Don Gregorio Antón is a photographer and an Emeritus Professor of Art of
Humboldt State University
California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt also known as Cal Poly Humboldt, Humboldt or Cal Poly"Cal Poly" may also refer to California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo, California or California State Polytechnic Universi ...
(HSU).
[ Hosted by ISSUU a]
this URL
/ref> During his 50-year vocation he has spoken nationally at universities and intercity schools in an effort to inspire and encourage students to realize their personal vision.
Early life and studies
Antón was born in East Los Angeles
East Los Angeles ( es, Este de Los Ángeles), or East L.A., is an unincorporated area in Los Angeles County, California. As of the 2020 census it had a population of 118,786, a drop of 6.1% from 2010, when it was 126,496. For statistical purpo ...
and raised in Pico Rivera, California
Pico Rivera is a city located in southeastern Los Angeles County, California. The city is situated approximately southeast of downtown Los Angeles, on the eastern edge of the Los Angeles basin, and on the southern edge of the area known as the ...
. When he was 17, his father forbade him from following a career in photography unless Antón could prove to his father that a Chicano photographer could be successful. Antón searched libraries and found a book by influential Mexican photographer Manuel Álvarez Bravo
Manuel Álvarez Bravo (February 4, 1902 – October 19, 2002) was a Mexican artistic photographer and one of the most important figures in 20th century Latin American photography. He was born and raised in Mexico City. While he took art classes a ...
, which proved to be sufficient for Antón's father.[
Antón attended ]Rio Hondo College
Rio Hondo College is a public community college in Whittier, California. The college is named after the Rio Hondo. Founded in 1960, it mainly serves the cities of Whittier, Pico Rivera, Santa Fe Springs, El Monte, and South El Monte. Rio Ho ...
then shifted to San Francisco State University
San Francisco State University (commonly referred to as San Francisco State, SF State and SFSU) is a public research university in San Francisco. As part of the 23-campus California State University system, the university offers 118 different b ...
where he received his Bachelor of Arts in 1978 and a Master of Arts in 1980.[ He was mentored by photographers Duane Michals, ]Eikoh Hosoe
is a Japanese photographer and filmmaker who emerged in the experimental arts movement of post-World War II Japan. Hosoe is best known for his dark, high contrast, black and white photographs of human bodies. His images are often psychologicall ...
, Brett Weston, Robert Heinecken
Robert Heinecken (1931 – May 19, 2006) was an American artist who referred to himself as a "paraphotographer" because he so often made photographic images without a camera.
Early life and education
Born in Denver in 1931, Heinecken grew up in Ri ...
, Edmund Teske, Don Worth, Jack Welpott, and, during his earliest years, with Dody Weston Thompson.
Teaching
Antón's first teaching assignment was on the campus of Otis Art Institute/Parsons School of Design, Los Angeles in 1983. In 1986, he became the Coordinator of Photographic Education through the department of Extended Education and served as curator of the college's gallery. He also taught evening courses at Chaffey College
Chaffey College is a public community college in Rancho Cucamonga, California. The college serves students in Chino, Chino Hills, Fontana, Montclair, Ontario, Rancho Cucamonga and Upland. It is the oldest community college in California.
History ...
in Alta Loma.
In 1987, the founder of the photography program at Humboldt State University (HSU), Tom Knight, recruited Antón to fill a one-year visiting lecturer position. Antón was asked to stay for an additional year.
From 1989 to 1991, Antón served as director of the photography program at Olympic College in Bremerton. When Knight died, Antón was hired by HSU to fill his position. During Antón's tenure, he mentored the multicultural students. Antón retired in 2014.[
]
Antón was awarded the Freestyle Crystal Apple Teaching Award in 2010 from the Society for Photographic Education
The Society for Photographic Education (SPE) is a nonprofit membership organization that provides a forum for the discussion of photography and related media as a means of creative expression and cultural insight. Through its interdisciplinary pr ...
, as well as the Excellence in Photographic Education – Teacher of the Year Award from the Santa Fe Center for Visual Arts in 2002.[ He has also received recognition from the WESTAF/National Endowment for the Arts, Regional Fellowship for the Visual Arts in 1993, and support from the ]Lorser Feitelson
Lorser Feitelson (1898–1978) was an artist known as one of the founding fathers of Southern California-based hard-edge painting. Born in Savannah, Georgia, Feitelson was raised in New York City, where his family relocated shortly after his bir ...
