Luis Edgar Mejicanos
Region: South
My paintings explore specific memories that conflate the past, present, and
future, resulting in alternative narratives. Hypermnesia is an “increasing
mnestic capacity in the event of crisis or trauma,” as defined by Paolo Virno
in Déjà Vu and the End of History. I correlate this heightened experience with
memory through meticulously rendered details that come forward through
a haze of distorted recollection and active imagination. My paintings are
tight––rendered concretely and opaquely. Their crispness and shallow depth
reflect an interest in the conventions of Early Netherlandish and Northern
Italian Renaissance compositions and portraiture.
When I consider translating stories into paintings, literary devices used in
magical realism and science fiction offer pathways between autobiographical
fact and interpretive fiction. I build compositions with a lexicon of allegorical
imagery—from anthropomorphized binoculars, who tearfully lament and
sweat, to back braces and Band-Aids, whose wearers possess a certain
healing agency. These motifs introduce humor as a pressure release valve
that eases their melancholy and catapults the paintings into a world where
objects have emotional sentience.