Marianna T. Olague
My paintings are about the people and border town of El Paso,
Texas, where I grew up. I create narrative portraits that depict
the everyday lives of my family, friends, and even myself. The
environments in my paintings illustrate the circumstances of
living next to the US–Mexico border in low-income Mexican
American neighborhoods.
My subjects are seen engaged in seemingly ordinary activities,
such as hanging laundry, sitting on the front porch, or standing
in the backyard, all while being surrounded by the divisions of
public housing and the border wall. The border, or frontera, is
ever-present in my work and appears as a fence or rock wall that
offers protection and privacy, but also delineates an inescapable
socioeconomic condition. While it may seem as if my figures
were trapped, they subvert those boundaries by limiting the
viewer’s access into their private space. Through body language,
expression, and the flatness of their environments they take back
control and assert that they are the gatekeepers of their own lives.