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)
1media/Screenshot 2021-04-13 161113.jpgmedia/Screenshot 2021-04-13 161113.jpg2021-04-20T23:19:42+00:00Virgen de Mickey, Blue6plain2021-04-27T22:43:41+00:00 TOM KIEFER’S VIRGEN DE MICKEY, BLUE (2017) is part of El Sueño Americano(The American Dream), a series that uses objects confiscated from migrants at an Arizona Border Patrol facility where he worked as a part-time janitor. This photograph shows a child’s red Mickey Mouse zip-up sweatshirt, covered in dirt and paired against a contrasting, bright blue background. The title references the Catholic Virgen de Guadalupe, a popular saint in Mexican culture who protects and watches over her followers. The positioning of the sweatshirt, especially its draped hood, recalls images of the holy Virgin.
1media/Screenshot 2021-04-13 162155.jpg2021-04-22T22:08:18+00:00El Sueño Americano (The American Dream)2plain2021-04-27T22:53:35+00:00 TOM KIEFER’S 3 VIRGEN DE GUADALUPE (2018), WHITE SHOELACE WITH BABY SHOE (2017), AND DIARY (2018) are part of El Sueño Americano (The American Dream), a photographic essay of the discarded personal effects and belongings of migrants apprehended by Border Patrol agents, discarded while being processed at a U.S. Customs and Border Patrol facility near the U.S./ Mexico border in southern Arizona. Kiefer explains that his “intent is to explore the humanity of the migrants who risk their lives crossing through the desert and to create a personal connection for the viewer to a migrant and their hope for a better life.” The worn paint on the virgin statues, the stains on the white shoelaces, and heartfelt words written in the diary mark the lives and struggles of those who carried these objects.