Carlos was honored at a retrospective exhibit at Chicago's National Museum of Mexican Art. |
Whenever Día de los Muertos rolls around, my thought turn to my old Fellow Worker Carlos Cortez. Carlos often incorporated the skeleton figures
popular in the Mexican celebration
of All Saints’ Day into his art work
and he used a sketch of a black cat
with an arched back on a fence for the heading of his column musings, The Left Side, which ran in the Industrial
Worker for many years. That cat, of course, was an old Wobbly, symbol for sabotage, a tactic of striking while still on the job by the
voluntary “withdrawal of efficiency.”
If you never heard of Carlos, you
need to get to know about his remarkable life.
He was born August 13, 1923 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His father was a full blooded Indio from Mexico and an
active member and organizer for the Industrial
Workers of the World. His mother was a well read German Socialist and pacifist. Named Karl Cortez at birth, he was reared in
a loving household that was radical and proud of it.
At home the family spoke
English. He picked up some German from his mother, but never truly
mastered his father’s tongue.
Despite looking more like his fair
skinned mother than his deeply brown father, young Karl felt the sting of
ostracism at school where he was taunted for his unfamiliar Spanish surname and for not going to
church. His mother taught him to stand proud, but to never resort to
violence.
Those lessons in non-violence were
so deeply engrained that Cortez became one of the relatively few pacifist draft resistors during World War II, and one of an even tinier
minority of non-religious objectors. He told a judge he could see no
reason to “shoot other draftees full of holes.” The unsympathetic judge
sentenced him to prison. He served two years in Sandstone, Minnesota Federal Prison—the very same one I
would be sent to for the same offence 30 years later.
After his release Cortez found work
in a variety of jobs—as a dishwasher, construction worker, clerk in a deli, and
as a hand at various factories. He joined his father’s union. He
also took up art as a self-trained painter. Around 1948 he began
submitting drawing to the Industrial Worker
and contributing occasional stories.
In the ‘50’s he came down from
Milwaukee to Chicago to be closer to
the center of IWW activity. He volunteered at General Headquarters on Halstead Street. It was there that he
learned the medium for which he would become most famous. Like many other
struggling leftist periodicals, the Industrial
Worker had limited resources to turn his sketches into engraved plates for
the use on the letter press that
produced the paper. Cortez noticed that some contributors sent linoleum cut blocks which could be used
directly on the press. It did not take him long to master the techniques
of creating lino-cuts. Soon
almost every addition of the paper featured at least one new print by him.
The medium also helped him re-connect
to his father’s culture. He discovered that lino-cut blocks were a staple
of the art of the Mexican Revolution.
He studied books at the library and was soon adopting techniques and themes
from such artists as José Guadalupe
Posada. He was also impressed by the wood cuts of German Socialist
and expressionist Käthe Kollwitz.
Despite his limited Spanish, Cortez
became more and more identified with his Mexican, and particularly his Mestizo, heritage. He abandoned
Karl as a first name and adopted Carlos, By the mid-60’s so much of the Industrial Worker was made up of his
illustrations, articles, poems, and columns that he began using a variety of
ways of signing his contributions—CAC,
C.C. Redcloud, Koyokuikatl, and his IWW membership card number X321826.
Eventually even commercially
prepared lino-blocks for carving became too expensive. Carlos learned to
adapt to wood cuts, which both
required the development of new skills and which afforded a medium more
amenable to fine line and shadings than the bold lines of lino-cut. He
learned to make printing blocks from almost any cast-off wood scraps he could
find.
A lifelong bachelor, a Greek friend told him that he should
meet his sister. The trouble was that she was still in Greece. The two corresponded
through her brother for a while. Carlos saved his money, quit his job,
and crossed the ocean as a passenger on a freighter. He met Marianna Drogitis, a lovely young woman
who was, however, by the standards of her culture, a spinster having rejected
several suitors. The two fell in love despite not speaking a word of each
other’s language. They communicated by gesture and the few words of
German they had in common—she had learned the language while in occupied Greece
where members of her family were in the Resistance.
They returned to the U.S. on another freighter, married, and settled into the
happiest marriage I have ever seen in a Chicago apartment in 1965.
It was a great love story and Carlos
would frequently use Marianna as a model for his woodcuts, including loving,
voluptuous nudes.
I first met Carlos in early 1969
while I was working for a short time at an antique/junk store on Armitage Avenue. He came in
wearing a white Open Road Stetson
like mine, but not so beat up. He had on a plaid shirt under nondescript
jacket. He had heavy black framed eye glasses and a drooping black
mustache. He walked with a peculiar kind of shuffle and spoke with a
vague accent that he picked up mostly from trying to communicate with his wife.
He was looking for old table tops or other wood to make wood blocks from and
cheap picture frames. We spent an idle hour chatting, each of us smoking
hand rolled cigarettes. He preferred Bull
Durham and Wheat Zig-zag papers.
