Hely Omar Gonzalez
Workhorse
Projects, Los Angeles
7 May – 1 June 2022
WORKS EXHIBITED
EXHIBITION VIEWS
PRESS RELEASE
As the eldest son in his family, Gonzalez was preparing to inherit this beloved truck but hard times forced his father to sell it just before his 16th birthday. “I was heartbroken, but that truck really got me into cars, car culture and this California Chicano lowrider scene,” says Gonzalez, who poured over reader submitted art in the back of lowrider magazines before going deep into social realism and Romanticism. “Seeing how creative people were with their cars got me into drawing and painting.”
To inaugurate the gallery’s new Project Space in Los Angeles at
6150 Wilshire Boulevard, Praz-Delavallade is thrilled to present
Hely Omar Gonzalez: Workhorse (opening May 7, 2022 | 6-9PM)
The exhibition, curated by Michael Slenske, is a two-year
painting study by the Long Beach-based artist focusing on the
labor, humanity, and socio-political currency behind the Toyota Hi-Lux mini truck, from local leisure pursuits to international
rebel insurgencies. Grounded in a neon-classical palette,
Gonzalez’s cinematic landscapes and Romantic portraiture are
part self-portrait, part social commentary.
“At this moment in human history it’s a beautiful thing to find
this commonality between people of different belief systems,
cultures, races, and creeds even if it’s over something as
simple as this little truck that could,” says Gonzalez, who
studied painting at the Laguna College of Art & Design. After
earning his BFA, he moved to Long Beach and began a series
of conceptual portraiture projects that led him to live and work
in the marijuana harvesting scene around Mt. Shasta in 2016
(which resulted in a series of paintings inspired by The Gleaners,
the seminal 1857 oil painting by Jean-François Millet depicting
three women gleaning the stray stalks from a wheat field after
a harvest). During the pandemic, Gonzalez happened upon an
ad for a 1989 Toyota 4Runner, a 4x4 passenger version of his
father’s Hi-Lux, which served as the impetus for Workhorse. “I
essentially bought this truck as a work truck, but in researching
the history of the Hi-Lux I found that the uses spanned from
SoCal lowrider culture to being this war machine that helped
the Chadians defeat [Libyan president Muammar] Gaddafi and
his fully funded army in what became known at the Great Toyota
War,” explains Gonzalez, referring to the late 1980s conflict that
gave birth to the Technical, a light-weight civilian pickup truck
that was easy to fix and could safely navigate minefields while
carrying machine guns and anti-tank missiles. He also studied
The Toyota Way, a business manual on the advanced production system developed by the Japanese industrialist Eiji Toyoda
that relies on efficiency, innovation, and heavy investments in
workers.
“At the end of day the Hi-Lux is a tool of uprising,” says Gonzalez,
who also teases out formal connections in the iconography,
profile, and color values of the trucks. The hard-edge lines,
which almost evoke Manga comics, always seem to rise to the
foreground in Gonzalez’s paintings whether the truck is located
in Los Angeles, Africa, or Afghanistan. “From an aesthetic and
narrative perspective, it’s a very fruitful subject that connects
my work to this tool for specialized labor, be it metal scrapping
in the alleys of Long Beach, to the makeshift taxis in Thailand,
even to guerrilla warfare in Afghanistan. As someone who’s
worked as a specialized laborer, I know that this pursuit is a
common one. These people are all getting a job done to lift
themselves out from obscurity, poverty, or tyranny.”
Hely Omar Gonzalez (b. 1984) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA
and graduated with a BFA from Laguna College of Art & Design.
Born to immigrant parents, Gonzalez grew up in a culturally
rich and diverse home in North Highlands, CA. Gonzalez’s work
derives from his personal experiences and investigates a desire
to communicate through representations of labor, race and
leisure. His work has been exhibited in group shows at Tlaloc
Studios, the Watts Better Initiative, domicile (.n) gallery and
Sotheby’s and will be featured in forthcoming shows at Charlie
James Gallery and the Muzeo Museum and Cultural Center in
Anaheim.
Michael Slenske is a Los Angeles-based writer, editor and
curator. He is a contributing writer for Los Angeles magazine,
a contributing editor for Galerie, and has served as the editor
at-large of CULTURED and LALA and as a contributing editor
at the Los Angeles Times’s DesignLA, Modern Painters and Art
+ Auction. Slenske runs and curates the artist-led pop-up The
Street & The Shop (@thestreetandtheshopla), which has been
staged at Tin Flats, Frieze LA, and at NeueHouse Bradbury.
Slenske has also curated exhibitions at Wilding Cran Gallery,
The Landing Gallery, domicile (n.) and Spring/Break Art Show.