PUBLIC ART FORUM: LONG BEACH, CA

The City of Long Beach Department of Parks, 
Recreation and Marine Mural & Cultural Arts Program is hosting:
 
October is Arts Month
FREE! Public Art Forum
Sunday, October 11th from 3pm – 5pm

Location:
Sterns Champions Park
Community Center
4520 East 23rd Street
Long Beach, CA 90815
(562) 570-1685

We will be discussing the creation, maintenance and community/private or city/state government ownership of public art.  The pros, cons of community art, who decides on the artists, funding for projects, local artists versus a regional, state, national, international call for artists, etc.

Artist Panel Includes: 
Man One
Elliot Pinkney
SwissPrecise (aka Kenneth S Cassidy)

MODERATOR: Craig Cree Stone
is a Professor of Art in Public Practice and the Director of the American Indian Studies Program at CSULB. Known for his public artworks that often incorporate the use of shadows to allude to the history and activities of the area where they are located, Stone’s art in the public sphere is located throughout Southern California.  Ranging from a block-long building in the fashion District of Los Angeles to a park atop a hill in Signal Hill, to the entrance to City Hall in Manhattan Beach, a building lobby constructed as an artwork to a street long project entitled, Shadows Casting on the Shore, (1995) that is literally permanent “street art” where images of shadows extend from the parking meters along Second Street in Belmont Shore, on the sidewalks and up the walls of buildings. His most recent effort entitled: Image Emergence: Promenade of Clouds (2011) consists of the design of a plaza including five large sculptures for the first block of the Promenade in Long Beach.

For more information please contact:
Heather Green, Cultural Supervisor
Heather.Green@longbeach.gov

 

MUSEUM OF LATIN AMERICAN ART

SOMEWHERE OVER EL ARCO IRIS: CHICANO LANDSCAPES; 1971 - 2015 September 19 through November 15, 2015

I am currently showing at this wonderful group exhibition at MOLAA (Long Beach, CA) curated by Julian Bermudez. 

My piece "ALIENATION" 48" x 96" aerosol and acrylic on wood panel. 2015Courtesy of Castulo de la Rocha/AltaMed Art Collection

My piece "ALIENATION" 48" x 96" aerosol and acrylic on wood panel. 2015
Courtesy of Castulo de la Rocha/AltaMed Art Collection

MOLAA’s first exhibition to present works solely by Southern California-based Chicano artists, introduces audiences to this unique school of American art through a series of landscapes spanning 40 years. The exhibition features paintings, drawings, photographs, mixed media works and rare studies by artists such as Carlos Almaraz, Yolanda González, Gronk, Wayne Alaniz Healy, Ramses Noriega, Frank Romero, Jamex and Einar de la Torre, John Valadez, Patssi Valdez, Shizu Saldamando, Roberto Gutíerrez, Jose Ramirez, and Ana Serrano. In addition, street artists Man One, Jaime “Germs” Zacarias, Vyal Reyes, and Johnny KMDZ Rodriguez have been invited to create new, original artworks—inspired by some of the works on view in the exhibition—to convey the breadth and relevance of today’s Chicano art.

Here are some pics from opening night but there is much more to enjoy in person.

*Extended through January 31st, 2016!

MAN ONE IN TULSA

Although painting in hot, humid, and thunderstorm conditions of up to 110 on the heat index is not one of my specialties, I was able to get a nice production done over a couple days last week while visiting Tulsa, Oklahoma. Thanks to @JakeBson (aka YoMoms) for teaming up with me and getting this wall for us!

Source: http://www.manone.com/

TIA CHUCHA'S AUCTION: ¡ANGELIN@S PRESENTE!

Tía Chucha’s Centro Cultural – the renowned nonprofit cultural center and independent bookstore from the Northeast San Fernando Valley – will be hosting an Angelino all-star benefit concert, poetry reading, and art auction, to honor and celebrate Los Angeles and its new Poet Laureate, Luis Javier Rodriguez who was recently appointed by Mayor Eric Garcetti. 

Sunday, June 28, 2015, 2-7PM at the Pico House, El Pueblo de Los Ángeles Historical Monument, Olvera Street - the birthplace of Los Angeles - 424 North Main Street, LA, CA 90012. The event is in partnership with the Mexican Cultural Institute, Los Angeles, (MCI).

