Griselda Rosas (born in Tijuana, Mexico) is an artist and art educator working between Tijuana and San Diego. She explores themes of cultural hybridity as they relate to identities through her works that consists of textile art, collage, painting, sculpture, drawing and curating. Her work is guided by her experiences living and working between San Diego and Tijuana in the US/Mexico border region, an area in constant migratory flux.
Through the study and deconstruction of symbols in colonial history, Rosas’ work is a wide-lensed study of the entrenched amalgamation of religions and cultures in modern day Mexico. Her work encompasses the study of traditional costume clothing and religious regalia and its relationship to European costume clothing—such as the Oaxaca headdress from the Isthmus of Tehuantepec and the Elizabeth ruff collar. It’s also shaped by early known drawings of Mexico’s indigenous people after the Spanish conquest and the arrival of Catholicism, and critically by the exploration of motherhood, as symbolized through several works on paper that start with a gestural pencil or crayon mark made by her young son. She creates by applying stories, objects, and textiles obtained from the Tijuana/San Diego region and using the border itself as a medium of commerce and dialogue with the “other” side.
She received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in painting and printmaking in 2006 at San Diego State University, San Diego, CA, as well as her Master of Fine Arts in sculpture in 2013. After completing graduate school, she joined a teaching association at San Diego State University, and has taught; drawing, painting, and embroidery as an adjunct professor from 2013 to 2022. Solo exhibitions include Yo te cuido at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (2023); Forged Dialect, Quint Gallery, La Jolla, CA (2022); and Regata Abscisa, Oceanside Museum of Art, San Diego, CA (2020). Notable group exhibitions include, Stories from My Childhood, Northern Illinois University Art Museum, DeKalb, IL (2022); Cannon Gallery Ninth Invitational Exhibition, Carlsbad, CA (2022); First International Festival of Manuports, Kohta, Helsinki, Finland (2021); and San Diego Art Prize Exhibit, Bread & Salt, San Diego, CA (2020); among others.
Griselda Rosas
Tragaluz (Skylight), 2021-2022
Embroidery, watercolour, acrylic, and natural pigment on paper
42 x 72 in (106.7 x 182.9 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Aftermath/Secuelas, 2023
Watercolor, acrylic, embroidery, and appliqué collage on paper
45 x 80 in
Griselda Rosas
Untitled (Conquistadors), 2023
Acrylic, watercolor, and embroidery on faux ostrich skin
40 x 54 in (101.6 x 137.2 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Cabeza de Vaca, 2022
Found wood, cement, screenprint, and rubber from Michoacán
Dimensions vary, 5-7 ft each when stretched
GR11647
Griselda Rosas
Figura nocturna I, 2024
Embroidery on recycled grain bag
52 x 36 in (132.1 x 91.4 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Premonición, 2024
Embroidery and acrylic on faux ostrich skin
39.5 x 29.5 in (100.3 x 74.9 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Rudo, 2024
Embroidery on recycled grain bag
38.5 x 22 in (97.8 x 55.9 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Figura nocturna II, 2024
Embroidery on recycled grain bag
41.75 x 24 in (106 x 61 cm)
Griselda Rosas
She was left alone/La dejaron sola, 2023
Embroidery, textile collage, watercolor, acrylic on paper
68 x 45 in (172.7 x 114.3 cm)
72 x 49.5 x 2 in (182.9 x 125.7 x 5.1 cm) Framed
Griselda Rosas
Artifíce de insignias reales 7 (Faux regalia 7), 2023
Watercolor, acrylic, appliqué, and embroidery on paper
72 x 42 in
Griselda Rosas
Mourning Brooch I, 2023
Watercolor, appliqué and embroidery on paper
16.25 x 12.25 in (41.3 x 31.1 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Mourning Brooch II, 2023
Watercolor, appliqué and embroidery on paper
16.25 x 12.25 in (41.3 x 31.1 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Untitled, 2023-24
Tejido Vivo
Cyanotype and embroidery on paper
19 x 15 in (48.3 x 38.1 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Untitled, 2023-24
Tejido Vivo
Cyanotype and embroidery on paper
22.25 x 15 in (56.5 x 38.1 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Untitled, 2023-24
Tejido Vivo
Cyanotype and embroidery on paper
19.75 x 11.25 in (50.2 x 28.6 cm)
Griselda Rosas
Untitled, 2023-24
Tejido Vivo
Cyanotype and embroidery on paper
22.25 x 15.25 in (56.5 x 38.7 cm)
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is delighted to announce the acquistion of Griselda Rosas' La Batalla de Vortex and Tragaluz (Skylight) by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Acquisition made possible through the Drawings and Prints Department and the generosity of Karen R. Constine. Informed by her fluid experiences with the Mexico and US border and life between Tijuana and San Diego, her work deconstructs the ambiguities of identity and place, learned, and generationally passed subjugation, and the legacies of colonization and conflict.
