Mexican Revolution | Link TV
Mexican Revolution
KL Featured Category
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Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
Radio Clandestina Gives Voice to a Marginalized Latinx Community
Post date:It was 1996, and big media was swallowing up smaller stations in L.A., leaving little room for Latinx voices. It was into this barren media-scape that the pirate radio station Radio Clandestina emerged.
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Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
The Women of Regeneración: An Incredible History of Organizing, Defying and Empowering
Post date:Chicano and Mexican women of all ages featured in Vincent Price Art Museum's “Regeneración: Three Generations of Revolutionary Ideology” represents a century of transnational resistance against oppression in its many forms.
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Cultural Politics
Artbound
The Many Legacies of Regeneración
Post date:For over 100 years, the word regeneración has been a critical part of the political lexicon of Mexicans, Mexican Americans and Chicanxs in Los Angeles. Learn more about its many iterations over the centuries.
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Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
Soldadera: Loving in the War Years
Post date:Exhibition "Soldadera" disrupts the master narratives of the Mexican Revolution. It revitalizes archives to uncover hidden stories, imagines and creates an alternate reality, and commemorates women of an important past.
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Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
Soldadera: The Armored Rebozo
Post date:A bulletproof rebozo hangs on a wall in Nao Bustamante's exhibition "Soldadera." The yellow shawl carries the stories of women who were a part of the Mexican Revolution's violent history but that are often unrecognized.
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film and media arts
Artbound
Soldadera: Nao Bustamante and Sergei Eisenstein's Unfinished Revolution
Post date:The complex relationship between the Mexican Revolution and the camera is taken up by Nao Bustamante in the cinematic installation anchoring her exhibition "Soldadera." With the short film, the artist reimagines and (re)enacts the the missing sequence ...
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film and media arts
Artbound
Soldadera: Memory Machine
Post date:The speculative qualities of Nao Bustamante's exhibition "Soldadera" make a space for marginalized voices to construct alternative futures. Central to the show is installation "Chac-Mool" -- a 7-minute, looping, scented memory machine.
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Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
Soldadera: The Tiny Things They Carried
Post date:Leandra Becerra Lumbreras was the last known survivor of the Mexican Revolution. Artist Nao Bustamante and a small crew made a trip to Zapopan, Mexico to meet her.
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Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
My Love Affairs with Soldaderas
Post date:From calendars to corridos, the image of the Soldadera lives strong in popular culture. Nao Bustamante's new artwork re-imagines dresses of female soldiers.
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Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
Soldadera: The Unraveling of a Kevlar Dress
Post date:Made out of bulletproof Kevlar, Nao Bustamante's re-imagined Soldadera dresses protect the female body against violence.
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film and media arts
Artbound
Searching for Soldaderas: The Women of the Mexican Revolution in Photographs
Post date:What can portraits tell us about soldaderas? Nao Bustamante draws from UC Riverside's archival holdings of photographs of the Mexican Revolution to investigate further.
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Performance
Artbound
Nao Bustamante's Soldaderas, Real and Imagined
Post date:Nao Bustamante's exhibition "Soldadera" is a "speculative reenactment" of women's participation in The Mexican Revolution. ÂÂ
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America Tropical
Artbound
Representing Revolt: Images of the Mexican Revolution
Post date:Mexico at the Hour of Combat: Sabino Osuna's Photographs of the Mexican Revolution is an exhibition on view at UC Riverside's California Museum of Photography from November 3, 2012 to January 5, 2013.