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  • florencio’s first hand at playing music
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Flor
a multiplicity

Main menu

  • Exhibitions
    • Kiki—A Sky of Changing Lights at EVERYBODY
    • una noche maravillosa~
    • ✨ k i k i ✨ @ ADDS DONNA
    • Always Touches on a Flower
    • flowers always…
    • “…to make them endure, give them space.”
    • On Love, Friendship, and Coexisting in Multi-Temporal Spaces
    • Early Roses Filled with Late Snow
    • Roots & Culture
  • Performance
    • 𓀡✍︎︎⭕️ ᑭI ( a body describing a circle )
    • “querida”
    • florencio’s first hand at making room 00.06.66
    • florencio’s first hand at playing music
    • #epicpoem, thoughts on futurity
    • When Are We?
  • Poetry
  • Bio / CV / Contact
  • ✨🦋✨ kiki ✨🦋✨
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Upcoming:

THEM @ Roots & Culture ( Flor, Manal Kara, & Caleb Yono. Opening Friday, February 11th 5–9pm )


circles describing a body body describing a circle multi-temporal sound circles Presented at “Full of Subtlety, If You Believe Me”- Co-Prosperity Sphere, Chicago, IL Programed by Lauren C. Sudbrink
 
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kiki - una noche maravillosa

This book was created in correllation with the exhibition. A colaboration between florencio, Miguel & Maddy

 

Available at INGA Books (Link)

 

Available through This Store ( Link )

 

 

 

Alejandro Jiménez-Flores “… for them to endure, give them space” at Bar4000 Review by Gareth Kaye @ Chicago Artist Writers

In the latest exhibition at Bar4000, … for them to endure, give them space, Alejandro Jiménez-Flores’ explorations of time, image, and embodiment, continues through floral imagery and language. The artist also extends their interaction with florencio–a conceptual persona–whose conversations and inquiries with Jiménez-Flores often open new ways through which the artist translates ideas and images through the filters of memory, gesture, and performance.

Jiménez-Flores first began their work with flowers three years ago, beginning with photographs they captured on walks around Chicago. They later noted that the exercise ultimately grew stale, leaving them with a sense of having violated something of a trust or respect shared between beings. Whereas Flores framed the flowers for their own work, the relationship between artist and subject felt too insular. Coincidentally, it was around this time that Jiménez-Flores began to receive messages from friends of the flowers they saw and began to incorporate these images (coming as a form of mediated communication themselves) instead. Using these second-hand photographs, ready-made translations in themselves, Jiménez-Flores could interpret them not only as a form of communication between intimates but also as a passive observer of a photograph.

The pastel image-transfer process that has since become a staple of Jiménez-Flores’ work builds out images and time by simultaneous acts of addition and subtraction. As Flores builds an image, they intuitively select to transfer parts of it to another surface and then continue to expand the initial image afterward. The inevitable unevenness in line, weight, and color leaves behind a series of vestiges and impressions within the process. The transfers soften images like, from a distance (2018), to become out of focus in some parts from repeated transfer, while a certain leaf, stem or edge becomes sharp, and pronounced. The haziness of not only memory, but visual apprehension as well, can be found manifest in the soft glow of the pastel, floating on top of the surface of the canvas like a gossamer.

Jiménez-Flores first used this process in experimenting with images of their friends, and for one of the first times in recent exhibition, Flores has included one of these images, a longing—from a distance—giving space. nathan 6.22.15 (2015); an image, made in the past, presented now, amongst recent works that suggest where the work has been, is now, and a speculation of myriad routes for future explorations of intimacy. Paired with another painting, untitled (frame) – waz, (2014), the inkling of a figure creates an abstracted inquiry: Is this figure someone receding from memory and representation? Or someone coming into being, and only because of their placement and vibration are they out of focus and appear to be on the cusp of legibility? Is this what it means to recognize someone as an equal – as a friend? To care that someone is coming forward and always emerging when there is an option to choose between recession or affirmation?

Given that many of the painting’s titles imply an action or proposition for action e.g., let’s cruise— florencio” borrows from alejandro and alejandro learns from florencio, but they forgot who was sleeping and who was speaking, (2018) – a title that ends with a comma, causing caesura to suggest the potential for more action – if not here than elsewhere, anywhere really. Furthermore, another canvas, florencio’s first hand at cruisin’ (2018), is stacked on top, illustrating the action of the larger image title, all the while building the confusion of position, subject, and subjectivity in the making.

These images do not ask, but rather force a kind of communion between parties. An intimacy complicated by the inability to discern who is speaking, singing, making space, and looking once again recalls Nancy: “It is a real presence, because it is a contagious presence, participating and participated, communicating and communicated in the distinction of its intimacy.”

In a performance that accompanies the exhibition florencio’s first hand at making room 00.06.66, (2018), accompanied by a musical track by Fire-Toolz and a perfume made by Matt Morris, Jiménez-Flores’ conceptual persona florencio occupies the gallery for six minutes and sixty-six seconds. Through participation and cohabitation between the artist, audience, and the deep diffused drone of speakers carried and moved through the gallery by Jiménez-Flores and gallery director Ben Regozin, space and position were put into focus. The audience found themselves sharing the elusive and diaphanous exchange of vision and position with the parties implicated in the paintings, and addressing an entity that emanated from multiple points in time, space, memory, and imagination.

