Einar (Mexican, 1963–) and Jamex (Mexican, 1960–) de la Torre. Oxymodern (Aztec Calendar), 2002, blown-glass, mixed-media wall installation, 120 x 120 x 12 in. Courtesy of the Cheech Marin Collection and Riverside Art Museum.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE | IMAGES HERE

Collidoscope: de la Torre Brothers Retro-Perspective opens June 7 at Mint Museum Uptown

A celebration of the 30-year creative journey of artists Einar and Jamex de la Torre

Charlotte, North Carolina (May 6, 2025) — The Mint Museum is proud to present the vibrant and thought-provoking exhibition Collidoscope: de la Torre Brothers Retro-Perspective opening to the public June 7 at Mint Museum Uptown. The exhibition features 40 mixed media works by internationally celebrated artists and brothers Einar and Jamex de la Torre.  

As much an intellectual and poetic journey as it is visual, the exhibition includes a wide range of blown-glass sculptures, immersive installation art, and dynamic lenticular pieces (works that shift imagery as the viewer moves) highlighting the brothers’ distinctive style.

Celebrating their 30-year creative journey, the exhibition title and curatorial design reflect the brothers’ creative process, combining conceptual play with technical mastery and a deep engagement with cultural identity. Their creations combine glass, found objects, resin, laser-cut metal, and lenticular prints. 

Rich in symbolism, humor, and layered visual storytelling, the de la Torre brothers practice has earned international acclaim and a loyal following. Inspired by Mexican folk art, mythology, popular culture, consumerism, and religious iconography, their art offers a bold, multilayered exploration of the Latinx experience, as well as bicultural identity, politics, religion, and pop culture. 

The de la Torre brothers have strong connections to North Carolina, having worked at both Penland School of Craft located in western North Carolina and Starworks centrally located in the state.  

“The Mint is thrilled to bring this important exhibition to Charlotte. Our museum is praised worldwide for its collection of contemporary glass, and Collidoscope offers an in-depth look at the fantastic creations of ‘the brothers’ as they are affectionately known. Their collective imagination is matched by their technical virtuosity, keen wit, and courageous social commentary,” says Annie Carlano, senior director of Craft, Design, and Fashion at The Mint Museum. “It was important to the Mint and the brothers to bring Collidoscope to our community, vibrant as the objects in the exhibition itself.”

Collidoscope is organized into five thematic sections: Histerical Vignettes, Hybrid Dislocations, Systems and Cycles, Retracollage, and Other Works. The exhibition is further enhanced by a soundtrack inspired by the artists’ creative process. 

Collidoscope in Charlotte is generously presented by Laura and Mike Grace. The national travelling exhibition is organized by The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture of the Riverside Art Museum in partnership with the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Latino.

Collidoscope is on view June 7–September 21, 2025 at Mint Museum Uptown at the Levine Center for the Arts, 500 S. Tryon St., Charlotte, North Carolina.

About the artists 

Einar and Jamex de la Torre (born 1960 and 1963, respectively) have energized and expanded the notion of contemporary glass. Born in Guadalajara, Jalisco, México, and currently living between San Diego and Baja California, the de la Torre brothers have spent decades cultivating a body of work that seamlessly blends traditional techniques with contemporary themes and technology. The de la Torre Brothers are known for their collaborative mixed media works that fuse blown glass with lenticular imagery and found objects. Their art has been exhibited globally and is held in major museum and private collections. Learn more at delatorrebrothers.art. 

Ticket Information 

Admission to The Mint Museum exhibition is free for members and children ages 4 and younger, and students in grades K-12, plus college art students; $15 for adults; $10 for seniors ages 65 and older; and $10 for college students with ID. For museum hours, visit mintmuseum.org. 

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About The Mint Museum
Established in 1936 as north Carolina’s first art museum, the mint museum is a leading, innovative cultural institution and museum of international art and design. With two locations — Mint Museum Randolph in the heart of Eastover and Mint Museum Uptown at Levine Center for the Arts — the Mint boasts one of the largest collections in the Southeast and is committed to engaging and inspiring members of the global community.  

About The Cheech & Riverside Art Museum (The Cheech) 
The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture and the historic Riverside Art Museum are located in downtown Riverside, California. Both sites offer high-quality exhibitions and arts education with a mission to integrate art into people’s lives. Learn more at thecheechcenter.org. 

About Cheech Marin
A leading voice in Chicano art, Cheech Marin is the collector behind one of the most significant private holdings of Chicano art in the United States. His vision for The Cheech is to serve as a nationally relevant and internationally renowned center for Chicano creativity and culture. 

About the National Museum of the American Latino
A Smithsonian institution, the National Museum of the American Latino works to preserve, celebrate, and expand the understanding of Latino contributions to the United States. Learn more at latino.si.edu. 

For more information and artist or curator interviews, contact:

Michele Huggins, associate director of marketing and communications
michele.huggins@mintmuseum.org | 704.564.0826

Clayton Sealey, senior director of marketing and communications
clayton.sealey@mintmuseum.org | 704.534.0186

Figure 1: Einar (Mexican, 1963–) and Jamex (Mexican, 1960–) de la Torre. “Oxymodern (Aztec Calendar),” 2002, blown-glass, mixed-media wall installation, 120 x 120 x 12 in. Courtesy of the Cheech Marin Collection and Riverside Art Museum.

