Filtering by: culture

Ancestral Lights, Día de los Muertos Exhibition,
Oct
10
to Nov 27

Ancestral Lights, Día de los Muertos Exhibition,

  • Google Calendar ICS

Our Annual Día de los Muertos Exhibition, Ancestral Lights, is on view Thursday, October 10, 2019 - Wednesday, November 27, 2019.

Artists include:
Melanie Cervantes
Germs
Natalia Anciso
John Jairo Valencia
Juan R. Fuentes
Kalli Arte
Roberto Benavidez
Wakana Kimura
Maria Ramos
Adrienne DeVine
Mi Estori
Ezria Torres
Youth Committee
Zeal Harris
Altar for Carlos Zaragoza organized by his sister, Annette Zaragoza-Bilow
Alfredo Calderón
Yreina Cervantes
SOY Artista Virtual Reality Video Art in partnership with TechnoLatinx -to be featured on November 2nd Community
Boyle Heights Community Altar led by Ni Santas - will be featured on November 2nd

2019’S DÍA DE LOS MUERTOS IS GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY…

Senator Maria Elena Durazo 
Assemblymember Miguel Santiago 
Supervisor Hilda Solis 
Council District . 14
National Endowment for the Arts
Department of Cultural Affairs
Bank of America
Union Pacific Railroad
Oscar Health 
So Cal Edison 
ABC7
Hillsides 
Boyle Heights Community Market 
Jive Live
Kaiser Permanente




View Event →
45th Annual Día de los Muertos Celebration at Mendez HS
Nov
2
5:00 PM17:00

45th Annual Día de los Muertos Celebration at Mendez HS

shg dod 2018 1.jpg

45TH ANNUAL DÍA DE LOS MUERTOS MAIN CELEBRATION
MENDEZ LEARNING CENTER NOVEMBER 2ND, 2018

MUSIC | ART | ALTARS | WORKSHOPS | FACEPAINTING


Ceremonia tradicional | Puesto de Pintura de Calaca | Talleres para Niños
Traditional Procession | Procesión Tradicional
Meet at Mariachi Plaza at 4:30pm
Procession to Self Help Graphics starts at 5:00pm

FEATURING PERFORMANCES BY

The California Feetwarmers 
La Chamba
The Altons
Danza Chicomecoatl
Special Musical Appearance by El Teatro Campesino 
Mendez High School Marching Band

FEATURED LOCAL FOOD, ARTS & CRAFTS VENDORS

Butterflies and Hummingbirds, Casa Papalotl, Chano’s Elotes, Children of Venus, CJ’s Angels, Colorful Bones, De la Luna Designs, El Machete, Estefania Garcia, EVILLUSTRATIONS, Farm Fresh To You, Fiesta Mexicana, Genetic Windsongs, iniCreations, JDN73, Kalli Arte Collective, La Candelaria Candles, Lil’ Libros, Lov Struk, Luis Genaro Garcia, Mis Nopales Art, Muertitos Art Collective, Nectar Azul, NSRGNTS, Olvera St., PINetration, Social Machine Productions, Sol de Cobre, Tezozomoc Sandoval, The Zombie Movement, Xochipilli Visions, Xti’Artisan and many more! 

OFRENDAS | DONATIONS 

Please help us continue to keep this tradition FREE by donating to
Self Help Graphics at selfhelpgraphics.com/donate

ADDRESS

Felicitas and Gonzalo Mendez High School
1200 Plaza Del Sol, Boyle Heights, CA 90033
(directly across from Self Help Graphics & Art)

Use the Goldline Metro (Pico/Aliso Stop) – Limited Paid Parking On Site!

Traditional Ceremonial Blessing * Food and Craft Vendors
Face Painting * Children’s Workshops

CALACA ATTIRE ENCOURAGED
COME DRESSED IN YOUR BEST CALACA ATTIRE!

 

View Event →
Recent Research on Self Help Graphics & Art Founders: Presentation and Artist Panel
Jul
26
7:00 PM19:00

Recent Research on Self Help Graphics & Art Founders: Presentation and Artist Panel

Ibañez y Bueno-Novia del Pueblo.jpg

Kicking off the 45th Anniversary of Self Help Graphics & Art

Looking back at our founders

Scholar JV Decemvirale (UC Santa Barbara) has been researching the foundations of SHG with a focus on Sister Karen, Carlos Bueno and Antonio Ibanez over the past year. Working from artwork, the SHG archive, and interviews with artists and people close to them, JV will share his findings and then moderate a conversation with friends and collaborators of Carlos Bueno: 

  • Willie Herrón
  • Ricardo Munoz
  • Milton Jurado aka "MAJA"

This event is part of a series celebrating the 45th Anniversary of Self Help Graphics & Art

Bios:

Willie Herrón

Born in Los Angeles, Willie Herrón III's artistic career spans over forty years of national/internationally recognized performance and conceptual art, including music composition (member of Los Illegals and founder of ELA's Vex Club), as well as the design and execution of internationally recognized iconic world-class murals. Herrón was also one of the founding members of ASCO, the East Los Angeles based Chicano artists collective (1972 to 1987). 

