I Pray, Then I Play in the Collective Landscape
Primary
Jesse Amado
(San Antonio, Texas, 1951–)
NationalityAmerican, North America
Date1995
MediumMirror, steel, Plexiglas, latex and soap boxes
DimensionsOverall: 72 × 96 × 2 in. (182.9 × 243.8 × 5.1 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Gift of the artist, 1999.57
Keywords
Rights Statement
Collection AreaModern and Contemporary Art
Object number1999.57
On View
Not on viewCollection Highlight
Originally, I Pray, Then I Play in the Collective Landscape I was a single component in a much larger installation realized while the artist was in residence at the ArtPace Foundation for Contemporary Art in San Antonio. Created during a period of intense self-reflection on the part of the artist, I Pray revolves largely around the theme of personal transformation.
I Pray is divided into two or, if the door to the cabinet is open, three different segments, its very form calling to mind a religious altarpiece or, alternately, a minimalist sculpture. Inside the cabinet is a latex suit made to the artist's exact measurements. Its flesh color, as well as its dimensions, suggests a skin shed by the artist himself. A variety of soaps purchased from a local botanica (or Mexican pharmacy) lie nestled at the bottom of the cabinet. Each soap was designed to "cure" a specific affliction, whether physical or psychological. More generally, however, the soaps evoke cleansing and regeneration, purification and resurrection. The mirror, long a symbol for heightened self-awareness, serves to facilitate the participation of the viewer, which the artist has described as essential to the completion of the work.
While I Pray is born of the artist's experience as a Mexican-American living in South Texas, it can by no means be reduced to just that. Indeed, Amado's approach to cultural identity is nuanced rather than didactic, poetic rather than political.
Exhibitions