/ Helen Lundeberg Grant in 1984.
Recognition
Antón's earliest contributions were recognized by Franciscan
, image = FrancescoCoA PioM.svg
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, caption = A cross, Christ's arm and Saint Francis's arm, a universal symbol of the Franciscans
, abbreviation = OFM
, predecessor =
, ...
Sister Karen Boccalero, the director and founder of Self-Help Graphics
Self-Help Graphics & Art, Inc. is a community arts center with a mix Beaux-Arts and vernacular architecture in East Los Angeles, California, United States. The building was built in 1927, and was designed by Postle & Postle. Formed during the cul ...
, who curated his first exhibition at Galería Otra Vez in Boyle Heights
Boyle is an English, Irish and Scottish surname of Gaelic, Anglo-Saxon or Norman origin. In the northwest of Ireland it is one of the most common family names. Notable people with the surname include:
Disambiguation
*Adam Boyle (disambiguation), ...
in 1982. The exhibition and lecture was titled, ''Milagros'' and was reviewed by the writer and poet Dinah Berland of the ''Los Angeles Times
The ''Los Angeles Times'' (abbreviated as ''LA Times'') is a daily newspaper that started publishing in Los Angeles in 1881. Based in the LA-adjacent suburb of El Segundo since 2018, it is the sixth-largest newspaper by circulation in the ...
'' who wrote, "Listening to Don Antón speak about his life is like reading Carlos Castaneda
Carlos Castañeda (December 25, 1925 – April 27, 1998) was an American writer. Starting with ''The Teachings of Don Juan'' in 1968, Castaneda wrote a series of books that purport to describe training in shamanism that he received under the tu ...
. Antón, an intense young artist with an acceptance of the magical in everyday experience, describes his photography as 'trying to balance on a tight wire between feeling and thought.' Antón's work, like his life, is guided by a quality of feeling." Councilwoman Gloria Molina awarded Antón a commendation from the city of Los Angeles for his efforts to inspire others within the Latino community.
Antón's work would also be included in the first cross-cultural exhibition of photography in Los Angeles. The ''Multicultural Focus'' survey was directed by the curator and writer, Josine Ianco-Starrels and held at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery in Barnsdall Park in 1981 to celebrate the cities Bicentennial. American journalist Suzanne Muchnic called it "The best contemporary show f photographyof the year". Thirty years later, this exhibition, retitled ''REFOCUS: Multicultural Focus'', would resurface through the efforts of the photographer and educator Sheila Pinkel, and presented in the Getty Museum
The J. Paul Getty Museum, commonly referred to as the Getty, is an art museum in Los Angeles, California housed on two campuses: the Getty Center and Getty Villa.
The Getty Center is located in the Brentwood neighborhood of Los Angeles and ...
's monumental survey ''Pacific Standard Time
The Pacific Time Zone (PT) is a time zone encompassing parts of western Canada, the western United States, and western Mexico. Places in this zone observe standard time by subtracting eight hours from Coordinated Universal Time ( UTC−08:00). ...
''. It was a major collaboration of over 60 cultural institutions across Southern California, coming together for six months, from October 2011 to March 2012, to tell the story of the birth of the Los Angeles art scene and how it became a major force in the art world.
Antón was selected to participate in the exhibition, ''American Voices: Latino Photography in the U.S.'', created by FotoFest's artistic director, Wendy Watriss, and presented at the Smithsonian's Ripley International Gallery in 1997.
In 2001, Plaza de la Raza included Antón's imagery in their touring presentation of ''Hecho en Califas: The Last Decade''. This exhibition was curated by the artist and educator Richard Lou and coordinated by Rebecca Nevarez. In the accompanying catalog, Lou's essay, "The Secularization of the Chicano Visual Idiom: Diversifying the Iconography", Antón is quoted, "Art for me are the things that were kept next to your Santos in your house, they were the pictures that meant the most; the galleries that are the most significant are the ones that we keep in our back pockets."
