Showing posts with label coachella arts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coachella arts. Show all posts

Friday, May 22, 2015

Crisalida Poets doing their thing!



”Crisalida

Scenes from the rich and bountiful past week in the Eastern Coachella Valley...more later...


Maria Galaviz leading her poetry workshop with residents in the Mecca area.

Writers young and old, novice and experienced, sharing a love of poetry in community.

McCallum staff with our mobile Crisalida Art Van - we gave tours and a description of our activities.

Crisalida Program Manager, Moises Huerta, addressing the McCallum staff.

Local artist Carlos Galaviz (yes, Maria's son) brought some of his work, including this huge colorful calavera.

We also featured the work of Oscar Guevara, a brilliant local artist who will be offering workshops for us.                 

Leonardo Espinosa, a retired farmworker and longtime associate of Cesar Chavez at the Las Casas housing project of the Coachalla Valley Housing Coalition, listening to the Praise Poem that Crisalida artist, Francisco Rodriguez wrote for him.

Fransciso wrote a powerful poem that had the roomful of friends and family in deep silence, and not a few tears.

Leonardo is in the center with the red shirt next to Minerva, the property manager, Joe Mota and Nicole Sanchez from CVHC are hiding in there somewhere too.

Monday, May 11, 2015

East Valley Voices OUT LOUD - a photographic sampler...

”Crisalida

QUICK PHOTO TOUR OF

EAST VALLEY VOICES OUT LOUD

MAY 9TH
RANCHO TENOCHITLAN, COACHELLA, CA

PRODUCED BY 
CRISALIDA COMMUNITY ARTS 

IN PARTNERSHIP WITH
Culturas Music and Art
The East Valley Rep

 All photos by Christian Mendez, except AMFM portrait (photog unknown as of today)

This album is only a tiny sampling from the vast feast of performances, music, djs, visual artists, actors, rappers, cooks, and community art-consumers who made the event unforgettable.  More images and video coming soon!

The Crisalida Van made its debut at Rancho Tenochitlan on May 9th -- lots of guided tours, info sessions, and Q&A's about the project and how the vehicle can be used in the community!
Danzantes del Sol mezmerized the crowd with their authentic Aztec dances, music and gorgeous costumes  Bravo!

Talk about color!


Crisalida workshop leader/poet Maria Galaviz spoke about her work in Mecca, and read her own heartfelt poetry.

One of the aspiring poets from the Crisalida-sponsored workshops, Senora Garza, read an original piece.

Local singer-songwriter Giselle Woo wowed the crowd with her original songs.

Poet Francisco Rodriguez presented a "praise poem" commissioned by Crisalida to celebrate the life's work of Leonardo Espinoza, a Mecca resident who we interviewed.  Next step, bring Francisco to Leonardos' home so he can hear the poem for himself.

AMFM, the Coachella Valley's home team of hip-hop.  Left to right (myself) AZ, Verz, Rolo, Skyhigh, Giant.  AMFM tore it up and lifted the crowd onto their feet!
The beautiful, funky cafe at the Rancho where great conversation and dollar tacos were consumed.

Spoken word artists Arturo Castellanos performed three original poems with with and humor.


The East Valley Voices OUT LOUD event was a huge success with about 100 people swinging by.  Big thank you to Yaya Ortiz, Ruben Gonzalez, Culturas Music and Art, Carlos Garcia, SDC Sound and Eddie Ruiz, Miles and Monroe Productions, all the performers and support personnel, and volunteers --  It was a huge job, and we DID IT!

Friday, May 1, 2015

East Valley Voices OUT LOUD

”Crisalida

MAY 9TH!!!

COME OUT, COME OUT WHERE EVER YOU ARE.

East Valley Voices OUT LOUD: A Night of Song, Poetry, Spoken Word, Dance, Theater and Music


CULTURAS RANCHO 50-471 POLK ST. COACHELLA, CA 92236
  
Pick up what the voices of the Eastern Coachella Valley are putting down. This promises to be a night to remember as Crisalida Community Arts partners with Culturas Music and Art, The East Valley Repertory Theater Company, and other arts groups and artists for a celebration of the creative voice featuring local poets, actors, writers, storytellers, djs, bands, folkloric dance, and more. 