The intimacy of Jiménez-Flores’s practice often betrays the great lengths of collaboration that are necessary to make much of their work. From the production of images that are sent to them, or communication with florencio through multi-temporal spaces and the relationship between each image and its individual beholder reconsiders the triangulation of community. Jiménez-Flores pursues that sense in memories which are never explicit or visible, the unknowable glow of having been there all while being here. The multiplicity of the self into temporalities on the brink of one another, allowing each work in … for them to endure, give them space, fold time into the surface of the image, cloaking and highlighting the traces of familiarity Flores chooses to show in equal amounts. What is shared and what is withheld is a snickering exchange of secrets between unwitting and even unlikely friends.

to make them endure

Alejandro Jiménez-Flores is a conceptual artist. Part of their conceptual framework —friendship?— involves florencio. florencio asked Alejandro to ask Angel Marcloid to use her sound skills —and conjure her Fire-Toolz personae— to elicit the sounds that exist within and emanate from the multi-temporal spaces that florencio navigates (florencio666.wav). In addition to the aural environment, traces of florencio’s previous iterations appear visually in several paintings. One such iteration, waz appears in a piece from 2014 —perhaps “waz” was what florencio once was at one point ;) —becoming multiple.

While florencio cruises through their multiple temporalities Alejandro goes on a walk —a dérive, and while cruising through their neighborhood on this leisurely walk, Alejandro encounters the same flowers previously sent to them by Ben (the B A R in BAR400) on a summer afternoon —an image of yellow flowers joyously growing tall overflowing a fence. In a new series of works, the memories of this image conglomerates with the memories of that encounter and other walks—dérives— around that same neighborhood, of walking to the flower shop encountering the plant only their aunts had in Mexico (possibly from the milkweed family), the paw scratch marks on the mud, and walking while thinking of proximities, longings, gentle gestures… of propositions of language that are yet to come, giving these gestures space…making space for these propositions to explore their potentialities. Within these new works, there is a horizontal shift, a way in and out of portraiture (for more than 3 years all of Alejandro’s compositions had been portrait oriented). In this gesturing toward landscape, all these memories extend into and embrace an enduring collectivity. And in this cruising with flowers, they aim to deconstruct their subjectivities of themselves, picking up the traces of propositions of a language that is yet to come, always already in the horizon —but perhaps, always already within, so lets give this language space, make it endure, let it bloom…so come and join Alejandro, florencio and Fire-Toolz on this cruisin’ through the traces of ephemeral jouissance that lay in the horizon’s potentiality.

New work by Alejandro Jimenez-Flores & Michael Milano

To arrive at his subjects, Alejandro Jimenez-Flores begins by collecting images and gestures that he encounters through walks, surfing the web, or that come to him as gifts. His paintings are produced through a process of transferring drawings from paper and fabric to its surface.  The mimetic nature of his process aspires to unveil the inner workings of language and how it delineates meaning, authority, and agency.  His process continually develops more layers of simulations and transmissions, with each layer aspiring to give his subjects a platform to develop their own creative agency, a space for gathering, and abstraction.

Michael Milano employs materials that are part of our everyday experience, producing fabric-based paintings that are indebted to textile traditions and the history of abstraction. Thinking through the physical properties of textiles, as well as their cultural associations, he combines processes such as dyeing, pressing, and distressing to create abstract compositions that champion a deeper engagement with our material environment. Whether it involves the piecing of a quilt, or the seam, fold, or drape of a shirt, the ubiquitous and seemingly mundane quality of cloth continues to motivate him in the studio.

 

Alejandro Jimenez-Flores (b.1989) is Conceptual Artist. He attained a BFA in Studio Arts from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2012 & a very minor in Poetry from School of Poetics in Marseille France in 2013 ;). He thinks about concepts, idleness, funny things & likes using language to assess the limits of semiotics and its structures.  Jimenez-Flores has been featured in a range of exhibition spaces including ADDS DONNA, Chicago, IL;  Elastic Arts, Chicago, IL; Evanston Art Center, Evanston, IL;  FilmFront, Chicago, IL; Comfort Station, Chicago, IL; Neu West Berlin,  Berlin, Germany; Plains Project, Chicago, IL;  Eel Space  Chicago, IL.  His writings and works have appeared in Monsters & Dust; The Landline and Internet Poetry.

Michael Milano is an artist, writer, and curator living and working in Indianapolis. He earned his MFA in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and his BA in Humanities from Shimer College. He has shown at museums, galleries and alternative art spaces such as Elmhurst Art Museum, IL; Land And Sea, Oakland, CA; Dorsky Gallery, Long Island City, NY; DBQ Project Space, Pittsburgh, PA; Devening Projects, Chicago, IL; Roots & Culture, Chicago, IL; threewalls, Chicago, IL; Praxis Space, Singapore; Trunk Show, Chicago, IL; Intermedia House, Toronto, ON; Peregrine Program, Chicago, IL; Adds Donna, Chicago, IL; and the Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art, Chicago, IL. His writing has appeared in Surface Design, Textile: Journal of Cloth and Culture, Women Artist Zine and Bad At Sports, among other publications. He is a founding member of AM, a curatorial collective based in Indianapolis.

Early Roses Filled with Late Snow

At an artists’ residency in rural Southwest Wisconsin in 2015, a group of residents (mostly white) were having a conversation about race. One of them remarked “Sometimes I wish I could just wake up, go to the studio, and paint flowers” insinuating that because of their own personal politics, gender, race, etc, they had an ethical obligation to make work about those issues- that somehow identity had precluded beauty as subject-matter. Coincidentally, that same morning Alejandro Jimenez-Flores had woken up, gone to the studio, and painted flowers.

Whether seen as evasive, defiant, or a tongue-in-cheek nod to his maternal surname, Jimenez-Flores’s flowers (and other subjects) aren’t shy about beauty. Their soft, airy surfaces and playful gestures joyfully proclaim their loveliness without remorse. In a delicate process that involves transferring pastel drawings from one surface to another, they also suggest the intimacy of relationships -both romantic and platonican idea strengthened by the fact that many of the flower images were sourced from text messages sent to Jimenez-Flores by his friends. Combining the benign genres of still-life and gestural abstraction, Jimenez-Flores calls attention to the perceived neutrality of these traditions- a privileged non-position most often enjoyed by white, middle/upper-class persons. His claim on these subjects challenges assumptions about artists’ prescribed roles, and moreover, asks us to reexamine the the notion that formalist work is inherently apolitical.

