James Córdova, A Santero Pushing The Tradition
Story
and photos by Don Toomey
It is somewhat unusual to talk to a young santero and
have him lucidly describe for you where he has come from,
how and why he has arrived at this particular point, and
define for you, in the clearest manner, where he is going
with his art career. Such is the grasp and understanding
of James Córdova's personal ambitions that he is able to
define his career goals so well.
James Córdova was born in Santa Fe, New Mexico. His
parents are native born New Mexicans. His mother from a
small village in northern New Mexico called Questa, and
his father from the closeby village of San Cristobal. The
family has not done any archival research as to their New
Mexican roots, but his paternal grandfather has put
together a verbal history that traces the family back for
at least six generations. His mother's paternal
grandfather had originally settled in Pojoaque and later
moved to Questa. The family has both Spanish and French
origins, and as James says, "I believe we also have
Pueblo Indian roots too. I have been told that my
great-great grandmother was from Picuris Pueblo." James
was raised in a family with an older brother and sister.
As to being raised in a traditional Hispanic Catholic
family setting where Spanish was spoken, James said, "I
would say that being brought up in the late 70s and early
80s my upbringing was as traditional as that particular
time period allowed. We were raised as Catholics, and
Church, family, and culture were important elements. I
spoke Spanglish; I could not speak Spanish. My parents
spoke Spanish to one another, but English to the
children. We could understand Spanish, in part, but were
unable to communicate in Spanish." James laments this
fact and notes this was particularly frustrating when he
visited his grandparents and attempted to communicate
with them. He says, "When I visited with my extended
family I almost felt like an outsider, since I had to use
my parents as interpreters. I believe I lost part of my
culture, and I feel deprived that I did not get to know
my grandparents more fully." Over the years James has
made a conscious effort to learn Spanish, so that now he
is able to communicate with native speakers.
Questioned if there was anyone in the family practicing
traditional crafts or art, James replied that his brother
Lawrence began painting retablos almost two years ago,
and in 1998 was accepted into Spanish Market. In 1999 he
was juried and accepted into Market for bultos. He added
that his father also paints retablos, but not on a
regular basis, and that his mother has tried her hand
doing colcha.
James did his primary and secondary education in Santa
Fe, and is a 1992 graduate from Santa Fe High School. He
is presently attending Tulane University in New Orleans,
where he is majoring in art history leading to a second
masters degree. He earned his bachelors degree from New
Mexico State University at Las Cruces, and received his
first masters degree from Seton Hall University in New
Jersey. He began his course of study at Tulane in the
Fall of 1998, and is very pleased with his department
since it has some of the top scholars in both
Precolumbian art and Spanish Colonial art. As to his
future plans, he says, "I am aware that I have the skills
as an artist to engage in it as a full-time professional,
but I choose not to do this. Mainly because I am
attracted to the scholarly aspect of the art world." He
plans to pursue a Ph.D. program in art history either at
Tulane or the University of Chicago. He is attempting to
diversify his skills so that when he finishes his
doctorate he will have several options to pursue.
When James was queried as to how he became serious about
creating devotional art he replied, "Being brought up a
Catholic, and exposed to religious art had a decided
early influence on me." He elaborated, noting that some
of his earliest memories are of his father painting
retablos, landscapes, and family portraits. "So of
course, as a young child I wanted to grow up to be
exactly like him. I would attempt to imitate what he was
doing, and that developed and continued with me, and
fostered in me the desire to do drawings of religious
imagery." In 1988 one of his friends, Gilbert Quintana,
took a course in retablo painting with Charlie Carrillo
at the Museum of International Folk Art. He informed
James he was going to be showing his retablos in the
youth category of Spanish Market and asked James to stop
by and see him. James says, "At that point I had not even
heard of Spanish Market, and really did not know much
about retablos. Nonetheless I went to Market and was very
attracted to his art, but I was perhaps more impressed
with all of the other religious art that was being shown.
The fact that I was already interested in the artform
helped to excite my interest."