Refreshments and dollar toacs will be available for purchase to support Culturas Music-Arts, please bring a food dish to share.


AND...The debut of the new Crisalida Community Art Van!! 

The tentative program...


Time
Act and Contact Person
6
Danzante del sol. Javier Galves
7
DJ #1 – Sugar Free
7:45
Intro – dg
8:00 – 8:30
Band #1 Blue Queztal
8:30 – 8:45
DJ set - BABL
8:45-9:30
Poetry set #1 - Leonardo Espinoza/Francisco Rodriguez, and other poets
9:30 – 9:45
DJ set – Sugar Free
9:45 -10:00
Darren DeLeon Spoken word
10:00 - 10:30
Band #2 Electrik Lucie
10:30 – 11:00
Monologues from East Valley Rep
11:00 – 11:30
DJ set – Darren DeLeon
11:30 – 12:00
Poetry set #2
12:00 – 12:45
Band #3 – AMFM

Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Carlos Garcia's "Luna Mala" Table Reading at The Coachella Valley Arts Center

”Crisalida

Carlos Garcia's "Luna Mala" Table Reading at The Coachella Valley Arts Center
By, David Gonzalez & Lenin Silva



A copy of the "Luna Mala" play folks who read used during the table reading 

The power of theater was in full form Saturday evening at the Coachella Valley arts Center in Indio. Carlos Garcia's moving play "Luna Mala" was performed by seven intrepid actors before of an appreciative audience. The performance began a little past 6:00P.M. with Carlos Garcia giving a brief introduction about himself and his play. 


David Gonzalez (left) with the author of "Luna Mala," Carlos Garcia (right) after the table reading of "Luna Mala"

Before the reading began Mr. Garcia related how much of this play was based on his life experiences growing up in Texas. "Luna Mala" tracks the downfall of a young Chicano somewhere in a border town in Texas during the early 60's - 70's as he encounters a slew of obstacles, meeting each one with a bad choice... needless to say it all ends badly. Shakespeare set the tone for tragedy and Mr. Garcia's play transposes it into our present time.  



Critique and discussion about the table reading for "Luna Mala" at the Coachella Valley Arts Center

It was a hearty discussion, with lots of good ideas and suggestions for future involvement with the Latino theater community in the east valley.






A big thank you to Bill Schinsky for letting us use his wonderful space at CVAC!!!

Monday, December 15, 2014

Locolandia Live!

”Crisalida


Locolandia Live!
By, Lenin Silva

During one of the opening performances at the "Locolandia Live!" event
On Thursday the 11th of December 2014, the Crisalida-Arts project, along with College of the Desert’s Mark’s Art Center, and Riverside County’s Department of Mental Health’s program, “Cup of Happy,” hosted a night of live poetry, spoken word, and musical performances inspired by Lalo Alcaraz’s art on display in Palm Desert California at College of the Desert’s Mark’s Art Center presents “Locolandia Live!”
The penultimate spoken word oration recited at the conclusion of "Locolandia Live!"
The night’s events began a couple minutes past 6:00P.M. Crisalida-Arts project Manager, David Gonzalez, was host and master of ceremonies for the night. Dr. Lisa Soccio, art director and curator of the Marks Art Center, could be seen fastidiously prepping upcoming performers as Mr. Gonzalez opened the night with a poem he had prepared for the occasion.
People in attendance at "Locolandia Live!"
About 25 to 30 people were originally expected, but around the climax of the event there was easily 65 to 80 people in attendance. From College of the Desert (COD) students, to COD faculty, and other local students and educators, the audience in attendance was a potpourri of individuals.
A spoken word performance accompanied by electric guitar background music.
Local artist, and Hip-Hop performers such as RowLow, and Mario A. Giant were in attendance and highlighted the event with a poem/performance. Co-Founder of “Teatro de las Chicanas,” Chicana and women’s rights activist Felicitas Nuñez, also made her way out to Locolandia and presented a lecture on the yonic symbology of “Our Lady of Guadalupe” (The Virgin Mary). Ms. Nuñez related the iconoclastic and syncretistic properties that may be observed in postcolonial Mesoamerican art such as the incorporation of indigenous culture into colonial (European influenced) art, in this case The Virgin Mary.
A young woman who painted her face in the style of La Calavera Catrina 
There was a 15 minute intermission where the folks in attendance were welcomed to tour the Mark’s art Gallery and observe Lalo Alcaraz’s art that was on display there. Mr. Alcaraz was kind enough to supply College of the Desert with about thirteen original prints of his syndicated comic strip cartoon “La Cucaracha,” which may be found on the LA Times Sunday edition, and countless other newspapers across the country.
An audience member observing some of Lalo Alcaraz's work during the intermission at "Locolandia Live!"
Initially the event began with folks reciting poems, songs, and/or spoken word orations inspired by one of Mr. Alcaraz’s prints on display at the Marks Art Gallery. As the night concluded the event turned into an open mic night as folks who wanted to speak but were not prepared jumped on stage and improvised an oration not necessarily inspired by Mr. Alcaraz’s art.
Master of Ceremonies at "Locolandia Live!" David Gonzalez, closing the night with a poem.
The concluding moments leading up to the event’s conclusion resembled a jazzed up 1960’s beatnik poetry reading as Mr. Gonzalez and two of the other performers (one on an electric guitar, and another playing a homemade drum set configured out of a rectangular wooden box and steal drum appendages) closed the night with a call and response type performance with engaged the audience to become part of the performance. The night concluded with a spoken word poem accompanied by the guitar player and wooden box drummer.




