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Posts Tagged ‘Chicano

Mexico City celebrates Cine Chicano

1:31 pm By Maegan La Mala · Culture| Entertainment| Movies| mexico · Comments Off

29 Nov 2007

cinechicano.jpgMexico City is a film lover’s paradise, with myriad cinemas and a film festival every month. This month is no different, and with the arrival of a new festival celebrating work by Mexican Americans, the city is abuzz.

This year marks the first ever Mexico City Chicano Film Festival, which began on Tuesday and looks to be shaping up quite well. There are 10 documentary features, 7 fiction features and a slew of shorts, some of them in competition. The festival will also feature a retrospective of Chicano film classics, among them Un dia sin mexicanos, Selena and Zoot Suit. And — no podía faltarEdward James Olmos will be there are a special guest.

This festival is to be applauded for opening up the world of Mexican American culture to Mexicans via film. There are so many misconceptions on the other side of the border about those born on this side, so efforts like this will help dispel stereotypes and bring appreciation of U.S. Latino culture. Though, speaking of stereotypes, they could use some help with their logo.

Via / Festival de Cine Chicano

Prominent Latino scupltor dies in accident

6:57 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Arts · 1 Comment

15 Jun 2006

7430-lg.jpgLuis Jimenez, one of the country’s foremost Latino sculptors died on Tuesday, the victim of an accident involving a piece of art he had been working on for over a decade; a monumental piece called “Mustang”. In a strange twist of fate, Jimenez was putting finishing touches on his piece when the unthinkable happened:

Tuesday morning, Jimenez and two assistants were working on Mustang in his Hondo, N.M., studio. Photographer Delilah Montoya, Jimenez’s close friend and UH colleague, said the horse’s head was finished, and he was beginning to give the body its final coat of paint.

A piece of the sculpture came loose from a hoist, “striking Jimenez and pinning him to the steel support,” the Lincoln County Sheriff’s Office report said.

Jimenez had been involved in a decade-long battle with the commissioners of the piece for late delivery of Mustang, and was just about to free himself of the situation when the accident occurred.

Jimenez was committed to telling the story of his culture: a son of immigrants who crossed the border into the U.S., according to friends he never let that fall by the wayside:

“El Paso is the Ellis Island of the South, and Luis was the native son who never failed to make the right choice.”

Via / Houston Chronicle

Photo credit: Ricardo T Barros via ASMP.org

New movie explores Chicano rights movement

3:30 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism| Movies · Comments Off

9 Mar 2006

walkout.jpg“Walkout” is the first major film to tell the story of the Chicano civil rights movement:

Esparza joined HBO Films and actor/director Edward James Olmos to produce a dramatic, historical film based on the true story of the Chicano student uprising in East Los Angeles in 1968, where he was among 10,000 high school students who staged walkouts to protest academic prejudice and dire school conditions.

The Los Angeles protests, widely regarded as the birth of the urban Chicano civil rights movement, spawned a generation of activists and reverberated across the United States, inspiring similar demands for change in public schools in El Paso, across Texas and New Mexico and wherever Hispanics lived.

The film, produced by Moctesuma Esparza and directed by Edward James Olmos will star Alex Vega (Spy Kids) and will air on HBO on March 18th.

Catch previews and in-depth info on HBO’s Walkout page

Via / Borderland News and HispanicTips

Chicano People Time

10:00 am By Maegan La Mala · Arts| Entertainment · Comments Off

19 Oct 2005

coverdolores1.jpeg Using the words of the Mexican painter Frida Kahlo, 12 Chicano artists painted their own reality by participating in the creation of the 2006 Año Tochtli Chicano Calendar. Each month features the work of a fames Chicano artist including Lalo Alcaraz, Dolores Gonzalez Haro, and Linda Vallejo. The Año Tochtli (Year of the Rabbit) 2006 calendar project is led by Chicano artist, Ernest M. Saenz, who says that recent activities targeting Chicano Art in several communities inspired him to respond by initiating the development of the calendar and other artistic projects that proclaim and celebrate the value of Chicano Art and culture.

What makes the calendar truly unique and valuable, besides the beauty of the art itself and what the art represents is the diversity of the art and artists included in the calendar. The calendar features paintings, cartoons, and photography reflecting the diverse talents within the Chicano art community. The art chosen also is a reflection of Chicano reality and politic, a visually stunning window into the complex frontera and between border lives of Chicanos here in the U.S.

The calendar, published by Floricanto press can be purchased online for 15.70 via www.0101aztlan.net

Via / Xispas


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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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