Still Lifes for the Touchscreen Age A Review

Still Lifes for the Touchscreen Age A Review of Alejandro Jimenez-Flores at ADDS DONNA by Ryan Filchak @NewCityArt

All of the rectangular-canvas and stretched-paper works by Alejandro Jimenez-Flores hang in the ADDS DONNA space at one upper sight line. This installation peculiarity causes larger pieces, such as “Cosmos, Tall and Wiry,” a highlight of the exhibition, to hang below a familiar height and smaller works to perch oddly just above eye level. Jimenez-Flores uses floral pastel transfers and gestural painting, referencing historically privileged artistic genres, to pursue a casual beauty. By repurposing the goals of still life, the artist works against genre to address personal and moral obligations of identity through his daily experiences of intimacy, both platonic and otherwise.

The heavy notion of simply painting flowers being a choice only afforded to the privileged aside, the everyday origins of the exhibition’s source material give the work its power of evocative affection. The works’ layered compositions resonate more when one learns that their sources are images sent to Jimenez-Flores in text messages from friends. For example, the heavy, pink and green marks in the foreground of the exhibition’s namesake, “Early Roses,” weights the abstractions in archived communication. These touch gestures appear again in the aforementioned “Cosmos, Tall and Wiry” in reds and blues reminiscent of the self-consciously limited color palettes of apps. In four soft pastel works entitled “Hugs?,” “Nook,” “Left” and “Leaves,” the Abex phone screen finger flicks are absent, but the repeated image of lush, blossoming roses serve to isolate one component of the source material, while works like “play-ground” double down on color and movement, to say nothing of poetry.

For an artist to pursue beauty for the sake of itself in a rebellious way seems antithetical to contemporary consciousness, but “Early Roses Filled with Late Snow” achieves a caustic self-awareness that fulfills the goals of still life while pushing the genre forward with passion. (Ryan Filchak)

 

On Love, Friendship, and Coexisting in Multi-Temporal Spaces

Alejandro vaguely recalls how seven years ago, while enrolled in a philosophy class, they learned that for the greeks to do philosophy was to be a friend of knowledge. Often there was mediator facilitating this correspondence, an already there. In Plato there is Socrates, and in Socrates, there is the Sophist Socrates struggles to differentiate their ideas from. Deleuze and Guattari refer to this already there mediator as conceptual personae. In Alejandro’s practice, there is a conceptual personae whose names are in flux; they are several, a multitude, some aliases they use are tazzy, wazzz, florencio, and ;). Alejandro strives to foster a conceptual environment where this personae can flourish. They represent the minor voices, that small voice in your head that says irreverent things and is often shut off by your bigger voice, repressed. But it’s also already aware of the systems of language that allow it to be.

This personae is the real stage-hand behind Alejandro’s work. It’s a collaboration, they both attempt to “loose the nuts” of systems of subjectification by learning how to coexist with others and each other and asking themselves what it is to write in place of the other, to conjure a language that is not here yet, that exist outside of straight time. Alejandro uses images of flowers and plants that are sent to them by friends. In a double entendre of multiple folds, these images reflect how their friends think of Alejandro, and what reminds them of them. Through these images, they mediate their own subjectivities. The weight of each image is unfolded in several compositions, fading away each time it is transferred, becoming less visible, becoming less subjectified, becoming ground, becoming a gestural trace of sensations and elusive temporalities. These images and means of image making are mediated through florencio and their process-based practice. Traces of the images are reflected in painterly gestures, colors, and lines that eventually mutate to a form that alludes to writing, they write propositions for a language that is not here yet.

 

 

florencio wrote on their painting journal the other day:

florencio first try aar writing
florenx first hand at writing
first try at cursive
gets tired halfway
letters can’t convey
glyphs
so colours in between
what’s does ones write about,
when there is just not one thing
what is grammar
that i don’t knows,
what’s is this great order
that doesn’t fits
anst

angst
rraawwww

if i change it
it becomes a bigger machine,
if i don’t i don’t exist
if i make a different machine
it is still a machine
and will eat others
including us

must learn how to make loose the nuts
add kinks to the motions
make rooms inside the machine
to dance
to laugh
to be free
to feels
…

 

flowers always @ Heaven Gallery

Images of flowers began to appear in Alejandro’s work 3 years ago. At first, Alejandro candidly took these reference images while walking to their studio, but they soon felt uneasy about this act, for it seemed like intruding upon the flowers; framing them and imposing a language onto the flowers that was not their own. Thinking there could be a better language to relate to their subjects (and, in a way, to Alejandro’s own subjectivities), they decided not to take these photos anymore. Around the same time, they started to receive and use photos of flowers sent to them by friends, usually with text (“So happy to have you in my leaf! “). These images contained a softer language and offered an encounter (interweaving) of Alejandro’s personal narrative with those of the flowers.
In a new series of works, Alejandro traces lines from these floral compositions on film and makes stencils by cutting through the lines. Drawing and tracing from these images, they aim to unravel what lies in between the lines: a kind of writing, a correspondence, a longing (“thinking of you”), a conjuring of a language that is yet to be. The outline of a leaf overlaps over a petal, and they begin to communicate, just like in nature when the sun shines on the petals and casts its outline onto the leaves, and the leaves in the shadow (the obscured presence of the sun) feels the transferred presence of the petals.

