James Drake
Juárez/El Paso (Boxcar)

Juárez/El Paso (Boxcar)

© James Drake / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Juárez/El Paso (Boxcar)
Juárez/El Paso (Boxcar)
ArtistAmerican, born 1946
CultureAmerican
Titles
  • Juárez/El Paso (Boxcar)
Date1987–1988
PlaceEl Paso, Texas, United States
MediumCharcoal on wove paper, mounted in steel frame with coal, railroad spikes, and crowbar
DimensionsOverall: 69 × 110 × 30 in. (175.3 × 279.4 × 76.2 cm)
Credit LineMuseum purchase funded by the Director's Accessions Endowment
Object number89.3
Non exposé

Explore Further

Description

For more than three decades, James Drake has mined the complexities of the Texas-Mexico border culture of El Paso and its neighboring Ciudad Juarez in a series of stark installations, videos, and powerful drawings. Drake moved with his family from the Texas Panhandle to El Paso in the 1960s.


 In the mid-1980s, Drake began a project titled Juarez/El Paso, which responded to specific border events. During the summer of 1987, 18 undocumented immigrants suffocated to death when the boxcar in which they were hiding was sidelined outside the town of Sierra Blanco, near El Paso. One man survived, and he later recounted that the ìcoyoteî who had arranged their passage deliberately locked the boxcar, throwing them a crowbar before closing the door.


Juarez/El Paso (Boxcar) memorializes this incident. Drake offers a vivid image of the isolated boxcar. Drawn in charcoal and framed in steel, it has a material affinity with the actual coal, railroad spikes, and crowbar that are placed in the foreground. The two-part drawing and installation forces the viewer to empathize with the men who lost their lives trying to enter the United States.


Provenance Research Ongoing Exhibition History"James Drake," La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, January 20–April 19, 1989.

"Darkness and Light," The Sarah Campbell Blaffer Gallery, Blaffer Art Museum, Houston, January 23–March 28, 1993.

"Tradition and Innovation: A Museum Celebration of Texas Art,” The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, February 17–May 6, 1990.

"Finders/Keepers," The Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, May 10–August 3, 1997.

"The Passionate Adventure of the Real: Collage, Assemblage, and the Object in 20th Century Art," The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, October 18, 2003–February 8, 2004.

"James Drake: Steel & Fire," New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe, October 28, 2011–April 22, 2012.

"US/Mexico Border, Mapping, Portraits of a Struggle," The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Oct. 28, 2020 – July 27, 2021. [Inaugural Installation: Kinder Building 309: No Catalog]

Cataloguing data may change with further research.

If you have questions about this work of art or the MFAH Online Collection please contact us.

Memento Mori [Agony]
Michael Tracy
1973/1979
Acrylic on canvas with hair, metal spikes, and oil paint on wooden support covered with rebozos
81.286
A Thousand Tongues Burn and Sing
James Drake
1996
Charcoal and oil on paper
97.21
Third World Street Girls I
James Drake
1989
Lithograph, two sheets in artist designed steel frame
2004.1513
A Thousand Tongues Burn and Sing
James Drake
1995
Nickel-plated steel
2011.643.A-.S
Provided by curatorial.
James Drake
1992
Charcoal on wove paper
2022.410
City of Tells – Calavera with Orphan Girl
James Drake
2005
Charcoal, tape with erasing, on torn and pasted paper
2017.129
James Drake
1984–1985
Conté crayon, pencil, charcoal, and watercolor on paper
91.1866
Redemption
Melvin Edwards
1990
Welded steel
94.133
One Eye Jack or Better
Virgil Grotfeldt
1998
Watercolor and coal dust on vellum, mounted on graph paper
2007.1481
Solace
Terrell James
1990
Oil, charcoal, pastel, and graphite over turpentine and burnt sienna wash on wove paper prepared with acrylic gesso and oil ground
90.445
Tongue-Cut Sparrows (Inside Out)
James Drake
2007
Two-channel video, edition 5/8
2010.1496.A,.B