Tino Rodríguez

Tino Rodríguez is a Mexican-American painter. Born and raised until age 12 in Guadalajara, Mexico, and moving to California and has resided there ever since. Rodriguez was influenced by the symbolism and themes evident in the Catholic churches of his youth. His work was also influenced by his absorption of fairy tales Shaman Rituals and Arts and Crafts.

His work incorporates fantastical imagery combining animal and human forms, as well as dream-like backgrounds and settings.

His work has been exhibited at numerous venues in San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Berlin and Sacramento. His work is in the permanent collections of: the San Jose Museum of Art, Crocker Art Museum, Nevada museum, Basel Museum Florida.

The exhibition Tino Rodríguez: The Darkening Garden/El Jardin al Anochecer was featured at the San Jose Museum of Art in 2003.

His work has been praised by the Los Angeles Times as: "Peculiar and rich, oozing with passion..."

He has worked with the Wachowskis on the video: 'Epilepsy is dancing' (along with visual artist Virgo Paraiso) for Antony and the Johnsons. And in the upcoming film 'Jupiter Ascending' and in the upcoming Netflix series : SENSE8 (he has a small cameo as the green fairy along with Virgo Paraiso who plays purple fairy and his paintings are featured as well).

Rodriguez studied at the Sorbonne in 1990. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the San Francisco Art Institute and his Master of Fine Arts from the University of New Mexico.

Far away from the sterile, pseudo-sanctified realm of the art museum, Tino Rodriguez gained his first exposure to the art world in the Catholic churches of Mexico. In these mysterious, hushed interiors, images of saints and angels seduced him, the scent of candle wax and incense beguiled him. Angels in particular – androgynous, half animal-half human creatures – captivated Rodriguez with their allure. The legacy of this seduction is visible in Rodriguez’ work.

His fantastic paintings are present postmodern fairy tales. Their mythical qualities stem from childhood legacies. Rodriguez came of age surrounded by the Mexican tradition of oral story telling. His grandmother, family and friends passed on stories as diverse as La Llorna, Little Riding Hood, and tales of the Brothers Grimm, as well as Aztec & Mayan myths. In his paintings such different cultural influences now commingle with art historical references, Hindu deities and allusions to the contemporary world.

Biography

Rodriguez’ work also challenges received gender ideologies, another strategy with personal roots. Many of his self-referential images borrow iconographies traditionally associated with femininity in an attempt to claim for himself and others “feminine” behaviors and feelings. Thus, images of babies and fetuses as well as androgynous figures donning bridal veils populate his paintings, insisting that procreation, nurturing, creativity and beauty be the modus operandi open to all. The veils, in particular, are potent signifiers of his personal history. As a child, Rodriguez dressed up and danced in his sister’s first communion veil. Weaving together signifiers from Celtic fables, Northern European fairy tales, Mexican myths, Native American legends, the history of art, as well as Catholic and Hindu iconography, magic, cross pollination, and gender are major themes in the art of Tino Rodriguez. A citizen of the world, Rodriguez rejects the seriousness and sterility of modernism for the fantastic iconographic wonders of postmodernism and post colonialism. In addition, his paintings – reflective but not literal, self-referential but not solely self-destructive – conjure events from his personal history in an attempt to engage the beholder in dialogue.

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