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store and, after the death of her mother, living with her sister in the family home; González never married. During summers she would travel in Mexico, gaining artistic inspiration. She developed a reputation as an eccentric in her hometown, often giving performances at which she would sing, dance,
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or read poetry. Later in life, González recalled that her art received little attention from her family, and she said that her sister expressed little interest in her poetry. González died in Del Rio, and is buried in its Sacred Heart
Cemetery.
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González is best known for her "filigree art", which took the hallmark intricate metalwork of traditional
Mexican jewelry as its inspiration. Her first attempts at creating art involved carving shell stone from the
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on paper or cardboard. Early drawings were in black on a white ground, sometimes with red, blue, or green ink added. During the last five years of her life she incorporated crayons and
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into her collection of tools, often using many more colors than before. She quite strongly believed that her inspiration was divine, and she incorporated many
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269:"Consuelo "Chelo" González Amezcua : Learn About The Artists : The Collection: The Anthony Petullo Collection of SELF-TAUGHT & OUTSIDER ART"
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in 1913. González received only six years of formal schooling, even though both of her parents were teachers. She wished to study art, and applied to
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into her work, which were always carefully planned out prior to execution. Otherwise her subjects were drawn largely from
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into elaborate designs, a practice which she began in 1956. Eight years later she turned to drawing, using a
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North
American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary
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207:. The 1968 exhibition led to others, both in the United States and in Mexico.
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birth. She was one of a number of Texan women of
Mexican descent, including
290:"Chelo Amezcua: Lush Inner Life in a Dry Border Town – Raw Vision Magazine"
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Several of her drawings are in the collection of the
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343:Jules Heller; Nancy G. Heller (19 December 2013).
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422:Chelo González Amezcua Papers, 1934-1976
371:"Artworks Search Results / American Art"
424:, from Texas Archival Resources Online.
243:MARIA-CRISTINA, GARCIA (15 June 2010).
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483:Mexican emigrants to the United States
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498:People from Piedras Negras, Coahuila
493:American writers of Mexican descent
488:American artists of Mexican descent
478:20th-century American women artists
468:20th-century American women writers
310:Gerard C. Wertkin (2 August 2004).
133:, to gain notice as a folk artist.
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314:Encyclopedia of American Folk Art
34:Consuelo (Chelo) González Amezcua
394:Notable Hispanic American Women
217:Smithsonian American Art Museum
205:Marion Koogler McNay Art Museum
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473:20th-century American artists
245:"GONZALEZ AMEZCUA, CONSUELO"
463:20th-century American poets
131:Alicia Dickerson Montemayor
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503:People from Del Rio, Texas
27:Mexican/ Texan folk artist
397:. VNR AG. pp. 183–.
197:American of Mexican birth
157:for a scholarship to the
107:Consuelo González Amezcua
211:Collections and exhibits
143:Piedras Negras, Coahuila
127:Beatrice Valdez Ximénez
448:Women outsider artists
318:. Routledge. pp.
47:Piedras Negras, Mexico
513:Writers from Coahuila
508:Artists from Coahuila
391:Diane Telgen (1993).
159:Academy of San Carlos
458:American women poets
518:Artists from Texas
528:Ballpoint pen art
404:978-0-8103-7578-9
356:978-1-135-63882-5
329:978-1-135-95615-8
201:Cantares y Poemas
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96:Outsider art
443:1975 deaths
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177:Pecos River
163:S. H. Kress
109:, known as
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223:References
141:Born in
92:Folk Art
85:Movement
147:Del Rio
123:Mexican
115:Chelito
76:Drawing
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399:ISBN
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170:Work
137:Life
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