Furthermore in this show, Alejandro mines images from memory to explore relationships to self and family (both chosen and determined by birth). Alejandro draws from memory the geraniums from their aunt’s garden, where they recall playing with their cousin and collecting dried petals and leaves from the geraniums and placing them into a bucket with water and dirt. Stirring this concoction with a stick, playing witchcraft (“haciendo brujeria”) to conjure up a spell, but what spell? It was probably all gibberish, but perhaps they were already learning to speak a language of flowers, learning from the way the flowers communicate, of pigments and shapes, of color and effect of light, their pure materiality and its exhaustion. Alejandro also recalls when they noticed a small voice in their head, florencio! A conceptual personae, And how in their dialogues they both have been making attempts to break out of subjectification systems by learning how to coexist with others and each other. Asking themselves what it is to write (speak) in place of the other, to conjure a language that is not here yet (that perhaps exists outside of straight time), full of sensibilities and kindness. So florencio asked Alejandro to ask their mother to teach them again, just like when they were a child, how to draw a flower again. florencio also asked Alejandro to ask Matt if he could make a perfume of florencio’s essence and Matt kindly agreed.

So come see and smell (and read) gestural propositions for a new language in flowers always…

😉

Always Touching Sough performance

https://www.instagram.com/stories/highlights/17857372417371169/

Always Touches on a Flower Interview w  Sixty Inches From Center
Published on July 22, 2019

Alejandro Jiménez-Flores: Always Touches on a Flower

written by Cecilia Kearney
Image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores, una noche maravillosa —a wonderful night, 2019, soft-pastels, flower petals dyes, and plaster on muslin, 9x11 in. Photo courtesy of Apparatus Projects.

Earlier this year, the two-person show Always Touches on a Flower at Apparatus Projects (February 17 – March 24, 2019) featured the work of Alejandro Jimenez-Floresand Cathy Hsiao. Enveloped in the themes of flowers and language, Jimenez-Flores’s work created an intimate and beautiful space at Apparatus Projects. Their work of soft floral transfers and paintings deal with themes of memory and plays with the language of flowers, both in Spanish and English. Pulling from personal memories, poetry, time traveling, and everyday experiences, Jimenez-Flores’s work is not to be missed. 

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Cecilia Kearney: Let’s start with some background, tell me a little bit about yourself.

Alejandro Jiménez-Flores: I’ve been an artist since high school. I mean, I always doodled and sketched growing up, but when I went to high school I took photography classes after school. And then I was an arts major. For undergrad, I went to UIC. I majored in Studio Arts (drawing and painting), but I was kind of all over the place–I was doing painting, video, and sculpture. I don’t necessary make traditional paintings and sometimes [I don’t] even engage with the kind of language that painting is engaged with. I use that field to start other conversations. I did some curating after undergrad at ADDS DONNA and DOS PERROS PROJECTS. About four years ago, I finally got a studio and that’s when I started producing more work. That’s the brief history of my art practice.

Image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores crouching down smiling in front of their artwork hanging on a wall. They are wearing dark clothing and a pink hat. Photo by Cecilia Kearney.
Image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores crouching down smiling in front of their artwork hanging on a wall. They are wearing dark clothing and a pink hat. Photo by Cecilia Kearney.

CK: So, tell me a little bit about the show you were in at Apparatus Projects.

AJF: I feel like, given the first time I met with Gareth Kaye [Apparatus Projects director] and Cathy Hsiao, it seemed like we all kind of had a vision for the show. I was thinking  about materiality, and the approach to material and process, and I feel like then the show started happening from there.

CK: Did you make work after you met with Garreth, then? Or did you have the work already done before?

AJF: I kind of had an idea. I knew about the show for several months and I had just been wrapping up another show. So yes, I made most of the work specifically for this show. Some of them are works from last summer. I was making some material moves, like working with plaster and flowers, which I started doing in the fall at the show at Heaven Gallery. I showed a piece with plaster in another show at BAR4000—soft pastels on plaster. And in some ways, for the Apparatus show, I combined those two [materials]. That became a new move. And just having to show works with Cathy made the move even more assertive–playing with both of these materials.

CK: In what ways do you think the culture you grew up with influences your work?

AJF: For me– I wouldn’t say, necessarily, direct culture, but I recently started drawing things from memory, of my relationship to certain experiences of living in Mexico, and also here– how through those memories, and also through the materials, my works have been kind of mediating this identity and play with language. I feel like I’ve been using flowers for about…four years now? And in some ways it’s a way for me to mediate my own identity formations through flowers. So my approach is to […] let my process-based practice kind of create this space for new language to form, which is a language I feel there is a lack of, or it feels like I need to make that kind of language.

AJF: When I’m making most of my pieces I’m not thinking necessarily about Spanish or English. Most of my vocabulary about art and talking about art is in English. Recently, I had a show in the fall at Sector 2337 in correlation to the Lit y Luz Festival. That exhibition was all about text and language and it [included] artists from Chicago and Mexico. There was a text written for the exhibition and also a bio and short description, and it was translated to Spanish. That was actually the first time I read something about my practice in Spanish, and that was just kind of mind-blowing. It’s something that, in some ways, I’m experimenting with a little bit more. Sometimes it shows through the titles. Actually, in the titles for [the show at Apparatus], there is one piece that just had the title in Spanish that I intentionally did not translate. Then, there are two pieces that had the same title in Spanish, but there’s a hyphen and it has the translation–and the translation varies. I guess I have always played with language and with materiality – like using the language of flowers and kind of trying to discover or let it happen, as opposed to imposing a language onto flowers, or a still life or a landscape. That’s how I think about language when I’m making work. Sometimes I find myself in between the lines.

