ACE LEHNER
GANGSTERS REVISITED
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ACE LEHNER
GANGSTERS REVISITED
December 5th, 2015 - January 9th, 2016
Opening Reception: Saturday, December 5th from 4-7pm
Artist talk Friday, December 11th, 2015 8pm
Cookie Paloma and Renee De Jesus were in middle school in the Bay Area, California in the 1990s, a time when the schools they attended and neighborhoods they hung out in were predominantly low income, Latino and overflowing with gang culture. Both Cookie and Renee were repeatedly harassed and threatened for being a “Gringa.” As youth they were afraid and angry. “I’m no Gringa!” Cookie recalls yelling angrily at throngs of gangsters. But words were not enough. The best way Cookie and Renee could survive was to make their Latina heritages visible, which translated into becoming gangsters. Becoming what they self describe as “gangsters” was not only a strategy for survival but it was also a way for them to visually represent their Latina identities, to assert family history, in Cookie’s case a history that involves migrant Mexican farmers struggling to survive and cultural assimilation that came in the form of embodied white-washing.
Today Cookie and Renee no longer regularly identify as gangsters, but their relationships to their formative teenage years spent as Cholas are still integral to who they are. Through Gangsters Revisited they explore the gangster parts of themselves from a safe distance.
This collaborative work is one part performance and one part authentic reenactment, it points to the failures of photographs to ever present unmediated truth, while also relying on pictures to point to the surface of identity performances and the relation between identity and aesthetics. Picturing Cookie and Renee as Gangsters now is about exploring their former selves from a place of safety and reflecting on how their identities are tied to deep and complex personal, geographic and political histories. To reflect this they pose in the natural landscape (rather than an urban setting where they would have typically been found in their youth), this also subtly gestures toward the fabrication of the picture. Picturing Cookie and Renee in the landscape also points to the way their personal histories are reflective of the history of the landscape of California, a landscape that used to be Mexico and that speaks to manifest destiny, colonization, racial inequity and the American Dream.
Ace Lehner is an artist, photographer and visual culture scholar originally from Averill Park, NY and currently based in Oakland, California. Lehner has exhibited, lectured and taught throughout North America and Internationally. Lehner was a recipient of the Murphy Cadogen Fellowship in the Fine Arts and the Sheffield Art League Portfolio Scholarship. Lehner's work is held in several private collections. Lehner works across photography and video and embraces collaboration as a form of artistic production. Lehner also works as a portrait, editorial and product photographer and freelance arts and culture writer. Lehner holds an MA | MFA from California College of the Arts and a BFA with distinction from Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Lehner is currently a Ph.D. student in Visual Studies in the History of Art and Visual Culture Department at UCSC.