The Virgin, ca. 1948-1950

Martín Ramírez (Mexican, 1895-1963)

The Virgin, ca. 1948-1950

Mixed media with graphite, colored pencil, chalk and watercolor on paper
75 in. x 35 in. (190.5 cm x 88.9 cm)

Crocker Art Museum, gift of the Estate of Martín Ramírez

2009.50.1

About

  • The story of Martín Ramírez’s life is curious and tragic. A tenant rancher from Jalisco, Mexico, he was Catholic and un hombre de a caballo (a man of the horse), a badge of social standing in his community. In 1925, he left his family and came to California seeking high-paying work with the railroads. Six years later, because he was exhibiting an odd and disorderly demeanor, he was arrested in Stockton and committed to a state hospital. Later transferred to a facility in Auburn, Ramírez occupied his time with drawing, using any materials at hand: crayons, charcoal, fruit juice, shoe polish, and saliva applied with matchsticks. Untrained, Ramírez was gifted at pictorial organization and graphic design. His compositions tended to sprawl off the paper, and when this happened he simply attached more and continued. Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception seen here, with her attributes the globe and snake, was especially venerated in his native state. Ramírez’s frontal portrayal with raised hands shows her welcoming all. While the snake represents the smashing of heresies, it may also symbolize Mexico. The artist has bestowed Our Lady with a crown, an adaptation of her star-spangled halo or borrowed from depictions of the Virgin of Guadalupe. During his years at Auburn, Ramírez’s drawings came to the attention of art professionals and subsequently were collected and exhibited. Ramírez’s first exhibition was organized by the Crocker.

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