Women muralists return to the scene of their early development as activists/artists
Editors Note: This article is a follow-up to Rita Sanchezâs La Prensa article, âMujeres Muralistas: Chicano Park Female Artistsâ(June 29, 2012). It contributes to the on-going, larger story of important female contributions to Chicano Park.
By Gail Pérez

âBeing the disobedient woman was the only way to save your soul,â Irma Lerma Barbosa exclaims when she recalls growing up Chicana/Yaqui in Sacramento and then navigating the heady days of the Chicano Movement. She, along with Celia Herrera Rodriguez and Rosalinda Montez Palacios, returned in early July to restore their Women Hold Up Half the Sky mural as part of the historic Chicano Park Restoration Project. Missing from the original team are Antonia Perez and Barbara Desmangles. San Diego artists Glory Galindo Sanchez and Vera Sanchez, however, now complete the current team. Both were responsible for preparing the wall and other essential tasks.
Over the past year, restoration artists who originally painted their murals in the 1970âs have been present at the park not only repainting, but also teaching about a time when many were deeply involved in the United Farm Workers Movement, in community organizing, in the Chicano Moratorium against the war in Vietnam, and in the struggle for a decolonized identity. Now, these women artists teach us how young women at the time struggled not only as members of such movements, but also as advocates against sexism within those movements. The three returning women have remained active as artists/organizers to this day. They remind us that it is simply impossible to appreciate the early murals without understanding that they are the work of young people who were embedded in the many strands of the civil rights and radical movements of the time, with all of their contradictions. Barbosa, Rodriguez, and Palacios are three âdisobedientâ women who sought to portray the Chicano Movement through the âdifferent lensâ of their Chicana experiences.
Celia Herrera Rodriguez, now a professor at UC Berkeley, recalls that from the beginning the mural was immediately embroiled in controversy. The women were associated with the Royal Chicano Air Force (RCAF), a legendary group that completed three murals in the park. In Marilyn Mulfordâs 1988 documentary Chicano Park the RCAFâs JosĂ© Montoya, assuming the speech of an Air Force commander, declared: âThe women jumped the gunâ by arriving earlier than expected and âit was a solo flightâ that is usually a âcourt martial. Again, it is the old machismo coming out. But they did a very beautiful pillar.â
Rodriguez remembers the court martial as âtraumatic,â and explains from her perspective how the mural came to be. In 1975, San Diego artist Antonia PĂ©rez told her that there were no women painting in Chicano Park and wondered if she knew that the RCAF was painting a mural. While the RCAF felt that the women took one of their walls, Rodriguez says,â Antonia Perez recently told me that the wall was given to us women. I did what Antonia asked me and went to Sacramento to look for women artists.â There she recruited Barbosa and Palacios among others. When it reached the leadership of the RCAF that the women were going to paint a wall they viewed as theirs, Celia simply responded, âWe need to do this.â
The stand the women took must be understood within the context of the change in gender consciousness at the time. Rodriguez attended the 1975 World Conference on Women convened by the United Nations. The point of the conference was to discard notions of merely supporting women and to focus on the agency of women in developing within their own nations and in fighting discrimination. In addition, all three women went to Cuba on the Venceremos Brigade. âGoing to Cuba was a miracle,â Rod-riguez explains. âI didnât know what it meant, but I knew it meant an open door.â Rod-riguez went on to work with CASA (Center of Autonomous Social Action) and Bert Corona and for the past ten years has been a member of the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues.
Irma Yerma Barbosa was a member of the RCAF, an original member of the Sacramento Brown Berets, and after the controversy with RCAF went on to found the Com-adres Artistas, an all-womenâs group. Rosalinda Palacios is a sixth generation Californian (â we were here before there was a borderâ) and has a long history of involvement with progressive movements, including her work with the Chicano Moratorium in 1970 and organizing with the United Farm Workers Movement. All three emphasize that they never thought of themselves as just artists. As Palacios says, âThe term artist was not in our vocabulary. We did it all.â She recalls creating posters and fliers and putting them on Greyhound buses to publicize events like the Chicano Moratorium.
The conception of the mural began in a discussion around Rodriguezâs kitchen table in Sacramento. Palacios says, âWe wanted to do something about consciousness and womenâs part in the revolution and movementâ and ânot the usual stuff.â Rodriguez emphasizes that the title has always been Women Hold Up Half the Sky, a Confucian proverb taken up by Mao Tsetung. This explains the indigenous women on the top of the mural who hold up the sky/pylon. (The mural titleâs misidentification as Female Intelligence persists in many books including the Chicano Park Mural Restoration Technical Manual.) The musicians on the lower half reflect the music of a male member of the RCAF, Javier Pacheco, who came down to paint his romantic ballad on the mural. At the time, Palacios was involved with the Free Angela Davis Committee and heard the story of Joan Little, an African American women who was tried and acquitted for killing her jailer in North Carolina in an act of self-defense. The artists decided to add her poem, âI Am Somebody,â to the side of the pylon (originally lettered by Sal Barajas). Her portrait was painted by Rod-riguez underneath, but has since been whitewashed.
