Hostile Terrain 94: A Project by the Undocumented Migration Project at Chapman UniversityMain MenuHostile Terrain 94 by the Undocumented Migration ProjectHostile Terrain 94 - Participants ReflectHostile Terrain at Chapman UniversityRaul Baltazar and Tochtli 7 the Aztec Bunny - An Interview with the artist about his video worksAn Interview With the Artist About His Video WorksRaul Baltazar - A Selection of Video WorksA Selection of Video WorksTHE BORDER/ LA FRONTERA father of COYOTE CULTUREMarcus Herse0219eb2a5a2992ddcae46fff7974d31b23cfc1a5
Tochtli to Delia LA Marathon
1media/Tochtli to Delia LA Marathon1_thumb.jpg2020-09-30T02:12:02+00:00Marcus Herse0219eb2a5a2992ddcae46fff7974d31b23cfc1a5331Tochtli to Delia LA Marathonplain2020-09-30T02:12:02+00:00Marcus Herse0219eb2a5a2992ddcae46fff7974d31b23cfc1a5
This page is referenced by:
1media/12 Talisman Bunniescorr.jpg2020-09-16T17:35:17+00:00Raul Baltazar and Tochtli 7 the Aztec Bunny - An Interview with the artist about his video works19An Interview With the Artist About His Video Worksplain2020-10-01T23:13:09+00:00Raul Baltazar (b.1972, Los Angeles) is an artist who works through aesthetic notions given in Mesoamerican and Western culture. Baltazar often mixes performance, video, photography, drawing, painting, murals, and community-based projects, to create new relations for the decolonial art object. His work is often driven by the struggle of Mestizo, Xicanx, POC and Mesoamerican Indigenous communities and their revolutionary vision for change in the context of Los Angeles. In addition, his work postulates responses to trauma and the body, examining the experience and rational abuse of power and authority by means of sanctioned or unsanctioned reiterations of violence in contemporary life. Baltazar challenges this by participating in the creation of contemporary cultural production rooted in an artistic research of ancient cultures. Where his work opens up a space for healing, communication and reflection; in order to engage publics and communicate the value of a self-reflexive identification with indigeneity.
Raul Baltazar received his MFA in Public Practice from Otis College of Art and Design in 2013, and his BFA in Sculpture and New Genres from Otis College of Art and Design in 2008. He has exhibited extensively in Los Angeles, and internationally in Mexico, Australia, Vienna, Egypt, and Taiwan, and was the 2015 recipient of the California Community Foundation, Fellowship for Visual Arts and in 2019 he participated in rufino-tamayo-innovation-and-experimentation at LACMA and he was selected by ArtNews as one of the top 15 LA artists to watch.