Starr Interiors’ Alcove Shows featuring Remarkable Women — July 2012, Lydia Garcia

Lydia Gar­cia – Retab­los & Santos

July 7–23, Open­ing – July 7, 4–6 PM

Retablo by Lydia Garcia
Retablo by Lydia Garcia

Nes­tled among the San­gre de Cristo moun­tain chain is the vil­lage of Ran­chos de Taos, New Mex­i­co, an artists’ com­mu­ni­ty since the 1800s. Here art is a way of life. “It’s a sim­ple life,” admits Lydia, “but it’s full of joy and peace. And that’s what is real to me.”

Lydia Gar­cia, the eldest of five daugh­ters, is one of the fore­most female san­teras cre­at­ing spir­i­tu­al art today. As a life-long res­i­dent of Ran­chos de Taos, steeped in the His­pan­ic tra­di­tions of art, cul­ture and reli­gion, her art reflects her cul­tur­al her­itage in all of its pas­sion and depth.
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As a young girl, Lydia worked along­side her father, Elias, while he cre­at­ed san­tos and won­der­ful objects in his wood-work­ing shop. Her hunger for art brought her to the stu­dios of two artists, Ward Lock­wood and Andrew Das­burg. In their stu­dios, Lydia sat with­out say­ing a word so that they would per­mit her to watch them work. After these ses­sions she would run home to her moth­er’s kitchen where she would paint the under­side of an oil table­cloth, using the pre­cious gifts of old brush­es and par­tial­ly used tubes of paints that her men­tors had giv­en her. In this man­ner, Lydia ini­ti­at­ed her own train­ing. She still paints any­thing she can get her hands on: recy­cled wood, tin cans, old fur­ni­ture, and trea­sures left out­side her home by neigh­bors and friends.

Today Lydia is a full-time san­tera and con­tin­ues to paint and sculpt in the same adobe work­space built by her grand­fa­ther, Anto­nio Vig­il, where she was born and raised work­ing with her father. Here she inte­grates con­tem­po­rary media, such as acrylics and recy­cled and found mate­ri­als. Although mod­ern in tech­nique, the core of Lydi­a’s work embod­ies the tra­di­tion­al faith in God and spir­i­tu­al­i­ty in her his­toric role of santera.

Lydia inspires oth­ers with her faith. “Life is a prayer,” she says. She gives thanks to God for the many bless­ings in her life, includ­ing five chil­dren, ten grand chil­dren and two great-grand chil­dren. She pass­es on bless­ings to her col­lec­tors in the form of unique hand-paint­ed prayers found on the back of her work. For oth­ers, she teach­es work­shops, bless­ing her stu­dents through her instruc­tion and guid­ance. Her pas­sion and faith touch the many folk she encoun­ters through her art, her prayers and teachings.

Lydi­a’s retab­los and bul­tos have been acquired by some of the finest pri­vate col­lec­tions and muse­ums world­wide.