Thursday, November 20, 2014

Crisalida at Cultura's SYNERGY FESTIVAL in Coachella


Cultura’s “The Synergy Festival” in the city of Coachella
Crisalida’s first steps

Blog entry by Lenin Silva


The Crisalida team around noon at the Synergy Festival in the city of Coachella
(Jeff Norman/The McCallum Theatre)

By, Lenin Silva
Crisalida’s first event was this past weekend the 17th of November, 2014 in the city of Coachella, Ca. The Crisalida team took part in “The Synergy Festival” at Dateland Park near Coachella’s city hall. The Synergy Festival was arranged by an organization called “Culturas.”


Culturas board member, Oralia Ortiz, and her granddaughter greeting folks at the Crisalida tent
(Lenin Silva/Crisalida)
Folks from Culturas were kind enough to provide the Crisalida team a space, tents, chairs, and food for the duration of the festival. The Crisalida team was provided the capacity to execute their first Story Corps inspired project at the outing. Weeks leading up to the event, the manager, spiritual leader, and face of Crisalida, David Gonzalez related “we don’t know what to expect at The Synergy Festival,” but that this event would be a great opportunity for Crisalida to get it’s feet in the water and get an idea of what obstacles and possibilities may lie ahead for the organization.



Over 80 Story Corps questions displayed in Spanish for folks to use as conversation starters as they sat down to interview each other in the Crisalida tent
(Jeff Norman/
The McCallum Theatre)

The Crisalida motto for the day, “listening is an act of love,” displayed on banners in English and Spanish at the main Crisalida tent during Synergy Festival in the city of Coachella
(Jeff Norman/The McCallum Theatre)

Initially the Crisalida team seemed somewhat disillusioned. From 10:00AM until 1:00PM a few local natives curiously came up to the Crisalida tent intrigued and inquisitive about the project, but not necessarily interested in participating in sitting down and talking about themselves. Folks were setting up tents and food stands at Dateland Park as early as 8:00AM, but the festival itself started around 10:00AM. Not until a little after 1:00PM did the Crisalida team get their first willing participants, a valley mother and her son. After breaking in the recording equipment and capturing their first story, more people began rolling in and signing up. It was not unexpected, since the team did not exactly know what to expect, but by sundown the folks from Crisalida were all somewhat elated to discover that about nine to ten folks had decided to sit down with them and relate little gems about their lives in the form of stories, to Crisalida and to each other.



The Crisalida team prepping two potential storytellers for an interview at the interview tent.
(Lenin Silva/Crisalida)
A brief description of the process on how Crisalida documented stories at the event may be described as follows: folks interested in participating in our storytelling project would be briefed ahead of time on how the interviews would take place. Then Crisalida team members would follow by getting their contact information before walking them to a separate tent we had setup at the fringes of the park where the festival took place. There, the team would be able to record the audio with less noise pollution from other activities going on at the time. At the recording tent there was over 80 starter questions on display and available to the participants, the team would suggest to participants that they select at least three or five questions to ask to each other. Once ready, everyone except the two participants, and an audiovisuals technician, would stay at the tent to record the participants as they shared each other's experiences through an active dialogue. 