Image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores,  una noche maravillosa —a fantastic night, 2019, soft-pastels, flower petals, and plaster, 8 x 10.5 in. Cathy Hsiao, Clamp (3), 2019, concrete, plant dye, silicone, 16 x 5 in. Cathy Hsiao, Clamp (I), 2019, concrete, plant dye, silicone, 43.5 x 5 in. Image courtesy of Apparatus Projects. Photo by Julian Van Der Moere.
Image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores, una noche maravillosa —a fantastic night, 2019, soft-pastels, flower petals, and plaster, 8 x 10.5 in. Cathy Hsiao, Clamp (3), 2019, concrete, plant dye, silicone, 16 x 5 in. Cathy Hsiao, Clamp (I), 2019, concrete, plant dye, silicone, 43.5 x 5 in. Image courtesy of Apparatus Projects. Photo by Julian Van Der Moere.

AJF: I’ve always been interested, actually, in translation and I guess that’s probably why I just went to painting. In high school, I used to read poetry and that was how I was learning English. I had this book of Pablo Neruda (Residence on Earth), and it had the poem in Spanish on the left and the translation on the right. In one of my favorite poems, there is this a line: “ir por las calles con un cuchillo verde,” and in the translation, it [says], “to go through the streets with a sexy knife.” And I was like, “How do they come up with ‘sexy’ instead of green?” So it changes the whole thing. Sometimes I feel that translating something– or the choice of not translating something and letting it exist in one language–is a move that I’m starting to do more. I just go back to abstraction and find some safe space there. When referencing this subject and materiality, I feel like I’m always cautious of the language I might impose onto the materials or the subjects within my work, because any kind of form of language structure might be a trap or slippery zone.

CK: What mediums do you use, and what got you interested in them?

AJF: For me, it’s been a weird loop. It’s more about my process that I started doing four years ago. I started transferring, which is more like mono-printing. I use soft pastels to draw an image and then I transfer that to the actual surface that is later exhibited. The first time I did this was with paper on paper. I would draw with soft pastels on paper and then transfer it–a kind of monoprinting. Then, from there, I started doing fabric on plaster. I would draw on the fabric and then pour plaster, and then the plaster would just suck all the soft pastel dust and texture [out] of the fabric.

AJF: When I do the transfers with plaster, it’s usually just one transfer. But when I do the fabric on fabric, it becomes like a mirror image. As I draw, I keep transferring, so the drawing exists in this expanded time and space across multiple surfaces. And I can typically keep working on that and keep transferring. I use very little paint, if I use paint. I also do performance, writing, and collaborations.

CK: What messages are you hoping to convey through your work? What do you hope people will get out of this? Or is that even the purpose of it?

AJF: For me, it goes back to this kind of longing for language. For a solo show I had two years ago, my niece, who was four or five years at the time, just walked into the show and saw all the paintings and was really, really moved by the show. But she doesn’t have a language to talk about painting or anything, besides being like, “Oh, these are nice” or, “I like them.” But she didn’t say anything at all, and then she just sat in the middle of the gallery and pulled out a notebook and started drawing flowers. I hope that’s what gets conveyed in the work, this kind of encountering of the work and making of language, and then for that to get practiced in its own way and ability.

CK: Who are some of your biggest inspirations as an artist?

AJF: Kalup Linzy, Donna Huanca, Giorgio Griffa, Camille Henrot, Matt Morris.

CK: What projects are you working on now?

AJF: I’ve done a lot of paintings and I think, even with this show, too—the works at Apparatus—they’re starting to hint towards less painting and more sculpture that deals with the body or its absence. I think that might be a direction that my work takes. And usually when I have a gap of nothing coming up, I go back to writing. So [I’ll be] writing poetry, and then that leads to performance.

Image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores,  una noche maravillosa —a fantastic night, 2019, soft-pastels, flower petals, and plaster, 8 x 10.5 in. (Detail). Image courtesy of Apparatus Projects. Photo by Julian Van Der Moere.
Image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores, una noche maravillosa —a fantastic night, 2019, soft-pastels, flower petals, and plaster, 8 x 10.5 in. (Detail). Image courtesy of Apparatus Projects. Photo by Julian Van Der Moere.

CK: Since not everyone gets this much background, is there anything that you wish people knew about you when they’re looking at your work?

AJF: I’m a time traveler. It’s like going back to memory, then taking that and trying to make a language that I wish exists and projecting it into the near-horizon or the future, and making it present. Sometimes time in the paintings and transfers has temporalities all over. My brain gets a bit loopy. I guess, for me, the other thing that some people get confused is this other, florencio. So florencio is a conceptual personae; it’s not an alter ego. Florencio and I don’t like that term. I channel florencio, and I make paintings that way and also approach other people to do collaborations for florencio–I’m just kind of this mediator. So, in some ways, I’ve been having two different practices, but really in the background it’s all florencio–this battle with language weaving through these language systems, and trying to loosen the nuts that make it work.

CK: What is your dream project if you had unlimited resources?

AJF: Last fall, I visited the Toledo Art Museum. They have a really good collection. They have these antique pianos in the middle of a room full of baroque paintings, and I’m writing a proposal to see if I can do another iteration of a performance I did at Heaven Gallery–florencio’s first hand at playing music–and have other works in an adjacent room. They love glass in Toledo and I would propose to do a residency at Toledo Museum of Art Glass Pavilion to create some works for that exhibition. Florencio wants to recreate from memory the glass marbles I used to play with when I was a kid. I would also do other interventions with their collection and spaces.

Featured image: Alejandro Jiménez-Flores, una noche maravillosa —a wonderful night, 2019, soft-pastels, flower petals dyes, and plaster on muslin, 9×11 in. Image courtesy of Apparatus Projects. Photo by Julian Van Der Moere.

Cecilia Kearney is a freelance writer and photographer, focusing on up and coming artists in Chicago. She is an English major at DePaul University. She is minoring in photography and her photography projects focus on people and their relationships to the world around them, as well as themes of femininity and the human body.

