Workshop #5. Introduction to Silk Screen Printing
Schedule
Sat Oct 05 2024 at 11:00 am to 05:00 pm
Location
401 2nd St SW | Albuquerque, NM
About this Event
* Limited space. Please only register if you will attend , even a portion of the workshop. No prior experience is necessary *
The Museum's newest temporary exhibit Oaxaca Ingobernable: Aesthetics, Politics and Art from Below is co-curated by Gustavo Garcia and Natalia M. Toscano, Ph.D. Candidates in the UNM Deparment of Chicana/o Studies.
As part of its cultural programming, we are offering five (5) hands-on workshops free to UNM & CNM students and the public. This is the fifth one and you can register for all five, if you wish, and you don't have to stay for the entire time.
In this fifth, six-hour workshop at the ABQ Zine Fest at Sanitary Tortiall Factory, in downtown Albuquerque, featured guest artist Pavel Acevedo, will teach a hands-on workshop that introduces participants to the art of silk screen printing.
The Oaxaca Ingobernable exhibit and this event is generously supported by the UNM Department of Chicana/o Studies, El Centro de la Raza, Center for Regional Studies, the Alfonso Ortiz Center for Intercultural Studies, and the Latin American & Iberian Institute.
MEET YOUR TEACHER
Pavel Acevedo is a dynamic artist and educator originally from Oaxaca, Mexico, who now calls California home. Much of Acevedo’s art incorporates themes and imagery depicting the migratory experience in California. As a relief printmaker, utilizing plywood and linoleum surfaces, he creates portraits of friends, the pre-hispanic codex, and other images that depict the diverse multitudes found in the city. Through the use of portraits and imagery, both new and old, he is able to invent a conversation that is neither Mexican nor American, but rather a contemporary reality that reflects his unique life.
Acevedo attended the School of Fine Arts Oaxaca (Escuela de Bellas Artes) and participated in different art workshops at the “Rufino Tamayo workshop.” In 2010 he moved to California, where he continues to live and work today. Although his art has led him to many locations across the country, his studio, Urge Palette Art Supplies, is in Riverside, CA, and he tends to create most of his art in East Los Angeles. Many of his pieces can be seen in murals and streets around Riverside, as well as in the Riverside Art Museum.
Where is it happening?
401 2nd St SW, 401 2nd Street Southwest, Albuquerque, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
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