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Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Cuban Exodus - Mariel,' 198

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Cuban Exodus - Mariel, 1980

Watercolor on paper

30 x 82 inches overall; 30 x 26 inches ; 30 x 30 inches; 30 x 26 inches

LCAd 158

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'The Plague: Aids Epidemic,' 1987

Luis Cruz Azaceta

The Plague: Aids Epidemic, 1987

Acrylic on canvas

121 x 146 inches (304.8 x 365.8 cm)

LCAp 52

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Ji Ji Ji Express,' 1974-75

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Ji Ji Ji Express, 1974-75

Oil on canvas with collage

70 x 45 inches

LCAp 165

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Babies with AIDS,' 1989

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Babies with AIDS, 1989

Acrylic on canvas

121 x 144 inches

LCAp 38

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Self Portrait: Rage (Angry),' 1981

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Self Portrait: Rage (Angry), 1981

Crayon on paper

30 x 20 inches

LCAd 169

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'No Parking Any Time,' 1978

Luis Cruz Azaceta

No Parking Any Time, 1978

Colored pencil and ink on paper

24 x 18 inches

LCAd 164

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Gun's Parade,' 1980

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Gun's Parade, 1980

Watercolor and ink on paper

22 x 30 inches

LCAd 157

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Blue Head,' 1979

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Blue Head, 1979

Colored pencil and ink on paper

50 x 38 inches

LCAd 156

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Subway Reality or Fantasy,' 1977

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Subway Reality or Fantasy, 1977

Colored pencil on paper

18 x 24 inches

LCAd 153

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Subway Door,' 1978

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Subway Door, 1978

Colored pencil on paper

24 x 18 inches

LCAd 151

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Do Not Kill Here From 6 am to 4 pm,' 1979

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Do Not Kill Here From 6 am to 4 pm, 1979

Color marker, ink, silver pencil on paper

40 x 28 1/8 inches

LCAd 140

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'Street Scene,' 1976

Luis Cruz Azaceta

Street Scene, 1976

Colored pencil and ink on paper

19 x 24 inches

LCAd 134

Luis Cruz Azaceta, 'City In Flames,' 1984

Luis Cruz Azaceta

City In Flames, 1984

Pastel on paper

40 x 52 1/2 inches

LCAd 118

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, 2024

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, Loose Screws: 1974-1989, George Adams Gallery, New York, NY, 2024

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, 2024

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, Loose Screws: 1974-1989, George Adams Gallery, New York, NY, 2024

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, 2024

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, Loose Screws: 1974-1989, George Adams Gallery, New York, NY, 2024

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, 2024

Installation View, Luis Cruz Azaceta, Loose Screws: 1974-1989, George Adams Gallery, New York, NY, 2024

Press Release

George Adams Gallery is pleased to present Loose Screws: 1974-1989 a survey of works on paper and paintings by Luis Cruz Azaceta, on view from June 6 through August 9, 2024. This is Azaceta’s seventeenth exhibition with the gallery. George Adams will host an opening reception for the artist on Thursday, June 6, from 6 to 8 PM.

Luis Cruz Azaceta (b. 1942) was born in Havana, Cuba, and experienced the violence of the Cuban revolution before emigrating to New York at 18 in 1959. He worked odd jobs and studied, earning a BFA from the School of Visual Arts in 1969. Azaceta's early work, characterized by cartoon-like caricatures, addressed the moral and ethical issues of the time, focusing on urban violence with the intention of inspiring empathy: “The vehicle for compassion is the aesthetic that draws one into looking closely at what are, perhaps, sometimes horrific subjects and embracing them.” He used humor to mask the atrocities he witnessed in New York. In 1975, Azaceta debuted with his “Subway Series” at Allan Frumkin Gallery in “New Talent”, depicting the New York City subway and its passengers as animal-like creatures shaped by an unsympathetic environment. His colorful palette almost distracts from the grim subjects, such as dismembered limbs in a hotdog box in Ji Ji Ji Express (1974-75) or the figures hanging from nooses in No Parking Any Time (1978), creating a “tragi-comic outcry at Man’s Condition.” Azaceta's work, influenced by both his experiences in Cuba and New York, was violent and rough, often compared critically to Goya and Daumier, coming out of a tradition of cartoon-like social commentary. His 1979 solo debut with Allan Frumkin focused on the brutality of city life, leading the New York Post to title their review "Canvas filled with terror."

Throughout the 1980s, Azaceta's work continued to tackle the dark realities of inner-city life, emphasizing the experiences of marginalized people. He developed a raw, expressionistic style of painting on a massive scale to channel the anguish and fear around him. In 1987, in response to the growing crisis of AIDS, Azaceta began making paintings directly addressing the senseless loss of the epidemic. Over the next few years, he completed several works directly addressing the disease - bleakly illustrating the toll in human lives through piles of skulls and ticking clocks seen in The Plague: Aids Epidemic (1987). He utilized a humanistic and sympathetic approach, where often his figures are self-portraits. By equating himself with those affected, his message is one of empathy.

Luis Cruz Azaceta currently lives and works in New Orleans. Azaceta has exhibited internationally and was the subject of a career retrospective organized by the American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora, Miami in 2016. He has been the recipient of several major grants and awards including a Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Grant in 1985, a Mid-Atlantic Grant for special projects in 1989, and a Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant in 2009. His work is included in major public collections such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Blanton Museum of Art, Austin; El Museo del Barrio, New York; the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington DC; the Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento; and the Museo de Arte Contemporaneo, Monterrey, Mexico, among others.