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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: flor sylvestre, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. My Superhero Band-aid -- a band-aid poem/a boo-boo poem

MY SUPERHERO BAND-AID
By
Gregory K.

My superhero band-aid
Takes all my pain away --
I put it on a cut I got when I went out to play.

My superhero band-aid
Is barely hanging on….
I’ve worn it 18 days, but still, it’s why the pain is gone!


It's a Poetry Friday poem dedicated to all the parents who've tried to peel off a band-aid TOO EARLY! The Two Writing Teachers are on the poetry roundup today. Check it out here.

Andf you want to get all my new poems (and only the poems) emailed to you for freeee as they hit the blog, enter your email address in the box below then click subscribe!

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2. Michelle Serros: Scandalosa y Fabulosa!





Michele Serros and Scandalosa

Named by Newsweek as "One of the Top Young Women to Watch for in the New Century" and by Tu Ciudad magazine as one of Los Angeles’ “Hip, Hot and Now” artists, Michele Serros is the author of Chicana Falsa and other stories of death, identity and Oxnard, How to be a Chicana Role Model, Honey Blonde Chica and her newest young adult novel, Scandalosa!
In addition to being an award-winning poet, Serros has been a featured contributor for the Los Angeles Times' children's fiction section and a commentator for National Public Radio (Morning Edition, Weekend All Things Considered, Anthem, Along for the Ride, Latino USA). She has read her poems to stadium crowds of 25,000+ for Lollapalooza, recorded Selected Stories from Chicana Falsa for Mercury Records and was selected by the Poetry Society of America to have her poetry placed on MTA buses throughout Los Angeles County.

While still a student at Santa Monica City College, Michele’s first book of poetry and short stories, Chicana Falsa, was published. When the original publisher of Chicana Falsa went out of business, Michele continued to sell copies from her garage until Riverhead Books reissued Chicana Falsa and as well as a collection of short stories, How to be a Chicana Role Model. The latter instantly placed 5th on the Los Angeles Times bestseller list.


In 2002, Michele wrote for the ABC television sitcom, The George Lopez Show. "An opportunity," she says, "that hopefully with my contribution opens the door for a wider representation of Latinos in the mass media."


Serros’ work is required reading in U.S. high schools and universities and garners a diverse fan base ranging from Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers ("Michele is the great Californian writer who makes me proud of my state. When I read her books I cry and laugh.") to author Sandra Cisneros ("Michele Serros is the young, sassy writer whose brilliant weapon is her humor.”) The New York Public Library recommends Honey Blonde Chica as a “Book for the Teen Age 2007.
Originally from Oxnard, California, Michele is currently working on a new novel, An Unmarried Mexican.


1. Scandalosa is a sequel to Honey Blonde Chica, with Evie a little bit further down the road of adolescence. Without giving too much away, what's going on with Evie?


In Scandalosa, Evie is now two months older than she was in HBC. She has also entered a new semester of school. In teenage years, such changes are paramount! She is excited to celebrate her Sweet Sixteen era and envisions her party to be similar to MTV's Sweet Sixteen but with all the traditional trappings (and birthday checks) of a quinceañera. BUT she is facing an obstacle. Will this obstacle interfere with her party... the pachanga of the school year? You'll have to read to find out!


2. You avoid a romantic portrayal of teens, yet Honey Blonde Chica isn't about the gang girl stereotype offered up as the YA Chicano/a experience. Can you also talk about the decision to write YA and it's significance to you, and your choice of
characters?


YA books saved me as a preteen. I grew up reading Judy Blume, Beverly Clearie, S. E. Hinton, and Louise Fitzhough. My first attempt at YA is an unpublished manuscript under my bed back home in NYC. It's titled Notes from a Medium Brown Girl. My agent has deemed it "took dark" and suggests that maybe I should focus on other projects but I haven't given up on Notes...just yet. The role of Evie is pretty much myself as a teenager. I dressed like a surfer but never flopped my belly on a board, ever. So the next best thing, of course, was dating a surfer. At 17, it was a dream for me to be the girlfriend of the tri-county (Ventura, Santa Barbara, Santa Maria) surf champion -- who was also Mexican (American) like me!


3. You seem to love and have a sense of playfulness concerning our pop icons and pop culture in general...I noticed on your site the gamine pose, where you're covered with chicharrones, as well as having seen a promos for Scandalosa where it looks like you're having fun with charreada and Flor Silvestre. Where does that love and that irreverence come from? How important an element is it for you in how you look at the world and how you approach writing?