I was using Prince Albert from a can
and Tops papers.
A month or so later I joined the IWW
and began a long friendship and fruitful collaboration in earnest. Carlos
had just been made editor of the Industrial
Worker. Fred W. Thompson, who
became my personal mentor, and I were soon working together to provide most of
the content that Carlos didn’t generate himself. By this time the paper
was coming out on an offset press
and had become tabloid sized.
One Saturday a month we pasted up the paper from long sheets of typeset copy, various illustrations and photos, and standard features reproduced from photostats. We worked with paste pots, X-Acto knives, and Press Type on a table in Carlos’s living room. If we had an odd space, Carlos would whip up a sketch to fit it. We would work all afternoon, Carlos and I smoking and drinking Blatz from quart bottles. When we were finished we would celebrate with a good stiff shot of bourbon. Marianna kept us well fed, too.
Eventually the Worker became, in the style of the day, a collective. Carlos did not mind at all being “demoted” we
continued to work together in much the same way as we did before. Even
when the Executive Board decided to
return to management by an editor, he did not take offense when I was named to
the post instead of him, or when I made changes. Every month still
featured a Left Side column and new
art work.
Besides the paper we worked on other
projects together. I remember putting together one of the first return to the Haymarket May Day rallies in 1970. The local IWW branch
collaborated with the Illinois Labor
History Society, and some radical unionists to hold a rally calling for the
Six Hour Day. Carlos designed
the poster/flyer and I ran it off on the q.t. on the offset press I was then
running for Columbia College. Carlos
was one of the featured speakers from the flatbed truck set up just where the
Haymarket speakers orated from an open wagon.
About 1973 Carlos and Marianna had
to find a place to live while their landlord did major work on their apartment
building. I lived near-by in a fourth floor walk-up in a courtyard
apartment building dubbed Wobbly Towers
for all of the fellow workers who had places there. My roommate Kathleen Taylor, then General Secretary-Treasurer of the IWW,
and I had a spare bedroom. Carlos and Marianna stayed with us for several months. Marianna
taught me to appreciate thick Greek coffee brewed in a tiny brass pot and
served in demitasse cups. Carlos and I refined our tastes in whiskey and
he tried unsuccessfully to convert me to the vile black cigars he had switched
to.
A few years later, Carlos returned
the favor.
Against his will, Marianna finally
convinced Carlos to buy a house. Carlos was ever suspicious of the lure
of property. But she found a single floor store front building with a
large rear apartment in the middle of an un-yuppiefied
north side block. They were able to buy it for a ridiculously low
price—about $16,000 as I recall—on money she had saved from her job doing
laundry and cooking for “the Priests” at DePaul
University. It turned out to be the smartest thing she ever forced
Carlos to do.
He transformed the large storefront
into a virtual gallery and studio. His paintings and posters decorated
the walls. There was plenty of room to accommodate gatherings of friends for
both social and organizational activities. There was space for the small flat bed press that Carlos had
acquired, nick named El Gato Negro—the
Black Cat—in the basement and he was able to go into production of posters
and prints on a scale he never could before.
It was the start of a period of
great productivity. He used that press to make a series of posters of
IWW, Mexican Revolutionaries, and other radical heroes that featured portraits
and quotes. These posters became his most famous work. They often
went through different editions. He would scrounge for any paper he could
to make his prints on. Sometimes he cut up butcher paper or begged odds
and ends from commercial shops. Friends occasionally donated better
quality stock. He would make new versions of posters to adapt to the
paper sizes he had available or when he decided to make them in a two block
process for added color. He also churned out, upon request, posters for
any organization to which he was sympathetic and who asked. He never
charged for that. And the posters he did sell were offered at just a few
dollars apiece to benefit the IWW or some other organization’s treasury.
A firm believer in “people’s art”
available and affordable to the masses, he refused to sign or number prints.
In fact, when his posters began to attract the attention of the commercial art
world he let it be known that if ever they started selling at inflated prices,
he would print more to keep the cost down. He even made that as a
provision in his will for those who came into possession of his blocks.
Carlos was also becoming known as a
mentor for a new generation of artists. In 1975 he helped found the Movemento Aristico Chicano (MARCH)—the first organization of Latino artists in the city. With
his close friend Carlos Cumpian and
others, meeting in the comfortable front room, he built an organization which
mentored many young artists, spread “the culture”, and helped foster the
re-birth of the muralist movement in the city. He also became an early supporter
of the Mexican Fine Arts Center now
known as the National Museum of Mexican
Arts which became the repository of many of his works and has the largest
collection of his extensive production in the world. He was also active with the Chicago Mural Group, Mexican Taller del Grabado (Mexican Graphic Workshop), Casa de la
Cultura Mestizarte, the Native Men’s Song Circle, a Native American group out of the American Indian Center. Through that association, he came to
mentor and encourage young Indian artists
with the same passion he dedicated to the Chicanos. In fact, there was no
artist or poet of any race who was not welcome in that home, as long as they
were ready and eager to serve the people’s needs and not “art for art’s sake,”
a notion he found repugnant and elitist.
