Excerpt:
...It was thanks to Sue Paull,
Coordinator of Long Bay Prison’s Boom Gate Gallery in
Sydney, Australia, that I had the pleasure of ‘discovering’
the constructions of Javier Lara-Gomez. I was introduced
to Sue in May ‘99 at an Art Brut exhibition and a few
weeks later made the trip down from my home in the Blue
Mountains to Long Bay Prison, south of the city. Lara-Gomez’
work was being stored in a small unused gate house,
laid out on tables and carefully covered with sheets.
When Sue began pulling the sheets away I felt the proverbial
chills at the sight of three rows of amazing buildings,
twenty-two in total.
Lara-Gomez worked with found
materials – cardboard, paper, bread ties, venetian blinds,
buttons, plastic spoons, plastic packaging, costume
jewelry, fan grills, bits of broom – anything he could
find in the prison complex.
The constructions measured, on average, 50 cm wide by
70 cm long and 40 cm high, about the size of a doll
house. The craft was superb: every piece joined to the
next with the precision one finds in old cabinets. The
roofs of most of the buildings could be lifted to reveal
their interiors, and all were illuminated with small
electric lights. Lara-Gomez started work on his constructions
at lock-up time, four p.m. and worked until the early
hours of the morning. Because he was not allowed to
have tools in his cell he would cut out and prepare
each section of the buildings in the prison’s art class,
then glue them together at night. He could get by with
just a few hours of sleep.