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Tomás Ybarra-Frausto research material on Chicano art

Archives of American Art

Object Details

Creator
Ybarra-Frausto, Tomás, 1938-
Names
Mexican Museum
Royal Chicano Air Force
Studio 24 (San Francisco, Calif.)
Garza, Carmen Lomas
Goldman, Shifra M., 1926-2011
Mesa-Bains, Amalia
Place
Mexico -- Religious life and customs
Topic
Santos (Art)
Household shrines -- Mexico
Chicano art
Chicano artists
Mexican American art
Mexican American artists
Latino and Latin American artists
Provenance
The collection was donated to the Archives of American Art by Tomás Ybarra-Frausto in 1997, and in 2004.
Creator
Ybarra-Frausto, Tomás, 1938-
See more items in
Tomás Ybarra-Frausto research material on Chicano art
Summary
The research material of Tomás Ybarra-Frausto, measures 33.1 linear feet and 1.27 GB and dates from 1965-2004. The collection, amassed throughout Ybarra-Frausto's long and distinguished career as a scholar of the arts and humanities, documents the development of Chicano art in the United States and chronicles Ybarra-Frausto's role as a community leader and scholar in the political and artistic Chicano movement from its inception in the 1960s to the present day.
Autobiographical Note
Papelitos (little bits of paper), whether rent receipts, paid bills, or piles of personal letters, can become layered bundles of personal history. I have always been a pepenador (a scavenger) and saver of paper scraps. Diary notes, scribbled annotations, and first drafts are often useful indicators of ideas and gestation. Papelitos are the fragments of every-day life that gain expanded meaning integrated into the larger historical events of a period. In the decade of the 1960s, I started saving ephemeral material--exhibition announcements, clippings of individual artists and of organizations fomenting a Chicano art movement. The social scenarios of the period such as marches, strikes, sit-ins, and mobilizations for social justice all spawned manifestos, posters, leaflets, and other forms of printed material. I somehow managed to assemble and protect the evanescent printed information that recorded the birth and development of Chicano art. As I started to research and write about Chicano art and artists of the period, I continued to clip, photocopy, and preserve material given me by Mexican-American artists from throughout the nation. My idea was to form an archive that would be comprehensive rather than selective. I knew that it was the offbeat, singular piece of paper with a missing link of information that would attract the scholar. Today, several decades after the flowering of Chicano art, there is still a lamentable paucity of research and information about this significant component of American art. It is my fervent hope that this compendium of information will function as a resonant print and image bank for investigators of Chicano culture. Perhaps contained within the archive are the facts that will inspire new visions or revisions of Chicano art and culture--this is my fondest dream. Dr. Tomás Ybarra-Frausto New York City, 1998
Extent
33.1 Linear feet
1.27 Gigabytes
Date
1965-2004
Archival Repository
Archives of American Art
Identifier
AAA.ybartoma
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Gigabytes
Photographs
Slides (photographs)
Interviews
Citation
Tomás Ybarra-Frausto research material, 1965-2004. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
Arrangement
The collection is arranged as a single series of subject files. The general contents of each folder have been listed. The subject files are arranged in alphabetical order. While no two files are alike, they may contain résumés, printed and digital material, letters, draft writings, and photographs. Unless otherwise noted, each listing represents one file folder. The abbreviation TYF was used to refer to the name Tomá Ybarra-Frausto throughtout the Series Description.
Processing Information
The collection was processed by Gabriela H. Lambert and Rosa Fernández in 1997-1998. New material was donated in 2004 and was integrated into the collection and added to the finding aid by Lucile Smith in 2005-2006. Oversized materials were moved to oversized boxes and folders in order to better preserve them. Notations were made after the folder listing in each of these instances. Born-digital materials were processed by Kirsi Ritosalmi-Kisner in 2019 with funding provided by Smithsonian Collection Care and Preservation Fund.
Rights
The Archives of American Art makes its archival collections available for non-commercial, educational and personal use unless restricted by copyright and/or donor restrictions, including but not limited to access and publication restrictions. AAA makes no representations concerning such rights and restrictions and it is the user's responsibility to determine whether rights or restrictions exist and to obtain any necessary permission to access, use, reproduce and publish the collections. Please refer to the Smithsonian's Terms of Use for additional information.
Genre/Form
Photographs
Slides (photographs)
Interviews
Scope and Content Note
