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Chicago Says Farewell To Carlos Cortez

carloscortez.jpg
Artist and Poet Carlos Cortez died of heart failure at 7:44 PM on Tuesday, January 18, 2005, at his home in Lakeview. He was surrounded by friends and listening to the music of the Texas Tornadoes when he passed away. Cortez suffered his first heart attack in 1993, and a massive heart attack a year and a half ago left him bed-ridden in his own home until he passed away. Cortez was 81 years old.

Cortez is best known for his poetry collections published by March/Abrazo Press and Charles H. Kerr. He is also known for his art. He was a consciencious objector in WWII. A public memorial will be organized in the future.

***********

Obituary by Carlos Cumpian

Carlos A. Cortez, 81, Activist Artist and Writer

Chicago, Illinois—
Carlos A. Cortez, through his labor-oriented art and writings that helped bring international attention to Mexicans and other native peoples, died on Jan. 18 at his home in Chicago. He was 81.

The cause of death was heart failure, according to his doctor Teresa Ramos M.D., present at the time of his death.

Imprisonment as a conscientious objector during World War II led to his membership in the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) union. Cortez’s support of the IWW or “Wobblies,” was central to the theme of many of his wood and linoleum-cut graphics, as well as editorial and poetic works. He was columnist and editor for the IWW union paper, The Industrial Worker, from the late 1950s to 2005, and the author of four books.

In 1975, Cortez joined Jose G. Gonzalez to found the first Mexican arts organization in Illinois, Movimiento Artistico Chicano, MARCH, Inc. Cortez was also an active member of the Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum, Chicago Mural Group, Mexican Taller del Grabado (Mexican Graphic Workshop), Casa de la Cultura Mestizarte, the Native Men’s Song Circle and Charles H. Kerr Publishers. Cortez’s work is in the collection of the Smithsonian Institute and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.

Cortez is survived by the relatives of his late wife Mariana Drogitis-Cortez: his sisters-in-law, Theodora Katsikakis and Lela Vlahos; brother-in-law Nicholas Drogitis; nieces Despina Katsikakis and Monica Meissner, grand niece Alexandra Kailing, and nephews Kosta Vlahos and George Vlahos.

Memorial services are private after Mr. Cortez’s cremation in Chicago, Illinois.

Those seeking to honor his memory may make a contribution to the American Indian Center at 1630 W. Wilson Ave. or the Chicago Coalition for the Homeless.


Dear Chicago Poets,

Carlos Cortez was a friend of mine. I say this with a measure of pride for a man whom I came to regard as, not only a fine artist and writer, but as extremely decent human being. Unfortunately, my first encounter with Carlos illustrates that you should never judge a man simply on externalities.

Before I get to the details of our first meeting, let me tell you a little bit about myself, the me I was during the winter of 1987. I worked as an administrator for a major foundation in Chicago. I reviewed grant requests and loan requests, and I learned to make quick judgments and to examine the financial integrity of nonprofit applicants. I lived and ate numbers. I took the job seriously, and, honestly, I took myself equally seriously, if not more so, because working for this foundation was considered a plum Chicago job. Man, I was suffering from a major case of Yuppie-itis. After all, I was in my early thirties, making decent money, and I even owed income property in Bucktown, before it had emerged as the in-place to live. But I also was starting to publish children’s stories and poems for Arte Publico Press and its journal, Revista Chicano-riqueña. But I kept that part of my life pretty much in the background.

I’ve always isolated myself as a writer. I didn’t know Carlos Cortez from Carlos Cumpian, and honestly, I couldn’t have cared less. I was a major twit who dressed in business suits or tweed jackets and wondered how I was going to gain literary fame while keeping my hand in the business world. Being part of a literary community was never a major concern. Then Carlos Cortez walked into my life. I was still married to the second Mrs. Varela. She, like me, held certain standards. I’m not going to tell you about these standards, but let’s just say that they gave me the means to an end.

I also liked going out to parties hosted by other Latino-Yuppies-in-the-making. A colleague from another foundation had invited us to one he was hosting in his flat in Logan Square. Wife number two and I accepted and drove to Logan Square on a very cold January night. The music was hot, the booze flowing, and the conversation stimulating. Then from out of the darkness came this reed-thin man wearing a white cowboy hat, dressed in black with a flowing mane of white hair gathered into a ponytail, and a black mustache that seemed to go on forever. He even had on a western shirt stitched with several red skulls and a figure of a coyote howling under a red moon. He also had on a bolo tie clasped at the throat by a large silver skull. Then he smiled and said, “I hear you guys live near me. Could you give me a ride?”

Wife number two and I just stared at this apparition. Sometimes the world comes to a screeching halt. I mean, my parents raised me up to never befriend strangers who wore cowboy apparel in the big city. Right off, I sensed that this guy was some sort of bohemian. My God, who would actually dress like that in the Roaring 80’s? Didn’t he know anything about Reaganomics and supply-side theory? And what would my stockbroker think if I actually gave someone like him a ride? But I seemed to hesitate, so wife number two squeezed my hand, which was her signal that she would kill me if I, indeed, offered him a ride, so I said no.

