Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Politics of Portrayal: Three Generations of Chicana Portraiture in Los Angeles In Conversation with San Diego artists at Mesa College.

By Patricia Frischer


Marianela de la Hoz

Being seen, as has been revealed lately on a mass scale, is a political act. In 1970, the beginning of the Chicano Art movement, being seen as a woman was not assumed. Chicana, the women artists, had the tools and the desire to change that.

Marianela de la Hoz (SD Art Prize recipient), Katie Ruiz,  Ale Ruiz Tostado are the three local San Diego artists joining Los Angeles painters  Barbara Carrasco, Yreina D. Cervantez, Emilia Cruz, Karla Diaz, and Maritza Torres at Mesa College Art Gallery until March 5, 2026. The  local artists were curated by Alessandra Moctezuma joining her selection to that of  Sybil Venegas for Avenue 50 Studio in Los Angeles.

The Baby Boomers in this group are del Hoz, Carrasco and Cervantez. The Gen x group is Ruiz and Diaz. The millennials are Tostado, Cruz and Torres.Graphic design and painting of the civil rights movement in the early 70'a, was replace at the turn of the century by a wider exploration of mediums and the popular culture of clubs and fashion trends. As the millennials come of age, issues of gender and identity and inclusion and the effects of a pandemic with ensuing isolation brings portraiture back as a means of healing and self empowerment. 

Some of these artists are showing some self-portraits but more often portraying members of their own community.  There are many Mexican Americans, but Chicana is a Mexican American woman that is an activist.  Chicana Art is Activist Art, then and now.  

Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz, “I offer an insight into the hidden character of my subject through visual codes and exaggerated features, using black humor and fantasy to depict the darker side of humanity.”
The small scale of de la Hoz’s  egg tempera work demands that you come up close…says the spider to the fly!


Katie Ruiz

Katie Ruiz

Katie Ruiz

Katie Ruiz detail

Katie Ruiz detail

Katie Ruiz, “My work explores the third culture….that examines the socio-political systems that created Chicana culture which is both and neither Mexican or US American.”
Watch for the references to the clothing in her portraits that are then repeated in the flamboyant elements to her sewn and constructed frames.


Ale Ruiz Tostado

Ale Ruiz Tostado detail

Ale Ruiz Tostado

Ale Ruiz Tostado, “My work offers warmth and a sense of belonging despite melancholic or painful expressions.”
Tostado, like Ruiz, incorporates a whole host of objects attached to her paintings.


Barbara Carrasco

Barbara Carrasco

Yreina D. Cervantez

Yreina D. Cervantez

Baby Boomers: Barbara Carrasco deals with feminist issues issues involving body rights.  Yreina D. Cervantez is part of the famous Self Help Graphic Atelier of East Los Angeles

Karla Diaz

Karla Diaz

Gen X: Karla Diaz, co-founder of  Slanguage a community based alternative, street-influenced and installation heavy collective.

Maritza Torres

Maritza Torres

Maritza Torres

Emilia Cruz

Emilia Cruz

Emilia Cruz
Millennials: Maritza Torres is an Xicana who uses the ancient idea of coldex as inspiration  to create her own family iconography and uses zines to broadcast the work. 
Emilia Cruz is passionate about the rich colors of her culture and depiction of real familiar faces. 





Installation Views

Politics of Portrayal: Three Generations of Chicana Portraiture in Los Angeles In Conversation with San Diego artists
Mesa College Art Gallery
Feb 9 to March 5, 2026
Artist Panel and Reception: Saturday, February 28, 4 – 7 pm
San Diego Mesa College Art Gallery
FA103, 7250 Mesa College Drive, SD 92111
Gallery Hours: Monday through Thursday, 12 – 5 pm, or by appointment. Closed Fridays and weekends
More info: 619.388.2829 amoctezu@sdccd.edu

Sunday, February 8, 2026

The Apiary: A Bee-Centered Production at New Village Arts in Carlsbad

By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt.


The original cast announcement of the show.



Two views of the Bee Screen onstage. (Jason Sullivan/Dupla Photography).

To bee or not to bee?

That is the question in The Apiary, a dystopic, occasionally comic play by Kate Douglas that originally premiered off-Broadway in 2024, and was directed here by Kristianne Kurner, NVA’s Founder and Executive Artistic Director.

Set 20 years in the future, it’s a play about a small team of women working in an Apiary that’s meant to sustain honeybee populations trying to keep their colonies from suddenly dying out. With plenty of dedication but no funding, they happen to discover that bees can survive by eating the flesh of dead humans…so they begin recruiting terminally ill people to donate themselves to science and keep the bees alive. 

