Untitled, from The Strangest Fruit
Primary
Vincent Valdez
(San Antonio, Texas, 1977–Houston, Texas, present)
NationalityAmerican, North America
Date2013
MediumOil on canvas
DimensionsAdditional Dimension: 89 x 55 in. (226.1 x 139.7 cm)
Credit LineBlanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin, Promised gift of Jeanne and Michael Klein, PG2016.12
Rights Statement
Collection AreaModern and Contemporary Art
Object numberPG2016.12
On View
Not on viewCollection Highlight
The title of this series of paintings, "The Strangest Fruit," hints at the history that inspired them. In 1939 Billie Holiday recorded “Strange Fruit,” a haunting song about the lynching of African Americans in the United States.
Vincent Valdez painted the series of ten life-size Latino men after extensively researching what he refers to as the “erased” history of the lynchings of Mexican immigrants in Texas in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Valdez isolates his subjects against stark white backdrops and deliberately does not include nooses around their necks. Rather than directly summon difficult images from the past, he depicts this history in the present tense, underscoring the continued persecution and struggles that immigrants and minorities face in the United States today. He explains, “Presenting this historical subject in a contemporary context enables me to present the noose as a metaphor and to suggest that the threat of the noose still looms over the heads of the young Latino males in American society.”
Patssi Valdez