paul ramirez jonas

curatorial statement artist's statement artist's video zingmagazine projects


Curator's Statement / His Truth Goes Marching On, 1993

Paul Ramírez Jonas's work examines issues of identity -- the individual as a representation of "micro" vs the masses' corporate history as representaiton of "macro". Often Ramírez Jonas's musings champion failures of this micro individual. As the tinkerer, Ramírez Jonas's experiments go astray, but are nostalgically held onto, and re-realized through their ghosts. In "His Truth Goes Marching On", Ramírez Jonas suspends a circular wooden armature from the ceiling; like crystals on a chandelier, it houses 80 bottles, each filled with different levels of water and sealed to represent a specific note in the musical alphabet. When tapped by a drumstick sequentially, the chandelier of bottles play "The Battle Hymn of the Republic".

Does his truth go marching on? In a time when we are so dependent on the realities of modern technological living, the role of the individual vs the corporate in the technological jungle goes on. In this jungle, new species and new technologies have become a derivative business of multiple loading platforms: hence this prosaic adaptation of music, structure, and content proves even more heroic in its allusions to anonymity through specificity.



Curator's Statement / 100, 1995

Ramírez Jonas's "100", an accordion collection of 100 photographs showing people ranging in age from zero to 99, sequenced chronologically, references similarities and differences between the individual and the whole. The images were first collected by photographing friends and acquaintances and assigning their ages to the representative linear placement. Later, the artist resorted to setting up a stand and collecting the "holes" -- the ages yet to be placed. Resting in demure platitude on a shelf approximately 40 feet long, the photograph's own meandering alludes to the disjointed yet connected reality or non-reality of the participants. Joined in this fashion, no one photograph exists individually -- both literally (as with a house of cards, should one fall, so shall they all) and figuratively (the cast of characters creates any metaphysical whole: they all are the "any" man, woman, child, at 32, 67, 84, 9, 26, etc).



Curator's Statement / Pause and Play, 2000

"Pause" and "Play": actions burnt like a CD into the hard drive of our consumer consciousness. Whether driving down the highway or adjusting our home entertainment consul, these concepts are very much a part of the electronic vernacular familiar to all. But the ability to stop an action and then start it up again, repeat and rewind, is a relatively new technology, say, since the 8 track. Paul Ramírez Jonas' Pause and Play takes the directive commands we know so well and puts them to use in an old-fashioned band -- complete with tambourine, cymbals, whistle, kick drum, snare drums, and even a banner. Electronically rigged to a digital alarm clock, this snake-like line of instruments, connected by black rubber hoses, sits idly. Maybe something happens, but probably not. Normally, when visiting a gallery, objects don't have a mystique that inludes a kinetic quality, or an tonal presence. Lots of times, art just appeals to visual aspects of our senses, and can surprise when other expectations are fulfilled, but every ten minutes this band will alert viewers to a new way of viewing/experiencing art/music/life.

Ramírez Jonas has curated three sections in zingmagazine. "100" appeared in issue #14, his "Magellan's Itinerary -- A Reproduction" is featured in #16, and "A-M-N-E-S-I-A" in issue #18.

Devon Dikeou



BACK