Salvador Jimenez-Flores

Buddy MFG

Regular price $28.00

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Declaration of Immigration/Declaration de Inmigración
Based on an outdoor Multi-media Mural Acrylics on Concrete | 2009
Painted with Yollocalli Arts Reach Students, a youth initiative program of the National Museum of Mexican Art.
The mural is a visual dedication to all immigrants and allies who have marched hundreds of thousands of miles to advocate for fair legislation for immigrants and who have stood strong in the face of anti- immigrant rhetoric. The Declaration of Immigration looked at some of the historic and current issues affecting immigrant communities and served as a reminder that the United States of America was founded on emigration and settlement.

Helping Handles: Tote Bags 4 Refugee Fundraiser is a series of tote bags made by Chicago artists to raise funds to get activated cell phones for asylum seekers arriving in Chicago. 

Tote bags go for $28 - or you can donate your old phone in exchange for a tote bag of your choice! 

Inspired by arts community mobilization efforts like the Bootlegs 4 Brandon project, Buddy has assembled 14 amazing artists to donate their artwork, which we’ve printed on bags that we’re releasing Aug 25. meet the urgent needs of assylum seekers involuntarily bussed to our city. Help us help our new neighbors get oriented, communicate with family and friends, and thrive with us in our welcoming communities.

Public Media Institute is working to get these newly-arriving refugees working phones with SIM cards. This is something our mutual aid buddies across the city have unanimously let us know there is urgent need for; other nonprofits and community groups are working to get asylum seekers’ basic needs met, but no one is helping people get the phones essential to find work, communicate with loved ones, and navigate complicated government aid.

In June, PMI acquired 100 SIM cards, but have only been able to activate 30 of them so far. We are raising funds to activate more phones at the cost of about $40 per phone.  More information about our campaign to collect funds for phones and old phone donations is here.  

Dimensions: 14.5 x 15.5"
Materials: Screenprint on 6 oz, 100% cotton canvas tote


Salvador Jimenez-Flores

Instagram: @salvador_jimenez_flores

Salvador Jiménez-Flores is an interdisciplinary artist born and raised in Jalisco, México. He explores the politics of identity and the state of double consciousness. Jiménez-Flores addresses issues of colonization, migration, “the other,” and futurism by producing a mixture of socially conscious installation, public, and studio-based art. His work spans from community-based work, drawing, ceramics, prints, and mixed media sculpture.

Jimenez-Flores is a member of The Color Network, an organization that promotes the advancement of people of color in the ceramic arts and assists artists develop, network, and create dialogue while maintaining a place for a database, resources, and mentorship. He is also a member of the Instituto Gráfico de Chicago, an organization inspired by the socio-political art of Mexico’s Taller de Gráfica Popular (The People’s Print Workshop) and uses art as a platform to inform and generate community discourse about urgent social issues.

Jiménez-Flores has presented his work at the National Museum of Mexican Art, Grand Rapids Art Museum, Urban Institute of Contemporary Art, Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, and Museum of Art and Design amongst others. He served as Artist-In-Residence for the city of Boston, Harvard Ceramics Program, Office of the Arts at Harvard University, and Kohler Arts Industry. Jiménez-Flores is a recipient of Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters & Sculptors Grants and The New England Foundation for the Arts, Threewalls’ RaD Lab+Outside the Walls Fellowship Grant, and he is a 2021 United States Artist Fellow. He is an Assistant Professor in ceramics at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Artwork Details:
Declaration of Immigration/Declaration de Inmigración
Based on an outdoor Multi-media Mural Acrylics on Concrete | 2009
Painted with Yollocalli Arts Reach Students, a youth initiative program of the National Museum of Mexican Art.

The mural is a visual dedication to all immigrants and allies who have marched hundreds of thousands of miles to advocate for fair legislation for immigrants and who have stood strong in the face of anti- immigrant rhetoric. The Declaration of Immigration looked at some of the historic and current issues affecting immigrant communities and served as a reminder that the United States of America was founded on emigration and settlement.

 

Bear Wood Editions
(Irving Park)

Operated by Logan Woodbury, Bear Wood Editions is a queer-owned, Chicago-based silkscreen printing service for handmade art and apparel. For more, follow @bearwoodeditions on instagram.