Artwork Detail

Coniuncti (interconnected) Interconectado

Artist: De La Torre Brothers

Object Date: 2018

Medium: Lenticular print, glass and resin

Imperial Dims: Overall: 240 x 101 x 6 in.

Department(s): Health Services

Address Name: Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center

Supervisorial District: 4

About the Artwork:

Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center (Rancho) is one of the top ranked rehabilitation hospitals in the United States, and is a public health facility with a history of excellence and innovation with a patient-family centered approach to care. Vital to the success of the Civic Art Program for Rancho is the engagement of Rancho artists from the art programs and the clinicians, researchers, staff and volunteers that form the Rancho family. The artworks created under the Los Angeles County Arts Commission Civic Art Program foster a sense of community and humanity that reflect the mission of Rancho to restore health, rebuild life and revitalize hope for persons with a life-changing illness, injury or disability, while creating a welcoming, humanizing and uplifting atmosphere for the patients, visitors and staff. Artists Deborah Aschheim, De la Torre Brothers (Jamex and Einar) and Glenn Kaino/Kainoco, Inc.’s civic artworks contribute to the healing environment and are integrated within the Campus to build a cohesive vision that recognizes the power and journey of recovery, rehabilitation and reintegration.

 De la Torre Brothers (Jamex and Einar) have created a suite of artworks that acknowledges Rancho’s familial atmosphere of healing, camaraderie, innovation and spirit for the outdoor plazas and interior lobby areas of the outpatient building. Coniuncti (interconnected) Interconectado is a large-scale dimensional transparency located in the Main Lobby of the Outpatient Building, the image flips between two separate visages as one moves laterally. One is a composite of an old tree in direct reference to the root concept of the tree of life. The other image is an anatomical human body found in a traditional reference book, interlaced with various motifs of plant and animal life. “Our aim was to connect our human experience with all life in the wonderful biosphere we inhabit” —Jamex and Einar. The bottom panel features framed self-portraits by Rancho’s own unique group of artists. These artworks also flip as you move laterally to reveal a second image by the individual Rancho artists.

About the Artist:

Brothers Einar and Jamex de la Torre were born in Guadalajara, Mexico, 1964, 1960.  In a sudden family move, the brothers moved to Dana Point, California in 1972. They both attended Long Beach State University, Jamex got a BFA in Sculpture in 1983. Currently the brothers live and work on both sides of the border: The Guadalupe Valley in Baja California and San Diego. The complexities of the emigrational experience, with its ensuing biculturalism, as well as their life on both sides of border explain a great deal of were brother’s work comes from. The brothers have been collaborating in earnest since the mid-nineties; they have developed their signature style mix media work with blown glass sculpture and installation art. Their pieces represent a multifaceted view of life that reflects a complex and humorous aesthetic that could be called baroque. Their approach is additive, constantly layering material and meaning. Their influences range from Catholic iconography to German expressionism while also paying homage to Mexican vernacular arts and pre-Columbian art. In recent years, they have been experimenting with lenticular printing and creating photomural installations. They have won the USA Artists Fellowship award, the San Diego Foundation Grant Award, The San Diego Art Prize, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Award and the Joan Mitchell Foundation Award. They have had 16 solo museum exhibitions including the National Glass Centre Museum in England, the Glazhuiz in Belgium, the Mesa Arts Center Museum, The Chrysler Museum of Art and the Tucson Museum of Art. To learn more, visit: www.delatorrebrothers.art