Labels

Showing posts with label Searching for Aztlán. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Searching for Aztlán. Show all posts

Meet the artist behind the American Night poster: Sivonna West

American Night continues tonight and through May 23! As an added bonus, check out Garden of Nocturne, the one woman show by the artist who created the promotional artwork! Read on to learn more about this young talented woman, and check out her exhibit in our lobby, open to the public an hour before the performances and during intermission!

About the Artist:
Sivonna Ash West was named after a figment of her mother’s imagination. Born and raised in sunny southern California, her life as an artist is influenced by the youthful skate, surf and snow scene, combined with instinctual dark nods to the occult, the metaphysical and the supernatural.
She paints from her heart in hopes to mystify the viewer, while feeding her constant craving for the wild fantastic thing called beauty.

Sivonna earned a BFA in Illustration from Pacific Northwest College of Art in May 2011 and since has been residing and painting in Portland, Oregon. Showing at local galleries and cafes.

In 2014 she stayed at Studio P52, an artist residency in Barcelona, Spain and painted murals indoors and outdoors as well. Afterwards she traveled to Berlin, Germany to make art and was inspired to start her own line of painted velvet capes. Both the murals and the wearable art pieces are creative vehicles to bring more exposure to her artwork from outside viewers.

Ed. Note: Ms. West also created the artwork and backdrops for the touring productions Sueños de Fútbol and Searching for Aztlán on commission from Milagro.

Artist's Statement:
For "Garden of Nocturne", my solo exhibition at Milagro, I made a series of black velvet paintings stretched on wood panels. I was inspired by native Mexican flora and the colorful cactus gardens that flourish even in the driest of seasons. The dark shadows of the black velvet against the bright colored acrylic highlights create nocturnal scenes in an abstract land. The glowing eyes that peer from the depths of these scenes remind the viewer of other life forms traveling in the night; and give the feeling of paranoia that one might associate with psychedelic hallucinations.

Don't miss this exhibit with elements of shamanism, native ritual and, of course, dreamlike visions, free and open to the public during the run of American Night!

Audacia y entusiamo (reseña en traducción)


Traducción al español de la reseña de "Searching for Aztlán", por Kaitie Todd para Willamette Week
Puede comprar entradas para las 3 presentaciones restantes en línea, por nuestra página de Facebook o llamando al 503-236-7253.

Searching for Aztlán comienza en Tucson, pero en diez minutos algo queda claro: ya no estamos en Arizona. La obra de una hora de duración, escrita y dirigida por Lakin Valdez, empieza con Dolores (Alida Holguín Wilson-Gunn), una maestra de Tucson luchando contra la ley de Arizona que prohibe los estudios mexicano-americanos en las escuelas locales. Es una batalla que va perdiendo sin ninguna esperanza. Dolores lleva el pelo en trenzas, viste huaraches y carga un perro de peluche, pero no es hasta que una violenta tormenta de arena azota la ciudad que las referencias a El Mago de Oz se hacen contundentemente obvias. Después de eso, los guiños a la trama clásica son difíciles de ignorar cuando Dolores se ve transportada por arte de magia a una realidad alterna, en la que debe encontrar la tierra mítica de Aztlán, hogar ancestral de los aztecas. En este recuento, la bruja mala es una senadora en traje sastre gritándole a su teléfono celular. Interpretada por Ana Silva con una pronunciación arrastrada y una carcajada irritante, es uno de los destacamentos de la obra. Los acompañantes de Dolores, mientras tanto, son varias caricaturas de los últimos 50 años del movimiento chicano. Teatro Milagro planea llevar Searching for Aztlán a escuelas durante una gira nacional, y su simplicidad y las metáforas obvias son definitivamente más apropiadas para audiencias jóvenes. En lo que cabe, sin embargo, la obra toma una formula familiar y la transforma en algo a la vez satírico y educativo, con una actuación particularmente poderosa de parte de Wilson-Gunn, quien interpreta a Dolores con audacia y entusiasmo.

Photo of the Day: Aztlán school matinee


It's a beautiful day to learn in Aztlán! And that's exactly what our guests did at this morning's matinee performance. Students from Linfield College, as well as Cleveland, Deer Park, Grant and St. Helens high schools, had the opportunity to chat with the cast of Searching for Aztlán in a fascinating post-show talk-back session.