Cecilia has worked at nonprofits around Chicago and is involved with social justice-based groups at DePaul University.

Always Touches on a Flower

The fleur is the finest, most subtle part, the very surface, which remains before one and which one merely brushes against [effleure]: every image is a` fleur, or is a flower.

–        Jean-Luc Nancy

 The title of this exhibition comes from a paraphrased, misremembered, and appropriately inverted version of the quotation above. To speak of the surface and the softness of contact that is visual apprehension, both Alejandro Jiménez-Flores and Cathy Hsiao create works that take Nancy’s maxim to a somewhat literal degree by placing the flower (fleur) directly to the surface of the image. Whether in Jiménez-Flores’s repetitious and languid drawings and transfers, or Hsiao’s botanically chromatic concrete sculptures, each artist engages the floral image and imaginary as an actant and subject imbibed with memory and familiarity.

In Jiménez-Flores’s work, flowers become media in and of themselves as sensing and sensitive beings whose encounters can become site for communication between intimates, or as a gateway to memory itself. The human experience with the floral for Jiménez-Flores is a site of translation or a type of experience where one subjectivity is channeled through another. This translation is extended into the bedrock of the artist’s practice through complex modes of transfer during the drawing process that involves revisiting, building out, and replicating an image or form asynchronously throughout the process. Across the surface of these images, Jiménez-Flores leaves behind hazy pastel and colored pencil drawings that seem to cling to the canvas by virtue of static electricity. Flowers float, fade, disappear, and reappear with some parts more pronounced than others across the same image but presented differently on other surfaces. Stains from petals and petals themselves peak out from their supports, grazing the ground and blowing kisses at the firmament between surface and visitor. The flowers in Jiménez-Flores’s work asks us to remember and pay attention, to see where and why they hide from us on one side, but show themselves on another, each work presents a different way of remembering not only our own floral encounters but encounters with the work itself across the gallery.

Meanwhile, a series of new cast works by Cathy Hsiao takes up the challenge of memory, communication, and mediation laid out in Jiménez-Flores’s paintings, responding to them with their own challenge. Casting c-clamps, a tool used to hold two things together, are hung directly opposite Flores’s work with the space between the clamps left conspicuously open, holding nothing between it but an absence that seems to suggest something once held, and dimensions gone AWOL. (The gaps actually correspond to the dimensions of the work on the opposite wall). The casts are made from an amalgamation of silicone, concrete, plant matter and dye, redirecting the object from something that facilitates the binding of surfaces to a surface that itself is bound up in its own materials. The object withdraws into itself with gaps of various sizes between their ends demarcating an absence that leaves the viewer looking to fill in the gaps. Hsiao’s c-clamps demonstrate the core function of the image as an absence that communicates, where the lack of a thing in and of itself gives way for its representation, suggestion, and reference. The emptiness of the clamps give way to an embedded sense of memory pushing up towards the surface of image and the tension between the emptiness of the wall framed by the gaps and the petals pushing their way up to the surface of the casts. Hsiao situates much of her own material interests in her familial memory of Taiwanese natural plant dye makers. While not producing dyed textiles, Hsiao has positioned her memory of family traditions into the surface of her sculptural practice where the memory of the clamps and the memory of technique brush against one another between immediate and ancestral temporalities.

 Always Touches on a Flower seeks to eavesdrop on conversations between works through floral mediation. In some small way, the tables are turned, revealing that we mediate with flowers, and they in turn mediate through us. The flowers might be displayed on the walls, but we are all wallflowers.

 Alejandro Jiménez-Flores (b.1989) is a process-based conceptual artist making gestures that occupy the space of painting, writing, and performance. Their practice is concerned with how the language we have, or lack, subordinates our subjectivities, identity formations, and the space we are allowed to occupy. They attained a BFA in Studio Arts from the University of Illinois at Chicago in 2012 & a very minor in Poetry from School of Poetics in Marseille France in 2013 ;). They have had recent solo exhibitions at BAR4000 (Chicago, IL), Heaven Gallery (Chicago, IL), and ADDS DONNA (Chicago, IL).

 Cathy Hsiao is an artist working in Chicago. She comes from a background in craft, weaving animal fibers dyed with plants, raised by a Buddhist mother. She has exhibited in Chicago, New York and Los Angeles. Upcoming shows include Aspect Ratio, and MCAC.

✨ k i k i ✨ a review

Alejandro Jiménez-Flores (florencio) Review by Lori Waxman @ 60 wrd/min art critic

Perhaps you’ve never wondered what it would feel like to be a monarch butterfly drunk on Aperol Spritz. That’s a shame, but one that can be rectified by allowing Alejandro Jiménez-Flores, also known as florencio, to introduce you to kiki, the subject of a series of radiantly kitsch paintings on view at Adds Donna during the virtual NADA Chicago Gallery Open earlier this fall. The pictures include gouache-on-muslin illustrations of kiki’s fabulously inebriated soirée, featuring shimmery lights of all colors, and a pair of small, psychedelically dyed silk rondels that suggest the exciting but worrisome effect of alcohol on kiki’s eggs. It’s unclear if kiki is florencio’s alter ego, although it seems a strong possibility: in a video on the exhibition website, the artist relays kiki’s story as a poem, told with great empathy and all the gender fluidity of metamorphosis. Besides which, who wouldn’t want to envision themselves gorgeously patterned and dancing through the air under a disco-ball moon?

