Galería de la Raza Information Programs Exhibits Shop Studio 24 Press Room
An interdisciplinary Chicano/Latino Space for Art, Thought, & Activism
 
 






  --December--    
 

Date:Thursday, December 4
Time: 7pm – 10pm
Admission: $5 – No one turned away

Video premiere of: “The Reappearance”

featuing Nomi of Power Struggle,  Q&A with BRWN BFLO and raffle.

BRWN BFLO, the East Bay, Chicano hip hop collective presents the world premier of “The Reappearance” – a three song music video.  Also featuring Nomi of Power Struggle, raffles, behind the scenes footage and a special Q & A with the cast and crew of the video.   BRWN BFLO are four Chicano MC’s: Giant, Jacinto, Somos and Big Dan. Currently recording and building their fan base out of the Bay Area but representing different parts of California, from San Diego, Salinas to Oakland. They have an original, yet world wide sound and have been featured at local hip hop clubs, live radio freestyle sessions, festivals, community rallies and local open mic’s. They’ve performed alongside many artists, including Clyde Carson, Frontline, Los Rakas, Zion I, Goapele, El Vuh, Mystic, Bayonics, Ise Lyfe, and many other well known Artists. With their 2008 debut Album BRWN BFLO, “potential to national exposure and success will come”, says Big Dan. Our spanglish and world wide music influence will shake this entire music business”, says Giant.

 

 

 

Brown Buffalo

 
 

Date:Saturday December 6th & Sunday December 7th
Times: Sat. 2-8 Sun. 12-6pm
Admission: FREE
Address: 2857 24th St., corner of Bryant

Galería de la Raza Hosts A Latino-inspired Holiday Arts Bazaar!

A wide range of local Latino artists will dazzle you with Latin-American flavored handmade crafts, t-shirts, jewelry and other DIY-inspired pieces to help us ring in the holidays. Shopping local and sustainable helps prop up the local economy and Galeria helps support local artists and crafters by providing them a venue to show their wares! The arts bazaar will be held in the Studio 24 space, located on the corner of Bryant and 24th St. in the heart of the Mission District.

 

 

 



"La Tigrea's" Coleen Flaherty and Frida Look-a-like at our first Arts Bazaar on Aug., 4, 2008

 

 

 

 

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  --November--    
 

Date: Sat., Nov. 22
Time: 8pm
Admission: $5 Student, Seniors, Members $10 General

The Really Big Show: Words and Expression

Hosted and Curated by Norman Zelaya

Featuring: Arisa White, Amir el-Chidiac, Paul S. Flores, Karim Scarlata, Jaime Cortez, Lakin Valdez & DJ Aztec Parrot

In the great spirit of Ed Sullivan and Rodney Dangerfield, a cast of the best and brightest voices in the Bay Area have been gathered to present new works and add to the tradition of visionary, radical, contemporary and eloquent writings that San Francisco has long been known for.  A night full of dialogue, inspiring lyrics, poignant thought, and as with all great writers, a sh--load of laughter. Hosted and curated by local denizen of 23rd Street barrio, Norman Zelaya, The Really Big Show will most definitely be a memorable night of words and expression.

Feature Biographies:
ARISA WHITE is a Cave Canem fellow and holds a MFA from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Factory Hollow Press will be publishing her chapbook Disposition for Shininess in late 2008. She received a Poets & Writers grant in 2008 and was awarded the 2007 Pavel Strut Fellowship in Poetry from the University of Western Michigan. In 2006 she received the Archie D. and Bertha H. Walker Scholarship from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown and a writing residency at the Atlantic Center for the Arts. Her poem "Who Invited the Monkey to Omen's Party" was nominated for a Pushcart Prize in 2005..

AMIR EL-CHIDAC’s poetry and prose explores issues of identity, the body, the social consciousness of political expression, the censored tongues and the bordered chorus of oppression. Amir recently received an MFA in Writing and Consciousness from the New College of California. His work has been published in Riffrag, Mizna, Tea Party Magazine, and I Saw My Ex at a Party.

PAUL S. FLORES is a poet, playwright, novelist and nationally prominent spoken word artist specializing in bilingual and hip-hop performance whose plays Fear of a Brown Planet and REPRESENTA! were National Performance Network Creation Fund Commissions.  Flores was featured on Season IV of Russell Simmons Presents Def Poetry on HBO, and his novel Along the Border Lies was awarded a PEN National Literary Award in 2003. He teaches Hip-Hop Theater and Spoken Word at the University of San Francisco Department of Performing Arts and Social Justice.  

KARIM SCARLATA, filmmaker, writer, crabber, and observer of life has appeared on stages and in phone booths across this fine city of ours. For years he has been trying to leave the Bay Area but he cannot turn his back on this little berg that raised him, and by berg he means Goldberg his counselor from Camp Akava.

JAIME CORTEZ is a cultural worker based in the San Francisco Bay Area.  His writing has appeared in a dozen anthologies. Jaime’s visual art has been exhibited at numerous California galleries. He was the editor of the anthology Virgins, Guerrillas & Locas.  Jaime has lectured on art and activism at Stanford, Berkeley, UC Santa Barbara, University of Pennsylvania and the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.  He is currently preparing a manuscript for The Jesus Donut, his first collection of short stories, slated for publication in 2009 by Suspect Thoughts Press.

NORMAN ANTONIO ZELAYA was born and raised in San Francisco. He began writing short stories under the influence of his English teacher, Ms. Maryann Berry, who still serves as a mentor. After his time at UC Berkeley, Norman was offered the opportunity to create and host his own poetry reading series, Poems y Poemas at Café International. In graduate school, Norman met up with Darren de Leon and Paul Flores to form Los Delicados. Currently, Norman is working on his first novel, a story based in his childhood barrio. Norman is a recent alumni of the Intergenerational Writer’s Lab sponsored by Kearny Street Workshop and Intersection for the Arts.

DJ AZTEC PARROT is the founding producer and host of KPFA's Radio 2050 since 2002. He began his DJ career in 1977 at the age of 12 and has steadily rocked it since. He has spun with the likes of Afrika Bambaataa, Dr. Dre, DJ Pooh, DJ Yella, 2 Live Crew, Uncle Jamm's Army, G-Spot and SAKE ONE. An avid collector of vinyl records he mixes a rare and eclectic mix of music ranging from Old School funk, Xican@, 80's New Wave, Ska, Bugalu, Indigenous Americana, and Revolutionary Moviemiento music. He has been producing independent radio shows since 1990, re-establishing Radio Aztlan at KUCR in Riverside, CA and most recently founding Radio 2050 at Pacifica's mothership station KPFA in Berkeley.

