Latino Life Experience Exhibit.

“Americanos: Latino Life in the United States,” will open at the de Saisset Museum at Santa Clara University on Jan. 17, 2004 and remain on view through March 14.

The exhibit presents an intimate portrait of the Latino community through the work of 30 prize-winning photographers. The 114 photographs in the exhibition are organized around themes such as family, community, work, and sports, and reflect the breadth and variety of the Latino experience.

“We are very proud to be the only Northern California location for this prestigious exhibit,” said Karen Kienzle, curator of the de Saisset Museum. “The University and Santa Clara Valley have had a rich and intimate association with the Latino community and culture over the years. The photographs document the diversity of Latino experience which has been an integral part of the Valley’s history and how it changed from a farming community to a high-tech Mecca.”

In conjunction with Americanos, the de Saisset Museum will be presenting an exhibition of winning entries from the “Young Americanos” youth photography competition sponsored by Farmers Insurance. The remarkable images included in this exhibition spotlight the photographic skills of San Jose youth in grades one through eight. Concurrent with Americanos is the exhibition “Conversations/Conversacions: Women Collaborate.” This exhibition highlights five collaborative artworks created by Bay Area women artists and writers commissioned for the exhibition.

To encourage families to visit the Americanos exhibit, the de Saisset Museum will host a Community Day on Jan. 18 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. with hands-on art activities, docent-led tours, and refreshments.

“Latino immigrants have played a crucial role in the history and culture of this country and Silicon Valley,” said Santa Clara University Professor Francisco Jimenez. Jimenez is the child of migrant Latino parents and author of the prize-winning book Breaking Through, which documented his experience as a migrant child. “I encourage the community to see this exhibit that documents the myriad dimensions of the Latino experience.”

Each of the six sections of the exhibition — work, family, spiritual life, community, sports, and culture and the arts – is introduced by personal statements written by prominent Latino writers and citizens such as Carlos Fuentes, Julia Alvarez, Sandy Alomar Jr., and Celia Cruz. The talented photographers featured in “Americanos,” including Alexis Rodriguez Duarte, Genaro Molina, and Rita Rivera, have captured an extraordinary view of the Latino experience. The photographs address such issues as differences of national origin, education, religion, economic status, and language in the Latino community. From fashion designer to clergyman to migrant farm worker, the images reveal the diversity and synergy as well as the important contributions — of the Latino community.

The exhibition “Americanos,” a project of Olmos Productions, has been organized by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service (SITES) and the Smithsonian Center for Latino Initiatives. The exhibition has been made possible by the generous support of Time Warner and Farmers Insurance.

The exhibition created a unique opportunity for collaboration with Edward James Olmos, the actor and activist. “This important collection of photographs reveals people who are diverse in culture, color, ideas, and dreams, who share a common desire to make life better for themselves, their families, their neighbors, and their nation,” said Olmos. “I am very proud to be part of this important project and to celebrate Latino life, culture, and history with the Smithsonian Institution.”

For more information at http://www.sites.si.edu

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