 

✨ k i k i ✨ a poem

… and so you of course know the journey of the Monarchs, and what it mirrors, what it metaphors. and let me tell you, that perhaps, being told “… you are not a Real Monarch” it’s maybe a relief, i am a monarch with lower case m,
no! ahem!

my name is kiki,
i was one of those butterflies
and let me tell you

i always felt more comfortable, when i was an egg

i could see
i could feel, sense every single part of my body,
moving, forming,
thinking, being
becoming

i went from being one single blob
plop!
and now there was ii (two) of us, a mirror?
an awareness,
a desire to become them,
to absorb them
to become whole again, a longing

plop! plop!!plop! plop!!plop! flooop!!

y esta estrella creció grande,

now that i think about it,
that first plop, might have had a bit of floop
my other me was a bit different i noticed,
and i knew i must be different then

as a caterpillar, i loved gossiping with the flowers,
they are the best,

wiggling through to not get caught in the details,

they let me eat their buds, because they saw i was different, fabulosa!
quizás conspiraban para convertirme en flor,

i heard someone say
you are what you eat!
and i was a flower bud, gossiping with them,

and then one day, i felt the sky not move,
so i hung upside down like a bat
from under a leaf near the bishop’s balls,

i liked that moment of stillness.
for a second i felt what it was like to die
nothing moved
did i die?
ay!
un stomach cramp,
toda la sangre se me subió a la cabeza,
y mi cuerpo líquido empezó a tomar forma
oh mira q piernas,
alas de una nueva colección de gucci
q mi abuelita me mandó en un gene hace dos vidas,

me quede en este tiempo más q los demás.
anhelaba el sentirme así más

because i stayed in that form
longer than others
processing all the secrets the flowers hid in their buds
when i came out of my shell, to spread my wings like a bat
i was alone
and everyone was already flapping about
forming groups
playing games
y yo aguitado (bummed out)
thinking back to that first plop!

i flew and tried to catch up w the group,
when i arrived they teased me for being late,
and someone made a remark that my spots where different,
i told them it was the gucci handbag my nana sent me in a gene two lives ago
ahh es la gucci
jaja ja q gucci q nada
hay este salió rarito, medio extraño.

they had formed roles to perform,
patterns to follow, and i kept stumbling,
it seemed like they were doing it on purpose,
oh kiki, tu no eres una monarca real,
you are not a real monarch kiki!

that’s it
i couldn’t take it,
if i wasn’t a real monarch
then then…

i flew away

missing my fabulous flower friends,
they understood,

how boring would have been to keep flapping like the other Monarchs
i didn’t like their patterns anyways,

stomach cramp,
ay, i have not drunk anything in two days, i was flapping furiously in the opposite direction
and now i’m quivering and disoriented, lost and hungry,
i smelled something irresistible

and the sky stopped moving again,
it looks like it’s coming from a weird tulip
with a stem of water, clear, but not flowing,
in this red tulip (what i thought was a tulip from disorientation)
a pool of nectar,

sip!
gulp!
fling!✨
wow!

esto sabe familiar (y no es una caguama jeje!)
pero nunca lo e encontrado,
un sueño?
un recadito q las flores me dieron?
un hechizo?
probé un lugar familiar, me sentí como el microsegundo antes de el primer flop!

por un segundo me sentí así, y tomé más!
hay que bonito se sentía

this tastes familiar (yet unknown )

a little message from the flower buds,
a conjuring,
a dream
y que es lo q va pasar?
and what’s that you say it’s going to happen! gosh!
i tasted a familiar space
that microsecond before the first flop

oh how fabulous it felt.

i now knew where to go,
that there was a place from where funny looking tulips like this came
a familiar space,

and i took a few more sips!
uy, se me puso poquita borrosa,
my vision go a bit blurry,
the disorientation was still there,
mixed with all this new feelings

my heart beating like a crazy horse
overwhelming (anxiety?)
tranquila…

describe cinco cosas,
el aire se mueve de nuevo,
the sky is moving again,
i feel it caressing my wing,
i am standing in a funny tulip,
me paro en un tulipán cómico
that is true
breathe in
exhale
a book of leaves
un libro con ojalás
que dice
squint
disorientation
ay cabron esta ansiedad me está haciendo una broma,
what the hell! this anxiety is playing a prank on me,
yes i am disoriented, lol no need to let me know through visions,
but then i thought,
kiki you don’t have visions!
thump thump thump Thump

shake my head
squint again
*disidentifications

ohhh! disidentifications! que bonita la foto en ese libro.

suddenly, someone came near,

oMG!
this butterfly is siping on my aperol spritz!
awwww, pipiripheww! snaps a photo

aperol spritz ✨
what a funny name for a funny looking tulip

y el aire se movió y como desorientada, sin querer volé!

and the sky began to move faster this time and
i moved with it,
out of habit,
disoriented, disidentifying
but I loved how i was feeling
all the sensations
i must find this familiar place

i must find this field of funny looking tulips…

Una Noche maravillosa–a Monarch butterfly makes an entrance at a nightclub

At Chicago Artists Coalition       ~     January 29, 2021 – March 11, 2021

For this exhibition, Alejandro Jiménez-Flores draws from the memories of going out dancing, having a delicious Campari soda, and finding new dance moves. All the while sharing glances with strangers, closing their eyes in movement, dancing with dear ones alone and accompanied. These moments are channeled by the artist into soft pastel drawings. Dancing to get lost and calling for a language that is not here yet, though making room for it with every new move.

Mirroring these moves with a fantastical twist florencio (the co-star of this show) creates paintings about kiki (a monarch butterfly). kiki’s story is an allegory for the experiences many people face when they resist dominant culture’s perception of their gender and race, as well as how individuals struggle with the roles and identities that their community expects them to perform. After suffering much bullying and teasing from the other Monarch butterflies, kiki wanders away from them. Lost and longing to belong, kiki finds clues for kinship throughout the urban landscape. Following the scent of something familiar yet unknown–an Aperol Spritz–she stumbles onto a dancefloor where she finally finds the space for moves and gestures of her own: for transformation, new worldmaking, and becoming.