 

 

The Really Big Show

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Wed., Nov. 12
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $5 or Free with food dish

LUNADA

Featuring: Naomi Quiñonez, Alejandra Mojica, Ricardo J. Tavarez, Olga Rosales

Forged in the crucible of La Causa, award winning Xicana poet and academic, Naomi Quiñonez, headlines along with the spit fire lyricism of spoken word poet, Alejandra Mojica, and the sublime verse of Ricardo Tavarez and Olga Rosales. Plus open mic surprise guests!! LUNADAS – how the meek inherit the Earth.

Artist Biographies

NAOMI HELENA QUIÑONEZ, Chicana poet and educator, is a recognized American poet whose two collections, Hummingbird Dream/Sueño de Colibri and The Smoking Mirror have received critical acclaim. Her forthcoming collection of poetry is entitled Exiled Moon. Among her other achievements are the Rockefeller Fellowship and the California Arts Council Award. Her poems and essays have appeared in numerous, noteworthy collections. Quiñonez, who has distinguished herself among a cadre of Chicano Poets informed by the social change movements of the 1970s such as Lorna Dee Cervantes and Gary Soto, is also part of a larger genre of U.S. ethnic writers and she has appeared in programs with Quincy Troupe, Leslie Marmon Silko, David Mura and Octavia Butler to name a few. Her work has also appeared in multicultural anthologies such as From Totems to Hip Hop, edited by Ishmael Reed.

ALEJANDRA MOJICA, twenty-four years live. Poet, community educator and mother. Alejandra is a long time creative arts performer encompassing spoken word, theater and dance. She was one of the first students of Writers Corp (1994) and was published in their anthology, Flavors of the City. Her poem, "Social Emergency" has been recently recorded on the compilation CD, "Jazz, Funk & Hip HoPoetry, Phaze 2". She is dedicated to the education and empowerment of youth. Her life-long dream and goal is to build an alternative school system that incorporates culture, leadership, self-sufficiency, social justice and love. Creator of "Ladies Outspoken" Girls Crew, she has inspired young women to find their creative voice and use it to promote social justice. She is currently a youth organizer at H.O.M.E.Y. and is working on her own spoken word CD. Alejandra is a powerful voice of truth, unity, cultura and peace.

RICARDO J. TAVAREZ lives in San Francisco, CA, where he teaches literature at Wallenberg High. His poetry and fiction have been featured in publications, zines and readings in the Bay Area and Southern California. His work features personal and collective memories that usually invoke the strength of hope and the optimism inherent in every sunrise. His writing includes thoughts on recent events and often times will reflect his musical background. Ricardo also works with high school youth organizing poetry events and musical performances.

OLGA ROSALES has been writing poetry since she realized that formatting complete sentences was entirely too tedious. As a child she wrote about the travesties that can happen on the playground and as a teenager she wrote about love loss and the growth of friendships. Now, at 28 she still writes about love loss and the growth of friendships. Number five of six daughters, finding her own voice and own space was a lifeline to always strive for. Olga’s poetry has been published in The Porter Gulch Review. A native of Watsonville, CA, she now lives in San Francisco.

 

 

 

 


Naomi Quñonez

Alejandra Mojica

Ricardo J. Tavarez

Olga Rosales

 
  --October--    
 

Date: Sat., Oct 11.
Time: 7-10pm (Live Auction Begins @ 8:30pm)
Admission: $20 General, $50 VIP

La Pachanguita

Galeria de la Raza will celebrate it s 8th annual auction of Latino art with works small and large by local and international artists this October 11th. PACHANGA 2008, or La Pachanguita as it is warmly referred to in light of our current sate of economic affairs, is Galeria de la Raza’s annual fundraiser in support of a year-long calendar of vibrant Latino visual arts programs in the Bay Area as well as next generation arts education programming for Mission District youth.

The auction includes close to a hundred pieces of contemporary art works from both emerging and established Latino artists who have donated their work in support of Galeria de la Raza’s mission to continue to cultivate and promote the work of outstanding Latino artists from all disciplines. Our largest fundraiser of the year, La Pachanguita, invites the public, students, art collectors, art lovers, neighbors and local community organizations to celebrate one of the longest standing Latino arts organizations in the United States. This year’s fundraiser will present a larger array of smaller and more accessible works for aspiring collectors and community members.

This year is especially exciting as we make our way towards our 40th anniversary and make plans for greater stability and the continued community engagement that has allowed us to historically thrive.

 

 

 

Download Absentee Bidding and Pre-registration forms
Tickets available at the door

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Tues., Oct. 14
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $5 or Free with food dish

LUNADA

Featuring: Peter Nathaniel Malae, Angry Black White Boy, Irene Faye Duller and DJ Qwan-Z

Curated by: Kevin Chen

October’s LUNADA celebrates the full force of autumn with award winning fiction writer and poet, Peter Nathaniel Malae, spoken word artist Irene Faye Duller (8th Wonder, The Rhapsodistas) and the cast of Campo Santo’s upcoming world premiere play, Angry Black White Boy. DJ Qwan-Z (Victor Chu) fills in all the gaps with his mix of old-school hip hop and down-tempo beats. This incredible line up was put together by Intersection for the Arts program director, Kevin Chen who co-hosts along with Marc Pinate.

Artist Biographies:
PETER NATHANIEL MALAE lives in Santa Clara, CA, where he is a 2007-08 Steinbeck Fellow at San Jose State University. His fiction, poetry, and essays have appeared in Cimarron Review, Missouri Review, ZYZZYVA, and a host of other magazines and journals across the nation. His work has been selected for distinguished recognition in the Best American Essays and Best American Mysteries series. The manuscript of his first novel was recently awarded the Joseph Henry Jackson Literary Award by the San Francisco Foundation.

A performance excerpt from Angry Black White Boy (written by Adam Mansbach) featuring Dan Wolf, Tommy Shepherd, Keith Pinto and other collaborators. Members from local hip-hop group Felonious, working with Intersection for the Arts Hybrid Project, create a new play from the acclaimed, provocative book by Adam Mansbach Angry Black White Boy, that provocatively and deftly explores pop-culture, identity and violence in the twenty-first century. An imaginative re-mix of Mansbach's novel with a performance that combines a hybrid of theatrical storytelling, poetry, rapping, beat-boxing, ballet and hip-hop dance. Directed by Campo Santo's Sean San Jose, Angry Black White Boy features adapting writer Dan Wolf as the story's tale, and actor and soundscape designing musician Tommy Shepherd, and actor and choreographer Keith Pinto.

