The UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center (CSRC) was founded in 1969 with a
commitment to foster multidisciplinary research efforts as part of the land
grant mission of the University of California. That mission states that
University of California research must be in the service of the state and
maintain a presence in the local community. If you wish to support CSRC's mission, please visit here.
Since its founding, the CSRC has played a pivotal role in the development of scholarly
research on the Chicano-Latino population, which is now the largest minority
group and the fastest growing population in the United States. The CSRC is one
of four ethnic studies centers established at UCLA in 1969 that are now part of
the Institute of American
Cultures (IAC), which reports to the Office of the Chancellor at UCLA. The
CSRC is also one of four founding members of the national Inter-University
Program for Latino Research (IUPLR, est. 1983), a consortium of Latino research
centers that now includes twenty-five institutions in the United States.
The
current CSRC Director is Chon A. Noriega who is a professor in the UCLA
Department of Film, Television, and Digital Media and an adjunct curator at the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).
Prof. Chon A. Noriega |
Home Opens at LACMA
After four years of extensive research and planning, the
CSRC-organized exhibition Home—So Different, So Appealing,
featuring artworks by U.S. Latino and Latin American contemporary artists on
the subject of home, will open to the public on June 11 at the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art. Curated by Chon A. Noriega, Mari Carmen Ramírez, and
Pilar Tompkins Rivas, Home is part of the Getty’s Pacific Standard Time:
LA/LA arts initiative. The exhibition has been funded by grants from the Getty
Foundation, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and the Pasadena
Art Alliance, as well as through support from the L.A. County Arts Commission,
Entravision, AltaMed, and individual donors. Home is on view at LACMA
through October 15 and then will travel to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. A
public panel discussion featuring exhibition artists in conversation with
Noriega and Tompkins Rivas will take place June 10.
Ortiz to Receive UCLA Medal
The CSRC is thrilled to announce that veteran artist
Raphael Montañez Ortiz will receive the UCLA Medal, the university’s highest
honor, in a ceremony on campus June 8. Ortiz (b. 1934) gained recognition in
the 1960s as one of the leading figures of the Destructivist movement. Perhaps
best known for his piano destruction concerts, “Archaeological Finds,” and
recycled film and video works, Ortiz employs his art to address issues of
religion, indigenousness, ritual, transcendence, mortality, and duality. His
artworks are in the collections of major museums, such as the Museum of
Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney
Museum in New York, the Pompidou Centre in Paris, and the Menil Collection in
Houston. He is currently distinguished professor of visual arts at Rutgers
University. In 1969 Ortiz founded El Museo del Barrio, the first Latino art
museum in the United States. He will be awarded the UCLA Medal for his
achievements in art, education, and social justice. Read the press release here.
Tobar to Join Faculty at UC
Irvine
Héctor Tobar, journalist, educator, and author of the
award-winning book Deep Down Dark about the thirty-three men who
survived the mine collapse in Chile in 2010, has been appointed associate
professor of Chicano/Latino studies and English (literary journalism) at UC
Irvine. He begins his appointment this fall. Since 2014, Tobar has been an assistant
professor at the University of Oregon School of Journalism and Communication.
The CSRC has the Héctor Tobar Papers.
Gomez Creates Artworks at Whitney
Museum
L.A. artist Ramiro Gomez, who is widely known for
cardboard paintings of Latina/o domestic and day laborers, is creating
paintings of the janitorial and security staff at the Whitney Museum of
American Art from May 30 through June 1. Gomez’s paintings are based on his
observations of laborers preparing for the opening of the 2017 Whitney Biennial
in March. For more information, click here. Artworks
by Gomez are included in the CSRC-organized exhibition Home—So Different, So
Appealing, on view at LACMA June 11–October 15, 2017.
Epstein Presents at Career
Conference for Graduate Students
Rebecca Epstein, CSRC communications and academic
programs officer, was invited to speak at this year’s UCLA Career Development
Conference for Graduate Students and Postdocs, organized by the UCLA Career
Center. The conference took place on campus May 4 and was designed to assist
graduate students and postdocs seeking alternatives to traditional academic
careers. Epstein has a PhD from the UCLA Department of Film, Television, and
Digital Media.
CSRC Press: Coming this Summer
Mid-August brings the release of Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell. Produced to accompany the eponymous exhibition opening in
mid-September at the Vincent Price Art Museum at East Los Angeles College, the
book explores the work of Chicana photographer Laura Aguilar. The catalog is
edited by Rebecca Epstein, communications and academic programs officer at the
CSRC. The exhibition, curated by Sybil Venegas, is a collaboration between
Vincent Price Art Museum and the CSRC. Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell is
part of the Getty’s Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA initiative. The catalog will
be distributed by University of Washington Press.Opportunities: Call for Papers
Fourth Bi-Annual
Sal Castro Memorial Conference on the Emerging Historiography of the Chicano
Movement
February 23-24, 2018, University of California, Santa Barbara.Faculty and graduate students working on historical projects concerning the Chicano movement are invited to submit a 500-word proposal and a short CV to Mario T. Garcia, professor of Chicano and Chicana studies, at garcia@history.ucsb.edu.
Submissions deadline: September 1, 2017.
Professor Chon Noreiga has propelled the CSRC to national heights!
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