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Arts & Culture Newsletter: MCASD puts women lithographers front and center

I’m David L. Coddon, and here’s your guide to all things essential in San Diego’s arts and culture this week. The Los Angeles of the ‘60s was fertile ground for the evolution of rock ‘n’ roll, film and pop art. At the same time, on Tamarind Avenue in Hollywood, a workshop under the leadership of printmaker June Wayne was pumping new life into the forgotten craft of lithography. Artists from other disciplines would enjoy residencies at the Tamarind Lithography Workshop, producing works that expanded their creativity and revived printmaking. Four of them Anni Albers, Ruth Asawa, Gego and Louise Nevelson are highlighted in a

Diversity of Latin American art and experience on display in online reading of famed scholar

Diversity of Latin American art and experience on display in online reading of famed scholar Lisa Deaderick © (K.C. Alfred/The San Diego Union-Tribune) Alana Hernandez is assistant curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (K.C. Alfred/The San Diego Union-Tribune) Alana Hernandez is bringing an added element of diversity to her curatorial work at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego. As assistant curator at the museum, she’s organized multiple exhibitions, including the current “To Tame a Wild Tongue: Art after Chicanismo.” Today, this digital exhibition includes an online reading of the work of noted scholar and theorist, Gloria Anzaldúa’s best known work, “Borderlands/La Frontera: The New Mestiza.”

The art show of 2020 shows Mexican influence on American art

Los tres grandes indirectly helped shape U.S. cultural policy too. In 1933, George Biddle, an artist who had spent time with Rivera in Mexico, wrote a letter to his friend Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who had recently been sworn in as president. In it, he told Roosevelt about the ways in which the Mexican government had funded the creation of murals on government buildings as a way of expressing “the social ideas of the Mexican Revolution.” Roosevelt passed the letter along to the Treasury Department, which launched a public works project in government buildings. This was followed, a year later, by the establishment of the Works Progress Administration’s Federal Art Project, a program that helped keep thousands of artists employed during the Great Depression, and resulted in the production of thousands of public murals and works of sculpture.

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