GRISELDA ROSAS: Donde Pasó Antes (Where It Happened Before) exhibition walkthrough will be held on Saturday, February 10, at 2pm PST.
Informed by her fluid experiences with the Mexico and US border and life between Tijuana and San Diego, Griselda Rosas deconstructs the ambiguities of identity and place, learned, and generationally passed subjugation, and the legacies of colonization and conflict. She often focuses on the pre-colonial and post-colonial war scenes and the introduction of Catholicism to Indigenous customs in the Americas as part of the Spanish colonial agenda. Rosas examines these histories alongside her roles as an educator and single mother, frequently collaborating with her young son to produce works that pulsate with the energy of an uninhibited child’s eye and hand.
Griselda Rosas’s large mixed media works on paper, representing Los Angeles gallery Luis De Jesus Los Angeles, were among the fair’s show stoppers. Rosas somehow combines the textures of paint with densely stitched or embroidered passages. The pieces are moody, atmospheric, full of surprises, and downright mystical in the way that they usher thread into the shimmery realm of fabulist landscapes. The artist, based in Tijuana and San Diego, straddles the US-Mexico border, and her stitching on paper can echo the back and forth, coming and going, of migration. In the far edge of one piece is a tear Rosas sutured. The divide is a wound; the wound needs repair.
The title of Griselda Rosas' exhibition, "Donde pasó antes (Where it happened before)," recalls the classic fairy tale preamble, "Once upon a time...," but also suggests a cautionary sense of place, a reference to location that doesn't frame so much as foreground the action depicted there. Which is slightly ironic because the works Rosas has created—in watercolor, embroidery, collage, and other materials—are vessels for a volatile chemistry of color and texture that variously congeal, smolder, and sublimate into a nebulous array of babies, battles, conquistadores, vortexes, regalia, insignia, animals and tissues.
The title of Griselda Rosas’ exhibition, “Donde pasó antes (Where it happened before),” recalls the classic fairy tale preamble, “Once upon a time…,” but also suggests a cautionary sense of place, a reference to location that doesn’t frame so much as foreground the action depicted there. The works Rosas has created here—in watercolor, embroidery, collage and other materials—are vessels for a volatile chemistry of color and texture that variously congeal, smolder and sublimate into a nebulous array of babies, battles, conquistadors, vortexes, regalia, insignia, animals and tissues. Alive, or in some transitional necrosis, they remain highly resistant to the perspective offered by narrative.
Two floors down is a solo show of recent work by Griselda Rosas, an artist from Tijuana, whose work engages storytelling in very different ways. The two artists hail from different countries, different regions of the border and different generations. Where Álveraz Muñoz uses the more oblique language of conceptualism, Rosas is preoccupied by craft.
LA JOLLA, Cali.—Born in Tijuana in 1977, artist Griselda Rosas has her ear to the ground on both sides of the California-Mexico border, listening intently to the eternal stories of conquest, colonization, and conversation. The stories flow into drawings and sculptures, multilayered imagery in which thread, paint, and collage combine to create an almost archeological presentation of hybrid cultures and histories.
There are many stories within the works in "Yo te cuido," each unique, provocative and vibrant in their own way. The title of the exhibition translates to "I care for you." One seemingly common theme within the works is Rosas' exploration of what she calls "ancestral memory" — the idea that the colonialist histories of the Americas is something that still informs our everyday lives, both genetically and sociologically.
A new exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego draws on experience living in a borderland. Griselda Rosas: Yo te cuido is the artist's first solo museum exhibition and will present both sculptural installations and textile drawings inspired by inheritance and inter-generational knowledge.
The title of San Diego-Tijuana artist Griselda Rosas' first solo museum show, "Yo te cuido," translates to "I take care of you." It's a nod to her entire artistic practice, structured primarily around the restrictions and inspirations of raising a son.
It has already been a busy year for Griselda Rosas.
Her work is on display across the county, at Balboa Park’s San Diego Art Institute, the Oceanside Museum of Art and the Lux Art Institute in Encinitas. She is now preparing to open a show in May at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Gallery in La Jolla with her three 2019 San Diego Art Prize co-finalists. And in October, she will have a solo show at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego in conjunction with a retrospective on artist Yolanda López.
Prolific transborder mixed-media artist Griselda Rosas lets place and migration economics inform her work — on view in four different shows in February and Griselda Rosas is, it seems, suddenly everywhere. And so is her work. The San Diego Art Prize finalist's broad repertoire — from large hanging sculptures suspended from ropes to mixed media pieces she embroiders at her kitchen table after her son goes to sleep — is specifically inspired and informed by place. The origins of the materials she uses and where they've traveled to seem as important to her as the shapes they take in her works.