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Exhibitions at the CSRC Library


The CSRC Library has two exhibitions spaces: inside the facility; and outside, in the vitrine located in the hallway. Exhibitions in the library may be viewed during library hours; exhibitions in the vitrine may be viewed whenever Haines Hall is open.


On view through June ...

La Cocina

In the vitrine

What is "authentic" Mexican food? Is authenticity measured by the types of ingredients that we use? Is it founded on the location of the culinary practice, be it geographic or structural? Homemade versus store bought? Taco shop versus restaurant chain? Or is authenticity based on the identity or ethnicity of the cook? Although responses to these questions can be provided from any number of viewpoints, there is, in truth, no right or wrong answer. Authenticity is a relative term that is dependent on the individual and the collective experience of a person or community.

For Chicanas and Chicanos, the kitchen is a site of tradition and familia. The platillos—the food we eatis as much a reflection of our history and culture as is our language, our music, or our art. As Meredith Abarca notes in her Voices in the Kitchen: Views of Food and the World from Working-Class Mexican and Mexican American Women (2006), the kitchen site is a form of studio and cooking, an artistic expression. La Cocina highlights this culinary tradition, which mixes traditions from the past as well as more recent customs. Like Chicanas and Chicanos, “Mexican” food is neither here nor there, this or that; instead, it is an amalgamation of diverse culinary traditions from people and communities all over the world.

¡Buen provecho!

 

  
 


Sandra de la Loza's Mural Remix Lightboxes

In the library

For Mural Remix Sandra de la Loza created three dramatic lightboxes featuring kaleidoscopic reworkings of Chicano mural imagery.

Using samples drawn from archival photographs of obscure and forgotten murals located in East L.A., the artist remixed this visual history to reimagine the mural format.

The lightboxes pay tribute to the artists who created the region's murals, many of which are now faded or obscured by grafitti or no longer extant. Among the artists whose work is incorporated are Roberto Chavez and Ernesto de la Loza, the artist's brother.

Mural Remix: Sandra de la Loza, was one of five L.A. Xicano exhibitions developed by the CSRC for the Getty Foundation's Pacific Standard Time initiative. The show ran October 15, 2011, through January 22, 2012, at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

 


Previous Exhibitions

Chican@s Collect: The Durón Family Collection


The CSRC Library is open Monday through Friday, 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. The library is located at 144 Haines Hall on the UCLA campus.