IRENE FAYE DULLER is a performance poet and writer. She is a founding member of Bay Area based Pilipina/o spoken word collective 8th Wonder. Duller also co-founded The Rhapsodistas, an all female hip hop group that has performed sold out shows throughout San Francisco at venues such as Milk, Elbo Room, and Club Six. As a soloist, she has featured at Thursday Night Alive at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Word on the Street at Bindlestiff Studio, Poetry Mission at Dalva, Mango Mic at Pusod, and Nommo at Los Angeles. Irene holds a Masters degree in Asian American Studies in critical artistry and cultural theory. She is a proud single mother and organizes with babae, around local and global Pinay issues.

 

 

Peter Nathaniel Malae

 

Angry Black White Boy

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Wed., Oct. 29
Time: 7pm
Admission: Free

 

Teatro Chicana: A Collective Memoir and Selected Plays
Reading and book signing by editors Laura E. Garcia, Sandra M. Gutierrez, and Felicitas Nuñez.

Laura Garcia, Sandra Gutierrez and Felicitas Nuñez – members of Teatro de las Chicanas – will read from and discuss their new book, Teatro Chicana: A Collective Memoir and Selected Plays, followed by a book signing. Teatro Chicana chronicles an important segment of the Chicano Theatre movement of the 1970s and 1980s. Books will be on sale.

The 1970s and 1980s saw the awakening of social awareness and political activism in Mexican-American communities. In San Diego, a group of Chicana women participated in a political theatre group whose plays addressed social, gender, and political issues of the working class and the Chicano Movement. In this collective memoir, seventeen women who were a part of Teatro de las Chicanas (later known as Teatro Laboral and Teatro Raíces) come together to share why they joined the theatre and how it transformed their lives. Teatro Chicana tells the story of this troupe through chapters featuring the history and present-day story of each of the main actors and writers, as well as excerpts from the group's materials and seven of their original short scripts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Teatro Chicana

"This collection of testimonials of early Xicanistas and their work in teatro is an important contribution to the preservation of the spirit and energy that made the Chicano Movement."
—Ana Castillo, author of The Guardians and So Far from God

 
 

 

Date: Sat., Oct. 4
Time: 7-10pm

Art Bazaar & Nuestra Señora de las Enfermedades Performance

For all those art lovers roaming around the Mission for MAPP, stop by to check out an art bazaar to support artists and our programming as well as a free performance in our Studio 24.

 
Beneath shadows and tattered rags, she awaits. Hidden for years, she has finally emerged. At first glance, the woman Siruela appears a mere beggar, her life of little interest.  Ridiculed for years for the massive, tumor-like growth that weighs upon her, Siruela has been revealed to be the bearer of our time’s greatest gift. What at first glance appears to be a grotesque deformity – a monstrosity – in fact holds the cure for our age. It is her “disease,” this huge tumor she must bear, that radiates with the power and image of la Virgen herself.  The devout will come. The curious will come closer. The skeptics will come closest of all, to gaze upon Nuestra Senora. And you will come, if you choose.
In coming you will be healed, cured of whatever ails you: a broken heart, a shattering loss, an unconquerable vice. You need simply open yourself to the reality that her sickness is your cure. She bears our burden and our salvation in her body.

Featured artist in art bazaar include Itzpapalotl, Raul Aguilar, Aydasara Ortega

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

--September--

 
 

Date: Fri., Sept. 26
Time: 6:30pm
Admission; $10 General $7 SFMOMA members, sudents, senior
@ Phyllis Wattis Theatre

 

Panel Discussion Homage:
Frida Kahlo
Presenting Rupert García, artist  Carmen Lomas Garza, artist  Amalia Mesa-Bains, artist  René Yañez, artist  Tere Romo, art historian

In 1978 San Francisco's Galería de la Raza presented Homenaje a Frida Kahlo: El Día de los Muertos, a special Day of the Dead exhibition honoring Kahlo; a few years later, in 1987, Galería presented Recuerdos de Frida, a mixed-media exhibit of rare photos and original paintings, videos, films, Kahlo memorabilia. At this program co-organized by the Galería, the artists who curated and contributed to the original show discuss this key moment highlighting Kahlo’s achievement. They examine how Kahlo's reputation shifted across the 1970s and 80s, and how they responded to her life and work. Romo moderates the conversation.

Tickets are available at the Museum (with no surcharge) or online 

 

 
 

Date: Fri., Sept. 26
Time: 4:30 - 7pm

Paper Jam Session

Galeria de la Raza, Global Exchange & CODEPINK Women for Peace, with special presentations by Pablo Paredes (American Friends Service Committee and BAY-Peace: Alternatives for Youth), Nancy Mancias, HeadRush, and theater forum workshop conducted by spoken-word poet, Marc Pinate.


Galeria de la Raza joins forces with Pablo Paredes (American Friends Service Committee and BAY-Peace: Alternatives for Youth) and Nancy Mancias (Global Exchange & CODEPINK Women for Peace) to host an evening of performances, workshops, and speak-outs to introduce Bay Area Latino youth to alternatives to the military. The evenings activities are part of Galeria's PAPER JAM SESSIONS, an open studio for youth, their families and friends, and will feature a presentation by Pablo Paredes an Iraq war resister and Bay Peace co-coordinator, performances by HeadRush, a Chicano theatre troupe and spoken word in a forum theatre guided by Marc Pinate. The alternatives to the military workshop for Latino youth is the first of its kind in the Mission District since the start of the Iraq war. The evenings activities respond to the  frequent access Military recruiters have to high schools whereas local community leaders in the Mission have fewer resources and opportunities to teach youth about their options. This PAPER JAM SESSION seeks to provide the next generation of Latinos the tools and knowledge of the different alternatives available to Latino youth once leaving school. Snacks and drinks will be provided.

 

 

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Date: Thrus., Sept 11
Time: 6-10pm

Fun-raiser @ Bisssap Baobab
Enjoy a plate of Senegalese food and delight in knowing that 20% of your dinner tab is going to a support our programming

Bissap Baobab
2323 Mission St.
SF, CA 94110
Tel. (415) 826-9287
Fax. (415) 401-0641
Tues - Sun: 6pm - 10:30pm

View Map

   
 

Date: Mon., Sept 15
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $5 or FREE with food dish


LUNADA: Literary Lounge & Open Mic

Featuring: BRWN BFLO, Penina Ava Taesali, Damn Pete & Natalia Ancisco

Join us as we kick off our fall season of guest curated LUNADAs with one of the Bay Area’s most explosive Xicano hip hop collectives, BRWN BFLO. Back from a Califas tour with Ise Lyfe and having just released their new album, BRWN BFLO is sure to ROCK DA MIC! Also on the bill ­ poet and youth advocate, Penina Ava Taesali, and Oakland MC, Damn Pete. Yo, this show it HOT!!!! Don’t miss the first LUNADA of the fall, cuz we’re gonna GIT DOWN!! Bring your own poetry, music and/or flow for the OPEN MIC.