At that point James' father mentioned that he was
friendly with a Santa Fe santero, Rubén Montoya, and
reminded James that Rubén had created the altarscreen at
the family parish of St. John the Baptist. That very day
James went to the church to look more closely at the
altarscreen, and even made sketches from it. Later his
father cut him some pine panels and knowing nothing about
the procedures he painted an image of San Antonio
directly onto the pine board. This was in 1988 and James
was fourteen years old.
From then on things happened rather quickly. He continued
painting retablos, mainly on his own, and he says, "That
first year I looked at a lot of historical paintings in
books, and continued to work on my painting skills." He
then applied to become a participant in the youth
category of Spanish Market for 1989. That year his booth
was situated adjacent to santero José Ramón López. James
says, "Ramón befriended me and began to give me tips,
such as what gesso was and how I should use it, and just
general good all around advice. He suggested I go to the
Museum of International Folk Art and spend time studying
their collections. I followed his sage advice and things
began to snowball from that point on. In 1991 I attended
a workshop at the Museum of International Folk Art on
traditional methods, given by Ramón López and Charlie
Carrillo. Here I was exposed to the usage of natural
pigments. I felt that I was ready to move away from using
watercolors and follow the more traditional methodology.
This was also the time I began to carve bultos."
When James was questioned if he found that both painting
and carving came easily to him, he replied, "I have been
doing this for about eleven years, and there is always a
challenge involved. Initially, the challenge was how do I
do this? How do I make it look the way I want it to? Now
the challenges are somewhat different. Presently, it is
more how do I make the images mean what I want them to
mean? I don't prefer doing retablos over bultos; each
represents a different challenge." His painting medium is
water-based pigments, noting, "I am not so much of a
purist anymore. At one point I was, and I wanted to do
everything in the traditional manner. However I do
believe this is a good starting point for all artists."
A year after James began painting retablos he thought if
he was going to become a santero he needed to learn how
to carve bultos. To this end his father advised him to
talk to santero Rubén Montoya, and inquire if Rubén would
be willing to teach him carving. James spoke to Rubén,
and he agreed to take James under his wing. Reflecting on
this time, James said, "In a way it was almost like
serving an apprenticeship, but perhaps in a more informal
manner than that label implies. When I watched Rubén
carve it was an education in itself. This
'apprenticeship' lasted for several months. I would go to
his home several times a week, and we would not
necessarily carve together. We would talk, look at
various images and discuss them. One day he took me into
his backyard shop and said 'watch carefully, this is how
I carve! He took his knife out and made several different
angled cuts into a piece of wood. He made cuts of various
angles to get the overall shape he was striving for, and
he just kept on doing this until he got the desired
shape. I said to him okay, and I went home, and following
his instructions, produced a few relief pieces." From
then on I just continued on my own creating bultos, and
developing both my conceptual and carving techniques as I
went along."
James was asked if he felt that the time he spent
creating devotional art was a time for personal spiritual
meditation? He responded, "It is a time of meditation for
me, but creating santos is not just a spiritual act for
me, it involves different parts of my mind, and I just
sort of let my mind wander. It's a great time to recall
memories; a quiet time during which I can have a dialogue
with myself. For me, creating devotional art is a very
spontaneous thing, it's not something I have to struggle
with, but it is something in which I do feel guided."
In 1989 James Córdova applied to be in the adult Spanish
Market. For the jurying process he submitted a retablo of
Christ Carrying the Cross and a bulto of San Isidro. He
noted the judging process was very informal at that time.
"I took my pieces to the Spanish Colonial Arts Society
office and left them there for a week. When I picked them
up they said, 'No problems, you have been accepted!'
There was some positive feedback, but I had already spent
two years in the youth category and had won a few awards,
so I was not what you would call a freshman. However, I
do believe that the best critical feedback comes from
your fellow artists and patrons. James most enjoys the
sense of camaraderie and community that the event
engenders. He says, "As a graduate student I am away from
New Mexico most of the year, so Market becomes a time for
me to become reacquainted with most of my artist friends.
Really, Spanish Market is like a homecoming for me." On
the down side, he finds that he personally seems to get
more tired during the event than when he was a teenager.
"It is a long two days. You deal with people constantly,
and the weather can be pretty uncooperative." He says the
whole thing brings about a case of stimulation overload.
"So much descends upon you from all sides, that you
undergo adrenaline overload!"
