# 4968-72 - 2015 First-Class Forever Stamp - Martin Ramirez (1895-1963)
Birth Of MartÃn RamÃrez
RamÃrez came to America in 1925 seeking a better life. Instead he faced more hardship. Jobs were difficult to find in California during the Great Depression, and being unable to speak English further reduced his chances of finding work.
Ramirez worked on the railroads for five years, but was eventually unemployed. When RamÃrez was found homeless and did not speak, he was sent to a hospital. Diagnosed as a schizophrenic, RamÃrez became a lifelong resident of DeWitt State Hospital. It was there he created art from discarded and improvised materials.
RamÃrez used a number of unusual art supplies – fruit juice, shoe polish, junk mail, paper bags, and examining table paper. To make a surface large enough for his drawings, he glued scraps of discarded paper together using mashed potatoes and saliva. The collage of paper became not only the canvas for his work, but many times was incorporated into the design. Advertisements from car companies and pictures cut from magazines became part of his art. He improvised for additional supplies as well, crushing crayons in homemade pots to make paint.
The art that resulted from these primitive supplies was surprisingly skillful and intricate. RamÃrez showed the skill of a draftsman with his parallel lines and curves. He repeated his patterns precisely on large-scale pieces. Even though RamÃrez spent most of his adult life in the United States, much of his work seems to reflect memories of Mexico. He also frequently portrayed images of automobiles, highways, and trains, reminiscent of the industrialized nation he encountered upon moving to the US in 1925. With recurring themes of religious symbols, burros, and trains, RamÃrez’s paintings used perspective and patterns to make masterpieces of which only the artist himself knew the true meaning.
Birth Of MartÃn RamÃrez
RamÃrez came to America in 1925 seeking a better life. Instead he faced more hardship. Jobs were difficult to find in California during the Great Depression, and being unable to speak English further reduced his chances of finding work.
Ramirez worked on the railroads for five years, but was eventually unemployed. When RamÃrez was found homeless and did not speak, he was sent to a hospital. Diagnosed as a schizophrenic, RamÃrez became a lifelong resident of DeWitt State Hospital. It was there he created art from discarded and improvised materials.
RamÃrez used a number of unusual art supplies – fruit juice, shoe polish, junk mail, paper bags, and examining table paper. To make a surface large enough for his drawings, he glued scraps of discarded paper together using mashed potatoes and saliva. The collage of paper became not only the canvas for his work, but many times was incorporated into the design. Advertisements from car companies and pictures cut from magazines became part of his art. He improvised for additional supplies as well, crushing crayons in homemade pots to make paint.
The art that resulted from these primitive supplies was surprisingly skillful and intricate. RamÃrez showed the skill of a draftsman with his parallel lines and curves. He repeated his patterns precisely on large-scale pieces. Even though RamÃrez spent most of his adult life in the United States, much of his work seems to reflect memories of Mexico. He also frequently portrayed images of automobiles, highways, and trains, reminiscent of the industrialized nation he encountered upon moving to the US in 1925. With recurring themes of religious symbols, burros, and trains, RamÃrez’s paintings used perspective and patterns to make masterpieces of which only the artist himself knew the true meaning.