East_Los_Streetscapers

East Los Streetscapers

East Los Streetscapers

American art collective


East Los Streetscapers Public Art Studios is a muralist art collective and fine art studio based in East Los Angeles, California. Its members have executed over twenty murals and large-scale public artworks, primarily in the Los Angeles area.

History

East Los Streetscapers grew out of the Chicano Mural Movement of the 1960s and 1970s,[1] a strand of muralism that "began as an arm of struggle of claiming urban space"[2] for Chicanos. It was founded by Wayne Alaniz Healy and David Rivas Botello in 1975. Alaniz and Botello met in elementary school, and when in the third grade, collaborated on a mural. However, they lost touch when Botello's family moved to nearby City Terrace.[3]

In 1969, Botello co-founded Goez Art Studio, "the first" Chicano art studio,[4] with Jose Luis Gonzalez and Juan Gonzalez. In 1973, he painted Dreams of Flight, one of the early murals at Estrada Courts.

In 1968, Healy earned bachelor's degrees in aerospace engineering and mathematics from Cal Poly Pomona. He went on to earn a Master's in mechanical engineering from the University of Cincinnati in 1973. He began working with Mechicano Art Center in East Los Angeles, and in 1974, painted the mural Ghosts of the Barrio at the Los Angeles housing project Ramona Gardens. He has since earned a Master's of Fine Arts from California State University, Northridge and created numerous screen prints with Self-Help Graphics & Art.

In 1975 Healy and Botello teamed to form Los Dos Streetscapers. They were soon joined by other artists such as George Yepes, Paul Botello, Rudy Calderon, Rich Raya, Ricardo Duffy, Charles Solares and Fabian Debora, which occasioned the renaming of the group to “East Los Streetscapers.”[ Name change] While collaborating artists have come and gone, Healy and Botello have remained the core of the group.

In 1990, Healy and Botello founded the Palmetto Gallery to provide exposure for younger artists,[5] and East Los Streetscapers has also sponsored projects for barrio youth.

Artworks

The collective used acrylic paint as the primary medium for their early murals. Later in the 1990s and 2000s they incorporated other media such as hand-painted tiles, cast bronze, and porcelain-enameled steel.[6] Murals outside of Los Angeles include projects in San Jose, California, Santa Maria, California, Houston, Texas, St. Louis, Missouri, and Bellingham, Washington. Their work is characterized as "multicultural, strong, dynamic, colorful, site specific, and compositionally dramatic in line and texture."[7]

In a departure from acrylic and tile murals in 2002, Wayne Healy and East Los Streetscapers installed the 12-foot tall oxidized steel and dichroic glass public art sculpture Read, Reach, and Realize at the courtyard entrance to the Buena Vista Branch Library in Burbank, California.[8]

Murals

More information Title, Year ...

See also

Notes

  • ^ Name change: "Los Dos" is Spanish for "The Two", which, once the group expanded, was no longer applicable.

References

  1. Healy, Wayne Alaniz. "History". East Los Streetscapers website. East Los Streetscapers. Archived from the original (JPG) on 2011-07-10. Retrieved 2008-01-09. The roots of E.L.S. reach back to the Chicano Mural Movement of the 1960s and 70s.
  2. Eva Sperling, Cockroft. "Contradiction or Progression: The Mainstreaming of a Mural Movement". ZoneZero Magazine. ZoneZero. Retrieved 2008-01-09.
  3. "EAST LOS STREETSCAPERS". Lamurals.org. Los Angeles Mural Conservancy. Retrieved 2008-01-09. Botello and Healy did their first mural together about dinosaurs in the third grade, but soon afterwards Botello's family moved a mile away to City Terrace from their East Los Angeles neighborhood. It wasn't until they were adults, and both were doing murals on their own, that they met again and decided to renew their collaboration.
  4. Gonzalez, Jose Luis. "Bio". Goez Art Studio. Goez Art Studio and Gallery in East Los Angeles; (1) which was the first art studio and gallery in the country to dedicate its resources to Chicano art and artists {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
  5. Eva Sperling, Cockroft. "Contradiction or Progression: The Mainstreaming of a Mural Movement". ZoneZero Magazine. ZoneZero. Retrieved 2008-01-09. In 1990 they founded the Palmetto Gallery, a work and exhibition space for younger artists as well as for themselves.
  6. "East Los Streetscapers". Mural Conservancy of Los Angeles. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  7. "East Los Streetscapers". USC Library Archival Collections. University of Southern California. Archived from the original on 2007-11-27. Retrieved 2008-01-09.
  8. George, Lynell (30 July 2007). "East L.A. always has a place in his art". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  9. "El Nuevo fuego (The New fire), Los Angeles, 1985". USC Digital Library. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  10. "South Central Codex". Mural Conservatory of Los Angeles. Retrieved 13 September 2020.

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