When we discussed the long line of historic New Mexico
santeros and their impact and inspiration on his
devotional art, James said, "You know, I cannot point to
one particular historic santero and say he has been my
inspiration. This is because each has a body of work,
some of which is better than others, and I tend to
selectively draw from all of them."
"During the time of our great historic santeros, I find
there are several that tie for me. One of those is
Molleno. I am drawn to his work because I enjoy seeing
the progression of his style, the use of color, and the
change of his imagery as he moved away from the influence
of the Laguna Santero to his own sort of calligraphic
style. I also like the work of the Truchas Master because
it is so varied and interesting to observe, specifically
because it is so asymmetrical. When you look at works by
Molleno, the Laguna Santero, or the Aragons everything is
very symmetrical. I believe people are readily drawn to
objects that are symmetrical. Recently, I have had a
chance to admire the works of Santero Bernardo Miera y
Pacheco while I worked as an intern at the Brooklyn
Museum of Art. Here, they have two of his columns that
were originally in the Zuni Pueblo Church, and they are
spectacular just to look at, and not so much for their
style, but in what they attempted to accomplish. It was
his juxtapositioning of the artwork of the borderlands,
which was New Mexico, compared to the more metropolitan
Mexican area. That is the sort of thing that draws my
interest; interpretation and variation on a theme."
Of contemporary santeros whose work has most impressed
James Córdova, he said, "It is the art of Luis Tapia and
Nicholas Hererra. I like their works because they are
pushing the art in new directions. In directions that I
hope to explore in the future. I am personally drawn to
their overall style, that to me, emphasizes the
contemporary aspects of identity and culture, and the
interaction between different people. I believe that
Tapia and Hererra have done a good job in creating a
bridge to build upon. I am not about to follow their
paths so much; my thrust will be somewhat different. Both
of them have come from a real grassroot level, that is
politically oriented. My approach will be somewhat
different. Afterall, I did not grow up in the 60s when
the Chicano movement was so prevalent. Mine was a
different experience, but I am very attuned to their
ideas of cultural identity and awareness. I am also
coming from more of an academic background, and that will
create a different set of happenings."
Awards and recognition have come early to santero James
Córdova. As a participant in the youth category of
Spanish Market he was the recipient of a number of
ribbons for his retablos. His first year as an adult
participant, he won the Bienvenidos Award for artwork
showing exceptional promise by a first time exhibitor for
a bulto of San Francisco. The next year he won the
Hispanic Heritage Award for in-depth research, for his
large bulto of San Francisco enclosed within a nicho, in
addition to receiving a First Place for one of his
retablos. A year later he received the SCAS Purchase
Award, for an exceptional piece to be added to the
Society's permanent art collection, for his Holy Trinity.
In 1998, James received a First Place in retablos for his
magnificent altar screen "Altar Anima Hispanica," which
also garnered the Archbishop's Award, for a piece of art
that portrays a religious theme in a traditional New
Mexican style. Then at the close of 1998 James was
honored by the city of Santa Fe with the Mayor's Award,
given to recognize an emerging artist. 1998 was a very
good year as far as awards to James Córdova were
concerned.
Since James is a full-time graduate student very few
galleries offer any of his works for sale. In the past he
has sold pieces from the Montez Gallery in Santa Fe, and
at the Potrero Trading Post in Chimayó. Only recently, he
was able to place two retablos at Good Hands Gallery in
Santa Fe, owned by his good friend Ramón López. Serious
gallery affiliation will have to wait until James
finishes his schooling.
As a santero James Córdova hopes that his devotional art
will inform people where we as New Mexican artists are
coming from. "I want to emphasize the overall traditions,
and the directions we are presently taking them. I am
personally striving to push the tradition in new
directions, and that is my prime focus as a santero."
When finally questioned if there was a grand project that
he hoped to complete in the near future he replied, "If
you had asked me that three years ago I would have said I
wanted to create a grand altarscreen; but I have already
done that. My present grand challenge is to push the
santero art tradition a little bit more."
Don Toomey is staff writer for Tradición Revista.
First published in Tradicion Revista, Volume 5, No. 2,
Summer 2000.
Copyright 2000. May not be reproduced in any form without
written permission.