November 19 – December 31, 2022
info@easyside.org
Interior gallery
Hector Ramirez | |
Blue Waltz, 2018 Video 2:07 minutes | $1,000 |
Exterior gallery:
Raul Rodriguez | |
1998, 2020 Archival Inkjet Print 20 x 24 inches Edition of 5 | $1,600 |
Raul Rodriguez | |
Paper – Roshambo, 2021 Archival Inkjet Print 11 x 14 inches Edition of 10 | $400 |
Raul Rodriguez | |
Jorge, 2019 Archival Inkjet Print 11 x 14 inches Edition of 10 | $400 |
Raul Rodriguez | |
Stickers, 2020 Archival Inkjet Print 11 x 14 inches Edition of 10 | $400 |
Raul Rodriguez | |
Untitled, 2020 Archival Inkjet Print 11 x 14 inches Edition of 10 | $400 |
Skate Park:
Liz Trosper | |
a free space wrapped in black #1, 2022 Ink on vinyl 87 x 120 inches Limited edition print | $3,200 |
Liz Trosper | |
a free space wrapped in black #2, 2022 Ink on vinyl 87 x 120 inches Limited edition print | $3,200 |
Liz Trosper | |
a free space wrapped in black #3, 2022 Ink on vinyl 87 x 120 inches Limited edition print | $3,200 |
Hector A. Ramirez is an artist from El Paso, Texas and is currently based in Fort Worth. In 2020, he earned a M.F.A in Sculpture from Texas Christian University and currently teaches at the University of Texas at Arlington. Ramirez’s appropriation of objects and videos derives from a form of play through thought, experience, and senses. He develops a language towards the vernacular. Hector has exhibited in multiple solo, and group shows around the Dallas/Fort Worth metropolitan area, as well as in New York City, Berlin, and Hiroshima. Ramirez was also included in The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth’s Modern Billings. Most recently, Ramirez’s work was published in Artillery Magazine.
Raul Rodriguez is a photographer, artist, curator and educator from Fort Worth, Texas. He graduated with a BFA from the University of North Texas College of Visual Arts and Design with a focus in Photography. As an artist he investigates communities and cultures like skateboarding, boxing, and Lucha Libre, as well as social justice topics linked to the Latino identity. His projects reveal the layers and complexities of his personal and cultural experience as a first generation Mexican-American. His work has been exhibited in galleries and spaces including the Fort Works Art, The Oak Cliff Cultural Art Center, Southern Methodist University and the Latinx Project at New York University. He has worked with museums and organizations like Make Art with Purpose, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth and the Amon Carter Museum of American Art. In 2020,
Raul received the Nasher Sculpture Center Artist Grant for his photographic community platform, Deep Red Press focusing on underrepresented artists in Texas.
Liz Trosper is a new media painter working with ideas of reproduction, the body, painting and technology. Trosper’s work centers on the desire for touch that is both fueled by technology and denied by it. Her creative work examines reproduction as a concept and as technical means. Her work is represented by Barry Whistler Gallery in Dallas and via the international DANAE HI digital art network in Paris. Her work has been shown at the CICA Museum in South Korea and the Artron network in China. Her work has been included in surveys of abstraction at the San Antonio Museum of Art and The Museum of South Texas. She was also the subject of a one-person exhibition at The Wilcox Space, an initiative of the Edith O’Donnell Institute of Art History, a site for the exhibition, documentation, and study of the work of artists who explore painting as medium and idea. Trosper teaches as Assistant Professor of Instruction at The University of Texas at Dallas.