BRWN BFLO Four Chicano MC’s: Giant, Jacinto, Somos and Big Dan. Currently recording and building their fan base out of the Bay Area but representing different parts of California, from San Diego, Salinas to Oakland. They have an unheard, yet world-wide sound and have been featured at local hip hop clubs, live radio freestyle sessions, festivals, community rallies and local open mic’s. They’ve performed alongside many artists, including Clyde Carson, Frontline, Los Rakas, Zion I, Goapele, El Vuh, Mystic, Bayonics, Ise Lyfe, and many other well known Artists. With their 2008 debut Album BRWN BFLO, “potential to national exposure and success will come”, says Big Dan. Our spanglish and world wide music influence will shake this entire music business”, says Giant.
About BRWN BFLO, Myspace

PENINA AVA TAESALI is a Capricorn, poet, spiritual dancer, teacher and community organizer who has worked with youth and local artists for the past ten years in Oakland, CA. Her favorite quote: "God is the smile on the face of the child that is not being wasted" by the great poet, Piri Tomas, sums up her fight to support youth and their families find and become the shining stars that they truly are. As a poet, she has been published in magazines and journals throughout California and has read her works around the Bay. Her greatest hope is that she can become the Tenderloin Monk's daughter, a starry and beloved human being that would make her father proud.

DAMN PETE is your friendly neighborhood whiteboyemcee/poet/questioner/learner/philosopher-king-in-training.  He lives in Oakland and works as an English teacher with his amazing and beautiful students at Leadership Public High School in Richmond. 

NATALIA ANCISO is a Chicana Artist from Mercedes, a small hardscrabbled town situated in the Rio Grande Valley of the Texas Borderlands.  Against all odds, she recently graduated with a degree in Studio Art from the prestigious University of Texas at Austin and currently resides in East Oakland, California. 

BRWN BFLO

Penina Ava Taesali

 

Natalia Ancisco

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Date: Sat., Sept 20
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $15 General $10 Students & Galeria Members



Pinta Tu Propio Mundo
Hosted by Leticia Hernández
Featuring: Raquel Gutierrez, Lysa Flores, Kirya Traber, Kim Addonizio, Amie Suzara, and DJ La Rumorosa


For seven years, the Pinta tu Propio Mundo/Create Your Own World series has gathered cutting edge artists that celebrate the creative expression and resistance of women. Founded by spoken word artist Leticia Hernández, this event has grown from a reading among friends to a multidisciplinary gathering of established and emerging women artists. This year, DJ La Rumerosa will open the doors to the voice of slam champion Kirya Traber, Butchlalis de Panochtitlan founder, Raquel Gutierrez, Chicana rocker, Lysa Flores, award winning novelist and poet, Kim Addonizio, East Bay phenom Amie Suzara, and Mission poetista and host, Leticia Hernández. Amelia Berumen of Izpapalotl Clothing, will sell her one of a kind cloth poems at the event.

Featured Artist Biographies:
RAQUEL GUITERREZ is a Los Angeles-based writer, performer, curator and cultural activist. She is a co-founding member of the performance art ensemble, Butchlalis de Panochtitlan, and has written their first play currently in production called The Barber of East L.A., commissioned by a humanities initiative at USC. Currently, Gutierrez is working on a one person performance called Malathion, about life in Southeast L.A. She holds degrees in performance studies from New York University, and journalism and Central American studies from California State University at Northridge.

KIRYA TRABER is a nationally awarded spoken word artist. Her work is raw, bold, honest, and unafraid to challenge, commanding attention from all sides. In 2004 she became a National Teen Poetry Slam Champion and has since featured at Robert Redford's Sundance Summit, the Bay Hip Hop Theatre Festival, the Living Word Festival, San Francisco's Lit Quake, and in Tiny Little Maps to Each Other, a collection of five young women poets published by First Word Press. In the fall of 2007 she took the traditional stage in the lead role of Bullrusher, the pulitzer prize nominated play written by Eisa Davis. She currently works as a Poet Mentor with Youth Speaks.

East L.A. native LYSA FLORES, a first generation Mexican-American, has been a pioneer in the East Los alternative scene since her teens and was named by Newsweek as one of 20 young Latinos to watch in the new millennium. Her reach extends beyond music alone. She had a starring role in the critically acclaimed indie-film Star Maps --a favorite at 1997’s Sundance Film Festival-- and, for this, she earned a Best Debut Performance nomination from the Independent Spirit Awards. She also served as the project's musical director (which was the first feature film highlighting a track by folk cult-hero Nick Drake). Additionally, Lysa was the lead-guitar player in seminal L.A. punk-pioneer Alice Bag’s all-female group, Stay at Home Bomb, as well as having toured the globe as a member of performance-artist El Vez’s band. In 2008, Lysa's trio (featuring Marco Renteria from the Jaguares and Alfredo Ortiz from the Beastie Boys, Ozomatli, Morningwood) began a weekly Friday-night residency to standing-room only crowds at the Chicano-punk bar EastSideLuv in east LA's Boyle Heights' district.

KIM ADDONIZIO is the author of three books of poetry from BOA Editions: The Philosopher's Club, Jimmy & Rita, and Tell Me, which was a finalist for the 2000 National Book Award. Her poetry and fiction have appeared in numerous anthologies and literary journals. Her latest collection, What Is This Thing Called Love, was published by W.W. Norton in January 2004. A book of stories, In the Box Called Pleasure, was published by Fiction Collective 2. Her first novel, Little Beauties, was published by Simon & Schuster in August 2005 and came out in paperback inJuly 06. Her new novel, My Dreams Out in the Street, has just been published by Simon & Schuster (July 07). Her awards include two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Pushcart Prize, a Commonwealth Club Poetry Medal, and the John Ciardi Lifetime Achievement Award.

AIMEE SUZARA. Filipino-American writer/ performer and educator Aimee Suzara uses poetry, theatre and movement to explore themes of home, migration and the body. Her play, Pagbabalik (Return), was awarded the Zellerbach Community Arts Grant in 2006 and 2007 and she has been published in the NAACP-nominated Check the Rhyme: an Anthology of Female Poets and Emcees(Lit Noire, 2007) and in several journals. Her poetry chapbook, The Space Between, will be published by Finishing Line Press in 2008. She coaches youth and adults in poetry and performance and teaches English at City College of San Francisco and Laney College. www.aimeesuzara.net

DJ LA RUMOROSA grew up on the Mexican border and has spun in the Bay Area for the last four years with the intention of getting people to shake what their momma gave ‘em.