Ten minutes later, the party’s host came over and said in a voice frosty with annoyance. “I just heard that you wouldn’t give Carlos Cortez a ride. I said, “Who?” He replied, “Cortez. Don’t you know him? Man, everybody loves Carlos.” I wanted to say that I never give rides to eccentrics or lunatics, but I kept my tongue in check. He huffed away. I suppose the host arranged a ride, because I saw the graveyard cowboy as he left with someone else. What was all the fuss about?

Well, there is a lot to fuss about when it comes to Carlos Cortez. I thank God for having had the privilege of knowing him and appreciating the immerse gift he gave to me, his friendship. And he was also the most tolerant man I ever knew. After all, he even forgave me, the biggest twit in the world for being such a twit that night. Imagine I turned down the opportunity to become friends with a great artist.

--Frank Varela


Links

Chicago Tribune Obituary

Center Stage

About the artist

An Interview With Carlos Cortez

REQUIEM FOR A STREET

Book Review

Click Here to watch one of the greatest Labor themed films ever made, Metropolis (apx 2hrs, must have DSL to watch).

I have set up an additional page to post comments at ChicagoPoetry.com.
 
 

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Farewell, Fellow Worker.

Don't Mourn, Organize...

Carlos Cortez was a proud member of the Industrial Workers of the World - and a legendary Wobbly graphic artist. The IWW commemorative poster of Joe Hill displayed here has been reproduced around the world.

Farewell, Fellow Worker.
- DR

Related Links:
  • Rebel Graphics - A Tribute to Carlos Cortez

    Related Stories:
  • Carlos Cortez - by Kari Lydersen, Center Stage

    Published Works by Carlos Cortez:
  • De Kansas a Califas & Back to Chicago -1992, March/Abrazo Press
  • Emergency Tacos : Seven Poets Con Picante (with others)
  •  

    Re: Chicago Says Farewell To Carlos Cortez

    We have lost a truly great soul. May his memory be an example to us all.
     

    Re: Chicago Says Farewell To Carlos Cortez

    carlos i will always remember as a fighter and artist incredibly thoughtful and kind. ive looked up to him from the moment i met him.

    in 2001 the direct action network had a conference called, "defeating the offensive of global capitalism" that brought people in from as far as toronto to san diego. carlos read a poem to a hundred of us that saturday night about a miner accident that brought tears to the eyes of many listening to his deliberate and encompassing voice. he was a true human in every respect and someone that gave his life , heart and mind to the struggle.

    youre missed already fellow worker.
     

    Re: Chicago Says Farewell To Carlos Cortez

    Hi, I'm going to be working on an article about Carlos Cortez for the march issue of third coast press. I'm looking for thoughts about cortez from people who knew him well.

    If you have some remarks about Carlos that you would like to be considered for inclusion as quotes in the article, please write up about 200 words about your personal encounters with Cortez, and send them to chicagopoetry (at) chicagopoetry.com

    Comments that are not used in the article may also be used at ChicagoPoetry.com on a page in remembrance of Cortez, thanks
     

    Re: Chicago Says Farewell To Carlos Cortez

    Thank you for posting so much of Carlos' great art on the web. Art has to speak to the workers. The Joe Hill poster is at the Mine Mill Hall in Sudbury Canada, along with some of Joe Hill's ashes. All workers unite.
     

    Re: Chicago Says Farewell To Carlos Cortez

    Carlos, your spirit with us forever. I started a drawing of you two days before you left us. It will hang alongside your work. You brought great joy into so many artists' lives.
     

    Re: Chicago Says Farewell To Carlos Cortez

    I missed Carlos Cortez's memorial service. A blizzard intervened. I was all the way up in McHenry County. Instead, I did my duty as an elementary school head custodian and spent that Saturday digging out from the storm. I was out over 11 hours as the wind and the snow filled my work in behind me. Less than a week later, I was unemployed after 18 years on the job. My big mouth had offended a local big shot. Carlos would have laughed and asked me, "What did you expect, Fellow Worker"

    Carlos and I went back almost 35 years. He was Editor of the Industrial Worker and I a hippy grunt recruit. I learned a lot from him. Over the years I worked for him, we both worked together in a "Staff Collective" and eventually I was the editor and he the long-running collumnist of "Left Side."

    As a native Westerner, I also wore a big hat and sported a goatee. For a while we both worked together as janitors at a trade school. Everyone assumed we were father and son. They may not have been as wrong as biology may have indicated.

    When Carlos and Marrianne's appartment was being renovated, they statyed in the fouth floor walk-up apartment I shared with Kathleen Taylor at "Wobbly Towers." Later, when I was homeless and in disgrace, I stayed for months with the two of them enjoying long conversations and learning to drink strong coffee from tiny cups. Carlos even drew an illustration for my wedding anouncement.

    For me, Carlos was not a legendary figure, as he became for so many. He was my friend, my Fellow Worker, my drinking buddy. We could squabble over the content of the Industrial Worker without ever loosing that deep connection.

    I saw him mentor generations of Wobblies, as he did the wide eyed Chicano kids who came to him. He gave his life to both--his revolution and his art.

    His like will not be seen again. Farewell, Fellow Worker.

    Patrick Murfin,
    Crystal Lake, Illinois
     

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