One of the first participants in the storytelling project, Joe Villarreal, and Sara Conantes, as they concluded their interviews with each other at the Crisalida tent
(Lenin Silva/Crisalida)

At Synergy, there was a great turnout and participation! Some really incredible, moving, and inspirational stories were collected. The Crisalida team documented folks predominantly from Coachella, but not limited to Indio, Thermal, Mecca, and other communities pertinent to the Coachella Valley. This in hopes to capture a picture of what life is like in the valley, and take the pulse of the community by sharing each other's experiences, discovering something new about ourselves, our environment, by giving back the gift of storytelling to those folks who participated.


Mother and daughter, Patricia Silva (left), and Melissa Damian (right), with Crisalida team leader David Gonzalez (far right) helping them out in choosing what questions the pair would ask each other before their storytelling interview
(Lenin Silva/Crisalida)
From the day’s turnout and participation, it's not farfetched to conclude that Crisalida has the capacity to walk through many doors; the possibilities for this project are brimming with opportunity. At the event the team managed to secure contacts and build a rapport with artists, community leaders, healers, and educators such as: Veronica Cordova, who helps empower people with disabilities via the Community Access Center; The Center for Domestic Violence; writer and producer, Trino Martinez; local graphic artist, Josue Miramontes; hair stylist and fashion enthusiast Belen Cortez; the dance group “Mujeres en Resistencia;” Hip-hop performer RowLow, and other young folks from the local hip-hop community; and a handful of other individuals who expressed a desire to work with the Crisalida program in the future.


The performers, Mujeres en Resistencia, concluding their set at The Synergy Festival in Coachella, Ca
(Lenin Silva/Crisalida)

Special thanks to the folks at Culturas for putting this event together! A shoutout to Culturas board member, Yaya Ortiz, for helping us put this event together. Thanks to the venerable brother from Aztlan, community leader, and Culturas board member, Pepe Rivera, who shared some of his experiences and wisdom with the Crisalida team. Also, praises to the city of Coachella for allowing activities like this to happen in their hometown. To all the youth, the chavalitos and chavalitas who came came out to take part in this event, to all the performers, lowrider and classic car enthusiasts (Los Viejitos), artists, educators, motivators, and all the other folks who went unnoticed here, from Crisalida to you, thank you for coming to this event.

Thursday, October 9, 2014

Meet our Community Engagement Facilitators

”Crisalida

Dear Crisalida Community,

I'm back in New York and Autumn is gorgeous.  After a month in the desert it sure is nice to be around the lush landscape of Hudson Valley.

I have to admit that the Crisalida bug has bit, and hard...I think often about the people I've met, and have a buzzing brain about the possibilities.  So, though I am on the East Coast till December, my heart and mind is with y'all, truly.

I'm delighted to present three of Crisalida's recent hires...more to come.

Meet the Community Engagement Facilitators


Sofia S. Enriquez


 
I was born and raised in the Coachella Valley.

I’ve been painting and creating for about 10 years now.  Encouraging other people to make and understand art is one of my biggest passions…along with eating elotes at the Indio swap meet and finding rare decorative textiles.

Growing up in the Valley has made me appreciate a close community. It’s also made me capable of standing tall through any kind of heat. I’ve become the person I wanted to be since I was a kid here.

This job is exciting because I get to run around all over the valley, and get a chance to meet communities, and find out about old traditions and new subcultures. I look forward to developing and/or inventing creative ways that can help improve the valley.

My area of interest would have to be the art world. It’s the kind of world where everyone has gone mad, but in the most beautiful way. I know there’s a creative side to everyone, I feel like my job is to make that creative chunk of someone’s brain come out and rampage.

