Gabi Magaly

Gabi Magaly is an emerging artist born in Bryan, Texas. Magaly received her BFA in photography at Sam Houston State University in 2015 and is currently working toward her MFA in Visual Arts at the University of Texas at San Antonio. Magaly has exhibited in solo shows at Satellite Gallery in Huntsville, TX and at The Brick in San Antonio, TX. Her numerous group exhibitions include New Media from San Antonio, Texas at Luis Leu Gallery (Karlsruhe, Germany), Galeria Guadalupe Photoplay at The Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center (San Antonio, TX) and winning Best in Show at 56th Annual Juried Competition Exhibition in Masur Museum in Monroe, Louisiana. Magaly was honored with a Graduate School Travel Stipend to give an artist talk at the SPE Conference at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, TX. She works predominantly in the medium of photography, but also employs other mediums like sculptural installation and intervention. Magaly currently lives and works in San Antonio, Texas.


Santa Gabriela

Santa Pabla

Artist Statement

Growing up in a Mexican-American household, my childhood was saturated with the machismo and marianismo culture. Hyper masculinity oozed brutality, control and bad cologne. Placated and tongue biting women don’t speak up, act up, and always have rice and tortillas on the table at precisely six o’clock. Daughters are being raised to submit to men, are being taught to fetishize purity and holiness. We are expected to feed stomachs, ego, and taste for violence.

With my work, I draw from my experience within this toxic culture and provide a call to action for the women who don’t have a voice to feel empowered, and for the men with a little too much to say to be softened. The imagery I use within my work reference the everyday accessible household items that are traditionally associated with my Mexican-American household: Fiesta spices, Fideo, prayer cards, candles, blankets, and tortillas. I want these items to be culturally and physically accessible. A visual language usually reserved for Abuela’s kitchen and living room is transformed into defiance, empowerment, and hopefully change.

Santa Teresa

Santa Judas

Santa Miguela

Mi Religión

My woven cotton blankets reference Catholic Saints and bible stories I heard growing up, with a critical view of women who were told not to own their sexuality and to not question these religious saints. My self-portraits reproduce a modern day version of saints using my own image as all the saints. As a child, I was told to look up to saints that never looked like me, all of them were fair skinned with blue eyes none of them had brown skin with brown eyes. By reproducing them with brown skin, I am creating a more relatable representation that is more inclusive. As we look towards the future, my work encourages women in my culture to find the strength to forget about the old traditions and raise their daughters to be independent.

Santa Theresa

Santísima Trinidad

Santa Catherine De Siena

Santa Sebastina

La Virgen De Guadalupe


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