GUEST
I brought a painting by Domingo Ulloa. He's a local artist from El Centro. The little information I have about him is the California State Assembly passed a resolution declaring him the father of Chicano art. One Saturday morning my wife sent me to go get some eggs and I happened to be driving by a yard sale, and the painting caught my eye and I asked the gentleman if it was for sale. He said it was. I said, "I'll be right back when I get back from the market." I purchased it...
APPRAISER
So you went and bought the eggs first. (laughing) Okay, but it was still there.
GUEST
Eggs came first.
APPRAISER
How much did you buy it for?
GUEST
I bought it for $15.
APPRAISER
How long ago did you purchase the painting?
GUEST
I purchased this in 2010.
APPRAISER
And then you took it home and put it up on the wall?
GUEST
No, my wife, she said it was too ugly to go on the wall. Well, I like it. To me, it tells me what the migrant farm worker would do on a weekend after probably a hard week of work. And this is how they would relax and entertain themselves on the weekend, a little dancing, food, a little drinking, and, of course, you can never forget the music.
APPRAISER
Domingo Ulloa, he was named the father of Chicano art, and this painting actually has a lot of themes in it which deal with the Chicano movement, and as well as the Chicano art movement. The medium looks like it's oil on Masonite. He was very much influenced by certain social movements, as well as certain art movements. Now, the social movements were the United Farm Workers, run by Cesar Chavez, so he was influenced by the progressive politics of that particular movement and that particular individual. Also, as an artist, he was influenced by Los Muralistas. Now, when I talk about them, I'm talking about three main guys, although there were others. I'm talking about Diego Rivera...
GUEST
Wow.
APPRAISER
...David Siqueiros, and Orozco, Jose Orozco. They were famous for their mural paintings, especially, but they were all social-minded paintings in terms of themes. A lot of them had even socialist or communist, sometimes, themes and subjects going on, things having to do with labor. So you can actually tell here, we're talking about the same kind of subject matter. This is labor that was very often oppressed, the farm workers. That's why that whole movement came into being. Ulloa, as an artist, his work was very political. Now, this is not necessarily a picture of oppression. This is more like a happy painting.
GUEST
It's more a happy scene.
APPRAISER
Right. Now, he studied at the Antigua Academia de San Carlos in Mexico City.
GUEST
Oh, wow.
APPRAISER
Even though he was born in Pomona.
GUEST
Pomona.
APPRAISER
So he went there to study. And he was also very influenced by the Taller de Grfica Popular, which was also an artist movement that had a lot of socialists and revolutionary kind of ideas. So, again, we're talking about an artist whose other work was very, very revolutionary and inspired. In 2012, there was an exhibition of Mexican-American artists.
GUEST
Yes, there sure was. It was at the Gene Autry Museum. It was called "Art Beyond the Hyphen." And a lot of his work was there. One that really stood close to me was one that was called "Los Braceros," where basically they had all these farm workers kind of caged up.
APPRAISER
Right. I think the fact that they had an exhibition in 2012, it shows that there is an increasing interest in Mexican-American art and Chicano art, in particular. Now, what is interesting to think about is that this painting is from 1976.
GUEST
Correct.
APPRAISER
Now, to a certain extent, these artists were forgotten. I think there's a reason that you found it driving on your way to get some eggs. He went to a very good school in Mexico City. He was a trained artist. But his theme in the 1960s and '70s had more to do with that kind of revolutionary communist theme, rather than abstract expressionism and modern art, which was popular in America in the '60s and '70s. But now, things are changing. There's more of an interest in Chicano art and Chicano culture. And I think what's going to happen is that's going to become something that happens more and more, that there will be more and more interest. If I was going to put it at auction, I'd put an auction estimate on it of $3,000 to $5,000.
GUEST
Very nice.
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