Saul Villegas

Cristela’s Shadow

Image from Cristela’s Shadow.

 

Cristela’s Shadow is a three-part installation in virtual reality and a physical space that explores personal memories through 3D, video projections and photographic media. The work builds upon themes of memory, perception and trauma as viewers encounter the cathartic experience of losing a loved one. Employing an autoethnographic methodology, the work delves into the complexities of trauma, utilizing imaginal exposure techniques to explore its transformative potential for healing through art.

 

Saul Villegas is an interdisciplinary artist and researcher whose work focuses on the exploration of scientific taxonomies, digital art and new media. His work in the OpenLab Collaborative Research Center and the Venom Lab at University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) merge art and science to develop interactive artworks focused on the environment and reimagining of archives through storytelling. He has exhibited his mixed media works online featuring deep-sea coral specimens in an online festival with New Art City’s Memory Card (2023). Last summer he engaged in a flagship residency program with EmergeNYC (Brooklyn’s Art Exchange) through E.A.R.T.H. Lab SF, where he developed the character of The Sun. Saul was born and raised in Avenal, California. He works between Santa Cruz and the Central Valley while completing his MFA degree in Digital Arts and New Media (DANM) at UCSC.

 


Archived Poster Image from Cristela’s Shadow.


 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
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Return to DANM MFA 2024

Jordan Fickel

Eagle UCSC

Image from Eagle UCSC.

In Eagle UCSC, I delve into the unexamined history of art within leather bars and kink spaces, while also proposing a forward-looking vision for the community’s visual culture amidst shifting landscapes of queer bodies and desires. Collaborating with a diverse group of contemporary gay artists, I aim to present a more inclusive and reflective portrayal of the diverse bodies and desires prevalent in these spaces today. The suspended wooden figures, crafted with a jigsaw in homage to the traditional form of artwork found in leather bars, serve as embodiments of this modern perspective. Central to the installation is a physical wooden bar, symbolizing the historical foundation of the leather community by presenting interviews and historical media. Sitting at the bar positions one between the past and the potential futures of these rapidly disappearing spaces.

Jordan Fickel is a multidisciplinary artist specializing in sound and game technology, wooden cutouts, and graffiti tools. His solo work interrogates unexamined normative viewpoints to create installations and sound pieces. Jordan is influenced by media and glitch art, the queer community, video games, and his personal experience with neurodivergence. His MFA thesis work includes elements of social practice and experimental documentary. Jordan collaborates as half of the art duo BEARPAD, creating explicitly fat positive and sex positive queer installations for parties and galleries all over the San Francisco Bay Area and beyond.