Founder and host of Pinta tu Propio Mundo, LETICIA HERNÅDEZ, has been performing her music and teatro-infused spoken word for over ten years. An educator and published writer, she has presented her work throughout the country and in El Salvador. Her writing has appeared in newspapers, anthologies and literary journals which include, The Other Side of the Postcard, This Bridge We Call Home, and Latino Literature Today. Her first chapbook of poetry, Razor Edges of My Tongue, is available from Calaca Press. She has worked with youth and community based organizations for over seventeen years and is currently the Executive Director of GirlSource, a non-profit organization that supports and empowers young women in San Francisco.

Lysa Flores


Kim Addonizio


Aimee Suzara


Leticia Hernandez

 

 

 

 


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  --August--    
 

Date: Sat., Aug 2
Time: 6pm


Frida was Here Look-a-Like Audition and Artist Bazaar
featuring Txutxo Perez, Lawrence Colacion, Ricardo Peña, La Tigresa, ITZPAPALOTL

In celebration of the current exhibition at the SF MoMA, Galeria has partnered up with MAPP (Mission Arts and Performance Project). For one night only "Frida was Here" will take place at 17 locations in the Mission. Rene Yañez will conducting a Frida Khalo Look-a-Like Model Search in Studio24, while Galeria will host a Fridamania artist bazaar featuring work by Txutxo Perez, Lawrence Colacion, Ricardo Peña, La Tigresa, Itzpapalotl, El Campo Santo, and more to come. Music provided by DJ Chango Julius

The Frida Look-a-Like Models are for live Tableauxs that will be taking place on September 28th at SFMoMA. For full details on the live tableauxs please click here.
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  --July--    
 

Date: Fri., July 11
Time: 7:30pm
Suggested $2 Donation


Narrating Identity, (Dis)locating Bodies
Partipating Artists:
Monica Enriquez-Enriquez, Sonali Gulati, Vanessa Huang, Mujeres y Cultura Subterránea (Ines Morales and Susana Quiroz) and Rebeka Rodriguez.


Exhibition Dates: July 11th - August 8th
Suggested Donation $2

Artist Talk: Saturday, June 12th @ 2pm
Suggested Donation $2

Narrating Identity (Dis)locating Bodies, is curated by Monica Enriquez-Enriquez. The exhibition examines diasporic identities through the use of multimedia installations representing both a Latino and South Asian narrative. Monica Enriquez-Enriquez’s mixed media installation, Fragments of Migration, uses video and audio interviews to create a storyboard of Queer Asylees and Queer Asylum Seekers. Three body-sized screens with rear projection serve as dislocated frames exhibiting representations of loss, asylum and institutional violence. The public display of bodies, voices and sexualities of her participants paired with an inconsistent audio underlines the complexity of maintaining a normative narrative upon gaining asylum in the United States.

Video Still 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Thurs., July 17
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $5 or Free with food dish


LUNADA: Literary Lounge & Open Mic

Featuring: Mamacoatl with special guests: Nina Serrano, Marina Lavalle and Theresa Perez


Join us for a summer night of verse, song and community. July’s LUNADA features San Francisco’s one and only Mamacoatl and, as always, the open mic. The Bay Area’s only full moon literary gathering, four years running!! Bring a poem, bring an instrument, bring some food, bring your friends… BRING IT.
Mamacoatl is a Border Crossing Diosa, Her performance is an innovative fusion of diverse musical traditions. For those who demand comparison, she’s somewhere between Lila Downs, Ani DiFranco and Nina Simone, incorporating a fearless, feminine re-articulation of trova (Latin American protest song) and spoken word infused with jazz, funk and traditional Mexican sounds. MamaCoatl tells stories from both sides of the border in a time when the streets across America are filled with people using their voice to demand immigration reform.

Mamacoatl 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Fri., July 18 & Sat., July 19
Time: 7pm
Admission: $5


Film Screenings

Featuring: Queer Latino Films


More information to come

EVENT IS CANCELED...

 

 

 

 

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Date: Thurs., July 24
Time: 8pm
Admission: FREE

Flor y Canto en el Barrio: A Celebration of Latino Poetry

Brave New Mundo
Featuring: Javier O Huerta, Alejandra Mojica, Marc Pinate/Tocayo and Las Manas Tres.

Join us at Galeria de la Raza, one of six venues participating in the Flor y Canto en el Barrio kick off and Lit Crawl, on Thursday, July 24. Translated to mean “Flower and Song in the Neighborhood,” the festival brings young, unpublished poets alongside authors such as two-time winner of the American Book Award, Alejandro Murguía, and San Francisco Poet Laureate Jack Hirschman for poetry readings, workshops, and a special exchange of culture and history. “Flor y Canto is about the pursuit of peace through the celebration of poetry, art, culture, and friendship,” said the event’s curator and critically acclaimed poet Alejandro Murguía.

The Festival will begin on Thursday, July 24 with a kick-off party at 6:00pm in Balmy Alley (24th St. between Harrison and Folsom) and a Lit Crawl of both established and emerging poets. The Lit Crawl will take place at over six different venues on 24th Street (between Mission and Bryant). Poetry readings and workshops for various ages and interests will continue throughout Friday and Saturday, July 25 and 26. For locations of the poetry crawl or for more details visit the Friends’ website at www.friendssfpl.org.



Las Manas Tres

 

Lit Crawl Schedule of Venues:

6:00 pm— Balmy Alley, 24th St. between Harrison & Folsom; Lit Crawl locations include:
7:00 pm—“Other Voices/Many Americas” @
Café La Boheme 3318 24th St.
7:00 pm—“La Nueva Flor
Philz Coffee 3101 24th St.
7:00 pm—“El Corazon de la Misión
Sundance Coffee 3000 24th St.
8:00 pm—“Breaking Borders
Accion Latina (El Tecolote Headquarters) 2958 24th St.
8:00 pm—“Fuerza: From Sor Juana to the Mission
L’s Café 2871 24th St.
8:00 pm
—“Brave New Mundo – Cutting Edge of the 21st Century
Galería de la Raza 2857 24th St. @ Bryant

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Friday., July 25
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $8 (No one turned away for lack of funds)

Campy Ethnotopias
Featuring:
Dimension of IS: A Spectacular Future & LezBros

An evening of two experimental shorts that playfully explore the future of ethnography and anthropology from queer, feminist and multiracial perspectives, followed by a Q & A.

Dimension of IS: A Spectacular Future
Imagine a time in the near future, when ethnic and sexual “Others” collaborate with cosmic and ancestral forces to prevent the conquest of space by imperialist war mongers.  Dimension of IS is a postcolonial, sci-fi, performance-based video that humorously speculates about the evolution of the phenomenon of world's fairs. 
 
Dimension of IS co-creator, Heather Carducci defies societal norms by combining and inverting opposites to form function.  She is founder of SpaceSuperStar Inc., a future virtual planet for alien fashion and art. Gigi Otalvaro-Hormillosa, AKA Devil Bunny in Bondage, is a San Francisco based interdisciplinary artist who has received numerous awards and has presented her work all over the world (visit www.devilbunny.org).  
 
