UNVEILING
OF “ESTA TIERRA ES NUESTRA TIERRA”
(“THIS LAND IS OUR
LAND”) MURAL BY MATA RUDA
Festival Honors the Diversity of the Latino Experience in America and Celebrates Latino New Yorkers Who Embody Franklin D. Roosevelt's “Four Freedoms”
NEW YORK,
NY – On
the occasion of Hispanic Heritage Month, September 15 – October 15, the Four Freedoms Park Conservancy will host a
“LatinXtravaganza” family festival curated by Pulitzer Prize finalist and
Brooklynite Xochitl Gonzalez at Franklin D. Roosevelt Four
Freedoms State Park on Roosevelt Island, October 7 from 11:00 am to 4 pm. A
newly commissioned mural by Mata Ruda entitled “Esta Tierra Es Nuestra Tierra”
(“This Land is Our Land”), celebrating the diversity of Latino experience in
America and featuring Latino New Yorkers representing FDR’s Four Freedoms, will
be unveiled. The “LatinXtravaganza” family festival is FREE with registration.
The Festival will include wonderful activities, including a Latino Banned Book
Library from Lush and a pop-up bookstore from Cafe con Libros. It will also
feature Children's Story Time by Alyssa Reynoso-Morris, a musical performance
from Bomba y Plena, dance lessons with Ballet Hispánico and Salsa Salsa
Dance School, a domino tournament organized by NYC Dominoes, live mariachi
music, poetry readings, food trucks, face painting, a set from
DJ Christian Mártir and a composting exhibit by iDig2Learn.
“When I first contacted Xochitl about the idea of curating a public art
installation and event at FDR Four Freedoms State Park, she seized the
opportunity. By transforming a presidential monument designed completely
in white granite by the great American modernist Louis Kahn, she recognized
that her words, sentences and paragraphs that are her craft could be put to
influential public purpose,” said Howard Axel, Chief Executive Office of
Four Freedoms Park Conservancy. “Working together, Mata Ruda and Xochitl
created an important, temporary intervention, just 1,500ft from the United
Nations, that reminds every visitor to the park of a more accurate and
inclusive history.”
“In the absence of our own official monuments, murals have allowed us to assert
and celebrate our histories, origin stories and heroes,” said Xochitl
Gonzalez, cultural critic, producer, screenwriter, and New York
Times bestselling author of Olga Dies Dreaming.
“Not as they are seen from the outside, but from within. It felt, given this
context, the most appropriate medium to reflect the multitude of voices in our
community, and when I encountered Mata Ruda’s work, I knew that we would be in
caring, passionate hands.”
“It is really important to figure out how these versions of history – the white
granite presentation of history and the rich, under-celebrated history embodied
by the Nueva Yorquinos on our mural – can exist side by side. This public work
seeks to reclaim our space through a generative, additive, annotative process
rather than one of subtraction and erasure,” Gonzalez added.
The mural features Latino New Yorkers, embodying FDR’s Four Freedoms: freedom of speech and expression, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear.
- Dr. Marta Moreno Vega: Freedom
of religion – As a writer, educator, cultural leader and Yoruba priestess,
she has done unquantifiable work to destigmatize and contextualize
Santeria and other Afro-diasporic faiths.
- Lorena Borjas: Freedom from fear
– She protected countless transgender women from being trafficked, of
falling ill, of being deported.
- Candido Arcángel: Freedom from
want – For 14 years, the Brooklyn bodega owner turned his basement into a
makeshift homeless shelter for men who had fallen on hard times.
- Olga Garriga: Freedom of speech
– From our past, a Brooklynite turned freedom-fighter, jailed for speaking
in defense of Puerto Rican liberation under the gag laws of the late
1940s.
The last figure on the mural is a dreamer who represents an “every man” who
refuses to be relegated to the margins.
“I decided to work with a variety of brown earth tones against the blue shadow.
Conceptually, my thinking is that these tones will contrast with the white
granite steps – challenging the classical, “Western” architecture of the site,”
said artist Mata Ruda. “With the title “Esta Tierra Es Nuestra Tierra,” the
earth tones so closely weave with the concepts of the piece and resemble clay,
dirt, soil, adobe. It also ties in with the medium I work with to paint the
pieces – adobe powder, plaster, and wood stain.”
Directions to the Park can be found HERE.
For more information about Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms State Park, please visit: https://parks.ny.gov/parks/186/details.aspx
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