LAJ ARTICLES

Danie Cansino – ‘THIS IS MY BLOOD’

Press Release:

DanieCansino ThisisMyBlood PR 1
Danie Cansino, Popocatépetl and Iztaccíhuatl (star-crossed lovers), Oil on wood panel, 96 x 72 inches, 2023

DANIE CANSINO – THIS IS MY BLOOD
969 CHUNG KING ROAD
MAY 6 – JUNE 17, 2023
ARTIST’S RECEPTION: MAY 6th, 6-9pm
Media Contact: Rachel Cohen
rachel@ciamesgallery.com
213.687.0844
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Charlie James Gallery is delighted to present our second solo exhibition of paintings and drawings by Los Angeles-based artist Danie Cansino titled This is My Blood, opening May 6th at the gallery from 6-9 pm.

Danie Cansino’s work is a mix of Baroque realism and Chicanx aesthetics; where one might expect to find historical or biblical heroes, Casino inserts her own friends and family. Through a commingling of time periods and the conflation of the spiritual with the real, Casino builds upon a legacy of Mexican painters and the realismo magico that is a part of Mexican spirituality. In her latest solo show This Is My Blood, Casino takes us into the world of magical realism, wherein she installs her friends and colleagues in a Mechica pantheon, subverting the traditions of Western art.

In This Is My Blood, Casino brings to question the subjects of Baroque painting through the deification of her own friends, personal heroes, and community. This Is My Blood references the Catholic tradition of the Holy Communion, as well the blood quantum pseudoscience that was foundational to the Spanish caste system which still operates in Latin America today. This Is My Blood confronts Cansino’s relationship of being both the colonized and the colonizer, mixing traditional Catholic imagery with elements of Indigenous cultural and spiritual traditions. Through the fourteen works in the show, Casino creates her own personal pantheon of gods and goddesses, including fellow artists such as rafa esparza, Patrick Martinez, and Nao Bustamante, as well as others who have been influential in Cansino’s practice like Mike Kelley, Paul McCarthy, and most notably Frida Kahlo.

The centerpiece of the exhibition is a 6 × 16-foot diptych painting which depicts Cansino’s take on The Last Supper, (1495-1498). The left panel, titled Your Truth Will Determine… features thirteen male

artists and colleagues of Casino, while the right panel titled A Seat at The Table features eleven female artists and curators, including a self-portrait of Casino herself. By having two fewer women present than anticipated for a rendition of The Last Supper, Casino seeks to reveal the gender imbalances that exist throughout the art world, in which men make up the majority of artists featured in museums and sold at auction. The right panel stays truer to da Vinci’s original, featuring Frida Kahlo as Jesus and La Malinche (born Malintzin) as Judas. While both women are important members of Mexican history, the two had very different life experiences, one perceived as a great artist and the other a traitor. As both Kahlo and Malintzin suffered much through their lives, Cansino also points to the burden of labor, guilt, and shame that women of color must carry in their lives.

As a tattoo artist, much of Casino’s work references the street culture of Chican communities on the eastside of Los Angeles. In the painting titled This is My Blood, Casino paints a photo taken of herself with her closest childhood friend Andrea on the porch of her Montebello home, both proudly wearing their first name brand sneakers purchased earlier in the day. In the ballpoint drawing Whittier Boulevard, Casino pays homage to her tattooing background. Using a blue ballpoint pen instead of a needle, Casino uses tattooing techniques to draw the iconic sign over Whittier Boulevard in East Los Angeles. In Palm Views, Casino paints a landscape scene from the vantage of her current residence in East LA with sunset and palm trees in the background.

Several paintings in the show reference traditional catholic and Western subject matter. In Flesh (I) and Blood (r) Casino paints the hands of herself and a friend playing dominoes atop two separate serapes, their two hands nearly touching in a pose suggestive of Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam (1508-

1502). In a painting titled Jessica (As Olympia), Casino imagines fellow Los Angeles-based painter Jessica Bellamy as Manet’s Olympia alongside her two sphynx cats depicted as mythical Mexican creatures known as alebrijes. In Tres Gracias (Three Graces) Cansino reimagines Peter Paul Rubens’s The Three Graces populated with her friends Ever, Lolbettte, and Kali-Victoria who are painted holding the tools of their respective arts, except for Ever who wears white, vital to her practice as an Obatalá Oshún Curandera.

Through her reimagining of both Western and Indigenous traditions, Casino subverts a number of tropes present throughout the history of art and the Latinx culture of machismo. In one painting entitled Popcatépetl and Iztaccihuatl (star-crossed lovers), Cansino reimagines the Mexican myth of Popcatépetl and Iztaccihuatl as fellow artists rafa esparza and Maria Maea. The story of Popcatépetl and Iztaccihuat was created to serve as an explanation of why two volcanoes in Mexico resemble two lovers. The two lovers were of different classes and therefore their love was forbidden. Generally suggestive of Romeo and Juliet, Iztaccihuatl was told that Popcatépetl died in battle, which caused Iztaccihuatl to die of grief.

Popcatépetl then took her body to the volcano which shares their namesake and they have been in that same position ever since.

A recurring element in Casino’s work is the traversing of different periods of time. In both Jarabe Tapatio and Put on Your Red Shoes Casino references the traditional dance of folklórico as well as danza azteca, two popular Mexican styles of dance. In Put on Your Red Shoes fellow artist and danza azteca performer José Guadalupe Sanchez Ill is seen wearing both his contemporary clothing as well as the traditional clothes worn for danza azteca, with the 6th Street Bridge visible in the background. In Jarabe Tapatío, Cansino queers the tradition of folklórico dancing, showcasing two women in a romantic pose. The tradition of folklórico dancing is a very gendered one, in which men and women have

distinctly different dance steps, as well as dances that are strictly women or men only. However, these days it is becoming more common for there to be queer folklórico and mariachi groups.

-Text by Leah Perez

Danie Casino (b. 1986, Los Angeles) attended Rio Hondo College shortly after her first apprenticeship for tattooing in 2013. In 2017, Danielle graduated from the Laguna College of Art and Design where she earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Drawing and Painting, with an Emphasis in Sculpture. After graduation in 2018, Danielle began tattooing full-time as a resident artist at Mi Familia Tattoo Studio, specializing in color and black and gray realism. In 2021, Casino completed her Master of Fine Arts degree at the University of Southern California. Casino’s work has been featured in Artforum and ArtNews magazine, she was exhibited in the SUR Biennial, at UCLA, AMOCA, UTA Artists Space, Felix Art Fair, Human Resources Gallery, The Mistake Room, USC Roski, Prjct LA and Charlie James Gallery. Her work resides in the collections of the Rubell Museum and the Xiao Museum of Contemporary Art, in addition to numerous private collections. Danie Casino is represented by Charlie James Gallery, Los Angeles.

Artist Instagram: @daniecansino

Gallery website: www.cjamesgallery.com

Gallery Instagram: @charliejamesgallery

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