Tag Archives: Teddy Sandoval

ENTRE TINTA Y LUCHA — SELF HELP GRAPHICS & ART RETROSPECTIVE

ENTRE TINTA Y LUCHA—“between ink and protest”—is an exhibition of fine art prints covering forty-five years of art and graphic design from Self Help Graphics & Art,* the East Los Angeles organization dedicated to the “production, interpretation, and distribution of prints and other art media by Chicana/o and Latina/o artists.”

Seen as a descendant of Mexico City’s Taller de Gráfica Popular (founded in 1937), Self Help was incorporated as a non-profit in Boyle Heights in 1973 by Sister Karen Boccalero and the artists Carlos Bueno, Antonio Ibañez, and Frank Hernandez.

The collective’s “disciplinary, intergenerational programs” continue to promote “artistic excellence and empower community by providing access to working space, tools, and training.”*

ENTRE TINTA Y LUCHA—

45 YEARS OF SELF HELP GRAPHICS & ART

Opening January 31, from 6 pm to 8 pm.

Exhibition runs through March 9.

Todd Madigan Gallery, CSUB 

9001 Stockdale Highway, Bakersfield.

Artists in the exhibition include William Acedo, Margaret Alarcon, Judy Baca, Sandow Birk, Sister Karen BoccaleroChaz Bojorquez, Barbara Carrasco, Yreina Cervantez, Lawerence Colación, Sam Coronado, Alfredo de Batuc, Roberto Delgado, Victoria Delgadillo, Alex Donis, Richard Duardo, Felipe Ehrenberg, Enik One, Luis Genaro Garcia and Lilia Ramirez, Mark Steven Greenfield, Dolores Guerrero-Cruz, Gronk, Miles Hamada, Wayne Healy, Ester Hernandez, Bernard Stanley Hoyes, Jean LaMarr, Leo Limon, Alma Lopez, Jose Lozano, El Mac, Dalila Paola Mendez, Willie R. Middlebrook, Delilah Montoya, Malaquias Montoya, Eduardo Oropeza, Raymond Pettibon, Miguel Angel Reyes, Frank Romero, Sonia Romero, Favianna Rodriguez, Shizu Saldamando, Teddy Sandoval, Miyo Stevens-Gandara, Joey Terrill, Eloy Torrez, Peter Tovar, John Valadez, Patssi Valdez, Vincent Valdez, Linda Vallejo, Lawrence M. Yanez, Ernesto Yerena, and Jaime (Germs) Zacarias.

From top: Joey Terrill, Remembrance, 2008, serigraph; Jean Lamarr, Some Kind of Buckaroo, 1990, serigraph; Ester HernandezLa Ofrenda, 1988, serigraph; Chaz BojorquezNew World Order, 1994, serigraph; Wayne Healy, Bolero Familiar, 2002, serigraph.

AXIS MUNDO

AXIS MUNDO—QUEER NETWORKS IN CHICANO L.A. is a PST: LA/LA exhibition exploring the links between queer Chicano artists and their collaborators from the late 1960s to the early 1990s.

Paintings, drawings, videos, artists’ magazines, mail art, flyers, and other ephemera by Skot Armstrong, Vaginal Davis, Mundo Meza, Tomata du Plenty, Teddy Sandoval (Butch Gardens School of Art), Joey Terrill, Jack Vargas (Le Club for Boys), and more are on view at MOCA Pacific Design Center and the ONE Archives Gallery through the end of the year.

AXIS MUNDO is organized by David Evans Frantz and C. Ondine Chavoya, in collaboration with MOCA, Los Angeles.

AXIS MUNDO—QUEER NETWORKS IN CHICANO L.A., through December 31.

MOCA PACIFIC DESIGN CENTER, 8687 Melrose Avenue, West Hollywood.

ONE ARCHIVES GALLERY, 9007 Melrose Avenue, West Hollywood.

moca.org/exhibition/axis-mundo-queer-networks-in-chicano-la

one.usc.edu/axis-mundo/

For more on the ONE Archives Foundation, see:

onearchives.org/

Patssi Valdez, Portrait of Sylvia Delgado, circa early 1980s. Hand-painted photograph with ink and pastel, 20 x 36 in. (50.8 x 91.4 cm). Courtesy of Patssi Valdez. Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber.

Harry Gamboa Jr., Roberto Gil de Montes, 1978. Gil de Montes shown with his work Tongue Tied in the No Movie exhibition at LACE, May 2–31, 1978. Chromogenic print, 14 x 11 in. (35.6 x 27.9 cm). © 1978, Harry Gamboa Jr.

Gerardo Velázquez, The Neglected Martyr, 1990. Acrylic on canvas, 80 x 66¼ in. (203.2 x 168.3 cm). Gift of the Nervous Gender Archive to the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the USC Libraries. Photograph by Fredrik Nilsen.

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