NPR for Northern Colorado

Platform Americas: Filmmaker Denise Soler Cox; Artist Dmitri Obergfell

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“Being Ñ” filmmakers Denise Soler Cox and Henry Ansbacher";s:3
Andrea Flanagan

Episode 2 of Platform Americas is all about the immigrant experience and identity. Filmmaker Denise Soler Cox talks about the unique identity of the “ñ,” American-born children of at least one parent from a Spanish-speaking country. Then we visit Dmitri Obergfell, a multimedia artist exploring his roots -- and his tenuous relationship with his estranged Mexican father -- through a unique, layered exhibition at the Denver Art Museum.

Denver’s Denise Soler Cox: Her story of “never being Latina enough, and never being American enough, is the subject of the documentary, “Being Ñ.”
Credit Andrea Flanagan

Part One: Denise Soler Cox

Filmmaker Denise Soler Cox is spearheading a movement to help 16 million Latin Americans come to terms with their mixed identities. She talks with Platform Americas co-host Ray Rinaldi about her film, Being Ñ.

Interview Highlights

On being a child of two cultures: "I never felt Puerto Rican enough for my Puerto Rican family and friends, and never felt American enough for the mainstream culture that I grew up in. And that night, I realized, wow, we’re actually all the same." 

On growing up Latina in a white, suburban school: "They called me, 'Spic.' They had no idea I no longer cared. I used to think, ‘I wish they’d call me something that would actually hurt, like "liar."'"

On being Latino in the age of Trump: "I was kicked out of an Uber two days before the election … because the driver didn’t like the subject of my film."

On the identity crisis of Latina teenagers: "Compared to black and white teens, Latina teenagers have the highest attempted suicide rates...This has become personal to me. This is my mission."

Additional Resources

Dmitri Obergfell, Federal Fashion Mart, 2016.
Credit Dmitri Obergfell / Denver Art Museum

Part Two: Dmitri Obergfell

Multimedia artist Dmitri Obergfell explores his mixed identity through an edgy art exhibit that mimics life in a local Latino neighborhood. 

Dmitri Obergfell at the Denver Art Museum
Credit Denver Art Museum

Interview Highlights

On a t-shirt with an image of a coyote, a clue to understanding “Federal Fashion Mart,” his installation: "My father was brought to the United States illegally by a coyote. And then on the back of the shirt there's a map of Mexico and the western United States. There's a little dotted line in the style of cartoon character coyote….This is the key to the exhibition, that really unlocks the whole the thing."

On his American mother: "My mother met my father on a horse racing track; my mother trained race horses. So I spent a good portion of my early childhood, up until I was 16, on horse racing tracks getting exposed to immigrant culture as well as horse racing culture, which is a whole thing in and of itself."

Additional Resources

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