The Art of Nature
Join us for the debut of our new occasional series, The Art of Nature, where we tell the stories of artists that create art to tell stories about nature. In this episode, we spotlight San Antonio painter Jesus Toro Martinez, reminding us we’re not just observers, but also characters in the saga of life.
The Art of Nature
Season 1 Episode 9
Under the Texas Sky: S1:E9: The Art of Nature
Major support for this podcast comes from the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Foundation: Conserving Our Wild Things and Wild Places for Over 25 Years.
[MUS—BORN FOR THIS MOMENT]
Mother Nature…now there’s a storyteller.
[SFX—RAIN /WIND /BRANCH CREAK / BIRDS]
The lush, rich scent of damp earth when it rains… the perfume of spring
flowers …and the calming music of bird songs carried on the whisper of a
breeze those are the stories of renewal and hope.
[SFX—DESERT/WIND/ RUBBLE]
The impossible uplifts and folds of massive rock cliffs… and the ancient
impressions of extinct animals captured in undulated layers of sediment offer
powerful accounts of change over millennia.
[SFX—FLOWING WATER]
And, then there’s the modern-day cautionary tale of water from rain-swollen
creeks and rivers rushing to the coast, eroding banks along the way because
they no longer have native grasses rooted in them… and in its hurry, it leaves
behind an unsightly trail of plastic bottles, cups and assorted trash from
upstream communities in its wake.
Nature’s always telling her stories to those willing to listen… and she gets help
from others.
[MUS—GENE SEQUENCING]
I like to think that beginning with prehistoric pictographs… artists have been
faithfully interpreting and retelling nature’s stories—reminding us that we are
not simply observers… but are important characters in this ongoing saga.
Today’s podcast is the debut of an occasional series we’re calling The Art of
Nature. It’s where we tell the story of an artist who tells the stories of Nature
through their work.
This time we put the spotlight on San Antonio painter Jesus Toro Martinez.
We learn what inspired the artists’ current series of oversized canvases, and
how he uses them to share tales of the wonder, beauty and fragility of our
world, and our role in it. Stay with us.
[MUS—HOWDY]
From Texas Parks and Wildlife…this is Under the Texas Sky …a podcast about
nature…and people… and the connection they share…I’m Cecilia Nasti.
[SFX—THUNDER/RAIN MIX]
When rain falls, it does so seemingly without meaning or intention other than the
fulfilment of its own nature. But to Jesus Toro Martinez—who goes by Toro—rain
is his painting partner, providing inspiration and a depth of meaning to his work by
delivering raw materials to him for use in his latest series of canvases.
Originally titled Creeks and Rivers he renamed the series of abstract oil paintings
Tierra [TEE-air-ah] Sagrada [SAH-grah-dah] or Sacred Land. Many of the pieces
reference degradation of riparian vegetation due to changes in land use practices.
[01—TORO—14] I’m trying to come up with a visual of land erosion. This is
what happens when you have a lot of rainwater, climate change, and different
other things that happen to our earth.
[MUS—QUICK RHYTHMIC STABS]
To further emphasize human impact on our land, Martinez creates pigments from
trash he forages from creek sides, river banks and beaches …after episodes of
heavy rain.
This past spring, I joined Toro at Fisherman’s Park in Bastrop, along the Colorado
River, for a scouting expedition.
[02—TORO—18] I come look at different locations and see how beautiful it is.
And after a storm [I] come back to the same location and see what trash has been
brought in; and that’s how I start the first step of looking for my art.
[MUS—STREETS OF LAREDO]
Toro was born and raised in Webb county…
[03—TORO—02] The U.S. Mexico border…
Next to Zacate Creek inside Laredo city limits.
[SFX—WATER FLOWING]
[04—TORO—10] After a good rain, you would see trash flowing through. I
started trying to follow the trail. Connecting the dots [use echo effect].
Toro was a young adult when the Texas Department of Transportation debuted its
Don’t Mess with Texas anti-littering campaign, which continues to this day.