(Sofia is a phenomenal artist and illustrator, I saw her work at COD's Marks Gallery and bought a painting!.  She is working on a master list of festivals and visual arts and artists in the East Valley.  You can reach her at sofia@crisalida-arts.org)




Lenin Silva



Growing up in the Coachella valley is like taking a crash course in socioeconomics. The experience has cultivated in me a sense of what it means to live at both ends of wealth. Most of the original works of art and creative endeavors that emanate from the valley not only transcend and evoke abstract universal feelings, but at the same time evoke a brutally obvious concrete truth, that the valley is a service/tourist dominated community which is just starting to find and create a voice for itself

I love telling people the stories they need to know with the insight and context to understand what the story means. This job is exciting because it provides the opportunity to listen to other people’s stories and help folks in the community share their stories with others.

My area of interest is in helping other people, through community outreach, involvement, and activism. Hearing stories of folks who struggle and suffer in their efforts to have a greater part of life’s blessings inspires me to want to help make their voices heard and help them produce positive changes in their experience.  

(Lenin is one of the most thoughtful and articulate young men I have met in a long time.  As the former editor-in-chief of the COD Chaparral Newspaper he was hands-on/mind-on all the relevant news stories that came across his desk.  We only have Lenin for a short time before he heads to UC Berkeley to pursue his Philosophy and Law studies...happy to have this brilliant and soulful man along while we can!  Lenin is currently working to compile a list of health care and elder care agencies for Crisalida. Reach Lenin at lenin@crisalida-arts.org)




Jon Becerra

Growing up here has been challenging; It's always up and down in the valley. But I've gotten to know a community of people who support and help each other. It's made a lot of my personal goals possible to have grown up here. 

This is the first job where I'm not choosing between human services and film production. I've never thought those two worlds would merge; let alone that I could get this opportunity within the Valley. 

I'm fascinated by media. I think commercials, movies, music videos, gifs, selfies, anything visual online or in entertainment is a weird new language we're all learning together. I'm just always looking for a way to be apart of the conversation when it comes to my film production. Which is relatively easy nowadays with the technology we have.  

(Jon is a can-do, multi-media producer who has earned his stripes with social service and arts organizations throughout the valley.  He is spearheading an Instagram story project for Crisalida and is also working on a short feature on the Marks Gallery and some of the local artists who are showing there.  Look for Jon at the CULTURAS SYNERGY FESTIVAL on November 15 where he will be interviewing and recording local peeps. Reach Jon at jon@crisalida-arts.org)

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Angels in America -- Coachella style.



DESERT MIRAGE HIGH SCHOOL - COACHELLA



Meet playwright, actor, theater-maker, and long-time dedicated theater teacher Carlos Garcia.  Carlos and I talked in the black box theater in Desert Mirage High School where he has taught for the past ten years.  Carlos spoke to me about the challenges of being a Latino theater artist in a community that doesn't seem to value theater, and especially theater that speaks in 3D matrix of bi-lingual wordsmithing -- niether English, nor Spanish, but that multi-grounded/levitated textual space that reaches across the cultural divide of the mono-lingual monolith.

He has a dream...to create a Latino Theater Company that creates, produces and performs bi-lingual theater that reaches the people of the Coachella Valley, and beyond to the bi-cultural communities that are a growing and vibrant reality in the US.  To that end we cooked up a reading of his play, La Mala, that will be done in the coming weeks at the Coachella Valley Arts Center (see previous blog).  We will do a table read of the multi-character play with a bi-lingual cast of readers, and an invited audience.  A hearty discussion and dramaturgical session will follow.  Please check in on this blog for updates.

I will be giving performance workshops for the advanced theater students at Desert Mirage HS in the coming weeks -- looking forward to that.



COLLEGE OF THE DESERT - INDIO CAMPUS





On Thursday afternoon I visited Jacalyn Garcia-Lopez's Art History class in the brand new Indio Campus of College of the Desert.  The lecture centered on the variety of ways that art "functions" with special attention given to Maxine Greene's notion of "awakening".  I read some of my poetry, and showed clips of Butoh dancing and images from Hiroshima, I performed part of my rhymed-verse version of Sleeping Beauty and told the story of how I got into music therapy (Geraldo Rivera played a major role).  The students were vivacious, curious and engaged.  They said they would be happy to have me return.  Got to say that the students' curiosity got under my skin, in a very good way.  Congrats to COD/Indio for giving these people a place to learn, and to Jacalyn Garcia-Lopez for making an intellectual and soulful space that welcomes them, and makes them want to inquire.