There are three more nights for the public to come along on this metaphorical journey; get your tickets today!

Un viaje metafórico (reseña en traducción)


Traducción al español de ‘Searching for Aztlán' at Milagro Theatre takes us on a metaphorical journey’, por Holly Johnson para The Oregonian
Puede comprar entradas para las 3 presentaciones restantes en línea, por nuestra página de Facebook o llamando al 503-236-7253.

"Searching for Aztlán," una nueva obra en el Teatro Milagro, puede ser corta, pero está repleta de ideas, bordada con humor satírico y diseñada para que adultos y jóvenes disfruten y aprendan por igual.

La obra – la cual saldrá de gira a escuelas en el noroeste después de esta corrida en Portland, fue escrita y dirigida por Lakin Valdez, quien formó el aclamado Teatro Campesino. La pieza teatral tiene raíces en el movimiento chicano de los últimos 50 años, y nos lleva en un viaje metafórico, con leves pero astutas referencias a la odisea de Dorothy en “El Mago de Oz.”

En 2012, cuando el programa de estudios mexicano-americanos en Tucson (Arizona) se ve clausurado y los libros relacionados son removidos de las aulas, una maestra llamada Dolores (Alida Holguín Wilson-Gunn) se encuentra desempleada, y después transportada en una tormenta de viento a una realidad alterna. Perdida en el desierto, decide buscar el mítico Aztlán, la tierra ancestral de los aztecas que algunos ubican en el sureste de Estados Unidos o el noroeste de México (el concepto de Aztlán es central para el movimiento chicano e inspiró su idea de una nueva nación). Al comienzo de su travesía, se le unen otros viajeros que son exiliados desposeídos, incluso uno traicionero. Pero la solidaridad sale vencedora, a pesar de una malvada bruja (Ana Silva como una villana corporativa, completa con traje sastre, teléfono celular y una frondosa peluca rubia) quien trata de suprimir al grupo. ¿Es Aztlán un estado mental, un lugar emocional quizás, uno que pueda fortalecer la herencia indígena de los viajeros para permitirles encontrar su pasado y nutrir su futuro? Esa parece ser la idea de Valdez, y es potente, aunque partes de la obra se sienten superficiales cuando podrían profundizar más. Aun así, la política resalta fuertemente en la tradición de El Teatro Campesino (el brazo cultural del sindicato campesino United Farmworkers, co-fundado por César Chávez y Dolores Huerta.)

Momento destacado: Cuando los cuatro actores hacen un pequeño baile “del camino de baldosas amarillas” mientras viajan juntos y escuchamos la música de El Mago de Oz combinada con percusión pesada y guitarra eléctrica, estilo James Brown. Es una mezcla perfecta de música y ritmos, un poco de rabia y un poco de dulzura mofante. La música realmente agudiza el espectáculo de una hora, brindándole mayor enfoque.

Puntos bajos: Silva es muy cómica en una variedad de papeles, incluyendo HighSpanic, una joven chicana completamente envuelta en la cultura dominante norteamericana que apenas habla español. Pero la agudeza en todos sus papeles afecta la producción, incluyendo la chirriante risa de su bruja. Sería mejor usar esas notas lo menos posible.

Participante más valioso: Ajai Terrazas Tripathi, egresado de la facultad de teatro de Oregon State University, brinda un maravilloso sentido del humor y fuerte caracterización al espectáculo. Como el único varón en la obra, esboza una variedad de personajes con gran habilidad, pero es más potente, cómico y convincente como un militante de los 1970s que ha estado buscando Aztlán por tres décadas, progresando solo circularmente. Con él todo es ladrido y nada mordida, ostentando una metralleta de juguete como descubrimos, y jugando con los muñecos de peluche que forman su “ejército.” En un momento nos confiesa: “A veces me espanto a mí mismo.”

Frase de la noche: "El Aztlán que buscas es un lugar de conciencia en evolución.”

Mejor momento: Cuando el mural de fondo es revelado, indicando Aztlán como una idea visual. La pintura de la artista escenográfica Sivonna West es cautivadora, aún si el color es un poco tenue.

Mayor sorpresa: Cuando uno de los personajes interpretados por Silva (empleada por la bruja) viste el tocado de una deidad solar y trata de intimidarlos, y después renuncia para unirse a ellos. Bueno, no fue gran sorpresa.