The mother and child figures in the muralâs center were conceived and painted by Irma Lerma Barbosa. She recalls coming to paint but not, she emphasizes, because she was a feminist: âI was an activist and a mechanic.â She simply wanted to paint a mother and child who are the foundation of all human communities. When she painted the baby as a male, âwomen objected. It was a desmadre.â She now reflects, âI took baby steps to become a feminist.â Her restoration of the mother and child now rolls the earth into the motherâs skirt, uniting the mother with the earth so both âholdâ the child.
As with Rodriguez and Palacios, Barbosaâs imagery unearths her indigenous roots. She remembers speaking Spanish as a child in Sacramento, but other Mexicans could not understand her rich mixture of Calo, Yaqui colloquialisms, and Spanglish: âMy father was kind of Zoot Suity.â Rodriguez was raised by her single grandmother who was of Tepehuan descent and Palacios studied indigenous art in Mexico at the Escuela de Bellas Artes. Rodriguez comments on the womenâs radical and indigenous views: âYou see us sitting here together. We never left that perspective. Weâve just deepened that understanding.â
When asked about the iconography of the mural, the artists insist that everythingâactivism, family, indigenous and female consciousnessâcontributed to the mural, especially, a new awareness of the female body that was blossoming in the 70âs. As with any monumental art, male and female figures are central, from Michelangeloâs Sistine Chapel to Chicano Parkâs Aztec warriors and Mujer Cosmica. The figures in Women Hold up Half the Sky, though, have received negative attention. âYou better put some chonies (panties) on that girl,â one male artist recently said referring to one of the paintingâs female figures.
Palacios explains how such attitudes continue to be hurtful. At Chicano Park, male artists have represented the nude female body but not like women artists: âComing here, we put up women in a natural position. We all come to this place with a different consciousness. Men develop their consciousness in a different way. But the point is that our ways were not accepted.â She emphasizes that her âbrother artistsâ are allowed their perspective, but the womenâs lens was not allowed. Since the 70âs were a time when women were reinterpreting their bodies in non-sexist and non-shame based ways, this silencing and continuing ridicule hurts.
All three women emphasize how gender balance is central to the indigenous culture so richly celebrated in the park. Palaciosâs studies in Mexico taught her the concept of La Dualidad (duality): âWe on the planet are equal to the stars, the tress, fish, water. We have that equality. Without duality, there can be no existence.â When women are removed from a central position, the whole premise of cosmic balance is violated. Rodriguez goes on to explain: âColonialism infected our continent. This is how they broke the back of our people, by separating us, by putting us in the position of having to be spoken for by men.â This insistence on womenâs voice and agency includes the gender dynamics of the park. There were always women at the park, they note, but some were helpers or âcamp followersâ and not women who generated their own themes and climbed up the scaffolding. This is a crucial distinction they make about the roles of women as viewed by their antagonists: âWe are not supposed to tell the truth. Weâre supposed to be quiet,â Barbosa states.
Thus, the notion of restoration takes on a new meaning with Women Hold Up Half the Sky. Women artists must restore the feminine, not only as the objects of art but as creative advocates for their point of view. There have been many silences and omissions in the history of the park: the erasure of the portrait of Joan Little and, as Rodriguez notes, the disappearance of the artistsâ names , their rightful claim to authorship, from the mural. Even the title of the mural was changed and was later attributed to the RCAF.
Irma Barbosa, like many other artists who have returned to the park, emphasizes that they want to leave powerful images that will teach and heal future generations. But the participation of women artists in the act of creation is also crucial. As Glory Galindo Sanchez says, âIâve had a lot of comments said to me like âItâs all men,â and now we have one for the women and I am grateful to be a part of it.â Vera Sanchez explains the importance of mentorship as well, âI know very few women artists. Glory has always been my mentor. Celia brought me on board and I am grateful.â
The restoration/revitalization work of Rodriguez, Barbosa, and Palacios along with Sanchez and Sanchez, prevails against the erasures of the past. Women Hold Up Half of the Sky invites us to contemplate how women who refuse to be devalued continue to struggle and resist the ecological, political and psychological assaults on all of us. Our very continued existence relies on restoring the feminine and making visible the women who really do hold up half the sky and half of Chicano Park.
Gail Pérez is a Professor in the Ethnic Studies Department at the University of San Diego.