Blog powered by TypePad

« April 2005 | Main | June 2005 »

6 posts from May 2005

May 29, 2005

Heading to Tokyo, Japan

Yo_japan_1
I will be traveling to Tokyo this coming June 4th, it's my first time in Japan. I will be participating in the Yo! What Happened to Peace exhibit that will run from June 10th to June 26th. The show will be hosted by the Parco Museum space. This is a significant place to show because it is the place where the show began. The show has grown tenfold in size 2 years.

Check back in with this BLOG for reports from Tokyo!!!

The show features handcrafted prints by: Joseph Ari Aloi/JK5, Ames Bros, Christian Azul/Aerosol Warfare, Jon-Paul Bail, Jesus Barraza, Chaz Bojorquez, Roger Bova, Glenn Brooks, Sean Brown, Buff Monster, Bughouse, Colin Burns, , Freddi C, Matt Campbell, John Carr, Ben Collison, Edward Colver, Robbie Conal, Jared Connor, Josh MacPhee/Counterproductive Industries, Jeff Czekaj, Mike Davison, Jerome "G" Demuth, Evil Design, Ron Donovan/Firehouse, Doze, Eric Drooker, Dave Ellis, EMEK, Mike Estano, Brandy Flower, Shepard Fairey/OBEY, Peter Claver Fine, Karen Fiorito, Forkscrew Graphics, Manena Frazier, Futura, Genevieve Gauckler, Kyle Goen, GONZO247/Aerosol Warfare, Hugh Gran, Tiger J. Gushue, Peter Hamlin, Kenji Hirata, Gary Houston/Voodoo Catbox, Marc Lepson, Lucky Bunny Visual Communications, Luba Lukova, Mika Machida, Jaime Macias, Kayrock & Wolfy, Magmo the Destroyer, Malleus, Man One, Poli Marichal, David Mashburn, Mear One, John Miner, Douglas Minkler, Minwin, Claude Moller, Nayce, Ray Noland/CRO, Melina Rodrigo, Artemio Rodriguez, Favianna Rodriguez, Christopher Rubino, Davi Russo, Christopher Ryan, Jennifer Schmidt, Scope, Seripop, Yuri Shimojo, Alex Skramble, Winston Smith, Roger Spence, Graphonic, Chuck Sperry/Firehouse, Seth Tobocman, Todo Design, Trase One, Gustavo Alberto Garcia Vaca, Mark Vallen, Kiku Yamaguchi, Zara and more...

Estria illustrates new MEDIA JUSTICE poster

Estria illustrated new MEDIA JUSTICE poster
In time for the Free Press Media Conference this past May 13-15th in St. Louis, Estria Miyashiro designed this poster for Third World Majority. Third World Majority (TWM) is a new media training and production resource center run by a collective of young women of color dedicated to developing new media practices that affect global justice and social change. They commissioned Tumi's to design a poster about the control of media by corporate giants and our right to have self determination through Media Justice. There are actually very few posters that deal with this theme, and there definitely are VERY FEW that depict women of color. Back in 2003, I designed TWM's first Media Justice poster that read, "From the Celly to the Telly, Media Justice Now!" But now it was time for a new flavor. This poster is available for sale, contact Third World Majority.

May 19, 2005

Panteon Rococo Celebrates 10 Years

Poster2 While I was in Mexico City in April of this year, I was introduced to the Chilango band PANTEON ROCOCO. Their music is a mixture of reggae, ska, and rock en español. This May 14th the band celebrated its 10th Anniversary at El Faro de Oriente, the same cultural center where I taught a silkscreening workshop.

The band formed in March 1995, performing in La Faena, a bar located in the Centro Historico. Early on, their music was influenced by latin rhythms. Their lyrics reflected experimentation and the struggles of the EZLN, who had launched their call to action in 1994.

Six months ago the Panteon Rococo approached El Faro de Oriente requesting to use their facilities for their 10th anniversary celebration. El Faro told the band that not only could they use their space, but that the artists of El Faro would collaborate to produce an arts festival. In this festival, all the artists from the different workshops (paper mache, silkscreening, dance, paiting, singing) would lend their respective talents to produce the event. This sense of collectiveness changed the way folks organize in party and redefined what it means to throw an event.

The paper mache (cartonería) workshop committed to build HUGE oversized calavaras (skeletons). I captured this process with photos. Over 100 students came daily to build arms, rib cages, or skeleton heads. The skeletons measured over 40 feet in height and were placed on the stage. The silkscreen class helped me brainstorm ideas for the event poster, which is pictured here.

