Joe Galarza Explained

Joe "Peps" Galarza is a Chicano artist, educator, and musician based in Los Angeles. He is the bassist for the Chicano rap group Aztlan Underground.[1]

Biography

Joe Galarza was raised in the El Sereno neighborhood on the east side of Los Angeles. Growing up in an economically-disadvantaged largely Latino community, he was exposed to a lot of gang violence, crime, and drug abuse.[2] As a result, he became an educator for at-risk youth, and teaches art at correctional facilities and community centers.[3] In 2008, he led a mural workshop with high school students on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation for their Death to Meth campaign.[4] He collaborated with Tongva Native elder, Julia Bognay, to create murals on the Pitzer College campus to acknowledge indigenous land and stories.[5] He has worked with the Ventura County Arts Council to lead mural workshops for the elementary schools and for their Art & Youth justice program.[6] [7] In 2016, Galarza along with artist Jose Baltazar, created one of the 31 angel statues for the California Community Foundation’s 100 years of service to Los Angeles County public art display.[8] Galarza has also taught art at University of Redlands, Pitzer College, and Self-Help Graphics. Along with artist and scholar Marisol L. Torres, he formed the art collective Arte Toltecaytol. He is a multi-disciplinary artist who creates paintings, murals, sculptures, music, and musical instruments. Galarza is best known for being a member of the award-winning Chicano rap band, Aztlan Underground which has toured internationally and has opened for large acts such as Rage Against the Machine.

Arte Toltecaytol

ArteToltecaytol is an artist collective founded by Joe Galarza and Marisol L. Torres.[9] The collective has created murals and led arts workshops throughout southern California. They were commissioned by Academia Semillas del Pueblo Xinaxcalmecac, an Indigenous Mexican public charter school in East Los Angeles, to create a mural program for the school titled, “Tonacayotl” which means "fruits of the land/sustenance" and features various Indigenous gods.[10]

Exhibitions

Genetic Wind Songs is a solo online exhibition and performance space created by Joe Galarza to showcase the negative effects of colonization in the Americas including erosion of Indian American culture and death to the people.[11] In November 2020, Joe Galarza performed as Genetic Wind Songs of Truth and Revolt at Rio Hondo College in East Los Angeles.[12]

Artworks

2019 Channel Islands University Mural at University Hall - Lead artist for Michele Serros Mural[13]

2019 Redlands University Mural for Think Indian Program - Lead artist/muralist in collaboration with Desert Sage[14]

2019 Camp Rocky Juvenile Hall - Lead Artist for Mural with Boyle Heights Arts Conservatory[15]

2018 Self-Help Graphics - Lead Artist For 100 Year Anniversary of LA Philharmonic/Ciclavia and Day of The Dead ceremony

2018 Camp Rockey Juvenile Detention Center Mural with AIYN/ Armory Center for the Arts[16]

2018 Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall - Compound Mural - Lead Artist with youth serving life sentence

2017 Pitzer College Mural - Lead muralist[17]

1998 Monte Vista Elementary School Mural - "Tonantzin" in collaboration with Daniel Cervantes and Ozomatli[18]

Arts Activism

2019 Homeboy Industries - Inter-generational trauma informed art workshop[19]

2016 Camp Scott - Juvenile Detention Center mural workshop[20]

2014 Youth Action Party and Mendocino County Youth Project Muralist Instructor for Native Pomo youth project[21]

2012 Migrant Education Program, 1st Street Elementary School Art & Drawing Instructor

References

  1. Book: Gonzalez, Martha. Chican@ Artivistas: Music, Community, and Transborder Tacitcs in East Los Angeles. University of Texas Press. 2020. 9781477321393. 36–37.
  2. Web site: JoeGalarza - Professional, General Artist DeviantArt. 2021-05-02. www.deviantart.com. en.
  3. Web site: About the Artist. 2021-05-02. LA Phil. en.
  4. Web site: Fischer. Emily. May 10, 2008. Death to Meth Brings Drug Free Message to Youths. Rapid City Journal.
  5. Web site: Tongva elder Julia Bogany shares the significance behind Joe Galarza's Tongva Mural at Pitzer College in Claremont, CA. Santa Barbara Today. 2021-05-10. santabarbara.today.
  6. Web site: VCAC Partners with Local Business Owners to Create Art Display on Victoria Ave. off the 101 Freeway in Ventura Ventura County Arts Council. 2021-05-12. en.
  7. Web site: Ventura County Arts Council. 2021-05-12. Alliance for California Traditional Arts. en-US.
  8. Web site: 2016-11-12. California Community Foundation Unveils We Are Los Angeles Public Art Exhibit in Honor of Foundation's Centennial. 2021-05-12. California Community Foundation. en.
  9. Web site: artetoltecayotl. 2009-09-14. Arte Toltecayotl. 2021-05-12. Arte Toltecayotl. en.
  10. Web site: Palmieri. Angela. 2016-07-07. Indigenous Murals in Schools. 2021-05-12. Māori-to-Español: A Cultural Pedagogy Site for Spanish Bilingual Educators. en.
  11. Web site: Genetic Windsongs, 3818 Drysdale Ave, Los Angeles, CA (2021). 2021-05-02. www.findglocal.com.
  12. Web site: Cultural Events 2020-2021. 2021-05-12. Rio Hondo College. en.
  13. Web site: Michele Serros Collection - Channel Magazine - CSU Channel Islands. 2021-05-03. www.csuci.edu.
  14. Web site: New campus mural highlights Native American history University of Redlands. 2021-05-12. Redlands. en.
  15. Web site: Cartoons and Cereal - The Superhero Me Edition. 2021-05-03. us10.campaign-archive.com.
  16. Web site: Armory Helps Incarcerated Teen Girls Create a Mural in Santa Clarita » Armory Center for the Arts. 2021-05-12. www.armoryarts.org.
  17. Web site: 2017-04-21. Pitzer Community Mural "Decolonizes Academic Space". 2021-05-10. The Student Life. en-US.
  18. Web site: Macias. Martin Jr.. 2018-11-16. LA Neighborhood Looks to Preserve Cultural – and Culinary – Identity. 2021-05-02. Courthouse News Service. en-US.
  19. Web site: Homeboy Art Academy. 2021-05-12. Homeboy Industries. en-US.
  20. Web site: Radio. Southern California Public. 2016-06-10. Artists step in to reimagine spaces for juvenile offenders. 2021-05-12. Southern California Public Radio.
  21. Web site: Youth Action Party. 2021-05-12. mcyp.org.

External links