His vast experience as an art restorer and conservator of public landmarks of cultural heritage have gained wide media attention as he completed six restorations of the historic 1984 Olympic Freeway Murals, Los Angeles 2012-2017, commissioned by the Mural Conservancy of Los Angeles.
Including the 1973 "Moratorium: the Black and White Mural" in Estrada Courts, Los Angeles 2016-2017.

Herrón’s artworks are seen in films, music performances and museums throughout the US and Europe. Recently in the exhibition "¡Murales Rebeldes!" at LA Plaza de Cultura y Artes, Los Angeles 2018,  "LA Raza" and "Chicano Males Unbonded" at the Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles 2018 and the new Whitney Museum, New York 2015. 
Examples of his work were included in "Asco: Elite of the Obscure, A Retrospective,1972-1987” at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) in 2011, at Williams College Museum of Art in Massachusetts (2012), Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA), the Museo Universitario de Arte Contemporáneo (MUAC),on the campus of the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) in MexicoCity, and at the Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago (2013).

Ricardo Munoz

Ricardo Munoz was born in Arizona, his family relocated to Los Angeles when he was 4yrs old.  All his schooling took place in Los Angeles, at the following schools:  Rowan Avenue School, Riggin Avenue School, Avenue 21 School, Nightingale Jr. High School, Franklin High School, UCLA, USC and UCLA Law School.  At UCLA he took an Art Appreciation course and an Art History course of Western Art from the Renaissance to the present.  Prior to taking the art courses he enjoyed looking at works of art he observed in books, museums and public places that included murals, sculptures, statues, graffiti and billboards.  After completing his schooling and becoming a lawyer his interest in art works was very much lifted when he took a job as a lawyer with Model Cities Center for Law & Justice.  This occurred because Self Help Graphics & Art also was a tenant in the same building as the Center for Law  & Justice.  SHG artists became friends of Center staff and some of them arranged to have their art works displayed in the Center's office space.  Carlos Bueno painted a beautiful mural entitled, " La Luna Conquista el Sol," in the Center's lobby. Ricardo Munoz visited with Carlos Bueno as he was painting the mural and this is how their friendship began. This really motivated Ricardo Munoz to collect art, so he in turn got his wife, Maria Teresa (Terry), interested in collecting art they could display in their home.  He and his wife's earnings did allow them to afford to do some collecting of art works over many years.  They developed friendships among many artists and Carlos Bueno was one of them who they so much liked.  He was their house guest the last four times he had shows in Los Angeles.  Terry's sister, Maria Elena, is in the same Franciscan Order that Sister Karen was in and they were close in their views of their roles as Sisters.  Sister Karen did come to the Munoz' home on occasion with Maria Elena to visit Maria Elena's and Terry's mother who lived with the Munoz family.  Sister Karen enjoyed seeing works by Carlos Bueno on the walls of the Munoz' home.  Ricardo and Terry Munoz have been and continue to be strong supporters of Chicano/ Latino visual arts programs and venues in the Los Angeles area.

Milton Jurado aka "MAJA"

Milton was born in Quito, Ecuador in 1953. He first came to California in 1972, where along with other Latino artists he helped start Self-Help Graphics in East Los Angeles. He joined other Mexican and Chicano artists such as Sister Karen Boccalero, Carlos Bueno and Antonio Ibanez to explore and promote a new kind of artistic expression. Due to his cultural background and traditions in Ecuador, Maja brought with him the knowledge of an art form not yet known to the artistic community in this hemisphere; namely, artistic sculptures made from the unlikely medium of everyday bread. Inexpensive and available everywhere, Maja was able to create miniature sculptures of human figures out of this most unexpected medium. Not surprisingly, these small creations found an audience in the local art scene. MAJA continues producing work today and was most recently included in two Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA exhibitions at Self Help Graphics & Art and Loft at Liz's. 

View Event →
Dec
14
7:00 PM19:00

Panel Discussion: Día de los Muertos - Cultural Appreciation or Appropriation?

