The sacred art of J. Michael Walker will be on display at the  Yale Institute of Sacred Music from October 10 to November 30.  The free exhibition, titled “Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe: J.  Michael Walker’s Life with the Virgin and Saints,” is open  weekdays, 9 am to 4 pm. Most of the works will then travel to New  York to the National Museum of Catholic Art and History, where  they will be on display from December 10 to August 30.   An Arkansas native, Walker was culturally and spiritually  transformed by a lengthy stay in the Sierra Tarahumara of  northern Mexico. The sacred themes presented in this exhibition  reflect the artist’s immersion in the story of Our Lady of  Guadalupe and the legends of the saints.   Since 1995, Walker has created a series of works depicting  Mexico’s most important icon and patron saint, the Virgin of  Guadalupe, as a real Mexican woman of Indian descent, engaged in  the myriad daily tasks by which women hold the world together.   His imagery flows from an apocryphal revelation in his studio, in  which he perceived Guadalupe and her attendant angel “freeing”  themselves from their iconic positions, to come down from their  pedestals into the three-dimen-sional space of the artist’s  studio. This “vision” permitted him to place Maria in a physical,  three-dimensional space while showing respect for her rich  Mexican traditions.   More recently, the artist’s attention has focused on the vast  number of streets in Los Angeles named after saints – San Julian,  Santa Monica and Santa Clara, to name a few. The works inspired  by these street names bear witness to the rich Mexican and  Catholic tradition present in Los Angeles since the Eighteenth  Century.   There will be a reception for the artist on Thursday, October  27, from 4:30 to 6 pm in the Great Hall of the Institute. The  Yale Institute of Sacred Music is at 409 Prospect Street. For  information, www.yale.edu/ism or 203-432-5062.
 
    



 
						