Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ochoa became involved with Chicano activism while he was in college. In April 1970, he saw fliers at the City College Student Center for a park take-over for what would later become Chicano Park. [7] Ochoa recalls leaving class to go to the protest. [7] He and other artists added their own stamp to the protest by starting murals on the park. [11]
Irma Patricia Aguayo, also known as Patricia Aguayo, is a Chicano Park muralist and longtime activist. She was born and raised in San Diego, California.Both of her parents are from Mexico and she grew up in a Mexican culture household but was told by her parents that in order to succeed in America to act American outside her house.
Murals inside the women's public restroom at Chicano Park, Barrio Logan, 2024. Murals on Chicano Park public bathrooms, 2024. The Chicano Park Museum and Cultural Center in Logan Heights, San Diego, had its grand opening on October 8, 2022, with their pillar exhibit: Stories of Resilience and Self-Determination. [25]
The City Clerks Archives joined forces with Chicano park and its artists to showcase an exhibit titled, “Telling Our Stories and Preserving Our Histories: The Chicano Movement in San Diego.” According to an article on the event, it featured photographs of San Diego city records and newspaper articles that helped tell the story of the ...
Chicano Art: Resistance and Affirmation (or CARA) was a traveling exhibit of Chicano/a artists which toured the United States from 1990 through 1993. [1] CARA visited ten major cities and featured over 128 individual works by about 180 different Chicano/a artists. [2] The show was also intended to visit Madrid and Mexico City. [3]
Bardo Martinez of Chicano Batman, Lila Downs, Divino Niño, Arath Herce, Victor Internet and Loyal Lobos have signed management deals with Cosmica Artists. The indie record label and company ...
Salvador Roberto Torres (born July 3, 1936) is a Chicano artist and muralist and an early exponent of the Chicano art movement. He was one of the creators of Chicano Park, and led the movement to create its freeway-pillar murals. [1] He was also a founder of the Centro Cultural de la Raza in San Diego, California.
Carmen Linares-Kalo is an indigenous mural artist and fourth-generation spiritualist and practitioner of the Uto Nahua Mexica/Aztec traditions. [1] She is based in San Diego and most known for her work on a mural located in Chicano Park in honor of the Kumeyaay people.