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Tuesday, December 24, 2024 |
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Aztlán exhibition showcases the Garcia Collection |
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Much of the Garcia Collection is rooted in the Chicano movement of East Los Angeles in the late 1960s, which spawned groundbreaking activist art and a renewed pride in Hispanic culture and heritage.
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CLAREMONT, CA.- The Claremont Lewis Museum of Art exhibition Home in Aztlán: The Garcia Collection of Chicanx Art will showcase artwork by some of the most important Chicanx artists of the last 50 years. The Garcias Claremont home is filled with a diverse range of works that reflect their commitment to supporting artists and building community.
Home in Aztlán celebrates the beauty and power of Chicanx creativity in Southern California, despite the challenges posed by exclusionary forces that have sought to deny Chicanx people their rightful place in art history and in this land.
The exhibition will open with a reception on Saturday, December 7 from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. featuring jazz by "Homero Chavez Y Una Noche". Home in Aztlán, sponsored by Epic Design Build Inc, Carol Holder and John Mallinckrodt, will remain on view through March 23, 2025.
The Museum, located in the historic Claremont Depot at 200 W. First Street next to the Metrolink Station, is open Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, from noon to 4 p.m. Admission is free every Friday.
The Exhibition
Much of the Garcia Collection is rooted in the Chicano movement of East Los Angeles in the late 1960s, which spawned groundbreaking activist art and a renewed pride in Hispanic culture and heritage. The collection includes several artists from the seminal art collectives of 1970s East L.A.: Los Four and Asco.
The Chicano movement used the concept of Aztlán (the pre-colonial ancestral home of the Mexican people encompassing the American Southwest) as a symbol of cultural pride and geographic sovereignty. This movement/community has important historical ties to Claremont and the Pomona Valley throughout ancient and modern history. In addition to this region being located within Aztlán, in the twentieth century, the Mexican muralists Jose Clemente Orozco and Alfredo Ramos Martinez completed murals at the Claremont Colleges in the 1930s and 40s that have yielded global influence. Jackson Pollack regarded Orozcos Prometheus mural at Pomona College as one of the most important works of modern art in North America.
In 1970, Hal Glicksman curated the first exhibition of Chicanx graffiti art at Pomona College, entitled Chicano Graffiti. One of the visitors to that exhibition was a young Gilbert Magu Lujan. Magu would go on to attend graduate school at the University of California, Irvine, where he worked with Hal Glicksman. Glicksman mentored Magu in curatorial practice, leading to Magu organizing the first Los Four exhibition in 1973 which featured work by the founding members of Los Four: Magu, Carlos Almaraz, Beto de la Rocha and Frank Romero (Judithe Hernandez became the fifth member in 1974). The exhibition traveled to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1974.
Frank Garcias local legacy is strongly rooted in the annual exhibition he curated at the dA Center for the Arts in Pomona entitled Return to Aztlán. Garcia organized the first exhibition with the help of Magu and painter Margaret Garcia in 2003. For 17 years, Return to Aztlán celebrated the rich local Hispanic community of artists and proved to be tremendously popular. The exhibition featured many of the artists who make up the current Garcia collection.
Home in Aztlán will include artists Carlos Almaraz, Guillermo Bejarano, David Botello, Paul Botello, David Flury, Margaret Garcia, Linda Garcia-Dahle, Sandy Garcia, Wayne Healy, Jose Lozano, Gilbert Magu Luján, Glugio Gronk Nicandro, Sergio Rebia, Frank Romero, John Valadez, Jaime Germs Zacarias and Marco Zamora.
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