Yes! The photo shoot with the chicharrones was for Estylo magazine. The editors had brought up Salma Hayek's Los Angeles magazine cover's version of Herb Alpert's Whipped Cream and other Delights. They suggested we push it a little further and had me wear a dress of pork rinds, rather than whipped cream. It was pretty funny. The photographer's assistant's sole job was to fan flies away and after the shoot, my skin was so greasy. My only regret is that too many people think I'm completely naked under the skins!


4. Who are the writers/artists that move you and how do you think they've influenced you and your work?


Oscar Zeta Acosta made a big impression on my while I was a college student. And Lester Bangs. I have more records and CDs than books and when I was younger I was always trying to write record or show reviews for underground fanzines and rags. One book I loved was I'm with the Band, by Pamela de Barres.

5. Where do you think the challenges lie for you as a creative person?


Discipline! It's challenging to pays bills based on your creativity.
Also, I tend to over think too much. It drives my friends and family crazy.

6. Are there people that act as mentors/sounding boards for you? If so, how does that mesh into how you work?


Oh yeah. I'm afraid that a current boyfriend is always put in the position of being the unexpected sounding board. I pity the man who is dating me in the middle or start of a new manuscript or project. They have to hear me whine about every little sentence that isn't going well. I'm really attracted to men who hold blue collar type jobs -- carpenters, contractors, UPS delivery guys -- men (in my experience) who don't typically read fiction a lot. So it's really good for me to share my work with them, because if they aren't "getting it" it's a sign for me to work a bit harder. Not saying that blue collar men are my entire "demographic" but I definitely don't want to write for other writers or, say, for the editors of The New Yorker. For me, the biggest compliment is from someone who admits that they don't like to read but confess that they actually read one of my books and liked it!


7. Where would you like to see yourself personally and creatively in ten years? In twenty?


I'd like to see Notes from a Medium Brown Girl published. I'm currently working on two manuscripts -- one of them is An Unmarried Mexican. It's about my first year in New York City after being newly separated from my ex-husband.


8. What something not the official bio?


That I was once married to the drummer of the heavy rock
Queens of the Stone Age. It's something being a musician's wife. You're like in a little club with all the other band member's wives who can be really catty and extremely insecure. And you know if your man is getting kicked out of the band soon...because little by little all the wives stop inviting you to shop Melrose. This experience, of course, has inspired yet another manuscript I've been working on -- The Hair Club for Men.


Scandalosa

ISBN-10:
1416915931
ISBN-13:
978-1416915935

Michele's MySpace page

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

GREAT TEATRO LUNA NEWS!





CURRENTLY PLAYING:
MACHOS



After a sold out run at Chicago Dramatists, MACHOS is moving to the 16th Street Theater in Berwyn, IL, conveniently located near the CTA/Blue Line Austin stop.

Tickets are already on sale, and I hope you will help spread the word!


Here's the scoop:

MACHOS
At 16th Street Theater 4 weeks only! January 25 through – February 17, 2008

Fridays at 7:30 PM Saturdays at 5:00 PM Saturdays at 8:00 PM Sundays at 6:00 PM

BUY TICKETS ONLINE
at www.brownpapertickets.com/event/25539


Lisa Alvarado

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3. Chicanartists Update

Michael Sedano

La Bloga was invited to a “Mental Menudo” recently, at the home of noted Chicano artist Magu. The tertulia’s subject ranged across such topics as art history, rhetoric and aesthetics in the praxis of Chicanarte, and quotidian issues revolving around marketing and selling.

As with literature, artists struggle with perception and identity, whether to be recognized as “artist” or “Chicana artist” “Chicano artist” or perhaps “Xicana Xicano”. The difference may or may not affect sales per se, but in who buys art. Magu recounted an incident when an Anglo collector wrote a check for several thousand dollars to buy some splashes of color laid on canvas by an MFA student the collector thought might one day become important. Then he asks Magu, “What do you have for about fifty dollars?”

Such are consequences of being shoehorned into a niche market. Readers, collectors see the work as limited appeal, specialized, hence worthy of small sales.

Finding a market becomes the persistent challenge of niche art. In Los Angeles, for example, eastside galleries come and go. Historic Self Help Graphics and Art imploded in recent years and exists only as a struggling shoestring calaca of its former self. But it's still there, thankfully.

Eagle Rock's Carlotta’s Passion recently closed after the owner lost several hundred thousand dollars, leaving Avenue 50 Studio as the sole major eastside venue for Chicanarte. Downtown LA is similar, with new spots opening up like the 2d Street Cigar Bar & Gallery. Over on the west side of town, Patricia Correia's is among the rare dealers presenting Chicana Chicano work.

