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Toltec warrior
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Codex of Emma Tenayucca
title Codex of Emma Tenayuccadescription From the Codex Series, the painting honors labor activist Emma Tenayuca (1916-1999), who organized pecan shellers, mostly Mexican American women of San Antonio, Texas. Their strike for better labor conditions and higher wages in 1938 was the first successful large-scale action of the community's struggle for justice. The artist used a black and white photograph to create the portrait, and she added a Toltec warrior's pectoral. The labor organizer emerges from the maguey which is rooted to the earth. Coyolxauhqui, the Aztec moon goddess, sits on a half-moon and holds a rabbit. Much of the imagery is appropriated from the codices, including hieroglyphs and iconography. The cut tree in the top right corner is the artist's icon for Aztlan. Acrylic on canvas. Dimensions: 54” x 55”artist/creator Barraza, Santasubject Feminism Chicana art Tejana art Symbols Appropriation Coyolxauhqui (Aztec deity) Calendar art Hieroglyphs Codices Postmodernism Tenayuca, Emma, 1916-1999 Paintings Visual quotation Toltec warrior Borderlands Frontera Maguey Moon Ollin Portraits Serpents in art Tonallicontributor Santa C. Barraza