Not long after the Cortez’s settled
into their new home, I found myself semi-homeless and out of a job. I was
bouncing from couch to couch. When Carlos found out he invited me
home. I was not the only one. The several spare bedrooms in the
back of the building often accommodated guests and visitors. I stayed
happily with them for several months.
Carlos also got me a job. He
had to quit his job of many years, hand loading box cars with cases of shampoo
at what he called the Bubble Factory.
It was just too punishing on his body. He found work as a custodian at the Coyne American Institute, a trade
school on Fullerton Ave. and got me
a job as a boom pusher on the second shift. The folks at the school often
thought we were father and son. We both had our cowboy hats, thick
glasses, and at the time Carlos as sporting an impressive goatee to complement
his flowing mustaches. We had arrived at our curious adoption of the same
look quite independently, but there was no dishonor in being called Carlos’s
son.
When I proposed to Kathy, Carlos was pleased to make a
drawing of the two of us with her daughters Carolynne and Heather
for the invitations I designed. He and Marianna danced happily at our
wedding party at Lilly’s on Lincoln Ave.
By 1981 Carlos’s heart forced him to
retire from wage slavery. It
gave him more time to dedicate to his art work, poetry and causes.
Unfortunately, it also put a strain on Marianna who took extra work to make up
for the lost income. Despite sometimes working twelve hours at two jobs,
she always had a smile for any of Carlos’s many guests, and a pat on the cheek
for the old man.
Carlos, although best known as a graphic artist and
for his work on the Industrial Worker, was also a poet. He would
do occasional readings at an old haunt, the College of Complexes, in
coffee houses, at radical book stores, and where ever his friends
gathered. He wrote three books of poetry, including De Kansas a
Califas & Back to Chicago, published by March/Abrazo Press,
and Crystal-Gazing the Amer Fluid & Other Wobbly Poems,
published by the old Socialist publisher Charles H. Kerr &
Company. Carlos was President of the Kerr Board for 20 years, a title
he detested. He also edited, wrote the introduction to, or contributed to
several other books.
By his later years, Carlos’s work was gaining
international recognition. He illustrated the novel Brassero by
Eugene Nelson. Although not widely read in this country, it
circulated widely in editions in Sweden, Germany, and the Soviet
Union which attracted attention to his lino-cuts. In Sweden where Joe
Hill is a national hero, an edition of his famed poster which he made in
Swedish, was widely circulated. His prints have appeared in various
touring shows and were added to the permanent collections of the Museum
of Modern Art. He preferred venues like the traveling exhibition Eighty
Years of Wobbly Art which he curated in 1985 and the retrospective
exhibits of his work at the Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum.
Carlos was devastated when his beloved Marianna died
in 2001. I last saw him at her memorial.
His health deteriorated rapidly after that and he was
often confined to a wheel chair. He continued to greet a steady parade of
visitors and admirers to his studio home and participated in the planning of
new exhibitions of his work, including one in Madrid sponsored by the anarcho-syndicalists
of the Confederacion National de Trabajo (CNT.)
He suffered a massive heart attack and was confined to his bed for the last 18
months of his life.
On January 17, 2005 Carlos died, surrounded by friends
and “listening to the music of the Texas Tornados.”
On the Day of the Dead, Carlos, I wish I had an offenda
decorate in your honor with Wild Turkey, cigars, sugar skulls, and
copies of your great art.
Here is one of his favorite of his poems:
Crystal-Gazing the Amber Fluid
Sitting at
this bar
Thinking of places
Afar
In my glass of beer
I see
Thru the smoke-filled haze Of this room
Like a crystal vision
Looms
A ribbon of cement
Black line down the middle
Perdition bent
Like a galloping snake
On the make
Thru treeless prairies
And bottomless passes
Ever in motion
Over a moonkissed desert
Toward golden California
Grasses
Stopped only
By a big blue ocean,
Man----!
Give me the song
If you can
Of a greyhound motor's
Tirade
Crawling along
Some old ten-mile grade
Where life can be complete...
Thinking of places
Afar
In my glass of beer
I see
Thru the smoke-filled haze Of this room
Like a crystal vision
Looms
A ribbon of cement
Black line down the middle
Perdition bent
Like a galloping snake
On the make
Thru treeless prairies
And bottomless passes
Ever in motion
Over a moonkissed desert
Toward golden California
Grasses
Stopped only
By a big blue ocean,
Man----!
Give me the song
If you can
Of a greyhound motor's
Tirade
Crawling along
Some old ten-mile grade
Where life can be complete...
—Carlos Corez
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