Xochitl Nevel-Guerrero
Xochitl Nevel Guerrero (born 1954) is a Chicana artist who specializes in making murals, paintings, gourd decorations, masks, and mosaic/tile art.[1]
Early life and education
[edit]Xochitl Nevel Guerrero was born in 1954 in Berkeley, California, but was raised in Oakland.[2] She was the youngest child in her family of six children.[2] Her father, Raymundo “Zala” Nevel, came to the United States from Mexico City as part of the Bracero Program and settled in West Oakland, where he met Nevel Guerrero's mother.[2][3] He was also a muralist, and it is because of him that Nevel-Guerrero became fascinated by art.[2]
Nevel Guerrero had a traumatic experience at the age of eleven that made her contemplate suicide at the age of thirteen.[2] To cope with this, she started making art full of bright colors, changed her name, and began working in the community.[2]
She got a summer job around the ages of fourteen and fifteen that allowed her to work with children, where she learned she wanted to create a safe space for others to express themselves in artistic forms.[2]
Nevel Guerrero joined baile folklórico and also learned to play the flute because of her parents' love for music and dancing.[2] Since her father was active in the social movements of the time, she became involved as well.[2] She joined a theater group called El Teatro Triste, where she performed skits that had political or social critiques.[2]
At Laney College, she joined a theater group called El Teatro Calcetin, where she continued to represent and be involved in the community while making statements about current events.[2][4] Nevel Guerrero became part of the “Mujeres Muralistas,” where she connected culture, environment, and gender into her art.[2]
After Laney College, she transferred to the University of California, Berkeley and dropped out after a year.[4] Nevel Guerrero then took a gap year, enrolled at Cal State East Bay (formerly known as CSU Hayward) and received her degree.[2][4]
Works
[edit]Latino America
[edit]Latino America was a mural project coordinated by the Mujeres Muralistas in 1974.[2] Together with artists like Ester Hernández, Nevel Guerrero created this piece on the Mission Model Cities building in San Francisco, California.[2] She painted much of the maize, and her dreams of a corn goddess inspire her to include corn in many of her works.[2]
La Clínica de la Raza Mural
[edit]In 1977, Nevel Guerrero and her father painted this mural at the Clínica de la Raza in East Oakland, California.[3][5] It depicts indigenous peoples and symbols as well as Mexican cultural elements, such as the Virgin of Guadalupe and a curandera healing a man laying face down.[5]
Youth of the World, Let's Create a Better World
[edit]This mural was painted by Xochitl Nevel Guerrero and Crystal Nevel, along with the PLACA group, in 1984.[2] There is a young man holding the world in his arms with others around him.[2] Those surrounding him are expressing themselves creatively through painting, breakdancing, and more.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Pickman, Heidi (2015-03-26). "Xochitl Guerrero, Taller Xochicura". CAMEO. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s "Xochitl Nevel-Guerrero Oral History". SFMOMA. Retrieved 2023-11-25.
- ^ a b Payton, Brenda (2009-10-04). "Murals: A colorful journey through Oakland". SFGATE. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
- ^ a b c OPL, Friends of the (2023-05-22). "Interview with Xochitl Guerrero". Friends of the OPL. Retrieved 2023-11-26.
- ^ a b greenkozi (2020-02-14). "La Clinica de la Raza - Oakland Murals". Retrieved 2023-11-26.
Further reading
[edit]- HOMBRES Y MUJERES MURALISTAS ON A MISSION: PAINTING LATINO IDENTITIES IN 1970S SAN FRANCISCO by Cary Cordova