Mujeres Muralistas

Las Mujeres Muralistas ("The Muralist Women") were an all-female Latina artist collective based in the Mission District in San Francisco in the 1970s. They created a number of public murals throughout the San Francisco Bay Area, and are said to[by whom?] have sparked the beginning of the female muralist movement in the US and Mexico. Their murals were colorful and large scale and often focused on themes such as womanhood, culture, beauty, and socio-political change. Patricia Rodriguez, Graciela Carrillo, Consuelo Mendez, and Irene Perez are recognized as the founders and most prominent members of the collective,[1] but other female Chicana artists assisted along the way and even joined later on, such as Susan Cervantes, Ester Hernandez, and Miriam Olivo among others.

Las Mujeres Muralistas was one of the first mural art groups in the Mission District in San Francisco, reacting against the contemporary Chicano Art Movement which had been a male dominated movement. Las Mujeres Muralistas established their unique style in 1973. At this time women artists were at work painting murals but not as a collective.[2] Chicano art was, from its very beginning, an art of protest, connected to social politics and the labor movement and concerned with creating distinctive work that reflected the Mexican experience in the United States.[3] Member, Ester Hernández, went on to be credited with creating one of the first images to link the plight of farmworkers to the effects on consumers and the environment with her screenprint, Sun Mad, 1981.[4] Groups of women artists of color, like Las Mujeres Muralistas, protested marginalization on the basis of gender, race and ethnicity. A few other Chicano Muralist groups in Northern California during the 1970’s were Galeria de la Raza, Royal Chicano Air Force, and Brocha de Valle.[5]

  1. ^ Cordova, Cary. "Hombres Y Mujeres Muralistas on a Mission: Painting Latino Identities in 1970s San Francisco." Latino Studies 4.4 (2006): 356-80. ProQuest. Web. 8 Nov. 2018.
  2. ^ Sanchez, Rita (1980). "El Renacimiento: Renacimiento, El". El Renacimiento. 11 (165): 4 – via JSTOR.
  3. ^ Bain, Rowan (2014). "Ester Hernandez: Sun Mad". Art in Print. 3 (6): 28–29. ISSN 2330-5606. JSTOR 43045621 – via JSTOR.
  4. ^ Bain, Rowan (2014). "Ester Hernandez: Sun Mad". Art in Print. 3 (6): 28–29. ISSN 2330-5606. JSTOR 43045621 – via JSTOR.
  5. ^ Sanchez, Rita (1980). "El Renacimiento: Renacimiento, El". El Renacimiento. 11 (165): 4 – via JSTOR.

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