Iconic 'Pee-Chee' folders reimagined with familiar scenes of police brutality
The center of Patrick Martinez’s art studio is occupied by large wooden panels reminiscent of the school folders he once used as student.
From afar, the panels look like giant Pee-Chee folders, the same type that American students have been using to carry their homework in since the 1940s. The original Pee-Chee folders featured drawings of athletes emblazoned on peach-and-yellow colored covers. But Martinez’s version are decorated with a much different type of American scene.
“I’m taking situations where police have gunned down youth,” Martinez told me in his studio in South Los Angeles.
Martinez, 35, has appropriated the idyllic Americana scenes and reimagined them with images of police officers moments before they killed Oscar Grant, Laquan McDonald and Sandra Bland. His work includes other controversial scenes of police using excessive force, like the UC Davis officer pepper-spraying a group of students at close range, or a young undocumented woman in a cap and gown being arrested by police officers.
The contemporary mixed media artist says his work “is about honoring people who have been mistreated or have lost their lives” in altercations with the police. He says he wants to freeze those images “in a fine arts context.”
In one of Martinez’s most recognizable paintings he illustrated a black man getting wrestled to the ground in a choke hold by a white male. At quick glance, the striking image of two men wrestling feels similar to the sports scenes on the traditional folders, but at closer glance it’s recognizable as a scene millions of us have seen on YouTube: The police attack on Eric Garner.