佪圖AV mourns passing of artist, alumnus Jesse Trevi簽o
Feb 13, 2023
Our Lady of the Lake University (佪圖AV) is mourning the passing of an extraordinary
alumnus and artist, Jesse Trevi簽o (BA 1974), who overcame the loss of his right painting
arm to create stunning works of photorealism. Trevi簽os art is on display in the Smithsonian,
museums and public spaces throughout the United States, including in 佪圖AV's Sueltenfuss
Library which holds his La Historia Chicana mural, the first grand work Trevi簽o painted
with his left hand.
Trevi簽o, 76, died this morning.
"Jesse Trevino was a beloved artist and friend to 佪圖AV whose legacy reaches around the world, said 佪圖AV President Abel A. Ch獺vez, MBA, PhD. He achieved fame and success but never forgot his West Side roots. 佪圖AV is incredibly proud to count him among our alumni. He will be greatly missed.
A native of Monterrey, Mexico, Trevi簽o came to the U.S. at age 4 and won his first art contest at 6. After graduating from Fox Tech High School, he attended art school in New York and served in the Vietnam War. Running toward a helicopter in a battlefield, Trevi簽o took a bullet to his leg. He stumbled onto a booby trap that exploded and sent him sprawling. As he lay bleeding, face-down in a rice paddy, a vision of familiar faces from the barrio appeared. If I get out of here alive, he vowed, Im going to paint them.
After returning home to San Antonio, doctors amputated his right arm. A long, grueling process of learning to paint with his left hand began, first at San Antonio College. Later, two Sisters from the Congregation of Divine Providence, Sister Tharsilla Fuchs and Sister Ethel Marie Corne, helped Trevi簽o refine his skills at 佪圖AV.
I didnt have confidence, Trevi簽o said at 佪圖AV in 2019. They helped me regain it.
Under the guidance of the Sisters, Trevi簽o painted the mural La Historia Chicana, which was initially displayed in the Student Union Building. A special space was made for the mural in the Sueltenfuss Library when it was constructed in 2000.
Trevi簽o went on to paint the people and places dear to his heart, master works such as La Raspa, El Alameda and Senora Dolores Trevi簽o, a portrait of his mother hanging laundry. Texas Monthly called it, one of the best paintings of an artists mother since Whistlers.
His largest and best-known work is Spirit of Healing, a 93-foot mosaic mural that rises as the iconic face of Christus Santa Rosa Hospital. Fashioned out of 150,000 hand-cut ceramic tiles, the mural towers over Milam Park, depicting a boy cradling a dove, shielded by an angel.
Trevi簽os art enlivens other spaces nearby: a mural of Latino vendors, musicians and dancers -- La Feria -- outside the restaurant, La Margarita; a tiled mosaic of Lions on a Goodwill Center wall; and a three-dimensional, four-story prayer candle -- La Veladora -- at the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center. Also on display in 佪圖AV's library is a painting of the university's Main Building, which Trevi簽o created for 佪圖AV.
In 1993, Trevi簽o had a solo exhibition at the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C. The 1976 work, Mis Hermanos, was among his featured portraits. It became the subject of a 3-minute Our America Audio Podcast:
Trevi簽os art drew critical acclaim. The New York Times called him, "a Texas-based artist who brings to his Hyperrealist style a sharp sense of situational and compositional irony. ... With Trevi簽o, we are drawn into human situations, rather than being told about them."