LezBros
It has been discovered that certain biological men display a special affinity for the company of same sex desiring women – commonly referred to as “lesbians.” This distinctive kinship is often brotherly, inspiring the male to be endearingly termed “Lezbro!” The short film LezBros explores this unique friendship between guys and dykes in a sassy mix of faux-anthropology, reality TV and a techno-pop music video.
 
LezBros creator and co-director, Dara Sklar playfully brings San Francisco 's queer culture to life in popular shorts including This is a Party, Toothbrush Tango” and “Day One: APeriod Piece” that appear in film festivals worldwide. Writer and producer, Brynn Gelbard, manages the production of television commercials, music videos, shorts, and feature films in the Bay Area and U.K. , including Ruby Blue and The Calling. Director of photography and editor, Melinda Bagatelos, has lived behind the lens, shooting and editing shorts and music video for many years. Production designer, Lisa Donohoe, is a Bay Area decorative painter that brings her creativity to set decoration and art direction in videos, short, and feature length films worldwide.  
 
The video completion phase of Dimension of IS has been possible in part by the Ford Foundation, JP Morgan Chase, the Andy Warhol Foundation, and Southwest Airlines through a grant from the National Association of Latino Art and Culture. 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  --June--    
 

Date: Fri., June 6
Time: 7:30pm
Suggested $2 Donation


Opening Reception for The 10th Annual Queer Latino Arts Festival's 1st Exhibition

Maria: Politics. Sex. Death. Men.


Partipating Artists:
Keith Aguiar, Robert Guzman, Allan Herrera, Jody Jock, Jonathan Solo, Ernesto Soprani and Leo Herrera.
(*** ADULT CONTENT. PARENTAL DISCRECTION ADVISED.)

Exhibition Dates:Friday, June 6th – Friday, July 4th

Maria:  Politics. Sex. Death. Men. curated by Leonardo Herrera was the winning proposal of a call to cuarortors, and was selected from seven curatorial proposals submitted to a Review Panel composed by John Blanco (artist), Raquel de Anda (Curator), Carolina Ponce de León (Curator), Alberto Rangel (artist), and Rebeka Rodriguez (artist/educator).


Magnum, 2008 Photograph by Leo Herrera




 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Sat., June 7
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $8


Reading From Mario Golden's
"The Love of Brothers"

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Thurs., June 12
Time: 7pm
Admission:$7


Film presentation by the Latino Film Festival

Dias de Boda by Juan Pinzas

Sonia, la bella hija de un importante editor, va a realizar el sueño de su vida casándose con Rosendo, un apuesto escritor con tendencias homosexuales, que en realidad desea más el nuevo premio literario que ha creado su futuro suegro que a su prometida.
La celebración de la boda traerá inesperadas sorpresas para todos los invitados, sacando a relucir el lado más oscuro de cada uno, lo que provocará que la flamante novia, que tanto anhelaba este día, desee que nunca hubiese llegado el momento de decir "¡Sí, quiero!".

Filmed entirely in Galicia, the second Dogma film in Spanish cinema to receive an Official Certificate tells the story of Sonia, the beautiful daughter of an important publisher, and her upcoming marriage to Rosendo, a handsome writer. Soon it becomes clear that Rosendo is more interested in men and her father’s prestigious new literary prize than he is in Sonia. The wedding ceremony brings unexpected surprises for all the guests and causes the bride to wish she had never said, “I do.” A fresh new comedy by Juan Pinzas, who also directed the first Dogma certified Spanish film Erase Otra Vez.


Dias de Boda

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Wed., June 18
Time: 3-5pm
Exhibition Dates:Thurs. June 19- Sun. Aug. 31, 2008

Fantality!

An offsite exhibition of work produced by four young artists participating in the Youth Media Project at Galería de la Raza, which documents the video, drawing, sculptural, and installation work developed in a class entitled, Recording Every Corner (REC).

This exhibit is the outcome of a ten-week multimedia class conducted by Jerome
Reyes and Ariel Roman that examines urban studies through issues of immigration and cultural borders, both official and imagined.

Opening Reception:
Wednesday, June 18, 2008, from 3-5 pm.

Exhibition Dates:
Thurs. June 19, 2008- Sun., Aug. 31, 2008

Artist Workshops:
August 2nd and 16th 2-4 pm

WHERE:
Zeum 221 Fourth St. San Francisco, CA 94103
zeum website

Hours:
Tues - Sunday 11am-5pm

Production Still

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Wed., June 18
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $5 or Free with food dish


LUNADA: Literary Lounge & Open Mic

Featuring: Yosimar Reyes

From the Mountains of Guerrero, Mexico comes Yosimar Reyes, a Two-Spirit Poet/Activist Based out of San Jose,CA. His style has been described as "a brave and vulnerable voice that shines light on the issues affecting Queer Immigrant Youth and the many disenfranchised communities in the U.S and throughout the world." Yosimar’s distinct style has managed to get him to perform form the Bay Area to New York City (always Representing East Side San Jose and his beautiful Mexico).
He holds the title for the 2005 as well as the 2006 South Bay teen Grand SLAM Champion and has been featured in the Documentary 2nd Verse: the Rebirth of Poetry. (2ndversefilm.com)In the works he has is long awaited chapbook: For Colored Boys Who Speak Softly… and is static about an upcoming project with the one and only Carlos Santana.
In the meantime Yosimar finds inspiration while waiting for the bus and sharing PALABRA with his Abuelita always breaking it down hood and speaking from a community spirit.
He currently lives in East Side San Jose.

 


 

Yosimar Reyes


















 

 

 

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Date: Fri., June 20
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $5


Poetry Readings Curated by Carolina Morales

 

Cuerpo Habla y Ensegna

 

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Date: Fri., June 27
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $8


Humor y Joteria:
Performances by Dino Fox, "Coco" Ferrer and Others

 

 

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  --May--

 

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Date: Mon., May 19
Time: 7:30pm
$5 or free with food dish


LUNADA: Literary Lounge & Open Mic
Featuring La Peña's Hybrid & Experimental Performance Ensemble
w/ DJ Agana on the 1s &2s


Celebrate the full moon in May with a special sneak preview from PARADOX, a new work by La Pena's Hybrid & Experimental Performance
Ensemble, directed by Marc David Pinate. A metaphysical exploration into the power of performance to heal the spirit, PARADOX is both story and non-story, theatre and non-theatre, teaching and non-teaching, beingand non-being. It is the space beyond the logical or rational where
opposites coexist and simultaneous truths converge. All is (n)One.
 