A major retrospective of his work, entitled ''The Total Sum of Solitudes: Thirty Years of Photography by Don Gregorio Antón'', was presented at HSU's First Street Gallery in 2004. Accompanying this exhibition was a survey of Antón's former and current students titled, ''From Whom I’ve Studied, From Whom I’ve Learned.'' In the corresponding brochure, intern Cyrus Smith
Cyrus Smith (named Cyrus Harding in some English translations) is one of the protagonists of Jules Verne's 1875 novel '' The Mysterious Island''. He is an officer in the Union Army during the American Civil War. He is a very skilled man and a f ...
wrote, "These pieces, as in all of Antón's work in photography and in teaching, are, above all, gifts. They bring the gift of opportunity. He does not offer you what to learn, but rather how to learn. He does not simply show you a photograph, he allows you to enter into it. In doing so, Don Antón's photographs offer us the opportunity to see the richness and undeniable power of hope."
In 2006, Antón's Artist-in-residence
Artist-in-residence, or artist residencies, encompass a wide spectrum of artistic programs which involve a collaboration between artists and hosting organisations, institutions, or communities. They are programs which provide artists with space a ...
at Light Work would lead to the exhibition and catalog ''Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movements'', curated and authored by the Executive Director and photographer Hannah Freiser. Fine Arts Critic and former Director of the Michael C. Rockefeller Arts Center, Katherine Rushworth described it as "One of the most elegant shows of the year". The show contained Antón's "Retablos" series, intimate images on copper plates that harken to religious iconography
Iconography, as a branch of art history, studies the identification, description and interpretation of the content of images: the subjects depicted, the particular compositions and details used to do so, and other elements that are distinct fro ...
often found in colonial churches. This style of devotional paintings were first experienced by Antón when he was an altar boy at Saint Francis Xavier church in Pico Rivera.
In Light Work's Annual ''Contact Sheet'' of 2007, the poet and photo-historian John Wood wrote, "Don Gregorio Antón's photographs radiate compassion like the work of no other living artist I know. They are filled with an intense humanity we usually find only in a few documentary photographers and photo-journalists—the Smiths, Salgados, and Nachtweys. Antón is, however, a different kind of photographer, though one could call his work a document of the spirit, the journal of a sacred quest. But his photographs are not even photographs in the usual sense of the word—those captured moments of a past reality, be they taken by someone's uncle at a family picnic or by Paul Strand
Paul Strand (October 16, 1890 – March 31, 1976) was an American photographer and filmmaker who, along with fellow modernist photographers like Alfred Stieglitz and Edward Weston, helped establish photography as an art form in the 20th century ...
in a French village. His images, though equally real, are constructions of psychological realities, portrayals of mythic fears, sacrifices, and hopes... In the presence of such art we are in the presence of the sacred." In 2010, Aperture exhibited a selection of this work in ''Mexico & Afuera: Contemporary Mexican and Mexican-American Voices, and Selections from En Foco'' featuring Chicano, Mexican and Mexican American photographers.
Antón's work was shown in ''EN FOCO: New Works/Crossing Boundaries'', a collaborative exhibition by the editor and publisher, Miriam Romais and the historian and director of BRIC ARTS, Elizabeth Ferrer, in 2013. Ferrer wrote of this exhibition in the photographic journal ''Nueva Luz'', "For the series included in the exhibition, ''Arc of Tragedy'', Antón placed photographs into reliquaries, shrine-like objects created to house religious artifacts (or literally, relics) such as the fragment of a saints’s bone or clothing. Antón’s reliquaries display small photographs, often self-portraits depicting some kind of ritual act or moment of ecstasy. There is an otherworldly quality to these images; they are primal and visceral, yet suffused with shadows and never fully comprehensible. The artist’s aim is not to provide fixed meanings or readings, but for the viewer to complete these works, to project their own memories, dreams, or emotions upon the imagery and to continue this unending project of the search for self."
Writings
Antón was awarded the Cesar Chavez
Cesar Chavez (born Cesario Estrada Chavez ; ; March 31, 1927 – April 23, 1993) was an American labor leader and civil rights activist. Along with Dolores Huerta, he co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA), which later mer ...
Award from the students of M.E.Ch.A.
In science fiction, or mechs are giant robots or machines controlled by people, typically depicted as humanoid walking vehicles. The term was first used in Japanese after shortening the English loanword or , but the meaning in Japanese is ...
(Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan) of HSU, for their use of his essay "No Thought is Alone – A Teachers Plea for You to Add Yourself into the Course of Change" in welcoming and retaining incoming "diverse" students to the university.
In a plea to clarify those issues related to a personal inclusivity of ones own reflective thought, Antón's essay published by the Hispanic Research Center's Latina/o Art Community asserts, "It is crucial to understand that you must add a part of yourself to all that you see for learning to take place. Learning, not in what you see, but in how you see. Whatever you approach, whatever mysteries there are, all of them will need you as a vital pat of their unfolding. So I ask you to be active with your thoughts, challenge your world, refine your seeing as this is a gift you can only give yourself."
"Of Fields and Fissures: Facing Diversity and Leveling the Playing Field", was published in ''Nueva Luz'' (Vol.14 No.2), and its accompanying lecture "It Is Not in What You Teach, but Who You Teach", was presented at the 2010 Society of Photographic Education National Conference in Philadelphia.
Interviews
In the conversation, "Interviewing Don Gregorio Antón About Learning Through The Lens" for the Huffington Post, Ramon Nuez describes Antón's process of seeing, "There is a mysticism in Antón's work. Which calls for a preoccupation of thought. Provoking a different response in every viewer."
Antón was featured on "What Follows" a video production of the University of Colorado, Boulder
The University of Colorado Boulder (CU Boulder, CU, or Colorado) is a public research university in Boulder, Colorado. Founded in 1876, five months before Colorado became a state, it is the flagship university of the University of Colorado sys ...
, which is an ongoing series of videotaped interviews with artists, critics and curators who have participated in the Visiting Artist Program of the Department of Art & Art History. What Follows provides an accessible and inexpensive opportunity for colleges, schools and museums to become aware of the individuals currently active in today's art world.
Antón was also highlighted in Blue Mitchell's Diffusion: Unconventional Photography Vol. 2. In the Artist Profile entitled "The Rules of Tragedy", Antón claims, "To believe in anything is to risk the chance of being misunderstood... If you are willing to give up the weight of failure and judgment in your work, you will allow it freedom to move at its own velocity in its own unique force of description. Then it will have something to teach you, something to make use of what you know."
Aesthetics
Essayist Cameron Woodall, addresses the works relative nature of empathy, "Using Photography, Don Gregorio Antón searches the depths of consciousness leaving us awed at magic manifested. Charged with spiritual energy, his art is utilized to seek understanding of himself and his world. Through his use of personal myth we find the connection between subjective knowledge and shared emotion. The final pieces are neither questions nor answers but are artifacts of memory and experience."
The photography critic Paul La Rosa, construes the emotional underpinnings of the imagery, "To view the widely praised and widely exhibited work of Don Gregorio Antón is to bear witness to an intensely personal vision, immersive and in-the-raw. It seems more compelled than devised, conjuring a world both strange and familiar, enclosed and internal yet reverberating outward. We are riveted by these photographs as we might suddenly catch a stranger in a moment of self-reflection, caressing an exposed limb or talking out loud or shedding a tear alone in public. In times like these, we glimpse ourselves in others, acknowledge common pains and desires and fugitive thoughts. This is the hidden, introspective terrain Antón explores and records, and in which we in turn, halt, and find ourselves reflected."
Hannah Frieser's introduction to "OLLIN MECATL: The Measure of Movements", interprets the works ancestral construct, "Antón’s work is likely to provoke a different response in every viewer. The retablos can be appreciated for their enigmatic beauty, their haunting narratives, or their intense spirituality. Where we find ourselves in our lives may be where we find ourselves in Antón’s imagery, so it is up to each person to find his or her own way to his world. Antón has tightly woven his cultural identity into this body of work. Through the imagery and text of each retablo he describes and reforges his connectedness to his roots in Mexico. The writing on some retablos is easy to read, while the words on others fade into the background like melodies half remembered. Not unlike diary entries, the writing is deeply personal and vulnerable to exposure. The work describes a mysterious and otherworldly existence that most of us experience only through dreams or nightmares. Linear time does not exist, and raw emotions are laid out in the open. Antón’s world is not defined as pain and suffering, though both appear frequently in the images. Rather suffering, pain, and fear are invited and accepted as players within the timeless cycle of life, along with bliss and salvation."
