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Diverse Perspectives Series Guest Lecture: Alicia María Siu

Alicia María Siu headshot, facing down in front of a mural

The Department of LJWL's Committed to Diverse Perspectives Series presents an artist talk from Nawat-Pipil/Maya muralist Alicia María Siu on Thursday, December 5 at 3pm in Fermanian Conference Center.

is Nawat-Pipil/Maya from her mother's side from Siwatewakan, Santa Ana, El Salvador. She is of Cantonese decent from her father's side, who is second generation Nicaraguan born Chinese, from Bluefield's Nicaragua. Alicia was born in El Progreso Yoro, Honduras, Lenca homelands. Due to civil unrest and war, her mother left El Salvador to Guatemala and later on to Honduras. Alicia was raised in San Pedro Sula, Honduras in the 80's and 90's, when the country experienced and is experiencing an invasion of transnational companies, neoliberal policies, increasing corruption, militarization, social and economic injustices. Alicia and her family migrated to California in 1998. She began painting at the age of eight years old. She is inspired by her mother's life story as an orphan child and the traditions of her Pipil/Maya ancestors. As a child she wanted to be a muralist. 

She holds a B.A. in Studio Art and a Masters in Native American Studies. Her thesis focuses on the historical clarification of the 1932 Holocaust of Nahuat Pipil in El Salvador. She painted her first mural in Autonomous Zapatista Community in Chiapas in 2001 and learned the community mural process, which she implements in her practice, with Chicano Maestro and Muralist Malaquias Montoya at UC Davis. She has since left murals in the community of Cucapa El Mayor, Patwin land in Knights Landing CA, Nahuat Community of Valle de Anton in Panama, Matanzas, Cuba, in Santa Barbara, Honduras and many more. In 2006, she was part of the Zapatista Other Campaign in the Cucapa encampment and was encouraged and permitted by the Comandancia of the Zaptatista Army of National Liberation (EZLN) to spread the vision of a “world where many worlds fit" through her art. Diaspora, de-conditioning from domination and decolonization, the continuation of ancestral knowledge and ceremony integrate her life and art. She currently lives in Southern California with her daughter. In this light she continues her artistic trajectory serving the seven generations before and ahead. 

Alicia María Siu's presentation will focus on her art and mural work. Please join us on Thursday, December 5 at 3pm in Fermanian Conference Center. The event is free and open to the public.

B'ATZ'AL Q'IJ (Thread of Time in K'iche') Mural in San Diego Museum of Us

B'ATZ'AL Q'IJ (Thread of Time in K'iche')

Featured mural at the San Diego Museum of Us

Inside the Mask Mural in UCLA Hammer Museum

¡Ya no hay tiempo! Sin oro se vive. Sin agua se muere./There is no time! Without gold you live. Without water you die./Xan tesu kanah Iman! Oro in tê, a lapil. Wash in tê, a kanapil

Part of Exhibition 

(Feb 15 - May 17, 2020)

UCLA Hammer Museum