The research material of Tomás Ybarra-Frausto, amassed throughout his long and distinguished career as a scholar of the arts and humanities, documents the development of Chicano art in the United States. As community leader and scholar, Ybarra-Frausto played dual roles of active participant and historian in the Chicano movement, chronicling this unique political and artistic movement from its inception in the 1960s to the present day. Deeply rooted in American history, "El Movimiento," the Chicano movement, evolved from Mexican-Americans' struggle for self-determination during the civil rights era of the 1960s. It began as a grassroots community effort that enlisted the arts in the creation of a united political and cultural constituency. Chicano artists, intellectuals, and political activists were instrumental in mobilizing the Mexican-American community for the cause of social justice, and the movement was shaped by the affirmation of a cultural identity that embraced a shared heritage with Mexico and the United States. Just as "El Movimiento" aimed to instruct and inspire through the recollection and conservation of culture, Ybarra-Frausto's own career as scholar and historian helped to shape the intellectual discourse of the Chicano art. As a leading historian and theoretician in the field of Chicano Studies, he has written extensively on the subject, and has been instrumental in defining the canons of Chicano art. His papers are accordingly rich and varied, and they will be of great use to future scholars. His research material, dating from 1965 to 1996, are arranged in subject files containing original writings, notes, bibliographies compiled by Ybarra-Frausto and others, exhibition catalogues, announcements, newspaper clippings and other printed material, as well as slides and photographs. Many of these files also include interview transcripts and correspondence with prominent figures in the movement. While this research collection contextualizes Chicano art within the larger framework of Latino and Latin-American culture, the bulk of the files relates specifically to Chicano visual culture. The collection also contains pertinent documentation of the Chicano civil rights movement, material on Chicano poets and writers, and research files on the wider Hispanic community, but these also appear within the context of Chicano culture in general. Prominent among the bibliographies are the many notes and drafts related to the publication of A Comprehensive Annotated Bibliography of Chicano Art, 1965-1981 (University of California, Berkeley, 1985), which Ybarra-Frausto co-authored with Shifra Goldman. Ybarra-Frausto's files on Goldman, like other files in the collection, document his close associations and collaborations with scholars. Art historians have traditionally found the categorization of Chicano art a difficult task. Unsure whether to classify the work as "American" or "Latin American," critics often ignored the work altogether. An outgrowth of this dilemma was the proliferation of artists, curators, and critics within the Chicano community, and the papers contain many original writings by Chicano artists about Chicano art, found in extensive files on artists that will be of particular significance to researchers. These often contain exhibition essays, dissertation proposals, and course outlines authored by the artists, along with the standard biographies, exhibition records, and reviews. Some of the files contain rare interviews conducted and transcribed by Ybarra-Frausto. Highlights include conversations with Carmen Lomas Garza, Amalia Mesa-Bains, and members of the Royal Chicano Air Force artist cooperative. As a member of several Chicano art organizations and institutions, Ybarra-Frausto kept active records of their operation. The extensive files on the Mexican Museum and Galerie de la Raza/Studio 24, both in San Francisco, not only chronicle the history of Chicano art through the records of exhibitions and programming, but also offer case studies on the development of non-profit art institutions. The files on artist cooperatives, organizations, and exhibition spaces cover several regions of the United States, but focus on California, Texas and New York. Two notable events in the development of Chicano art were the 1982 Califas: Chicano Art and Culture in California seminar at the University of California at Santa Cruz, and the 1990 traveling exhibition Chicano Art: Resistance and Affirmation, 1965-1985 (CARA), of which Ybarra-Frausto served as organizer and catalogue essayist. His records document the planning and development of these seminal events. Ybarra-Frausto's files on folk art, altars, posters, murals, performance art, border art, Chicana feminist art, and Southwestern and Mexican imagery (both urban and rural expressions) mirror the diverse forms and subject matter of Chicano art. Spanning almost four decades of American culture from a Chicano perspective, these files have a unique historical value. The legacy of Chicano art and its contribution to the cultural landscape of this country, kept alive in Ybarra-Frausto's files, attests to the richness and diversity of American art. Henry C. Estrada Research Fellow, 1997.
Restrictions
The collection is open for research. Use requires an appointment and is limited to the Washington, D.C. research facility.
Related Materials
Tomás Ybarra-Frausto Papers are located at University of Texas Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin.
Related link
Record ID
ebl-1503512412403-1503512412439-0
Metadata Usage
CC0
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/mw9e4916919-f4aa-4cd9-bf03-0335539ae06d

