Felipe
Ehrenberg: A Neologist's Art & Archive
| The Stanford
University Libraries, Department of Special Collections,
held an exhibition entitled Felipe Ehrenberg: A Neologist’s
Art and Archive from November 19, 2003 through March
15, 2004 in the Peterson Gallery of Green Library. This
exhibition celebrated the work of Ehrenberg (b. 1943,
Mexico City), best known as a pioneer of experimental
and conceptual art. The display featured artists’
books and multiples, prints, correspondence, and ephemera
from the artist’s archive, the Felipe Ehrenberg
Papers (1964–2000), as well as the archive of Beau
Geste Press (1970–1976) in England. |
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Ehrenberg
began his artistic career as a painter and draughtsman,
and his early mentors included muralist José
Chávez Morado and avant-garde artist Mathias
Goeritz. Following the political turmoil in Mexico,
he emigrated to England in 1968. Once there he was
a founder of Beau Geste Press—one of the most
innovative and influential artist-run presses of the
time. The press published the work of Fluxus artists—an
international conceptual artists’ group of which
Ehrenberg became a member.
In the
mid-1970s Ehrenberg returned to Mexico and took part
in the Mexican group movement, when a number of Mexican
artists began working collectively staging performances—often
on the street—and publishing alternative art
publications that reflected their response to numerous
socio-political issues occurring in Mexico and other
countries in Latin America.
In the
1980s Ehrenberg led self-publishing workshops for
artists, students, and teachers in Mexico giving them
the tools to publish works reflecting the needs and
interests of Mexico’s distinct regions. He organized
a similar project for Nicaraguans rebuilding their
society after the fall of the dictator Somoza. In
addition, with the establishment of a program called
H2O Talleres de Comunicación, Ehrenberg helped
to establish 800 new community presses and over 1,000
community murals throughout Mexico.
In the
1990s Ehrenberg published elaborate books with strong
sculptural elements. He also created a series of installations
and performance pieces focusing on border politics
between the U.S. and Mexico in the age of the North
American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), California’s
Proposition 187, and the Zapatista liberation uprising.
His work in the late 1990s reflected the theme of
violence, and his more recent work includes the creation
of dynamic exhibitions on the Internet. Ehrenberg
currently lives in Sao Paulo where he is Mexico’s
Cultural Attaché to Brazil.
Felipe
Ehrenberg: A Neologist’s Art & Archive
featured items from the Beau Geste Press Ephemera
Collection (1970–1976), and the Felipe Ehrenberg
Papers (1964–2000)—one of the largest
archives of a Latin American artist available to the
public. Both collections are held at the Department
of Special Collections, Green Library, and were acquired
by the Stanford University Libraries in 1994 and 2000,
respectively.
In
conjunction with the exhibition, the Stanford University
Libraries published the exhibition catalogue Felipe
Ehrenberg: A Neologist’s Art and Archive.
The catalogue includes color reproductions of works
by Ehrenberg and an essay by contemporary Latin American
art specialist D. Vanessa Kam. The cost of the publication
is $10 (tax included) plus shipping. To order copies
please visit our publications
web site or contact the Department of Special
Collections, Green Library, Stanford University, Stanford,
CA 94305-6004; attn: Lisa Marie Hall, phone 650-725-1021
or via e-mail at speccollpubs@stanford.edu
|
Image top right:
Felipe Ehrenberg, Codex Aeroscriptus Ehrenbergensis.
Atlanta: Nexus Press, 1990. Reproduced with permission from
the artist.
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Last modified:
November 14, 2005 |