
Like much of his work, this show explores US-Mexico relations and border mythologies. Sánchez engages with history, not in the form of dead artifacts, but as a living, real genealogy of the present.

On these and other printed works, Sánchez mixes and remixes contemporary and ancient images: archeological artifacts, the statue of liberty, Mickey Mouse, Frida Kahlo and Picasso's Demoiselles d'Avignon appear alongside Aztec dancers, images of atrocities, body parts.

Writing about modern history, the French scholar Michel de Certeau noted that by creating a deep gulf of separation between our present moment and a strange past, modern history stifles genuine engagement with these events. "These ghosts find access through writing," de Certeau wrote, "on the condition that they remain forever silent." (The Writing of History, 1975).
In contrast, Sánchez employs what de Certeau called "a process of coexistence and reabsorption" to bring past and present together: The massive physical presence of the hanging paper scrolls, the sensuous feel of woodcut prints, the monumental scale of ancient fossil remains awaken the senses.

http://www.revistascisan.unam.mx/Voices/pdfs/9509.pdf]Benjamin Serrano, to Markus Kurticks and Guillermo Gomez-Peña and the Border Arts Workshop, José Hugo Sánchez has mastered multiple mediums such as performance, installation, video art, bilingual text, monumental printmaking, drawing, and digital technologies.
Outside CECUT, twin banners announce the current exhibitions of David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Hugo Sánchez. With this work, Sánchez indeed merits his place among the great artists of our time.
The exhibition Memorias de Fuego is on view in Gallery 3 of El Cubo, open Tues-Sunday 10 AM to 7 PM. Free admission on Sundays.
Click here for our gallery of photos from the opening of the show.
jill.holslin@sandiegored.com