*** Welcome to piglix ***

Patricia Rodriguez (artist)

Patricia Rodriguez (artist)
Born 1944 (age 72–73)
Marfa, Texas
Alma mater San Francisco State University
Scientific career
Fields Artist

Patricia Rodriguez (born 1944) is a prominent Chicana artist and educator. Rodriguez grew up in Marfa, Texas and moved to San Francisco to later pursue an art degree at Merritt College and this is where she learned about the Mexican American Liberation Art Front (MALA-F) and the Chicano movement. In 1970, Patricia received a scholarship to the San Francisco Art Institute and this is where she met Graciela Carrillo. Together, they created and founded the Mujeres Muralistas, the first Chicana women’s mural collective in San Francisco.

Patricia Rodriguez was born in Marfa, Texas in 1944. She was born to a Chicana single parent and was raised by her grandmother while her mother worked. Her grandmother played a major role in the development of a feminine identification. Rodriguez grew her creative identity by attending jamaycas (festive days) which provided an acceptable method of feminine creativity. Later, Patricia and her family moved to California and this helped Patricia learn a new sense about cultural boundaries. Back in Texas, Patricia wouldn’t hang out with Anglos unless they were poor or were from the same neighborhood, but in California, there wasn’t a division and they hung out together. In junior high, Rodriguez began to formulate herself as an artist. She had an art teacher that encouraged her to become an artist and to go to college. The limitations and social attitudes were an obstacle for Patricia’s future, but she relied on her endurance and perseverance.

Rodriguez began to pursue an art degree at Merritt College in 1966 where she discovered the Chicano movements. In 1970, she received a scholarship and attended the San Francisco Art Institute. She found art school to be isolating and chaotic and it wasn’t what she expected. Patricia was happy and excited to be accepted to such a prestigious art school but she didn’t want to be a minimalist painter at the time like everyone else. She wanted to paint with a lot of color. She joined Chicano movement groups to fight for their right for higher education and through this momentum, she developed herself more as an artist. Her support was restricted by the political expectations of her male counterparts. While attending San Francisco Art Institute, Rodriguez met and roomed with Graciela Carrillo where they rented an apartment on Balmy Alley. Balmy Alley is home to the most concentrated collection of murals in the city of San Francisco. Patricia started to study Mexican muralists and became inspired to create a women’s artist group. Patricia and Graciela created Las Mujeres Muralistas (The Women Muralists) in 1971. They added more members to their group: Consuelo Mendez, a Venezuelan born artist in the printmaking program and Irene Perez, a Chicana graphic artist.


...
Wikipedia

...