Exhibits
His works have been exhibited at Aperture
In optics, an aperture is a hole or an opening through which light travels. More specifically, the aperture and focal length of an optical system determine the cone angle of a bundle of rays that come to a focus in the image plane.
An ...
in New York; the Royal Photographic Society
The Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain, commonly known as the Royal Photographic Society (RPS), is one of the world's oldest photographic societies. It was founded in London, England, in 1853 as the Photographic Society of London with ...
, Bath, England; Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego; Nagase Photo Salon, Tokyo and Osaka; El Museo Francisco Oller y Diego Rivera, Buffalo, NY; Friends of Photography, Carmel, CA; Art Museum of the Americas
Art Museum of the Americas (AMA), located in Washington, D.C., is the first art museum in the United States primarily devoted to exhibiting works of modern and contemporary art from Latin America and the Caribbean. The museum was formally establis ...
, Washington, DC; Aljira, a Center for Contemporary Art, Newark, NJ; Bronx Museum of the Arts
The Bronx Museum of the Arts (BxMA), also called the Bronx Museum of Art or simply the Bronx Museum, is an American cultural institution located in Concourse, Bronx, New York. The museum focuses on contemporary and 20th-century works created by A ...
, NY; Sol Mednick Gallery, Philadelphia, PA; Starlight Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; Longwood Art Gallery, Bronx, NY; Arts Visalia Visual Arts Center, Visalia, CA; and at the Getty Museum's "Pacific Standard Time", REFOCUS: Multicultural Focus, and at Santa Monica Art Studios (SMAS) in California.
Antón's work is held in various collections such as the Bibliothèque Nationale
A library is a collection of materials, books or media that are accessible for use and not just for display purposes. A library provides physical (hard copies) or digital access (soft copies) materials, and may be a physical location or a vir ...
, Paris; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) is a modern and contemporary art museum located in San Francisco, California. A nonprofit organization, SFMOMA holds an internationally recognized collection of modern and contemporary art, and was ...
; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH), is an art museum located in the Houston Museum District of Houston, Texas. With the recent completion of an eight-year campus redevelopment project, including the opening of the Nancy and Rich Kinder Bui ...
; the Smithsonian Institution
The Smithsonian Institution ( ), or simply the Smithsonian, is a group of museums and education and research centers, the largest such complex in the world, created by the U.S. government "for the increase and diffusion of knowledge". Founded ...
, Washington DC.; the , Mexico DF; Royal Photographic Society
The Royal Photographic Society of Great Britain, commonly known as the Royal Photographic Society (RPS), is one of the world's oldest photographic societies. It was founded in London, England, in 1853 as the Photographic Society of London with ...
, England; Santa Barbara Museum of Art; the Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento; the Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego; and the Foto Museo Cuatro Caminos, Edo De Mexico.
His work has been published in "Don Gregorio Antón – Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movements", Contact Sheet No. 145; "Strange Genius": 21st The Journal of Contemporary Photography Vol. 5"; as well as ''Contemporary Chicana and Chicano Art – Artists, Works Culture, and Education'' Vol. 1.
Publications
* 2020: ''Latinx Photography in the United States'', by Elizabeth Ferrer
* 2008: ''Contact Sheet'', "Don Gregorio Antón – Ollin Mecatl: The Measure of Movements", introduction by Hannah Frieser
* 2002: ''Contemporary Chicana and Chicano Art: Artists, Work, Culture, and Education'', by Gary D. Keller
* 2001: "Strange Genius" – ''The Journal of Contemporary Photography'', Volume V, by Leo & Wolfe Photography
Videos
* 2010: No Thought is Alone, YouTube. (Video, 10-minute edited version.)
*2008: WHAT FOLLOWS, YouTube. (Video, 8:31 minutes.)
* 2006: Light Work – "Spotlight on Photography", Don Gregorio Antón (Video, 8:57 minutes.)
References
External links
*
Lightwork profile
{{DEFAULTSORT:Anton, Don Gregorio
Fine art photographers
Photography academics
Hispanic and Latino American artists
American artists of Mexican descent
American surrealist artists
Photographers from California
Artists from Los Angeles
20th-century American photographers
21st-century American photographers
American art educators
American contemporary artists
Living people
1956 births