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Border culture : the multicultural paradigm
title Border culture : the multicultural paradigmdescription Interested in reading more? Visit our partner's homepage by clicking on the 'View Item' button or visiting the url in the website sectionartist/creator Gómez-Peña, Guillermo -
Photography and art through Boricua Eyes : interview with Julio Perazza, Senior in Art
title Photography and art through Boricua Eyes : interview with Julio Perazza, Senior in Artdescription Interested in reading more? Visit our partner's homepage by clicking on the 'View Item' button or visiting the url in the website sectionartist/creator Gonzales, Jesse -
View Of The Front Entrance To The Old Mill Of Mission San Gabriel, El Molino Viejo, Ca.1890
title View Of The Front Entrance To The Old Mill Of Mission San Gabriel, El Molino Viejo, Ca.1890description Photograph of a view of the front entrance to the old mill of Mission San Gabriel, El Molino Viejo, ca.1890. The two-story adobe mill is at center. A covered porch can be seen at center, and a balcony is visible above. Two small square windows are cut into the walls at left. Several trees are visible in the foreground, and a line of large bushes obscures the view of the base of the building. On the back of the photo is an advertisement for Pierce Photo studio - including "Chinese, Indian and Mexican Character Scenes."artist/creator Unknownsubject Racism Indians Of North America Mills And Mill-Work El Molino Viejo Ethnicity Los Angeles County--San Marino--Architecture--El Molino Viejo Chinese Americans Buildings Mexican Americanscontributor Calisphere -
Sativa, 2001
title Sativa, 2001description [Sativa], 2001. 2083 unidentified street, Compton, California. By Elliott Pinkney. Mural painted on an exterior sign. Depicts Californians at work to provide water for the Sativa Los Angeles County Water District, transportation, and customers. Photographed ca. 2001 May.subject Indians Of North America Mural Painting And Decoration Ethnicity Street Art African-Americanscontributor Calisphere -
Photographs
title Photographsdescription Centro Cultural Tijuana For inSITE97, Ken Lum created two oversized large-scale photographs that were shown at the Centro Cultural Tijuana. The first photograph showed a young girl in San Diego talking on the phone about plans to eat either Mexican or Chinese food. The second photograph, with text from a popular Mexican children's rhyme, shows a young boy selling American soda and candy. The work suggests the blurring of cultural borders despite the adamantly divisive physical barrier. As a Canadian living near the northern US border, Lum stated that his experience in San Diego and Tijuana during inSITE97 caused him to rethink his notion of borders, and consider how the United States, with its pervasive capitalism and culture, borders nations throughout the world. --inSITE97 Photographs Special Collections & Archives, UC San Diego, La Jolla, 92093-0175 (https://lib.ucsd.edu/sca) This image is a scan of a 35mm color slide from the InSite Archive (MSS 707, Box 310, Folder 02, Item 210) [Title, Date]. InSite Archive. MSS 707. Special Collections & Archives, UC San Diego.subject Cell Phones Boundaries Texts (Document Genres) Mexican-American Border Region Conversation Ethnicity Insite97 Photography Food Installations (Visual Works) Border Artcontributor Calisphere -
Photographs
title Photographsdescription Centro Cultural Tijuana For inSITE97, Ken Lum created two oversized large-scale photographs that were shown at the Centro Cultural Tijuana. The first photograph showed a young girl in San Diego talking on the phone about plans to eat either Mexican or Chinese food. The second photograph, with text from a popular Mexican children's rhyme, shows a young boy selling American soda and candy. The work suggests the blurring of cultural borders despite the adamantly divisive physical barrier. As a Canadian living near the northern US border, Lum stated that his experience in San Diego and Tijuana during inSITE97 caused him to rethink his notion of borders, and consider how the United States, with its pervasive capitalism and culture, borders nations throughout the world. --inSITE97 Photographs Special Collections & Archives, UC San Diego, La Jolla, 92093-0175 (https://lib.ucsd.edu/sca) This image is a scan of a 35mm color slide from the InSite Archive (MSS 707, Box 310, Folder 02, Item 208) [Title, Date]. InSite Archive. MSS 707. Special Collections & Archives, UC San Diego.subject Cell Phones Boundaries Texts (Document Genres) Mexican-American Border Region Conversation Ethnicity Insite97 Photography Food Installations (Visual Works) Border Artcontributor Calisphere -
El Mexicano-American Ayer, Ahora, Manana, East Los Angeles, 1968
title El Mexicano-American Ayer, Ahora, Manana, East Los Angeles, 1968description El Mexicano-American ayer, ahora, manana (The Mexican American yesterday, today, tomorrow), East Los Angeles, 1968. East Los Angeles Public Library, interior, 4801 East Third Street (at Fetterly Avenue). Two large muscular figures dominate the mural. While one struggles for identity and liberation from ignorance, the other extends open arms toward a future of education and knowledge. By Armando Campero. -- Dunitz, Street gallery, rev. 2nd ed., p. 285, #3.subject Ethnicity East Los Angeles Public Library Street Art Mural Painting And Decoration Education Mexican Americanscontributor Digital Public Library of America (DPLA)