What do young people know of their arte? Ask a high school kid if she knows who Gronk is? Patssi Valdez? Frank Romero? Carlos Almaraz? Magu? Chances are the kid will respond, "huh?" or worse, “I don’t know and I don’t care.”

Such ignorance and apathy are not universal. People care about their art, when they know it. For instance, the crowd who showed up on Whittier Boulevard recently for the unveiling of the Latino Walk of Fame star for Antonio Aguilar. When the singer’s widow, actress Flor Sylvestre accompanied by Antonio, Jr. arrived, eager fans of all ages thronged around them, proud to be in their presence, then stood line for an hour for a chance to get an autograph and shake the singer’s hand. Such excitement grows from one part awareness, one part commitment to cultural continuity, exemplified in a remark one spectator shared, “¿Todavia esta tan bonita, verdad?”

Preservation and continuity exist as dual objectives of any culture. That, however, may not concern artists whose focus is on the making. Magu and Polaroid emulsion artist Mario Trillo, co-host of the Mental Menudo, both express small concern with “letting go” of a work once sold, or given away. (Unlike many writers who sweat blood over an editor’s emendation or alteration of a single word). Trillo observed sometimes he's completely satisfied to create an image for his exclusive enjoyment and if it never finds an audience, so it goes.

In Chicanarte, preservation and documentation are dual obstacles to providing succeeding generations with a record of their culture’s art. For example, Magu curated the first Chicano art show when he mounted an exhibit in 1964, in association with East Los Angeles College. The college produced no catalog or other lasting record. Similarly, the Autry Museum of the American West mounted a major show in 1998 whose beauty haunts the memory of Mental Menudist and experimental physicist Manuel Urrutia, who decries the wealthy institution’s failure to produce a catalog of such an awesome show.

In southern California, fortunately, two institutions have taken up their cultural responsibility to preserve and document Chicana and Chicano art, UC Santa Barbara and UCLA. At UCLA, the 38 year old Chicano Studies Research Center recently announced it would retrieve one of America’s earliest Chicano murals—perhaps the first Chicano mural—from its basement and hang it.

At the same time, UCLA has created A Ver, a program of documenting important contemporary artists, with the first publication Max Benavidez’ Gronk. Magu, who announced his retirement from arts activism at the Mental Menudo, will be the focus of an upcoming title, as well. Magu, who founded the seminal Chicano art collective Los Four comprised of Carlos Almaraz, Roberto de la Rocha, and Frank Romero, has earned the spotlight. A Ver looks to become as important a cultural resource as Los Four or ASCO have become in the history of Chicanarte.

Not on UCLA’s list yet is another activist-artist, East LA’s Carlos Callejo. Last Christmas season La Bloga spotlighted Callejo’s offer of his archives to any interested institution. Actually, he offered them to me, but I cannot take possession of something with the historical and cultural value of Callejo’s material. This material should be in public hands, not some private collector’s hoard.

Callejo recently relocated from El Paso to East Los. Currently developing a “freedom” series, Callejo’s work demonstrates the skill and aesthetic that characterizes the finest art and also the best exemplars of Chicano art. His bird's-eye perspective of a fellow pulling gente riding inner tubes and dressed in Sunday-go-to-meeting clothes will be a show stopper. (Click the image for a larger view).

Callejo's archives remain available to UCLA or UCSB, or another institution willing to accept its responsibility to cultural and historical preservation.

As the Mental Menudo drew to a reluctant close, someone asked Magu when he started Los Four. “Give us a date, Magu.” October 1973.

October. The beginning of a school year. This year, UCLA announced A Ver and the rescue of that first mural. October 2008 marks the 35th anniversary of the emergence of Los Four. Wouldn’t that anniversary be an ideal way for UCLA’s CSRC to open its academic year while achieving a beautiful syncretism between CSRC, A Ver, the community, and the university's mission?

Imagine what a first-class institution like CSRC can do. Mount a massive exhibit linking the precursors to Los Four and the ensuing movement that has grown from that 1973 spark.

Do it up right; an academic conference, published proceedings, a gallery catalog. After all, isn’t this the function of a university, cultural preservation and continuity? Tempus fugit, carpe diem, academicos.

Have a great feast day this week, and thanks for reading La Bloga!

mvs

Saturday, November 24, La Bloga welcomes a new monthly guest columnist, playwright Tomás Gonzales whose first contribution will be his one-act The Reunion. Please join us on Saturday to welcome Tomás.

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