Chicana Muralist Judith F. Baca goes from the great wall to the museum wall.
To get the best view of the painted mural known as the Great Wall of Los Angeles, you have to step through some underbrush, peek over a chain-link fence, and angle your gaze downward over the expanse of the Tujunga Wash. The mural stretches for half a mile along the concrete wall of the Wash, a tributary of the concrete-lined Los Angeles River. Tucked away in Valley Glen, a community in the San Fernando Valley, far from the glitz of Hollywood, the mural is an exuberantly colored sequence of images that begins with prehistoric times and ends in the 1950s.
The sweeping narrative—the Wall’s official title is “The History of California”—opens with mastodons and saber-toothed tigers looking across a river, and across time, at a camp of Chumash Indians, some of California’s earliest residents. It moves through the arrival of the Spanish (seen from the indigenous point of view), the mass deportation of Mexican Americans during the Great Depression, the turning back of the transatlantic liner St. Louis, loaded with European Jewish refugees during World War II, and the anguish wrought on Japanese Americans by internment.
Bu hikaye ARTnews dergisinin Spring 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye ARTnews dergisinin Spring 2017 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
A Portrait of the Artist as a Collector
How much can artworks tell us about the person who acquired them?
You've Gotta See This!
Artists are luring their peers and predecessors out of obscurity and back into the spotlight–discovering, rediscovering, and even mentoring them.
Concrete History
Chicana Muralist Judith F. Baca goes from the great wall to the museum wall.
Clean, Well-Lighted Places
On our nostalgia for the golden age of art dealing
Q & A Douglas Crimp
Q & A Douglas Crimp.
Mom & Popped
In a market contraction, the middle class gallery is getting squeezed.
Mary Heilmann’s Idiosyncratic, Rhymthic Abstractions Find Their Place In the Sun
Mary Heilmann’s idiosyncratic, rhymthic abstractions—and chairs—find their place in the sun.
To All Tomorrow's Parties
Break out the bubbly—Florine Stettheimer’s back.
From Palace To Tank
“Karaoke King” and art collector Qiao Zhibing is parlaying his popular Shanghai karaoke-club cum-exhibition-space into a museum-cum-recreation-space.
Autocorrect
The Politics of Museum Collection Re-Hangs