Artist Shakes Up Luxury Ads
The images of housekeepers and gardeners that artist Ramiro Gomez creates are deeply personal to him. Ramiro’s grandmother was a nanny, and in 2009 Ramiro himself took a job as a live-in nanny for an affluent family living in the hills above Los Angeles.
Ramiro, 27, will unveil more than two dozen works of art at his first solo show at the Charlie James Gallery in Los Angeles on Saturday. Ramiro rips pages out of magazines that features images of luxury, and inserts figures of domestic workers: housekeepers, nannies, gardeners and pool cleaners.
“I want people to remember those figures so that the next time they see a manicured lawn and environments such as those featured in magazines, they can understand the process that it took to get to that point,” Ramiro told Fusion.
Ramiro has received media attention in the past for his life-size two-dimensional cardboard cutouts of gardeners and housekeepers that he places around Beverly Hills. He’s also placed his public art in front of the White House in Washington D.C., to call attention to immigration reform and the rights of workers.