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Roberto Juarez | |||
| Born
1952 in Chicago, IL Lives and works in New York, NY, and Miami Beach, FL |
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| Caminito, Gloria/Little Road, Gloria, 1995 | ||||
| from
the suiteThey Entered the Road peat moss, rice paper, charcoal, acrylic paint, and urethane varnish on canvas 112 x 225 inches Bebe and Crosby Kemper Collection Gift of the William T. Kemper Charitable Trust 1997.13.2 |
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| Painter and printmaker Juarez created the suite They Entered the Road to honor the memories of five of his intimates: his sister, her daughter, and three close friends who died of AIDS. The five immense paintings are spectacles of the wonder, enchantment, and peace we may derive from the natural world. Juarez creates sites of ethereal grace where nature's abundance–flowers, fruits and natural materials–may encourage us to reflect on our passage through the physical world into another. |
|
Roberto Juarez | |||
| Born 1952 in Chicago, IL Lives and works in New York, NY, and Miami Beach, FL |
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| Gone to Italy/Se Fue a Italia, 1995 | ||||
| from the suite They Entered the Road peat moss, rice paper, charcoal, acrylic paint, and urethane varnish on canvas 79 1/2 x 234 3/4 inches, triptych Bebe and Crosby Kemper Collection Gift of the William T. Kemper Charitable Trust 1997.13.4a–c |
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| Painter and printmaker Juarez created the suite They Entered the Road to honor the memories of five of his intimates: his sister, her daughter, and three close friends who died of AIDS. The five immense paintings are spectacles of the wonder, enchantment, and peace we may derive from the natural world. Juarez creates sites of ethereal grace where nature's abundance–flowers, fruits and natural materials–may encourage us to reflect on our passage through the physical world into another. |
![]() |
Roberto Juarez | |||
| Born 1952 in Chicago, IL Lives and works in New York, NY, and Miami Beach, FL |
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| Granny Apples, 1995 | ||||
| from the suite They Entered the Road peat moss, rice paper, charcoal, acrylic paint, and urethane varnish on canvas 112 x 225 inches Bebe and Crosby Kemper Collection Gift of the William T. Kemper Charitable Trust 1997.13.1 |
||||
| Painter and printmaker Juarez created the suite They Entered the Road to honor the memories of five of his intimates: his sister, her daughter, and three close friends who died of AIDS. The five immense paintings are spectacles of the wonder, enchantment, and peace we may derive from the natural world. Juarez creates sites of ethereal grace where nature's abundance–flowers, fruits and natural materials–may encourage us to reflect on our passage through the physical world into another. |
![]() |
Roberto Juarez | |||
| Born 1952 in Chicago, IL Lives and works in New York, NY, and Miami Beach, FL |
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| Kissing Angel Fish/Pez Angel Besador, 1995 | ||||
| from the suite They Entered the Road peat moss, rice paper, charcoal, acrylic paint, and urethane varnish on canvas 96 x 260 inches, triptych Bebe and Crosby Kemper Collection Gift of the William T. Kemper Charitable Trust 1997.13.5a–c |
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| Painter and printmaker Juarez created the suite They Entered the Road to honor the memories of five of his intimates: his sister, her daughter, and three close friends who died of AIDS. The five immense paintings are spectacles of the wonder, enchantment, and peace we may derive from the natural world. Juarez creates sites of ethereal grace where nature's abundance–flowers, fruits and natural materials–may encourage us to reflect on our passage through the physical world into another. |
![]() |
Roberto Juarez | |||
| Born 1952 in Chicago, IL Lives and works in New York, NY, and Miami Beach, FL |
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| Smart Dana/Agudo Dana, 1995 | ||||
| from the suite They Entered the Road peat moss, rice paper, charcoal, acrylic paint, and urethane varnish on canvas 112 x 230 inches, diptych Bebe and Crosby Kemper Collection Gift of the William T. Kemper Charitable Trust 1997.13.3a–b |
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| Painter and printmaker Juarez created the suite They Entered the Road to honor the memories of five of his intimates: his sister, her daughter, and three close friends who died of AIDS. The five immense paintings are spectacles of the wonder, enchantment, and peace we may derive from the natural world. Juarez creates sites of ethereal grace where nature's abundance–flowers, fruits and natural materials–may encourage us to reflect on our passage through the physical world into another. |