I made a deal with the Panteon Rococo. I told them I really wanted our silkscreening studio in Oakland (Taller Tupac Amaru) to start designing rock posters for Rock en Español bands, Ska bands... bands that had a progressive message in Spanish. I want our Taller to be the Chicano version of Firehouse Posters in San Francisco. Firehouse produces some of the tightest rock posters for bands including Smashing Pumpinks and Red Hot Chili Peppers. Anyway, they agreed and I completed the design while I was in Mexico City. Since we didn't have the inks nor the resources to silkscreen the poster at El Faro, I waited until I returned home to the Bay Area on May 3rd. I finalized the design the weekend of May 6th & 7th, and I would say that in total I put 10 hours into the design. I also busted out the separations for each color that weekend and that took me another 10 hours, it was hard work. The registration was super tight so I had to use a light table to paste together each color. I designed the poster in Adobe Illustrator and then separated each color as a layer in Illustrator. I then increased the trapping for each color by a 1/8 th on an inch.

Jesus and I started printing on Monday nite @ 6pm and we ran the yellow and the orange that same nite. On Tuesday (May 9) nite, we ran the remaining three colors (pink, blue, purple) so that we could ship the package for 2 day delivery to Mexico City. The poster arrived that Friday May 13th and the next day they were present at the actual 10th Anniversary event! My students sold the posters at $10 each at the concert and raised about $400 dollars for their inks. While I was there, I introduced them to water based inks so that they could use them instead of the oil based inks, which are not only toxic themselves, but require ultra toxic liquids to clean up, like thinner and xylene. So they are saving up enough cash, about $800-$1000 to buy themselves 20 gallons of a variety of colors to print their posters. The silkscreening class at El Faro is our sister taller, and together we named it Taller Xolotl.

Welfare Poets launch their new album at the Malcolm X Jazz Arts Festival

The Welfare Poets (New York) will perform songs from their newest album, RHYMES FOR TREASON, at this Saturday's May 21 Malcolm X Jazz Arts Festivalin Oaktown, Cali. I interviewed five of the Welfare Poets on Hardknock Radio this Wednesday May 19th. It was a great interview and the show will be available soon on this site. Click here to hear Sak Pase, a song about the Haitian revolution...perhaps my favorite song on the album

Mind-Stirring! Inspirational! Heart-Thumping! The socio-political collective have compiled a 14-track
lyrical masterpiece entitled Rhymes for Treason. Following the release of their successful first album, Project Blues, in 2000, Rhymes for Treason promises once again to deliver transformative, thought-provoking lyrics with Afro-Caribbean beats, Hip Hop, funk and jazz.

Haiti, Vieques, Iraq, the current state of Hip Hop, and the role of the media in today's society are only a few of the issues that have been given a voice in the new album. Rhymes for Treason is not only information and inspiration, charging America with hypocrisy in its brand of democracy and its attempts at capitalist globalization, but it is also an indictment on the continuing erosion of our civil liberties, evident in the passage of laws like the Patriot Act(s) and the Anti-Terrorism Bill. "Our work is to bring information and inspiration to the welfanos of the world living under a system where we don't fare too well in order to collectively determine our shared future," said the Welfare Poets.

May 14, 2005

Anti-Violence Poster on the Metro

Anti-Violence Poster on the Metro

When I was in Mexico City back in April, I was very inspired by their aesthetic for Graphic Design. I was also pleased to see how the Metro (subway) system in the city is a place used to display art, political posters...to an audience of over 1 million daily passengers, most of them working class Mexican citizens. While riding the metro, I saw art exhibits at key transfer stations, I saw fliers announcing the historic march in support of Lopez Obrador on 4/24 (which pulled over 1.2 million people) and posters such as this one against domestic violence. As a political poster artist, it is important for me to remind myself of ways to develop art that speaks to a mass base of people, so that my the art becomes something functional and not something to be purchased and sold. My posters don¹t belong in galleries, they belong in schools, in the streets. Art in this country is commodified and transformed into something for commercial consumption. Our role as artists is to use our art to transform and inform a radical consciousness and to move the people.

May 06, 2005

Mi sistah Yazmin Hernandez (NYC) discusses her art in the Village Voice

Yasmin
Young Puerto Rican’s painting is a stroke for justice
By Ronda Kaysen

“I want to scare people into doing something,” said Yasmin Hernandez, sipping a cup of peppermint tea at Colonial Café on E. Houston St. “With technology and the media, we’re socialized to be complacent people. We’re socialized not to react or to know how to react. I want my art to challenge complacency.”

