Wikinson College Dean's SuiteMain MenuIntroductionTea TankWe Are All Mountaineers - Exit (出)Virgen de Mickey, BlueDespués del trabajoSan Diego - Tijuana XI, Frontera USA - MexicoCabaray: Observatory Venus at the Lover’s HourColor Farm Study#28Parting of the Ways, Green River (triptych)Friendship Launch, after Katherine JohnsonRacism Doesn’t Rest During a Pandemic Pee Chee (No Justice No Peace)The PeacekeepersMathewSamplerEl Sueño Americano (The American Dream)
Después del trabajo
1media/2017.10.1_thumb.jpg2020-06-02T16:15:42+00:00Jessica Bocinskia602570e86f7a6936e40ab07e0fddca6eccf4e9b271Ramiro Gomez, Después del trabajo, Mixed media on cardboard, 2016. Purchased with funds from the Escalette Endowment.plain2020-06-02T16:15:42+00:00Jessica Bocinskia602570e86f7a6936e40ab07e0fddca6eccf4e9b
This page is referenced by:
1media/2017.10.1.jpgmedia/2017.10.1.jpg2021-04-20T23:24:30+00:00Después del trabajo4plain2021-04-27T22:44:20+00:00 RAMIRO GOMEZ’S DESPUÉS DEL TRABAJO (2016) addresses issues of immigration and makes visible the “invisible” labor forces of Southern California. This work is a nod to the life-size cardboard cut-outs of gardeners, nannies, and housekeepers that Gomez places on display in the neighborhoods and parks around Beverly Hills, California. Like these cut-outs, the face of the housekeeper in Después del trabajo is expressionless that evokes the invisibility or her work. She is only identified by the service she provides (represented by the check she is picking up), and yet she is doing some of the hardest and most essential work that our society relies on to function. Gomez‘s work inspires us to think about and celebrate the unsung workers that we depend on every day.
12021-04-27T17:54:51+00:00Después del trabajo2plain2021-04-27T18:04:07+00:00