Mensaje: La lucha por la verdad, la justicia y “el modo indígena” siempre ha estado en el corazón de la causa chicana, y Valdez nos ayuda a descubrir lo que significa ser chicano en la sociedad contemporánea, mientras nos permite burlarnos con la sátira de los estereotipos. Menciona en las notas del programa que la inclusión de los programas de estudios mexicano-americanos, los mismos prohibidos en 2012, había tenido una relación directa al aumento en logros estudiantiles entre los latinos. Ahora lidiando con la agenda conservadora del Siglo XXI, se enfrenta a algunos de los mismos problemas que la generación de su padre, y la esencia política de El Teatro Campesino es tan vital hoy como lo era en los años 70s.

Aztlán in Oregon: the Chicano connection

We've seen a lot in our thirty one years as a company. January 29, 2015 will mark the fifth anniversary of the first public location in the city of Portland being named after an American Latino: Cesar Chavez Boulevard. In the years leading to the 2010 renaming of a stretch of 39th Ave., many questioned the union leader's significance to the city, but the national impact of Chavez and the Chicano movement is an undeniable fact of American history. The less-well known story of the leader's presence and legacy in Oregon's history, and that of Latinos in the Beaver State, however, is reason enough to honor the migrant worker from Yuma, Arizona.

One bright moment in Chicano history shone over the first accredited, independent 4-year Chicano/Latino college in the nation, Colegio Cesar Chavez in Mt. Angel, Oregon. Established in 1973, it was one of the few institutions named after the icon before his death in 1993. The college went on to create more Chicano/Latino graduates in 1977 than University of Oregon and Oregon State University combined. And Chavez himself helped create this institution to empower the growing Latino community by taking part in the negotiations for the campus. Others who made the Colegio possible were emerging Chicano leaders like Ernesto Lopez, Sonny Montes and José Romero.

Cipriano Ferrel was one of these young and driven Chicanos who graduated before the Colegio closed its doors in 1983, a principal organizer in what became Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN, or Northwest Treeplanters and Farmworkers United), an important organization that remains strong to this day, as does Chavez's original group, the United Farm Workers (UFW, formerly known as the National Farm Workers Organization, the country's first permanent agricultural union). 

Latinos continue to be the fastest growing group in the region and the nation, and as a reflection the name of this important leader is now on everything from public schools throughout the state to scholarships that empower coming generations, and even a national monument in California commemorating his home and resting place.

Milagro is honored to be part of this ongoing history, and in our own way have come back around to one of the key moments that became entrenched as a show of strength and unity of American workers: the grape strike launched on September 8, 1965 in Delano, California by the NFWA, led by Chavez and Dolores Huerta.

One enduring part of the organizing efforts of the time was the "actos" produced by the itinerant troupe that would become El Teatro Campesino and give shape to Chicano theatre. Our own touring production honor that empowering vision that travels where the community is, with another important link: Lakin Valdez, the son of ETC founder Luis Valdez and a life-time participant in his father's company, wrote and directed Searching for Aztlán, a very contemporary story that reaches from the history of the Aztecs to the future of Latinidad.

Join us at Milagro during its run, starting with a specially priced preview on January 8, before its premiere on January 9, and closing on January 17!

And on January 11, don't miss the free discussion Let’s talk about Aztlán at 3:30 pm. Join the cast and director in a conversation with Chicano líderes who inspired this production in a conversation about their own search for the legendary Aztlán. (You do not need to attend the production to join the discussion.)

Of course, you can also bring a performance to your community!

Aztlán: 5 ways to join the search party

The intrepid members of our touring troupe are hunkering down for the premiere of Searching for Aztlán, coming to Milagro this weekend, and you can join them in the trenches of identity and history!

Written and directed by Lakin Valdez (of El Teatro Campesino, which will be presenting our touring production in May), this play takes as point of departure the sociopolitical turmoil of Arizona surrounding Mexican American Studies programs. Ancient and not so ancient history is also visited, from the mythical birthplace of the Aztecs to the homeland of the Chicano movement.

Here's 5 ways you can join us on this exploration of the past and search for identity:

Jan. 7: Educators interested in the themes are encouraged to attend our special FREE preview event for dress rehearsal; you can decide if the play is appropriate to bring to your school or send your students to see it at our theatre during an evening or matinee performance. Sign up here!