Date: Sun., May 18
Time: 7pm
$10 General // $7 Members & Students


Fandango Jarocho
Featuring Felix "Liche " Oseguera
Along with: Los Soneros del Este and Lakin Valdez

Liche Oseguera, from Coatzacoalcos, Veracurz, Mexico is a founding member of son jarocho group Chuchumbe. An internationally-renown musician, and luthier, Liche has traveled throughout the United States and Europe performing and teaching el son jarocho. Liche will perform with current participants in ongoing bay area workshops, followed by a jarocho fandango in which the audience, musicians and dancers are invited to participate. Special opening performance by Lakin Valdez

Date: Sat., May 3
Time: 8pm
$10 General // $8 Members


Butchlalis de Panochtitlan in
BETTY & THE BARBER MONOLOGUES!


Butchlalis de Panochtitlan brings Betty and the Barber to the Bay! Join the trio of multi-genre margin walkers from the depths of Los Angeles as they perform an evening's worth of monologues culled from their latest full-length production, The Barber of East L.A. , as well as new works and
works that haven't seen the light of day in years. Meet and fall in love with Betty Basta and Chonch Fonseca. Meet new characters inspired by real
events (scary!) in a night of monologue madness conceived by Mari Garcia, Raquel Gutierrez and Claudia Rodriguez. Butchlalis de Panochtitlan, or BdP for short, is comprised of Mari Garcia,
Raquel Gutierrez and Claudia Rodriguez. This Los Angeles-based multimedia performance ensemble renders cartographies of desire, identity, and localized histories on the bodies they walk in as they perform themselves,
each other, imagined characters and caricatures.

PARADOX

 

 

 

 

Fandango Jarocho

 

 


 

 

Butchlalis de Panochtitlan

 
 

 

 

Date;Thurs, May 8
Time: 7:00- 9:00p.m.
$20 donations are greatly accepted

A Photo Exhibition Benefiting Puente a la Salud Comunitaria

Come join for live music, complimentary wine and snack, and a chance to wn a beautiful hand-woven rug from Oaxaca

Puente a la Salud Comunitaria Mission Statement is partnering with families, health workers, and farmers to promote the consumption and cultivation of the highly nutritious grain amaranth, Puente a la Salud Comunitaria is dedicated to the eradication of malnutrition and the improvement of health in rural Mexico.
For more info about Puente a la Salud visit puentemexico.org

puentemexico.org















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  --April--    
 

Date: Sat., April 5
Time: 8pm
$5-10 Sliding Scale


Out The Black Hole:
An Evening with Norman Zelaya


Like a meteor hurtling through the vastness of space, writer and performer, Norman Zelaya found himself caught in the gravitational pull of domestic obligation and the responsibility that comes with age. For three years, he drifted in the celestial ether. Then in April of 2006, a flash was spotted, a speck of brilliance moving slowly towards the nearest mic. Now, Norman is back to shake off the galactic dust and share cosmic tails about running out of fuel, an epic collapse and the journey back to himself.

Join Norman and special guests for an evening benefiting Galeria de la Raza.

Special guests include:
Jaime Crespo, cartoonist and poet
Karim Scarlata, filmmaker
Estela de la Cruz, poet

Ethereal soundscape provided by DJ Aztec Parrot

Norman Zelaya

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Fri., April 18
Time: 6-8pm
FREE


Paper Jam Session
with Ana Fernandez & Joey Brunner


Paper Jam Sessions are an extension of Galeria de La Raza’s Youth Media Project, which is an open lab dedicated to Mission youth and adults as a studio laboratory consisting of lectures and hands on workshops available to the public for free and is taught by professional visiting artists and educators from Galeria’s art education program.
Artist Lecture:
Ana Teresa Fernandez
Through performance-based paintings and video, Fernandez explores the territories that encompass boundaries and stereotypes: physical, emotional, and psychological. Fernandez subverts the typical folkloric representations of Mexican women by changing the protagonist's uniform to the quintessential little black dress, a symbol of American prosperity and femininity and of the Mexican tradition of wearing black for a year after a death.  Her paintings portray actual performances where Fernandez takes on the Sisyphean task of cleaning the environment - sweeping sand on a beach, vacuuming a dirt road - to accentuate the idea of disposable labor resources. Her work has been shown at Fondation d'Art Jacmel, Haiti, Galeria de la Raza, San Francisco, Centro Cultural Tijuana, Tijuana, Mexico and most resently a solo video exhibition at Queens Nails Annex in San Francisco.
Ana Teresa Fernandez received her Masters of Fine Art from the San Francisco Art Institute.
 
Artist Workshop
Joey Brunner
Joey is a graduate of Galeria’s Emerging Educators program and is finishing his architecture degree from The California College for the Arts. He will be conducting a hands-on workshop on 3-D design, which is based on issues of urban space, boundaries and monuments through the usage of maps, electronic media and drawing.
Galería’s Youth Media Project is a mentorship program serving at-risk youth, which aims to strengthen the relation between creative activity, social awareness, and community building. Driven by technological advances and mentorship, this experiential art education program engages youth in the creation of art while examining our local community’s social, cultural and political life. The goals of the YMP are to engage participants in creative activities that explore the significant links between their personal experiences and the larger communities to which they belong. Students can also receive training in building their portfolios for future education.

Painting by Ana Fernandez

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




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Date: Sun., April 20
Time: 7:30pm
$5 or Free with food dish

LUNADA: Literary Lounge & Open Mic
Featuring: Naomi Quiñonez & Erica Benton


Join us in April as we celebrate the fertility of spring with two distinct voices in poetry and song. Singer-songwriter, Erica Benton, lights up the stage with powerful melodies set to acoustic guitar rhythms. The award winning musings of acclaimed poet and scholar, Naomi Quiñonez, will definitely lift us up and over.

Erica Nalani Benton is the proud daughter of Oceania. She was raised in the bay area with roots in Guåhan (Guam), Hawaii, Europe, and probably dozens of other places. She has sung all over the bay area from SF Pride, to Chamorro Self-Determination Conferences, to Youth Empowerment summits and local open mics. From her bedroom to the stage, she uses music and creativity to inspire hearts and minds towards, love, healing, self-determination, and freedom. She loves eggs and rice for breakfast, and everday peoples strugglin for dignity. Be her friend at myspace.com/ebadu. Hear her music at myspace.com/ericanalani

Naomi Helena Quiñonez, Chicana poet and educator, is a recognized American poet whose two collections, Hummingbird Dream/Sueño de Colibri and The Smoking Mirror have received critical acclaim. Her forthcoming collection of poetry is entitled Exiled Moon. She co edited a groundbreaking literary anthology Invocation L.A: Urban Multicultural Poetry which won the American Book Award and she also co edited a highly regarded critical anthology Decolonial Voices: Chicana and Chicano Studies in t 21st Century. Among her other achievements are the Rockefeller Fellowship and the California Arts Council Award. She is featured in Notable Hispanic Women and the Dictionary of Literary Biography. Her poems and essays have appeared in noteworthy collections such as the Colorado Review, the Library of Poetry Anthology and the Encyclopedia of Latinas in the U.S. Quiñonez, who has distinguished herself among a cadre of Chicano Poets informed by the social change movements of the 1970s such as Lorna Dee Cervantes and Gary Soto, is also part of a larger genre of U.S. ethnic writers and she has appeared in programs with Quincy Troupe, Leslie Marmon Silko, David Mura and Octavia Butler to name a few. Her work has also appeared in multicultural anthologies such as From Totems to Hip Hop, edited by Ishmael Reed.