[MUS—DMWTX LUCAS NELSON EDIT]
The message… underscored his parents’ advice to have pride in and take
responsibility for the place…he called home. Among other things, that meant not littering
as well as picking up litter when he saw it. It felt like a losing battle at times because,
as he told me, many people in his community appeared indifferent to the issue of litter.
[MUS—CONCRETE FEET / SFX—FLOWING WATER]
Years later, Toro realized the trash problem didn’t begin or end in Laredo, and the
lack of urgency about solving it was not unique to residents of his hometown.
Much of the garbage in Zacate creek that doesn’t end up on land…travels to the
Rio Grande where some of it…
[SFX—SEAGULLS / OCEAN WAVES]
…eventually washes out into the Gulf of Mexico.
The scene that’s playing out in Zacate creek…takes place in creeks and rivers
throughout the Lone Star State.
Remember those dots Toro was connecting? He eventually came to understand that
each one links urban and rural communities throughout Texas to a glut of seen
litter and unseen pollutants that hitch rides downstream in creeks, rivers and storm
drains…fouling adjacent land along the way; some of it reaching the gulf,
including sensitive wetland areas that serve as nurseries for important Texas sport
fish.
By the time he understood the connection, Toro had found his voice and success as
an artist. He decided to use both to interpret and tell this particular story, and over
time…hopefully help to rewrite its ending.
[MUS—ZAMFIERCE]
[05—TORO—38] Back then [as a young person], I didn’t understand. But
now, we’re paying for it. We’re paying by—that little piece of plastic bag that
starts elsewhere in a commerce area, ends up on a creek bed or in a river. Going
down to the gulf, these will end up down there, shortly. Not knowing when. And it
comes back to us in the food chain. Let’s clean our rivers and creeks. And, I’m just
trying to create more caution among everyone. Like, where things come from.
What are we doing? What are we eating? And, it’s important.
Scientists from the Harte Research Institute and Mission-Aransas National
Estuarine [Es-tyur-een] Research Reserve tell us that most marine trash is plastic;
some we inflict on ourselves and some is inflicted upon us as ocean currents
deposit trash onto Texas shores from other countries.
As these plastics break down into smaller and smaller pieces, wildlife and fish that
ingest them may experience a change in behavior or reproduction, or even death.
At this time, we don’t have sufficient data to link the consumption of seafood
affected by plastic with impacts on human health. However, this issue is currently
under scrutiny worldwide.
[MUS—ELECTRIC JUNGLE]
From Texas Parks and Wildlife…this is Under the Texas Sky …a podcast about
nature…and people… and the connection they share…I’m Cecilia Nasti.
Support from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation allows us to bring you
stories from Under the Texas Sky. In fact, since 1991, the Foundation has raised
more than $190 million to conserve the lands, waters and wildlife of our state.
You can help by becoming a member. Find out how at WeWillNotBeTamed.org
[MUS—EVEN STEVENS]
Jesus Toro Martinez is a Texas-born San Antonio artist, who collects discarded
plastic grocery bags and bottles, aluminum cans and other miscellaneous items
from along creek and river banks and beaches (as well as materials foraged from
elsewhere)—and then incorporates them into his evocative oversized abstract oil
paintings.
[06—TORO—25] All this trash will become part of my work. You know,
getting ugly things. Getting plastic bags. You know, candy wrappers. And different
things. Plastic cups. Pieces of metal that you…you… see all this. And, uh…beer
cans. And, everything. All that becomes the actual material that comes to my work,
itself.
This past spring, we met at Fisherman’s Park in Bastrop, under partly cloudy skies,
to take in the serene beauty of this shady bend of the more than 600-mile long
river.
The Colorado originates south of Lubbock and cuts a diagonal path through the
state—with various tributaries flowing into it—until everything drains into
Matagorda Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. This means there’s the potential for plenty
of “upstream” input of trash and other pollutants before its waters reach the coast.
[SFX—GOOSE / DUCK / GRACKLE]
Toro said he was visiting the park to assess its condition ahead of a rain storm
predicted for later in the week.
[07—TORO—34] It’s a beautiful day. You see people fishing, you see wild
animals just…uh… roaming around. You even see the water down to the base. I
like to see that. Pretty soon we’re going to start seeing some storms here in
Central Texas. This view is going to change dramatically. Then, you’ll see the
trash coming down. The trash that we see in downtown Austin. It’s going to start
flowing down this way.
