual and formal rigor. She was well ahead of her time in examining identity and equality within the art world and in our communities, and her vision is essential to the narrative of contemporary art, said Lana Meador, Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at SAMA. Her photographs add an important dimension to SAMAs growing photography collection and connect with works by other contemporary artists in our collection who address art historical and social norms. This is a significant and exciting acquisition for SAMA, and we look forward to sharing these works with our audiences.
This acquisition follows the February 2022 announcement that SAMA received a gift of twenty-nine photographs by eight prominent American photographers, including Mark Citret, Mike Disfarmer, Leonard Freed, Henry Horenstein, Danny Lyon, Bill Owens, Lou Stoumen, and William Witt, as well as a separate gift of twelve additional photographs by Leonard Freed. Other recent photography acquisitions include works by Christina Fernandez, LaToya Ruby Frazier, and Texas-based artist Earlie Hudnall Jr.
Clothed/Unclothed
In 1990, Aguilar began work on her largest series, Clothed/Unclothed, which is comprised of thirty-five portraits of individuals, couples, or threesomesall close friends of the artist. The individuals are portrayed side-by-side, clothed and nude, beginning with the artists powerful self-portrait Clothed/Unclothed #1. In contrast to art historical precedents and mainstream visual culture, Aguilars subjects are diverse in their body types, sexual orientation, and relationship to one another. She gave particular focus to people in the lesbian and gay communities as well as individuals of color. This is reflected in the Latina lesbian couple featured in Clothed/Unclothed #17, which SAMA has acquired. This body of work paved the way for Aguilars celebrated self-portraits in nature series and now her international renown.
Stillness
SAMA has acquired Stillness #18, #25, and #27. Inspired in part by her mentor Judy Daters feminist nude self-portraits in nature, Aguilar began exploring the genre in her own work. The Stillness series features Aguilars nude body amidst the landscape of the US Southwest. Many of the images in this acclaimed series were captured in the San Antonio area during Aguilars participation in the Artpace International Artist-in-Residence Program during the summer of 1999. Stillness #25 and #27 were shot in Southern Californias Mojave Desert just prior to Aguilars residency at Artpace. Stillness #18 features the Texas landscape. The series portrays a reverence for self and nature through continuity and symbiosis between the body/self and its surroundings. At the same time, it responds to the art historical convention of the female nude and the gaze of the traditional white, male, heterosexual viewer by challenging normative conceptions of beauty and rendering her large, brown body both visible and obscured in the natural environment.
Motion
The Motion series was completed in Texas after Aguilars Artpace residency and continues her explorations of the nude female body in nature. Motion #46, #56, and #59all of which SAMA has acquiredeach include Aguilar and two other women representing a range of body types and skin tones, signifying the intersections of identity. Their bodily interactions with each other mirror the movement and rhythm of the natural environment. As in the Stillness, series the women's faces are obscured, complicating notions of portraiture and emphasizing the formal relationships between their bodies and the landscape.
Although largely self-taught, Aguilar took photography classes at East Los Angeles College. She has been recognized with awards including Anonymous Was a Woman (2020); Artpace International Artist-in-Residence Program (1999); California Community Foundation's J. Paul Getty Grant for the Visual Arts (1998); and the James D. Phelan Award in photography (1995). Her work has been shown in numerous exhibitions, including at the 1993 Venice Biennale and in the 2017 retrospective Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell, which was part of the Pacific Standard Time LA/LA exhibition series and traveled to four venues nationwide. Her work is included in major public collections, including Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, PA; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, NY; Ruby City, San Antonio, TX; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA; Tate, London, UK; Vincent Price Art Museum, Los Angeles, CA; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY, among others. She died prematurely at the age of 58 in April 2018.