In the Collection

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  • Altars

  • Subject Files

  • National Hispanic Cultural Center, Organization, Albuquerque, New Mexico (see also: Abeyta, Ray Martín; Arreguín, Alfredo; Casas, Mel; Gandert, Miguel; García, Rupert; Gronk; Mesa-Bains, Amalia; Lomas Garza, Carmen; Smithsonian Institution; Valdez, Patssi)

  • Mextiza Collective

  • Jiménez, Luis, Sculptor

  • Lucero, Linda

  • La Raza Graphic Arts Center, Inc., Organization, San Francisco, California (see also: Galería de la Raza/Studio 24)

  • Mesa-Bains, Amalia (see also: Altars; Cinco de Mayo; MoCHA)

  • Chicana Artistas (see also: Baca, Judith; Barrazza, Santa; Carrasco, Barbara; Esperanza Peace and Justice Center; Galeria de la Raza/Studio 24; Gamboa, Diane; Goldman, Shifra; Hernandez, Ester; Lopez, Yolanda; Lucero, Linda; Mesa-Bains, Amalia; Rayas; SPARC)

  • Chicanarte, Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery

  • Altars - Amalia Mesa-Bains

  • Con Safo Group, San Antonio, Texas, Organization (see also: Casas, Mel; Martinez, Santos; Reyes, Felipe)

  • Mesa-Bains, Amalia (see also: Altars; Cinco de Mayo; MoCHA)

  • Casas, Mel

  • Chicana Artistas (see also: Baca, Judith; Barrazza, Santa; Carrasco, Barbara; Esperanza Peace and Justice Center; Galeria de la Raza/Studio 24; Gamboa, Diane; Goldman, Shifra; Hernandez, Ester; Lopez, Yolanda; Lucero, Linda; Mesa-Bains, Amalia; Rayas; SPARC)

  • Graffiti

  • La Raza Graphic Arts Center, Inc., Organization, San Francisco, California (see also: Galería de la Raza/Studio 24)

  • ASCO

  • Chismearte, A Quarterly Publication of the Concilio de Arte Popular, Fall Issue

  • Regeneración Magazine, Vol. 2, no. 4

  • Corzas, Francisco

  • Planning - NEH Proposal

  • Seminar

  • García, Loraine

  • Association of Hispanic Arts Inc. (AHA), New York

  • La Frontera/The Border, Exhibition, Centro Cultural de la Raza; Balboa Park; Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, San Diego, California

  • Chicano Studies, Course

  • Revelaciónes/Revelations: Hispanic Art of Evanescence, Exhibition, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York (see also: Gronk; Martínez, Daniel; Mesa-Bains, Amalia; Muñoz Alvarez, Celia; Noriega, Chon),

  • Borderlands Sourcebook: A Guide to the Literature on Northern Mexico and the American Southwest, Publication, University of Oklahoma Press

  • Santa Fe

  • Latino Affairs Oversight Committee (LOC 05/15/1996)

  • Chacón, George

  • Ortega, Eriberto and Esteban

  • Lotería,

  • Járdin de Flor y Canto, Art center, Pacoima, California,

  • Royal Chicano Air Force (RCAF)

  • California Directory of Chicano-Latino Artists (see also: Concilio de Arte Popular)