[SFX—THUNDER AND RAIN]
The rains came…. and went…and the state’s creeks and rivers transported
carelessly discarded trash through Central and South Texas.
Instead of meeting again in Bastrop, Toro invited me to his gallery and studio in
San Antonio’s Lone Star Art District to see how he works with foraged raw
materials.
He didn’t have to ask me twice…so I hopped in my car…
23b [SFX—DRIVING CAR]
…and took a little road trip to the Alamo City.
[MUS—WINTER CARAVAN]
Called the Lone Star Art Space, Toro’s studio encompasses several rooms in a
large warehouse, which is surrounded by other warehouses—many of which have
artists as tenants—in an area some people describe as sketchy.
Residents and those who appreciate art simply call it the Lone Star Art District.
[SFX—CUTTING ALUMINUM CAN]
[08—TORO—34] This morning I got some trash along the San Pedro Creek,
here outside my studio. And I’m cutting—this is a piece of aluminum can—I’m
cutting [it into] pieces so I can put it into my grinder and start making different
levels of pigment. That’s what I’m doing. I’m trying to create something that would
really…uh…create a feel of something, like something flying on my painting. I’m
not there yet, but I’m more concentrating [on] the pigment, itself.
[SFX—GRINDING ALUMINUM]
The grinder he used was a heavy-duty blender that looked as though it had been to
war. Once the aluminum started to tangle with the blades, it created a confetti
storm.
[08—TORO—34] This cut aluminum is going to become little flakes.
It became shiny little flakes as well as curly cues.
[TORO] You see my pile of trash here in the studio. That’s from this
morning.
Toro saves the trash he forages… eventually turning it into pigment.
He emptied the aluminum fragments from the grinder into a jar that he sealed and
placed in a large, worn, paint-spattered trunk that sat in the middle of the room,
which contained neatly arranged cans of paint medium, jars of pigment, brushes,
rags and rubber gloves.
Next, he removed a jar from the chest: in it, the pulverized remains of a copper
gutter…
[SFX—DEMOLITION]
…that he salvaged from a dilapidated San Antonio home that had been razed.
Next, he poured a pungent liquid from one of the cans into a large glass jar.
[SFX—POURING LIQUID INTO JAR]
[09—TORO—36] I am going to mix some copper into this. Making paint is
very simple. You get pigment. You get a paint medium. And combine it together.
I’ve created copper paint. And what I added was a little bit of Damar varnish,
premixed with linseed oil—equal parts—with raw pigment together.
Toro had an oil cloth spread over the studio floor, topped with a four by eight-foot
canvas, already in progress. It was alive with color and movement, but too
abstract for me to recognize what the artist wanted me to see.
[10—TORO—37] This is a summer painting. If you look at it, the white part is
white pigment diluted, and those are flowers. And the yellow you see here is bee
pollen. Bee pollen that you get… I cheated. I went to a grocery store and actually
bought it, you know, and came back and reinvented it into paint. This has a little
bit of tar. A little bit of shoe polish. A little bit of floor polish and copper. And, of
course, aluminum. This is more like my signature process of how I paint. You can
either see it as an abstract or see it as a landscape.
Toro dipped a fresh foam brush into the jar of copper-based paint he’d just made…
[SFX—FLICKING PAINT]
… as he hit the brush against the rim of the jar, he sent fat drops of viscous purple
liquid splashing onto the canvas below. Next, he grabbed a shop broom that was
leaning against a wall, near his pile of trash…
[SFX—PAINTING WITH BROOM]
…and used it as a kind of giant paintbrush, moving colors across the surface of the
canvas until…grasses materialized before my eyes. For a minute I thought maybe the fumes in
the room had gotten the best of me and I was seeing things that weren’t there…
[11—TORO—05] There’s good ventilation in this building because it has so
many holes. So, don’t worry about it.
I didn’t really worry. But I was delighted to see how the grasses in the painting
began to reveal themselves with each stroke across the canvas. In truth, it was
more like a suggestion of grass. It was an abstract painting, after all.