Jan. 8: A specially priced preview is scheduled for the night before the official premiere. Tickets available online and on our Facebook page.

Jan. 9: Join the search party and stay for the other party! The official opening performance will be followed by a great reception hosted by our friends from La Bonita! Tickets available online and on our Facebook page.

Jan. 10-17: The show continues public performances at Milagro before launching its national tour. Tickets available online and on our Facebook page.

Jan.-Nov.: Catch the touring production on the road during their national tour!

And don't forget that Milagro offers senior, student, veteran and group discounts. We also participate in the Arts for All program: present your SNAP card (in person) to purchase up to 4 tickets for only $5 each!

Get your tickets today, and let the haboob carry you away to the land of Aztlán!

Aztlán, haboob, huarache and other "funny" words


One of the most interesting aspects of a modern language like English is that, like other "living" things, it grows, reacts and "learns" from its interactions. It is in such ways that words get borrowed and even high-jacked. American usage is wonderfully fertile for the evolution of the language, thanks in part to the proverbial "melting pot" of our plural cultures.

We're no strangers to "immigrant" words, which sometimes have no equivalents in English, or have become entrenched in our speech despite their "foreign" sounds and origins... much like the lively mosaic of cultures that make up this country we know as the U.S. of A. In discussing and planning the promotion of our upcoming show, Searching for Aztlán, a few words popped up that we found equal parts intriguing and interesting. Today we bring you the origin and meaning of three of them: Aztlán, haboob and huarache.

Aztlán: this name covers a lot of metaphorical and physical ground, which merits a longer post (coming soon), but at its core it refers simultaneously to the mythical land of the Mexicas (better known as the Aztecs), the physical territory that comprised Mexico before the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, and to the geopolitical consciousness that galvanizes the Chicano movement. Literally, it means "Place of (the Whiteness of) Herons".

Haboob: this word borrowed from Arabic means "blasting", an apt description of the violent sand storms that blow through arid territories all over the world like the Sudan and central Australia. The Southwest US also sees its share of these storms, such as the one that hit Phoenix, AZ in 2011 with a dust cloud 5,000 feet tall.

Huarache: Flower-power fashionistas in the US first encountered this term for a flat, leather strapped sandal in the 60s, and it was embraced with all the gusto reserved for comfortable, ethnically-diverse clothing that made dashikis, love beads and buckskin the rage of the age. The word itself is a linguistic corruption of the word kwarachi which means "sandal" in the P'urépecha/Tarascan language from the region around modern-day Michoacan, Mexico.

Strap on your huaraches and let the haboob sweep you along to the mythical land of Aztlán! Join us on January 9th for the official opening of Searching for Aztlán or catch it during its national tour!

Now you get the picture: Aztlán backdrop

Like a picture emerging as the dust from a haboob settles, the background mural for Searching for Aztlán is taking shape, and what a stunner it is!

Painted by Sivonna West, who also created the set piece for Sueños de Fútbol, the current picture includes symbols and characters from Aztec and indigenous mythology. One of the main features is Tonatiuh, the symbol of the current age in humanity's history, the Fifth Sun.

Ms. West, a California native, brought with her an Associate's Degree in Fine Art with emphasis on Fine Art and photography when she relocated to attend the Pacific Northwest College of Art in 2008, graduating with a BFA in Illustration. She took a residency in 2014 at StudioP52 in Barcelona, focusing on painting 3 large murals.

Her work has been showed in several local venues: Pony Club, Floating World Comics, Together Gallery, La Merde, Fontanelle Gallery, Jam on Hawthorne, East Side Delicatessen and at PNCA. You can see more of her work at sivonnawest.com and come and see the completed background mural when Searching for Aztlán opens at Milagro in January or while on tour around the country through November 2015.

Get your tickets now for the January performances!

A very special invitation from Lakin Valdez

Our next production is rolling down a different yellow brick road faster than an Arizona tumbleweed, and you too can be part of the journey starting January 8! (Educators, inquire here about the free 1/7 preview.)