  • Hispanic Foundation for the Arts

  • Esquibel, Jorge

  • Chicano Park, San Diego, California

  • Garcia, Camille Rose

  • Chicana/o Art of San Diego, Exhibition, University of San Diego, San Diego, California

  • Fernández, María Elena

  • Notes, Critique

  • Barrio, Raymond (see also: Mexican Art - General)

  • Hernández, Judith E.,

  • El Nuevo Mundo: The Landscape of Los Angeles (see also: Photography)

  • Delano, Irene, Artist, 1919-1982

  • Albright, Thomas, Art Critic

  • Southwest Museum, Los Angeles, California

  • General (see also Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center)

  • Video Forum: A Videography for Librarians

  • Turner, Kay (see: International Arts Relations, Inc.)

  • Latino Redux, Exhibition

  • Oversize Poster from Vasquez, Emigdio

  • Los Angeles, California (see also: Barraza, Santa; Gamboa, Diane; García, Margaret; Los Streescapers; Martinez, Daniel; Valadez, John; Valdez, Patssi),

  • Retablos y Ex-Votos, Exhibition, Washington State Arts Commission

  • Romero, Alejandro (see also: Galería sin Fronteras; Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum),

  • Martínez, Manuel, Painter, 1947-,

  • Herrera, Juan Felipe (Poet and Writer)

  • Rios, Richard and Graciela

  • University of California at Los Angeles (see also: Montoya, José; OV 32),

  • General

  • Photography

  • Palomino, Ernesto, Artist and Educator (1933-)

  • Latino Affairs Oversight Committee (LOC 01/13/1997)

  • Rámirez, Martin,

  • Meeting of Historians and Critics of Chicano Art, San Antonio, Texas (see also: Quirarte, Jacinto)

  • Villa, Esteban

  • Latin America Art Association for San Antonio (ALAA; see also: Quirarte, Jacinto)

  • Hispanic Heritage Month Schedule of Events

  • Sepúlveda, Artemio (see also: Goldman, Shifra),

  • Jiménez, Luis, Sculptor

  • Aguilar, Laura

  • González, Nivia,

  • Gamboa, Harry, Jr. (see also: ASCO; Goldman, Shifra; Gronk)

  • Las Fronteras: Sueños, Comadres y Manos, Exhibition, Santa Barbara County Arts Comminssion

  • Planning

  • Arte Chicano, Draft

  • Osorio, Pepón,

  • La Raza Murals of California, 1963 to 1970: A Period of Social Change and Protest by Marshall Rupert García (see also: García, Rupert)

  • Middle of Somewhere, Film by Eugene Rodriguez. Digital Video Recording

  • Muñoz, Celia Alvarez (see also: Lucy R. Lippard Papers),

  • Santeros (San Isidro Labrador)

  • Packard, Emmy Lou, Painter (1914-1998; see also: Emmy Lou Packard Papers; Rivera, Diego)

  • Social and Public Art Resource Center (SPARC), Organization, Venice, California (see also: ADOBE LA; Altars; Baca, Judith; California Chicano Mural Primer Project; Cockroft, Eva, Gamboa, Harry, Jr.; Lopez, Yolanda; Murals; Valadez, John)

  • Oversize Posters from Hecho En Califas

  • Conferencia de la Plastica Chicana

  • New York (see also: Lockpez, Inverna)

  • La Patria Portátil: 100 Years of Mexican Chromo Art Calendars, Exhibition, Museo Soumaya, Mexico City, and the Mexican Fine Arts Center Museum, Chicago

  • Fernández, Rudy M., Jr.,

  • Frontera México - Estados Unidos: Chicanos - Pachucos - Cholas, Symposium, Universidad Autonoma Metropolitana, Mexico City,

  • Concilio Mujeres

  • Barrios Art

  • Museum of International Folk Art, Houston, Texas

  • Museum of the American Indian

  • Cisnereos, José, Artist (1910 -)

  • Colón, Miriam,

  • San Diego

  • A Decade in Flight, Exhibition

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Altars - Amalia [Mesa-Bains]
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