Julio Galán
- Died:
- August 4, 2006, en route to Monterrey, Mexico
- Movement / Style:
- Neo-Expressionism
Julio Galán (born December 5, 1958, Múzquiz, Coahuila, Mexico—died August 4, 2006, en route to Monterrey, Mexico) was a Mexican Neo-Expressionist painter whose colourful autobiographical paintings were replete with elements of collage and added objects (ribbons, beads, bits of jewelry, and dried flowers) and suggested a dreamlike setting. The images alluded to his childhood, his homosexuality, Roman Catholicism, the Mexican Baroque, pre-Columbian cultures, retablos (nativity scenes), and Mexican folk art. Though his work makes clear reference to his native Mexican culture, it is also heavily influenced by leading international artists such as Sigmar Polke, Robert Mapplethrope, Julian Schnabel, and Francesco Clemente.
Galán was born into a wealthy and conservative Roman Catholic family in a northern Mexican mining town. He attended private school in Monterrey and later enrolled to study architecture at the University of Monterrey. He subsequently abandoned his studies to pursue his passion for painting. Galán began showing his paintings in Monterrey in 1980 with art dealer Guillermo Sepúlveda. In 1984 he moved to New York City, and he had his first gallery show the following year. It was shortly after that exhibition that Andy Warhol discovered Galán and printed select works of his in Interview magazine. That exposure brought Galán local and international attention and launched him into the Pop art scene in New York City. He at last felt free to live openly as a gay man and to explore and express his identity in his art. Early works such as China Poblana (1987), a self-portrait of Galán wearing a traditional woman’s Mexican folk dress, and Sí y No (1990; “Yes and No”), another self-portrait that depicts a bare-chested Galán bound by a leather belt (with a real leather belt affixed to the painting), both explore identity and the struggle of living within a traditional society.
In his lifetime Galán’s work was included in exhibitions at museums such as the Pompidou Centre in Paris (1989), the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam (1992), the Museum of Modern Art in New York City (1993), and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Monterrey (1994), as well as in the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Biennial in New York City (1995).