[12—TORO—29] I started working with some ideas showing different types of
native grass. And I’ve laid down the groundwork. Now I’m coming back and
producing the actual imagery that would reflect that. I’m halfway there. I have to
let it dry, come back, extract, attract, put more stuff on it, but then really redevelop
it into what I am about to create.
[SFX—PAINTING / TORO / CECILIA—28]
[TORO] What I’m doing here…I am creating some lines. I am trying to create the
underneath painting to come out and overlap…so it would create a translucent
idea when you’re seeing the actual work.
[Cecilia] So like you’re looking through the grasses?
[TORO] Yes. Definitely. And this is what I’m actually doing.
[MUS—SPARK DREAMS]
In the end, Toro Martinez would have a bold painting depicting human influence
on the land, creeks, rivers and wetlands of our state by incorporating items
discarded by the people of Texas into his art. Something that he admits makes him
a bit nervous.
[13—TORO]
[TORO] I’m always scared about people not loving it, because it’s like I’m using
ugly things—things that nobody wants. You know, trash. And materials that are not
beautiful. Materials meant to go to the landfill and let it be there; they’re not
meant to come into somebody’s living room. I’m very grateful for these people who
acquire these and let my vision keep going, and let people know about protecting
our creeks and our rivers and our wetlands here in Texas. And this is more or less
a way of me trying to advocate for that: me showing it in my work but then
showing it the process of where it came from. And that’s what I am trying to say.
I’m trying to tell a story using the materials that were left behind.
[MUS—REASON TO SUCCEED]
Lone Star Art Space participates in Second Saturdays, a free family friendly
monthly Artwalk event every second Saturday of the month in the Lone Star Art
District.
Meanwhile, Jesus Toro Martinez will exhibit his current series of oil paintings
called Tierra Sagrada/Sacred Land at the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American
Cultural Center in Austin. The opening reception is September 13 and the show
runs through November 23.
[MUS—WALKIN’ BASS RETURN—STING]
Before we end the podcast, another artist is here to close the show with a Shout Out
to the Wild.
[ALI ZANDI] What’s up Everyone. My name’s Ali Zandi, and I’m a landscape
photographer based in Austin. And here is my Shout out to the Wild.
[MUS—FRUIT OF THE DESERT]
[ALI ZANDI] So, I’ve got a fixin’ for all sort of photography. But, I have to
admit landscapes are one of my favorite subjects to shoot. Because for me, it’s a
chance to kinda get outside and bond with the earth. Everything from the lines,
colors, shapes and reflections can all be visually appealing. Especially when they
all work together. Um…as hard as it is sometimes, it’s worth trying to grab that
shot exactly as you have it pictured in your head. And that’s what I love about
landscape photography. There is no shortage of amazing landscapes here in
Texas—so I guess I lucked out a bit. So, some of my recent adventures include
canoeing to Devil’s Waterhole on Inks Lake, shooting the Milky Way in the
darkness at Enchanted Rock, and hiking some of the awesome terrain at
Pedernales. So, grab your hat, your sunscreen and some water, and I’ll see you on
the trails.
What do you love about the Texas outdoors; what have you experienced that you’d
like to share with the world? Tell us with your own Shout Out to the Wild. Just go
to underthetexassky.org and click on the Get Involved link—like landscape
photographer, Ali Zandi of Austin did. We’ll be in touch.
[MUS—TO ORBIT YOUR SOUL]
And so, we come to the end of another podcast. Under the Texas Sky is a
production of Texas Parks and Wildlife and is available at UndertheTexasSky.org
or wherever you get your podcasts.
We record the podcast at The Block House in Austin, Texas. Joel Block does our
sound design.
I’m your producer and host, Cecilia Nasti, reminding you that life’s better outside
when you’re Under the Texas Sky.
Major support for this podcast comes from the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Foundation: Conserving Our Wild Things and Wild Places for Over 25 Years.
Join us again next time for Under the Texas Sky.
[TORO—10] And the yellow you see here is bee pollen. Bee pollen that you
get…uh…I cheated. I went to a grocery store and actually bought it…