 |
Simon Silva’s paintings depict stylized portraits
of farm workers bending to harvest crops, suns radiating
heat, and picturesque fields and valleys. Silva says
this isn’t exactly an idealized portrait of
farm working—as he says, there’s nothing
romantic about field work. The reality is long, sweaty
and painful, destroying knees and knuckles, backs
and bones. But the portraits do portray farm workers
as those who are worthy of respect, those who do their
jobs with dignity and pride. “My images are
simplistic, powerful, beautiful, and about the Chicano
culture,” Silva says. “I have used these
images—scenes I used to be ashamed of—to
empower myself and other Chicanos.”
In fact, Silva said he grew up, like many from farm
working families, with a tremendous lack of self-esteem.
“At a certain point, I realized my lifestyle
wasn’t normal,” he recalls. “I longed
to join sports teams like other kids and to have new
clothes and to start school on the very first day
and to do something besides work on the weekends.
But I’d come back to school a week or two late
because we were working the harvest, and I’d
come back with purple hands. There were other kids
that came back with purple hands like me, but it was
always demoralizing. Sometimes the other kids would
talk about how they went to Disneyland over the summer
or stayed in a hotel with a pool. People don’t
realize that such innocent comments can hurt so bad.”
During his childhood, from the age of 8 on, Silva
worked every Saturday and Sunday, every holiday, and
every day of the summer doing fieldwork. (The legal
age to work in the fields is now 12.) A typical working
day was to get up at 5 a.m. and be in the fields by
6 a.m. “We’d work the whole day with a
15-20 minute break for lunch. We’d work until
4 or 5 in the afternoon. Sometimes we’d only
work a half day. Those days were a blessing.”
Born the sixth of 11 children in 1961 in the border
town of Mexicali, Mexico, Silva’s family moved
permanently to the United States in 1962 to nearby
Holtville, California, a small town in California’s
sweltering southern desert which was transformed by
irrigation into agricultural land. His father had
been working in the United States as an undocumented
worker, but with the help of a California farmer who
agreed to sponsor the whole family, the Silvas were
able to become citizens.
Even before the Silva children were allowed to work
in the fields, they were expected to help out the
family. Young children, for instance, could fetch
water for working members of the family. “When
I first started school, it was like an oasis for me,”
he said. “I craved love and attention, and I
could get it at school.” From the very first,
teachers noted his artistic abilities and often asked
him to draw. “I used art as a means of escape
from my home life and as a way to be recognized in
a positive manner in school. Art was very special
for me because it nurtured by selfesteem. It was basically
all I had.” As far as Silva’s family was
concerned, his attraction to art was irrelevant—something
of a hobby rather than a gift. Even when he was in
the fields, he would draw whenever he could, scratching
a mural into the ground with a stick on an “endless
earth pad.” “I had such a different mentality
than everyone else in my family,” he says. “My
imagination did a number on me, and it forced me to
think I was adopted. I even searched the house for
adoption papers.”
While he was working with the family, all of the money
he made went to the family’s communal needs.
Half was used for bills, clothes, food and other day-to-day
expenses. The other half was set aside in the bank
to live on for the rest of the year. In high school,
Silva realized he needed a college education. “I
talked to my mother and asked her to discuss with
my father the possibility of me going to college.
His response was to want to kick me out of the house.
My father saw a very physical and concrete relationship
between work and money.” Although his mother
and a few aunts were eventually able to temper Silva’s
father’s rage, even his mother drew the line
at Silva’s next proposal—that he be allowed
to keep a portion of the money he earned in the fields
to pay for his college. So, Silva had to leave home,
at least for the summer harvest. When he returned
home, he attended nearby Imperial Valley College and
majored in art. “To make this decision to go
to college was scary,” he recalls. “I
was made to feel it was a waste of time. On top of
that, I chose art as a profession. That was really
pushing the envelope.”
At first, Silva had a generic artistic style. He painted
horses and landscapes that he thought people might
be interested in buying. But literature changed his
life. “I had never been a reader,” he
says. “The only thing read in our house growing
up was the Bible and the yellow pages. Then, my brother-in-law
loaned me a copy of Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya.
There was so much material that was familiar in terms
of characters, story lines, and some of the things
I had gone through. It was a real revelation and it
opened up a whole new world for me.” Silva says
the book set him on the right path to look at the
experiences in his life and to find value in them.
“Literature saved me,” he says. “I
had tried to run away from these experiences—I
was carrying shame about them.
“Through Chicano literature, I was able to focus
on Chicano culture in my art work. It’s what
I needed to paint—not only for myself but for
those out there who have no selfesteem. It’s
an opportunity for me to tell a campesino, ‘You’re
important enough for me to paint about and you’re
also important enough to write about.’”
Silva compares it to the feeling of being lost and
then finding a familiar landmark. “It gives
you a sense of peace,” he said. Silva expanded
this exploration of his farm working past in 1998
with the publication of his first book, Small-Town
Browny, a collection of autobiographical short stories
of his childhood. “I started writing because
I found myself talking about my background a lot in
order to explain my art,” he said. “The
more I talked about my past, the more I realized how
interesting the stories were.”
For instance, there’s the time Silva’s
family lived in a labor camp in Washington state in
a shack built out of quarter-inch plywood walls, tin
roofs, and makeshift beds. The mattresses were old,
stained, smelly and infested with lice. Silva’s
father devised a clever—though unpleasant and
stinging—home remedy to rid the children of
lice: spraying their heads with Raid.
“Through my paintings and writings, I’m
able to make a powerful situation out of what I had
been ashamed of,” he says. “The same can
be said for ethnicity. It carries a lot of baggage
which can either tear you down or lift you up. For
instance, a lot of people I went to school with were
pigeonholed into thinking that they were throw aways.
If you’ve been told all your life that you are
inferior and can’t do it, you won’t. I
was fortunate in that I had my art work to keep me
going. “That’s what my dad and people
like him fail to understand,” Silva says. “It’s
not about money. It’s about how you feel about
yourself as a person—to feel good about what
you do and the life you live.”
Despite his deprivations as a child, Silva appreciates
what his parents were able to give him. “Everything
I do now is 100 times easier than when I worked out
in the fields,” he says. “My parents taught
me how to work really hard, and I respect them for
that. This is something a lot of people don’t
have.” Silva also spends his time traveling
around the country speaking about his experiences
and the importance of art and literature.
“Art is still looked upon in our society as
unimportant,” he says. “In reality, it
is very important. There are so many visual and textual
references in our everyday world. It gives people
a way to express themselves and to share that expression.
It gives meaning to what we do here in this life.
It allows us to form bonds—really deep bonds—with
our fellow human beings. It pushes our society onward.
It changes lives.”
Reserve
This Speaker or Submit Inquiries Using the Form Above,
or by Calling (310) 937-2789 or (310) 379-4486
|
 |