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Interracial Family: The Way Society Sees it
This painting is about the second marriage of my mother to my stepfather,
who died six years ago. My stepfather was a Puerto Rican of African ancestry,
while my mother is a fair-skin Puerto Rican of Spanish ancestry. As a
teenager, I always liked to observe people and evaluate situations. I
remember the looks they both got when they would walk into restaurants
and other public places. But the worst part was when my stepfather was
dying and I overheard a nurse joke to another nurse that she didn't know
that my mother was his wife because "she's white and he's black."
The two large figures in Interracial Family: The Way Society Sees it portray
different races, with the third smaller figure representing the union
of these two different races. It is the child figure that shows the imbalance
and awkwardness with which society sees interracial relationships. I think
that Interracial Family: The Way Society Sees it is a painting that portrays
the eerie feeling prejudice people experience when they see two people
of different races get together.
Soraida Martinez 1992
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Purchase This Fine Art Print
(No. 046)
regular price $125.00
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