GALILEE CENTER - MECCA



How often do angels toss you a head of cabbage?  Rare, but possible, especially if you happen to drop into the Galilee Center in Mecca on a Thursday afternoon when the weekly food distribution pickup is about to open its doors to 900 needy people.  Meet Gloria Gomez and Claudia Castrorena, spiritual sisters, and the powerhouse duo behind this booming organization that provides not only boxes of food, but counseling, housing help, medical support, a hip thrift shop, and many other much-needed things to the eastern most town in the Crisalida Project's geographical area.



Gloria and Claudia started in Indio with five bucks and a wish to help the poor.  The result was the thriving Martha Center, now running under its own steam, with new administration and a multi-million dollar budget, and bouyed by the everlasting imprint of its founders humble, serious, and deeply compassionate leadership.  Several years ago they decided that they needed to bring their special brand of community work to the poor of Mecca, so once again with only five dollars they began soliciting donations, reaching out to the people, and convincing one person at a time that the impossible was indeed possible, that the most helpless could be helped, that there was hope, that there was food enough, that there were hands to carry, ears to listen, and a voice that would speak when their voices were ignored.



This is the side panel of one of the Galilee pick up vans that travel throughout the region retrieving donations.

The strength of their vision was/is matched by the strength of their character and so the job gets done, one cabbage at a time, one box of food at a time, one hug at a time.

We talked about trying out a mobile concert stage on a Thursday afternoon in December, but first I want to volunteer on the food line, to learn more, but more importantly to be shoulder-to-shoulder with a couple of funky angels in Mecca.




See more at www.galileecenter.org





CULTURAS MUSIC AND ART - COACHELLA

This giant dinosaur head is part of the welcoming committee that greeted me at the board of directors meeting for CULTURAS Music and Art, the Coachella arts non-profit responsible for the vastly successful Synergy Festival.  My GPS had to have been going haywire, this endless strip of dusty empty land could not possibly be the location for the board meeting...there were a few houses, a couple of trailers, and one of those vast vistas that is equal parts terror and beauty.  So I called and Oralia picked up, "Was that you in the silver car that just drove past?"  "Yup."  "Well turn around and come on in."  You never know what lies behind an open door, or down a driveway.  In this case it was the amazingly hip and inviting studio/art-space/performance-space/cafe/anything-can-happen place known as Cafe Tenochitlan, owned and operated by Ruben Gonzalez, and the meeting place of CULTURAS.



The place is a marvel -- think the outpost saloon in Star Wars meets an outsider art show -- a place filled with provocative work, whimsy, brains, and especially soul.  Just stepping out my car I felt the power of art all around me, creativity bubbling all around...sculpture, paintings, equipment, materials, collections, junk and brilliance.  So when I sat down at the table in the patio with the CULTURAS board I was stoked to learn more.

This meeting was a planning session for their upcoming Synergy Festival (November 15th in Coachella), so they were looking at the line up of bands, reviewing proposals from vendors and discussing marketing and other critical details.  In attendance were: Oralia "Yaya" Ortiz, Mario Garcia (spoken word artist), Ruben Gonzalez, Pepe Rivera, Jack Rosales, Keila Cupil, Clarissa Camacho, and AZ (a maker of hip hop tracks and owner of a studio in the valley).

I was asked to give an overview of Crisalida and then fielded questions about the particulars of the project.  There was general excitement about collaboration, and I felt as though I had landed in the arms of my tribe -- artists and activists who are putting rubber to the road for their vision of a better community.

Mario offered to perform for us and took the neon-ringed stage beneath the stars.  His spoken word performance was terrific, funky, fueled with passion and intellect.  We have set up a coaching session so that I can try to help him in preparation for the finals of the Tilted Kilt Open Mic competition next Wednesday.  We will meet at AZ's studio so I will be able to hear the trax they have been producing.  Both AZ and Mario told me that their intention was to make music and studio space that could/would support the community.  Great young people standing up for art and community.  Dang.




SYNERGY FESTIVAL LINKS:
Indiegogo: http://igg.me/at/Synergy 2014
Acta video 2012:
 http://youtu.be/VXIRqslqyBc
Miles and monroe 2013
http://vimeo.com/81294382

Volunteers and donations gratefully accepted!

Check them out here:


Angels in America come in all shapes and sizes, and languages, and abilities, and...

d.