Hernandez, a 29-year-old, Puerto Rican native New Yorker with huge, almond eyes and thick tresses of curly black hair, does not – at first glance – look like a political activist. But beneath the cheerful demeanor is a fiery artist whose work conveys a deep sense of political injustice and a commitment to New York City’s various Puerto Rican communities, including the East Village.

Her latest project, “Musical Warriors,” pays homage to politically active musicians like Fela Kuti, the Nigerian founder of Afro-Beat whose mother was killed as retribution by the Nigerian army.

As Hernandez looks for funding for her latest project, she is reaching out directly to the Puerto Rican communities — rather than traditional arts funding sources.

“Because this project has such a social justice element to it, I thought I’d have a much better chance of getting support if I go to community organizations,” she said.

In September 2003, her mentor, Juan Sanchez, a former Guggenheim fellow and longtime Village and Lower East Side artist who teaches art at Hunter College, invited Hernandez to take part in a new project called RICANdition, addressing the effects of colonialism on Puerto Rico. RICANdition grew out of the Puerto Rican Equation, a cultural organization founded 10 years ago by Sanchez and his brother Samuel.

With the help of Hernandez and artist Miguel Luciano, Sanchez plans to enlist several artists to create posters “to deal with the colonial crisis in Puerto Rico,” he said.

“[Hernandez] is doing incredible work not only as a visual artist, but also as a cultural advocate,” said Sanchez, once an artist-in-residence at the Henry Street Settlement. His work has appeared at the New Museum in Chelsea, the Alternative Museum on the Lower East Side and Exit Art when it was in the West Village. “She goes out of her way to make the work accessible,” he said of Hernandez. “She has a commitment to the community.”

The poster Hernandez created for RICANdition is a haunting image of a female political prisoner, the shadows across her face cast by the bars that imprison her evoking the Puerto Rican flag. “When you think of prisoners, you never think of a female prisoner,” she said. “You never think of teachers and artists and mothers and women.”

Several of her paintings pay homage to Puerto Rican nationalist Lolita Lebrón, who spent 25 years in prison for firing gunshots inside the United States Congress in a 1954 protest.

In 1999, Hernandez took part in a show at Clemente Soto Velez Cultural Center on Suffolk St., a Latino-run arts center that has been mired in a dispute with Artists Alliance, a coalition of mainly white artists who also claim rights to the city-owned building the two groups share.

The row about the affordable performance and studio space embodies an ongoing struggle for Puerto Ricans in New York, said Hernandez. “We don’t have the funding and we don’t have the resources,” she said, describing Puerto Ricans as “one of the worst-faring groups in the city.”

On a recent Friday night, Hernandez introduced herself as an angry Boricua – diminutive for Puerto Rican – to laughs from the mainly Latino crowd at a lecture she gave at the Puck Building, organized by the Alliance of Latino and Latin American Students, a graduate student union.

“She is such a talented artist,” said Theresa Santiago, ALAS president, who organized the event. “I found it amazing that she had never spoken at a New York City college.” She has, however, conducted workshops at Swarthmore and Penn State.

One painting Hernandez discussed juxtaposed an image of a formally clad Latino-American soldier opposite a disheveled, haunted Vietnam veteran. Typical of Hernandez’s work, the two central images are surrounded by a dense collage of visual and literary imagery.

RicanNuyorican Poets Café and Vietnam veteran Pedro Pietri appears prominently in the collage. A symbol of the disproportionate number of Latinos in the military, Pietri died in 2004 of stomach cancer that he attributed to Agent Orange exposure.

Perhaps the most chilling of her paintings is the bloody trunk of a headless, limbless female body tacked to a wooden cross, a nod to a spate of unsolved murders of young women in Ciudad Juarez, a Mexican border town. “Think about what NAFTA has to do with this,” she said, referring to the rise in young girls heading north alone for work under the trade agreement and the predators who prey on them.

Hernandez makes no excuses for creating art about such disturbing topics: “There are many pretty images out there anyway, so why create more of it?” she said simply.

This article appeared originally in the Village Voice

My Photo

My Favorite Bloggers

  • Ludovic Blain
    A politically progressive, adventurous and art-loving traveler speaks his mind. The blog is just like Ludovic--a piece of work...in progress! Come join the Ludovic Industrial Complex.