The iconic rainbow cast and crew includes East LA’s Grammy winners Quetzal Flores and 

Martha Gonzalez from the Chicano rock, Afro-Latin, Mexican Son Jarocho band, Quetzal, performing their stirring, politically charged anthems; LA rock legends John Densmore, founding member and drummer for the Doors and East LA’s Rubén “Funkahuatl” Guevara, co-founder with Frank Zappa of the second incarnation of Ruben & The Jets, will perform together in a spoken word/percussion duet; LA Japanese American legendary performer, Nobuko Miyamoto, founder of the multicultural performance group Great Leap will perform along with the dynamic “Atomic” Nancy Matoba formerly with Hiroshima and current long time singer with the First AME Gospel Choir. They will be joined by Quetzal Flores and Martha Gonzalez for a new soulful fusion of Mexican Son Jarocho and traditional Japanese folk music called FandangObon, along with Chicano “Demon Drummer” Maceo Hernández, formerly with the highly acclaimed Japanese taiko group Za Ondekoza, and founding member of East L.A. Taiko. Plus, the Godfather of Latino Hip Hop, Mellow Man Ace, will make a special guest appearance for the finale of the all-star concert.

A reading by some of LA’s most powerful poets celebrating our City of Angels include:

Hometown hero, Poet Laureate and award winning author and life survivor, Luis J. Rodriguez along with Luivette Resto, traci kato-kiriyama, Mike the Poet,and Peter J. Harris.

World renowned trailblazers of collectable LA Chican@ Art include: Carlos Almaraz, 

Judithe Hernández, Margaret Garcia, Gilbert “Magu” Luján, John Valadez, Wayne Alaniz Healy, David Botello, Willie F. Herrón III, Ofelia Esparza, Eloy Torrez, Barbara Carrasco,

José Antonio Aguirre, and Arturo Urista, 

Other emerging giants including: 

Sonia Romero, Shizu Saldamando, Sandy Rodriguez, Jaime “Germs” Zacarias, Wenceslao Quiroz, Daniel Gonzalez, Raul Paulino Baltazar, José Lozano, Emilia García, Rick Ortega, Mario Trillo, Lilia Ramirez, and Gabriela Malinalxochitl Zapata; 

Urban Contemporary Graffiti Art by: 

Chaz Bojórquez, Man One, Vyal Reyes, and Nuke One; 

Fine Art Prints by: Richard Duardo/Modern Multiples, Francesco X. Siquieros/El Nopal Press, and José Alpuche/Self Help Graphics & Art; 

Photography by: George Rodriguez, Mike Murase, Rafael Cardenas, and Vicente Mercado. 

Auctioneer will be Herbert Siguenza of Culture Clash.

Reception/Silent Auction: 2-3:30 

Poetry Reading: 3:30-4 

Live Auction: 4-5:30 

Concert: 5:30 6:30

$25 prepay, $30 day of - includes 1 beverage and appetizers. 

For tickets:  http://www.eventbrite.com/e/angelins-presente-tickets-17033124534

Tía Chucha's co-founders, Luis & Trini Rodríguez, are life-long activists for community, youth, the arts, and inner-core transformative work with disaffected and neglected communities. A former gang member, drug addict & alcoholic, Luis changed his life to contribute to a new imagination about relationships and how to manage resources to achieve true equity, social justice, and healthy lives on a healthy earth.  His writings have been widely acclaimed, including his best seller, Always Running, La Vida Loca, Gang Days in LA and the highly recommended Hearts & Hands: Creating Community in Violent Times. His wife Trini, grew up in a large Mexican working class family in Pacoima, and through tapping into the power of education, political and spiritual development has become a dedicatedcommunity leader and mentor to many in the Northeast San Fernando Valley.

Tía Chucha’s is a cultural complex that includes a bookstore, art gallery internet, performance space, and workshop center that has been in the community of Sylmar for more than fourteen years. In that time, writers such as Sandra Cisneros and Victor Villaseñor have read there along with performances by Culture Clash, Lalo Alcaraz, Quetzal, the late Lalo Guerrero, and many other musicians, theater groups, comedians, artists, writers, and community leaders. Tía Chucha’s Centro Cultural is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization.


Man One x Hola Mexico Film Festival 2015

In support of the Hola Mexico Film Festival, I have created an installation/exhibit at 

Grand Central Market 

317 S. Broadway in Downtown LA, CA 90013 

(Hill St. 

entrance)

 It is currently up and running thru May 17th, 2015.

All photo credit: 

Alejandro Ibarra 

The theme of the installation is "Mexican Cinema" and includes portrait paintings 

of iconic figures in Mexican cinema 

like 

Maria Felix, El Santo, Cantinflas, and others as 

well as hand painted movie reels that will look cool in any home or office.

 

 

Check out this short video shot by my boy Reggie Reagor of our opening night event:

Find out more about the film festival by clicking here:

www.HolaMexicoFF.com

Thanks to Samuel Douek for making this possible!

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