Who is florencio, you might ask? To put it simply, florencio is a conceptual personae, a multi-temporal transdimensional entity, another framework to interact with language enacted and facilitated by the artist In relation to the exhibition, florencio via Alejandro asked Miguel Jiménez to write a short story about kiki’s journey. florencio then asked Maddy Stocking to illustrate and design the book world of the story, including drawing and paintings by florencio. This book will function as an atemporal exhibition catalogue that portrays an elsewhere, a third space, a different journey for kiki 🦋🥀

new pr

Alejandro Jiménez-Flores 

“Una Noche maravillosa–a Monarch butterfly makes an entrance at a nightclub…” April 10 – May 21, 2020 

Chicago Artists Coalition is pleased to present Una Noche maravillosa–a monarch butterfly makes an entrance at a nightclub… a solo exhibition of new works by the BOLT artist-in-residence, Alejandro Jiménez-Flores. The exhibition opens on Friday, April 10 with a reception from 5-8 pm. 

“Queer dance, after the live act, does not just expire. The ephemeral does not equal unmateriality. It is more nearly about another understanding of what matters. It matters to get lost in dance or to use dance to get lost: lost from the evidentiary logic of heterosexuality.” 

Cruising Utopia, The Then and There of Queer Futurity 

José Esteban Muñoz 

Una Noche maravillosa… 

For this exhibition, Alejandro Jiménez-Flores draws from their memories of going out dancing, having a delicious drink (a Campari soda), and finding new moves; sharing glances, closing their eyes while dancing; dancing with dear ones, alone and with strangers. These moments are channeled by Alejandro into soft pastel drawings. Dancing to get lost and calling for a language that is not here yet, though making room for it with every new move. 

In their new work, Alejandro continues to use flowers as a stand-in for themselves, but this time as gifted flower petals are embedded in some of the works, the flowers as material become abstract, becoming ground and expressing themselves by releasing their dyes, as that happens figures and traces of Alejandro’s body enter the works. Just as Alejandro uses their relationship with flowers to develop frameworks for new language propositions, florencio–a conceptual personae–is another framework to interact with language enacted (facilitated) by Alejandro. A framework that exists within their practice and extends to others by providing collaborative prompts. 

…a monarch butterfly makes an entrance at a nightclub. 

For this series, Alejandro channels florencio to create paintings from kiki’s journey of constant becomings. These works will explore themes of migration and transformation, illustrating the journey made by a monarch butterfly named kiki. kiki’s story is an allegory for the experiences many people face when they resist dominant culture’s perception of their gender and race, as well as how individuals struggle with the roles and identities that their community expects them to perform. After suffering much bullying and teasing from the other Monarchs, kiki wanders from the group. Lost and longing to belong, kiki finds clues for kinship throughout the urban

landscape. Following the scent of something familiar yet unknown, she stumbles onto a dancefloor where she finally finds the space for moves and gestures of her own, for transformation, new worldmaking, and becoming. florencio asked Alejandro to ask Miguel Jiménez to write a short story of kiki’s journey and to ask Maddy Stocking to design the space of in the story; this will function as an exhibition catalog to be released towards the end of the exhibition (May 14th).

a monarch butterfly....

Alejandro Jiménez-Flores 

“Una Noche maravillosa–a Monarch butterfly makes an entrance at a nightclub…” April 10 – May 21, 2020 

Chicago Artists Coalition is pleased to present Una Noche maravillosa–a monarch butterfly makes an entrance at a nightclub… a solo exhibition of new works by the BOLT artist-in-residence, Alejandro Jiménez-Flores. The exhibition opens on Friday, April 10 with a reception from 5-8 pm. 

“Queer dance, after the live act, does not just expire. The ephemeral does not equal unmateriality. It is more nearly about another understanding of what matters. It matters to get lost in dance or to use dance to get lost: lost from the evidentiary logic of heterosexuality.” 

Cruising Utopia, The Then and There of Queer Futurity 

José Esteban Muñoz 

Una Noche maravillosa… 

For this exhibition, Alejandro Jiménez-Flores draws from their memories of going out dancing, having a delicious drink (a Campari soda), and finding new moves; sharing glances, closing their eyes while dancing; dancing with dear ones, alone and with strangers. These moments are channeled by Alejandro into soft pastel drawings. Dancing to get lost and calling for a language that is not here yet, though making room for it with every new move. 

In their new work, Alejandro continues to use flowers as a stand-in for themselves, but this time as gifted flower petals are embedded in some of the works, the flowers as material become abstract, becoming ground and expressing themselves by releasing their dyes, as that happens figures and traces of Alejandro’s body enter the works. Just as Alejandro uses their relationship with flowers to develop frameworks for new language propositions, florencio–a conceptual personae–is another framework to interact with language enacted (facilitated) by Alejandro. A framework that exists within their practice and extends to others by providing collaborative prompts. 

…a monarch butterfly makes an entrance at a nightclub. 

For this series, Alejandro channels florencio to create paintings from kiki’s journey of constant becomings. These works will explore themes of migration and transformation, illustrating the journey made by a monarch butterfly named kiki. kiki’s story is an allegory for the experiences many people face when they resist dominant culture’s perception of their gender and race, as well as how individuals struggle with the roles and identities that their community expects them to perform. After suffering much bullying and teasing from the other Monarchs, kiki wanders from the group. Lost and longing to belong, kiki finds clues for kinship throughout the urban

landscape. Following the scent of something familiar yet unknown, she stumbles onto a dancefloor where she finally finds the space for moves and gestures of her own, for transformation, new worldmaking, and becoming. florencio asked Alejandro to ask Miguel Jiménez to write a short story of kiki’s journey and to ask Maddy Stocking to design the space of in the story; this will function as an exhibition catalog to be released towards the end of the exhibition (May 14th).