Lakin Valdez is the writer and director of Searching for Aztlán, a super-acto that turns Milagro Tour's critical and irreverent focus on an important cultural development along the border as Arizona politicians attempt to bury the cultural and political legacy of Latinos. Valdez, who also wrote and directed last year's Corrido Calavera, is one of a trio of outstanding Latino theatre artsts, born and raised in the midst of El Teatro Campesino, a founding pillar of the Chicano movement nearly 50 years ago. Actos were the easy-to-follow political sketches that educated and encouraged farm workers to organize for better conditions.

Here's Lakin himself, to tell you more about the show and invite you to join us in Searching for Aztlán, playing at Milagro this January 2015 before launching its national tour:

 

Tickets are available now!

Three roads to Aztlán: the creative team

While we're busy getting ready to put on two great holiday events, Posada Milagro (Dec. 14) and our Santas y Santas holiday dance party (Dec. 20), the Milagro Tour crew are focusing their irreverently artistic talents on an important story about current events and the deeper meaning of the history involved: Searching for Aztlán.

The title itself bears exploration, as it refers simultaneously to something physical, mythical and political. And the tutelary beings of this artistic journey, coming to Milagro Theatre Jan. 8-17, are three creative forces who represent some of the most vibrant and significant players in the history of Chicano theatre, reaching back 50 years to the roots of Chicanismo itself.


Lakin Valdez conducting rehearsals
for Corrido Calavera
Writing the script and directing the actors will be Lakin Valdez, whose previous collaboration with Milagro resulted in the raucous 2013 Día de los Muertos show, Corrido Calavera. In addition to a talented and critically-acclaimed theatre artist, Lakin has a direct connection to the earliest day of the Chicano movement as the son of the multifaceted artist, Luis Valdez. The elder Valdez was an integral part of Cesar Chavez's organizing efforts in 1965 at the height of the Delano farm workers' strike by presenting itinerant "actos" or skits to educate and unify. A bastion of Latino theatre in the US, his company is now known as El Teatro Campesino and has been recognized both for its legacy and for its artistic excellence. It is in this political and cultural cradle that Lakin Valdez was nurtured before becoming known as a director, writer, and performing artist in his own right, receiving two NPN Creation Fund Awards, a Zellerbach Award and NEA Access to Excellence Award for his generative work.

Alida Holguín Wilson Gunn (R),
with Ajai Terrazas-Tripathi in Cuéntame Coyote
Starring in the lead role of Dolores, an Arizona teacher facing the state's controversial changes, will be Alida Holguín Wilson Gunn, who joined Milagro as Associate Artistic Director, to work with the touring productions only a year ago. Distinguished as a performer, the local paper Willamette Week said in its review of Cuéntame Coyote that she "has a passion that is mesmerizing," and in 2006 she was nominated for the Best Actress Mac Award by the Arizona Daily Star. Gunn joined Milagro after more than a decade of working with another beacon of cultural expression and understanding: Borderlands Theater. Eventually becoming Director of Education and Outreach Programs, she describes some of her contributions as helping to "share realities", bridging gaps in Borderlands' generational segments, reaching their rural constituency and creating youth programming. 

Founding Director Dañel Malán (L),
with Tricia Castañeda-Gonzales from Frida: Un retablo
As the brains (and for many years, brawn) of Milagro's educational and touring efforts, Founding Director Director Dañel Malán is responsible for bringing the creative team together, something she has been doing since the earliest days of Milagro, with its first touring production, Perez y Martina in 1989. Malán's career reveals a dedication to keeping alive the spirit of those "actos" performed on a truck bed for an audience who, nearly half a century after Delano, still identifies with the need to point out injustice and evoke compassion. Bringing this itinerant "message theatre" into the 21st century, Malán has built with Milagro the only nationally-touring bilingual troupe, consistently presenting issues of high relevance to Latinos and the US in an engaging and artistic format. She is also the mind behind our arts-infused workshops for students and adults, and is currently conducting the only bilingual arts integration case study for middle Schools in the nation at Evergreen MS in Hillsboro.

Together, these three guiding stars of Searching for Aztlán combine their matching and complementary talents to present and preserve important work exploring history and identity. It is not only the themes of the play that harken back, however. The production's style itself has tremendous significance, as it continues a tradition of compact sets and props that allows for very efficient communication, traveling light directly to the point.

Get your tickets and come along on this irreverent journey, playing at Milagro Jan. 8-17 before it goes on its national tour through November 2015!