Join Marietta Bernstorff, Consuelo Flores, and Lalo Alcaraz for a panel discussion around how Día de los Muertos' popularity has exploded in the last decade in the United States and globally. The celebration has become ubiquitous in Los Angeles and …

Join Marietta Bernstorff, Consuelo Flores, and Lalo Alcaraz for a panel discussion around how Día de los Muertos' popularity has exploded in the last decade in the United States and globally. The celebration has become ubiquitous in Los Angeles and across the country is a mix of traditions of remembrance, pop culture and commercialization. Self Help Graphics & Art's Day of the Dead celebration has been from its origin about innovation and the formation of a tradition that is rooted in the Chicano identity, not an exact replica of the Mexican tradition. In what ways has this evolution shaped the celebration north of the border and how is it influencing change in Mexican celebrations? Is this growth and popularization a positive appreciation of culture and what is the line between participation and appropriation?

This panel is presented as part of programming around Self Help Graphics' PST LA/LA exhibition, Día de los Muertos: A Cultural Legacy, Past, Present and Future, on view until February 24, 2018. Beginning at 6pm, prior to the panel, will be a guided tour of the exhibition. 

Panelists include:
Marietta Bernstorff
Consuelo G. Flores
Lalo Alcaraz

Marietta Bernstorff is a contributor to Self Help Graphics' catalog of Día de los Muertos: A Cultural Legacy, Past, Present and Future with her essay titled "Processes of Appropriation and the Transformation of Tradition in Day of the Dead Festivities" and has more than 30 years of experience in the arts, in both México and the United States. Bernstorff has been an artist, curator, teacher and director of numerous non profits and collectives in Arizona, California and Oaxaca. Currently she is curating a traveling exhibition for the Museum of Contemporary Art in Oaxaca (MACO) and is teaching at the international art workshops (Cultural Bridges) in Oaxaca 2017 - 2018.

Consuelo Flores is a multidisciplinary artist from East Los Angeles. She has an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Antioch University and is a member of Fierce Backbone Theater Company in Hollywood. She has written and directed three one-act plays at the Frida Kahlo Theater 10-Minute Play Festival in 2014 - 2016. As a poet, she's presented and performed her work throughout the US and Mexico. She is also known for her work for the Day of the Dead which includes literary altars, cultural tours, lectures on the traditional and contemporary history as well as detailed altars, and Day of the Dead fashions.

Lalo Alcaraz is a nationally syndicated editorial cartoonist of the daily comic strip "La Cucaracha", host of the Pocho Hour of Power radio show on LA's KPFK 90.7 FM, teaches illustration and comics, and is the author of books including "Migra Mouse" and "Latino USA: A Cartoon History". Most recently he has served as a writer and producer on "Bordertown" and as a cultural consultant to Pixar's "Coco". 

Tickets are FREE, but RSVP is kindly requested via Eventbrite.

View Event →
Día de los Muertos 2017 - 44th Annual Celebration
Nov
4
5:00 PM17:00

Día de los Muertos 2017 - 44th Annual Celebration

at Felicitas and Gonzalo Mendez High School
1200 Plaza Del Sol, Boyle Heights, CA 90033
(directly across from Self Help Graphics & Art)

Use the Goldline Metro (Pico/Aliso Stop) – Limited Paid Parking On Site!

Traditional Ceremonial Blessing * Food and Craft Vendors
Face Painting * Children’s Workshops

CALACA ATTIRE ENCOURAGED
Come dressed in your best Calaca attire!

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

PROCESSION INFO:
Meet at Mariachi Plaza Kiosko at 4PM
Begin procession to event grounds at 4:30PM

An accompanying exhibition is part of the Getty Foundation Initiative Pacific Standard Time (PST) LA/LA and co-curated by co-curated by Linda Vallejo and Dr. Betty Brown (Emeritus Professor of Art History, California State University Northridge). The exhibition will include a full color catalog with essays by project historians Dr. Betty Ann Brown, Dr. Karen Mary Davalos (Professor of Chicana/o Studies, Loyola Marymount University) and Mexican artist Nayla Altamirano (Mexico, D.F.).

View Event →
Moms, Dads & Grads Mercadito
May
6
12:00 PM12:00

Moms, Dads & Grads Mercadito

MOMS, DADS & GRADS MERCADITO
Saturday, May 6, 2017 | 12 - 5pm
#Art | #Artisans | #Demos | #Refreshments#Community | #Culture

Self Help Graphics & Art: 1300 East 1st Street, Los Angeles, 90033

Artisans and vendors include: 
Cantos De La Tierra
Xti' Artisan
Evillustrations
Farm Fresh To You
Sacred Earth Farms: Starseed Nursery
Butterflies and Hummingbirds
Botanica del Barrio
Yerberia Mayahuel
Urbanxic Mercadito
Luna Marina Creations
Balam Creations
Malinalli Superfoods


Demos:
1:00pm: Luna Marina Creations- Metalsmith (cutting, filing & sanding metal)
2:30pm: Ernesto Vasquez - Art: Printmaking

If you are interested in vending please email vendor@selfhelpgraphics.com

Supported by California Arts Council

View Event →