• "State of the State: Contemporary Filipino/American Art in the Bay Area"

    Panel discussion at the Asian Art Museum.
    Please come.

    https://www.facebook.com/events/335095710022761/

  • Copy Right/ Copy Left

    A new drawing event at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco. Here is a write up on the Museum's blog describing the event and the ideas behind it. If you are in the Bay Area that day, please stop on by. You may just be able to leave the museum with a drawing from me for FREE!

    http://blog.asianart.org/blog/index.php/2013/07/22/copy-rightcopy-left-with-artist-lordy-rodriguez/

  • Review of Code Switch SFAQOnline.com

    http://www.sfaqonline.com/2013/06/lordy-rodriguezs-code-switch-at-hosfelt-gallery-san-francisco/

  • Review of Code Switch Squarecylinder.com

    http://www.squarecylinder.com/2013/06/lordy-rodriguez-rina-banerjee-hosfelt/

  • Great article about the show from SF Chronicle Arts writer Kimberly Chun

    http://www.sfchronicle.com/art/article/Lordy-Rodriguez-Code-Switch-4558806.php?t=2144fcfb39

  • Code Switch

    28 May - 13 July 2013
    Reception: Saturday 8 June, 4 - 6pm

    In his fifth solo exhibition at Hosfelt Gallery, Lordy Rodriguez presents new works on paper that utilize the map as a framework in which to experiment with unorthodox combinations of familiar visual languages from a variety of sources, including advertising, reality TV, fashion, gift-wrapping, and signature images associated with celebrity artists. With humor, craft, and adept analysis of popular culture, Rodriguez shrewdly subverts the fundamental purpose of design - to create something in the most beautiful and functional way - and the fundamental purpose of maps - to locate and transport ourselves in the world.

    In linguistics, "code-switching" means mixing languages or patterns of speech in conversation. Rodriguez applies this concept to the visual languages of popular culture, using the vocabulary of cartography as a 'grammatical backbone.' In this process, he has developed his own lexicon and 'signature style,' while disrupting our conditioned expectations of the function and meaning of symbols and design.

    Maps describe a place, and by extension an identity. Brand-name patterns and logos are also symbolic of identity, in terms of culture, class, and status. In Gangnam, America, Rodriguez remaps the country by 'cultural capitols' - i.e. entertainment districts in the US as defined by Wikipedia. In most cases, these were historically gay or ethnic neighborhoods, now branded and transformed, through appropriated, watered-down 'culture' from elsewhere, into centers of pop culture - essentially shopping and nightlife. America here is an ostentatiously elongated island floating in a Burberry sea.

    The boundaries between ostensibly opposed cultural referents like mass-produced consumer goods and original, high-end art are increasingly blurred. Several works riff on motifs associated with luxury brands, like Michael Kors and Louis Vuitton, and celebrity artists Takashi Murakami and Damien Hirst. Like the instantly recognized Louis Vuitton monogram, Murakami's mushrooms and Hirst's dots have infiltrated global markets, reproduced on coveted products synonymous with wealth, taste and prestige.

    Rodriguez began working with the vocabulary and concept of the map just as the digital revolution was propelling the shift from paper maps to map apps. The same technology is driving the rapid transformation of language and communication. The speed in which cultural memes are transferred almost overcomes the rate at which we can absorb them. Our vernacular has become a hodge-podge of cultural references, idioms, tropes, and entirely new words or new meanings for words. The work in Code Switch represents Rodriguez's experiments in 'code-switching' the visual languages of popular culture in an ongoing exploration of real and virtual place and identity.