Diane Gamboa and the Aesthetics of ProvocationLos Angeles-based Chicana artist Diane Gamboa is a multi-media figurative artist who has been creating and exhibiting art for close to forty years. Finding inspiration in the urban environment, Gamboa is well-known for her photographs documenting the punk rock music scene in Hollywood and East L.A. in the 1970s and ‘80s and for her disposable "Hit and Run" fashion shows featuring paper streetwear.

This exhibition of twelve silkscreen prints, created between 1983 and 2009, explores the work of the artist as subaltern provocateur. Gamboa’s iconography challenges the viewer by drawing us into vibrant and psychically intense settings that push the boundaries of our dualistic understandings of the dominant and subordinate, male and female, human and object, and pain and pleasure. Influenced by her work with marginalized communities such as homeless youth and transvestites, the series evokes both a sense of alienation and reclamation.

All of the pieces are drawn from the Self-Help Graphics & Art Archives in the Library’s California Ethnic and Multicultural Archives (CEMA) within Special Collections. Self-Help Graphics & Art is a community arts center that was founded in Los Angeles in 1973 to be a resource for young and emerging Latino artists. Gamboa was a visiting artist in CEMA in 2011.

Altered States is presented in conjunction with Gamboa’s Regents’ Lectureship on the UCSB campus in the fall of 2013.

View the Exhibition

Audio Recording of October 23, 2013 Artist Talk

About the Self-Help Graphics & Art Archives