By Annie Carlano

Einar and Jamex de la Torre (born 1960 and 1963, respectively) have energized and expanded the notion
of contemporary glass. The dynamic duo uses the performative nature of blown glass to express their views on binational identity, politics, religion, and pop culture. For “the brothers,” as they are known, art making is an additive process and goes beyond glass. Their creations combine found appropriated objects with resin, laser-cut metal, and lenticular prints. Colorful and exuberant, neo-Baroque, and over the top, the playfulness often masks an acerbic commentary on colonialism and corruption.

“The title of the exhibition mirrors the artists’ use of wordplay, alluding to the kaleidoscope-like quality of their works and the collision of imagery, themes, and references that comprise their artistic language,” says exhibition curator Selene Preciado. “The artists use critique layered with humor as a tool to unpack the tensions and contradictions of our postcolonial transcultural identity.”

Born in Guadalajara, Mexico, Einar and Jamex moved to California with their Danish-Mexican mother in 1972. The culture shock wore off as they enjoyed the relative freedom and entrepreneurial spirit of their new home.

Experiments with lampworking led to a small business venture, and further study at California State University exposed them to a variety of art media and the collaborative nature of blown glass. Working together since the 1990s, they dismissed the minimalist trends of the art world to pursue a maximalist aesthetic, drawing on multicultural sources, religious imagery, “Flemish Surrealism” — the paintings of Bosch and Breughel — German Expressionism, and current events. In the last 15 years, the brothers have added photo-mural installations and lenticular prints to their repertoire, heightening viewers’ senses and asking each viewer to take a closer look.

A Retro-Perspective is their take on a traditional retrospective, which this is not. This exhibition eschews chronology and is more like a party than a survey.

Spanning a 30-year period, Collidoscope is organized into five sections: “Histerical Vignettes,” “Hybrid Dislocations,” “Systems and Cycles,” “Retracollage,” and “Other Works.”

Hybrid Dislocations

Oxymodern (Aztec Calendar), in the section “Hybrid Dislocation,” is a mixed-media timepiece based on the design of the Mesoamerican Aztec sun or calendar stone and Asian mandalas, (figure 1). Depicted are eight dinner settings with human hearts sitting on a bed of mole sauce accompanied by Mexican bank note napkins. Four faces or characters are engaged in a game of dominos surrounded by snuffed-out cigarettes and squished beer cans. The brothers are making fun of the ways in which modern man passes the time.

Also, from “Hybrid Dislocation” is Baja Kali, (figure 3). This pyramid structure is named for Baja California, Mexico, where the brothers live part time, and the Buddhist goddess Kali. The goddess Kali is conceptually and visually blended with the Aztec goddess Coatlique, both representing Mother Earth and the life cycle, in the depiction at the top of the pyramid, where the blown glass and lampworked figures are born and devoured. An outstanding example of the brothers layered cultural narratives, Baja Kali was well received in bohemian California circles and rented to the Lollapolooza festival as a set design for their 1995 tour.

Figure 3: Einar (Mexican, 1963–) and Jamex (Mexican, 1960–) de la Torre, “Baja Kali,” 1995, blown-glass, lamp-worked glass and mixed-media sculpture, 87 x 45 x 17 in. Courtesy of Einar and Jamex de la Torre and Koplin Del Rio

Histerical Vignettes

“Histerical Vignettes” includes !2020! (figure 4), a work featuring a tattooed baby emperor who heralds in the new year. Conceived during COVID, the baby holds a remote, and the brothers ponder, who really has control of 2020. After searching for the perfect baby doll, the brothers found this one and made a blown-glass head and headdress. The head is a nod to the sugar skulls given out during Dia de Muertos (Day of the Dead) and to the candy-like appearance of blown glass in general. Found trinkets decorate the bed frame and posts, and the clear dishes under the legs of the bed conceal bedbugs.

¡2020! (detail), 2020, mixed-media, blown-glass sculpture with resin casting, 33 x 22 x 14 in. Courtesy of Koplin Del Rio Gallery.

Systems and Cycles

A lenticular print revealing two distinct scenes as one moves sideways, Feminencia, another made up word combining the Spanish for feminine and the Spanish for eminence, is a feminist work. A part of the “Systems and Cycles” section, it celebrates the strength and power of the female sex, both carnal and spiritual. Made after the brothers returned from an extensive European trip in 2020, one scene depicts a nervous King Leopold of Belgium (1790-1865) surrounded by female nudes depicted in French and Flemish paintings, including, at his feet, Gabrielle d’Estrées and one of her Sisters, 1575-1600, Musee du Louvre. Moving to the other side of the work, a second image appears: the sculpture of the Buddhist goddess White Tara, a gift of the Nepalese government to Mexico. Through the digital magic of photoshop the brothers layered images of Austrian churches and the Eiffel Tower to heighten the sensation of divine wisdom. 

Annie Carlano is the exhibition curator and senior curator of Craft, Design, and Fashion at The Mint Museum.