Erica Benton

Naomi Quiñonez

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 










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Date: Sat., April 26
Time: 8pm
$5-12 Sliding Scale


Come Fly With Me: A Celebration of Resistance
Featuring: Semilla & Son Del Centro


The Sacramento performance group, Semilla, presents a night to celebrate Resistance.  No more tears, fighting back with both song and dance.  The evening includes an opening ceremony, music, poetry, and an educational segment on I.C.E. immigration raids.  Special guest performance by jarocho group, Son Del Centro.






Semilla

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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--March--    
 

Date: Fri., March 21
Time: 7:30pm
Admission: $5 or Free with food dish

LUNADA: Literary Lounge & Open Mic
Featuring Lorna Dee Cervantes & The Genie


Join us in March for the hyperreal, scratch guitar sounds of San Francisco’s own, The Genie and legendary Xicana poet, Lorna Dee Cervantes, winner of the American Book Award.

Lorna Dee Cervantes  was born in 1954. She is the author of From the Cables of Genocide: Poems on Love and Hunger (Arte Público Press, 1991) and Emplumada (1981), which won an American Book Award. She is also co-editor of Red Dirt, a cross-cultural poetry journal, and her work has been included in many anthologies including Unsettling America: An Anthology of Contemporary Multicultural Poetry (eds. Maria Mazziotti Gillan and Jennifer Gillan, 1994),  No More Masks! An Anthology of Twentieth-Century Women Poets (ed. Florence Howe, 1993), and After Aztlan: Latino Poets of the Nineties (ed. Ray González, 1992). In 1995 she received a Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Writers' Award.

The renown pioneer of "scratch guitar", The Genie blends blues, jazz, electronica, bossa nova, latin and middle-eastern rhythms via slide guitar, beatboxing, and live sampling, to create a visually stunning and truly unique show.

 

Lorna Dee Cervantes
Lorna Dee Cervantes

The Genie
The Genie

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Date: Fri., March 7
Time: 6-9pm

Paper Jam Sessions!

Galería invites youth, their families, and the general public to the launching of the Paper Jam Sessions! The Paper Jams are an open studio and media laboratory consisting of lectures, music and hands-on art-making workshops taught by professional artists and educators from Galería’s Youth Media arts education program. The sessions will take place on Friday, May 7 at 6p.m., at our Studio 24 media lab. (2851 24th Street @ Bryant Street).
The first session will feature an artist talk by Mike Lai, a stencil workshop conducted by Andre Eamiello, and the rhythms of DJ Chango Julius.


Artist Talk:
Mike Lai will discuss his performance-based projects and present various projects, which include: Bruce Lee Manicurist/ Golden Dragon Massacre, an installation in which he recreated a typical Chinatown backroom that holds after-hours Mahjong gambling and mayhem. The project references the infamous 1970’s failed assassination attempt —known as the Golden Dragon Massacre— by Chinese teenagers in a San Francisco Chinatown back room. Lai’s work often utilizes Bruce Lee’s legacy as a way to explore issues of race, representation and cultural phenomena.
Artist Workshop:
Andre Eamiello is an alumnus of Galería’s Emerging Educators program and a visual Bay Area artist. He will be conducting a hands-on stencil design workshop based on the ideas of borders, boundaries and translation through the usage of spray painting, graffiti and drawing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  Date: Fri., March 7
Time: 7:30pm

Opening Reception for
The invisible Nation:
a solo exhibition by Victor Cartagena

The Invisible Nation, an evocative large-scale installation by Salvadorian artist, Victor Cartagena. The exhibition will include sculptural works, video and sound installations, as well as a public digital mural, which will be displayed at our Bryant Street billboard.


Opening Reception: March 7th, 7:30 PM

Exhibition Dates:
Friday March 7th – Friday May 16th

Gallery Hours: Tue. – Sat. 12 – 6 p.m

Artist Talk: Saturday, April 26 2:00 p.m.
A conversation with Victor Cartagena and Roberto Varea, Director of El Teatro Jornalero and chair of the Performing Arts Program and Social Justice Center at USF.

 

 

 

Date: Fri., March 8
Time: 8pm
Admission: $8

International Woman's Day

La Ultima Palabra : If yours was the last Word… what would it say?

Featuring: Mamacoatl, Leticia Hernández, Avotja, Kriya Taber, Susana Aragón

Join us for a night of poetry at the closing night celebration of a weeklong series of events in honor of International Women’s Day. Curated by Mamacoatl. Mujeres despiertas, come and share this guiso and bring your ULTIMA PALABRA!

 

Ultima Palabra

 

 

 

 

 

Ultima Palabra






 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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  --January--    

Date: Sun., January 27
Time: 2:30pm
Admission: $10 - $15 (Sliding scale)

Location: BRAVA Theatre, 2781 24th Street

Galeria de la Raza presents a BENEFIT film screening and live music performance.

Directors John Leaños & Gustavo Vazquez present two new films plus Oakland-based Latin fusion band CARNE CRUDA performs en VIVO!

QUE VIVA LA LUCHA
A film by Gustavo Vazquez

QUE VIVA LA LUCHA is a documentary that features a look at the sport of Lucha Libre or Mexican wrestling, specifically the extreme version in Tijuana. It explores how individuals are drawn to this grueling sport as either the wrestler or as a devoted fan, many of whom come from the poor working class neighborhoods. Universal themes of good vs. evil, the underdog beating the bully, the noble hero outwitting the corrupt nemesis - all play out over and over to generations of fans. The wrestlers fabricate unique characters that their fans can embrace or insult, such as corrupt politicians and cops, crime fighting heroes, mythological figures and villains. Familiar traces of comic book heroes like Superman, Spiderman, action fighting icons like Bruce Lee or a modern day Robin Hood combine to form one of Mexico's favorite spectator sports.

DNN: Dead News Network
A new animation by John
Leaños and Sean Levon Nash

(16 min)
Peter Deadings