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The Wellin Museum of Art exhibition René Treviño: Stab of Guilt, which runs through June 9, offers an exuberant selection of works with wide-ranging themes that illuminate the artist’s colorful and complex aesthetic. Included among the new work on display are 20 mixed-media collages that incorporate imagery from 19th-century star charts made by C.H.F. Peters, Hamilton’s first professor of astronomy.

The artist’s first museum survey features almost 200 works from 2008 to the present, including new work created for this exhibition.

René Treviño:
Stab of Guilt

On view Feb. 17-June 9, 2024
Wellin Museum of Art

Museum Hours & Info.

Treviño’s multidisciplinary practice encompasses a range of mediums and reflects personal inspirations as well as the artist’s research into Maya and Aztec history, Catholic symbolism, astronomy, pop culture, and queer theory to recast his heritage and identity in a new light. 

Recent explorations into sculpture have resulted in a suite of three courtly robes embellished with faux jaguar fur and sequined patches, displayed with Aztec-inspired feather headdresses and presented on a custom-built stage. Titled Regalia, Intuition; Regalia, Premonition; Regalia, Foresight, the work intentionally blurs the line between high and low, craft and fine art, history and popular culture. Two sets of custom-designed papel picado, the traditional Mexican craft of cut or punched paper, are strung throughout the galleries. 

Also debuting in Stab of Guilt are 20 mixed-media collages collectively titled Sunspots by Day, Asteroids by Night (2023), which incorporate imagery from 19th-century star charts made by C.H.F. Peters, Hamilton’s first professor of astronomy from 1858 until his death in 1890. The series builds upon paintings in which Treviño merges historical Western views of the heavens with scientific perspectives of the Maya and Aztecs and his own idiosyncratic naming conventions in the Celestial Body-ody-ody series (2020–23). 

Other works on view include the Circumference series (2019–23), a grid of 119 paintings comprised of circular imagery that, taken together, point to our commonalities across geography and cultures — ancient Aztec glyphs sit comfortably next to depictions of Greek pottery and Indigenous American folk art — as well as embellished paintings on leather, based on ancient codices and featuring a mashup of queer and Mesoamerican imagery. 

“Treviño’s work highlights the complexity of the queer Mexican American experience in this country. For the past 15 years, he has created multiple painting series and work in other media that celebrate difference while simultaneously erasing boundaries. The exhibition title, Rene´ Treviño: Stab of Guilt, connotes a unique blend of historical references, both personal to the artist and publicly known, including the violence often associated with the Aztec Empire, the private guilt engendered through religious doctrine, and the postcolonial reckonings faced by many cultural institutions, including art museums,” explained Alexander Jarman, assistant curator of exhibitions and curator of this show.

Tracy L. Adler, Johnson-Pote Director of the Wellin Museum, added, “The exhibition’s accompanying WellinWorks education space features its own planetarium inspired by the observatories that have existed on campus — both past and present — and reflecting Treviño’s interest in the celestial.”

René Treviño lives and works in Baltimore. His work has been exhibited at the Arlington Arts Center (Virginia), Baltimore Museum of Art, Delaware Center for Contemporary Art (Wilmington), and the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture (Baltimore), Pentimenti Gallery (Philadelphia), Wadsworth Atheneum (Hartford, Conn.), and White Box (New York City). Treviño is a recipient of the Baltimore Creative Fund Individual Artist Grant and the Trawick Prize. He holds a BFA from the School of Visual Arts in New York City and an MFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore.

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