[Author]by the El Reportero’s staff
[/Author]
Francisca Valenzuela was recently invited as the only national [Chilean] artist to perform in Shakira´s Popfest, in Santiago, Chile. She opened the Lollapalooza Festival, in its first international version in Santiago–performing in one of the two main stages. In addition, she was the only artist invited to sing with U2 during their tour performance in March, in Santiago. Francisca joined Bono on stage to sing One Tree Hill.
Don’t miss this great opportunity to see the performance of this artist great here in the SF Bay.
Wednesday, August 6, at The New Parish, 1743 San Pablo Avenue, Oakland. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmYGHQlsPuA
MEX I AM – live it to believe it:
A Festival Showcasing The Cultural Greatness & Influence Of Mexico
The Consulate General of Mexico in San Francisco, Conaculta and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts are pleased to introduce MEX I AM: live it to believe it a first-of-its-kind festival showcasing the best of Mexico with a multidisciplinary array of inspiring leaders from the performing arts and academia. The celebratory weekend of music, dance, theater and ideas.
MEX I AM will explore the best of contemporary Mexican culture, arts and ideas. Over the course of four days, the multidisciplinary festival will feature some of the most innovative Mexican performers from various genres and disciplines from opera to Latin jazz and from ballet to folk dance and more. MEX I AM will also feature Ideas: North & South of the Border a line-up of scientists, humanists and game changers that personify Mexico’s innovative spirit and leadership. From July 31 – Aug. 3 at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.
Exhibition features powerful Latino poster art of the 70s
Serigrafía, a traveling exhibition featuring 30 influential silkscreen prints created by the best of California’s Latino/a printmaking community,
The exhibition features poster art from the 1970s to the present, including works of Bay Area artists Juan R. Fuentes, Jos Sances, Favianna Rodríguez, Esther Hernández, Yolanda López and other California artists.
Emerging in concert with the civil rights movement and activism for political and social justice for marginalized groups, these prints confront political, economic, social, and cultural issues on both a personal and a global level.
The art, which explores such subjects as the United States embargo on Cuba, and the Occupy Wall Street Movement, was conceived to provoke, protest, and praise.
From the iconic Sun Maid by Esther Hernández, who combined the familiar Sun Maid girl with the calavera (the satirically costumed skeletons) to bring awareness about the use of pesticides, fungicides, and other toxic chemicals in raisin production, to works by emerging printmakers like Gilda Posada, whose print Libertad was created to show the relationship between liberation movements for human rights in Palestine and in Mexico, this exhibition is varied in subject matter but rooted in a long heritage of California printmaking.
Many graphic artists called on the iconography of their pre-Columbian past, such as in Xavier Villamontes’ Boycott Grapes, which depicts a powerful Aztec warrior crushing handfuls of grapes that drip with the blood of exploited and injured farmworkers. When strikes, marches, and legislation failed to improve conditions in the fields, through posters like this one, the United Farms Workers Union (UFWA) asked the public to boycott grapes, wine, and lettuce in order to pressure growers.
Will be on view in the San Francisco Main Library’s Jewett Gallery, July 26 – Sept. 7, 2014. Opening discussion with curators Juan R. Fuentes and Jos Sances.
Related events:
Voice on Ink/Voz en Tinta, poetry event with San Francisco Poet Laureate Alejandro Murgía on Aug. 7, at 6:30 p.m., at the Main Library, Latino Hispanic Community Room.