This regional premiere kicked off the theater’s 25th anniversary year and was the 40th show presented by Kristianne Kurner, whose note in the play’s program thanked “the many bee experts and bee lovers who shared their knowledge and passion with us about these most fascinating creatures.” 

She also added: “This show encompasses so many of the things I am passionate about: support for female artists, the importance of the scientific community, and the belief that telling each other stories is what brings out the best in us as humans.”

It’s a little too late to see The Apiary, whose actors I actually found more engaging than the play itself, but there’s plenty of time to get tickets for Hairspray, the Tony-Award-winning musical based on John Waters' 1988 film, coming June 5-July 19. 

The Apiary -  Jan 23 until Feb 22, 2026
New Village Arts
2787 State Street
Carlsbad, CA 92008
760-433-3245


Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net

A Heartfelt Conversation with the Creators of Palpitations: The Cadence of Heartbeats

By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt.



The Talk

On the morning of February 3rd in the theater at MOPA, which is now the Museum of Photographic Arts at The San Diego Museum of Art, acclaimed painter Marianela de la Hoz and Grammy-award-winning sound artist Marc Urselli gave their audience an illuminating look into the details of Palpitations: The Cadence of Heartbeats, their innovative installation at SDMA.

The talk was moderated by Deirdre Guevara, SDMA’s Director of Community Engagement, and the audience was totally captivated by the story of their unique collaboration.

Marianela, born in Mexico and based in San Diego, is known for her artworks created with egg tempera, an ancient and painstaking technique that involves egg yolks and was used by Byzantine and early Christian icon painters, reaching its height in the Italian Renaissance with master painters like Botticelli. 

Marc, who lives in New York, said he first discovered Marianela’s work about five years ago, when he dropped in at the museum on a break from a project in L.A. and her altar piece “Heaven and Earth” really spoke to him. He loved multimedia things and thought it would be great if they could do something together. 

Years of phone conversations followed.  Was there a way that a piece of art could play music?  Maybe she could try painting on a speaker cone!  If he used low frequencies, they could even make a piece seem to move. But egg tempera wouldn’t work. The heat created by low frequency sound would cause the piece to crack.

Marianela confessed that she was terrified at first. She couldn’t use her favorite medium and would have to use acrylic, and she didn’t know how she could paint on one of those cones.

“I like to be very detailed,” she said. “I’d have to use gesso and put extra layers on; it would be a completely different experience.”

“For the first year, we just exchanged emails of things we liked,” Marc said. “And we gave each other complete freedom.”

“Everything has a heartbeat, so we chose that as our theme,” said Marianela.

Finally, she sent him a painting… he created sound for it…and Palpitations was on its way.

“We’d even include a speaker that could defy gravity, climb up the walls!” Marc said. “And except for one breakfast in L.A., we didn’t even get together until the installation!”

“Painting the three pieces in the Tryptich took six or seven months,” said Marianela. “And as I was painting The Tree of Life and Death: From Cradle to Tomb, my companion cat died.” 

Her beloved cat, Fausto, who had been ailing, and often curled up on one of the speakers, was dead. “It brought clear to me that there’s nothing that won’t come to an end,” she said, sadly…. and audience members sighed along with her.

                The Tryptich: The Tree of Life and Death: From Cradle to Tomb.




“Each of my paintings is full of details--some of them cryptic to me!” she went on. “You can look for what each character is saying. I write a lot too: how can I express a message that I want people to see and feel?  I didn’t know I could be so detailed with acrylic, but I could.”


War

Hope

“She writes about her pieces before she paints them!” Marc said. “And I wanted the room to be welcoming; I wanted there to be a story told.  There’s the Tree of LifeWarHope… and you’ll never hear the same thing twice unless you stay there for hours. Every time the lights are turned on, a new sound cycle starts.”

Every sound cycle, he added, takes 7 ½ minutes… and he recommended that visitors stay for that full amount of time, and listen for the different subtle sounds that come up with each piece.

“If you’re there at the right time, you can hear the dead man and the dead cat snoring,” he said. “My intent was to bring as much physicality to a two-dimensional artwork as possible… to insert three-dimensionality…like when you throw a stone into water.” 

At the end, there were heartfelt questions from the audience, and heartfelt responses. 

How would the artists like viewers to respond to their artwork?

Said Marianela: “For me, as an artist, I want people to feel and think and observe my painting…not just say: Oh, it’s beautiful!  It goes with the colors of my sofa!”

Could sound damage the paint?

The audience, myself included, loved Marianela’s response: “I put layers of gesso on…I don’t think it will crack. But if it does, maybe they can find hairs of my cat….”

I had seen Palpitations before, but seeing it again after the Artists’ Conversation, I was able to notice so much more and my experience was fuller and deeper.

If you read this after Feb 22, 2026, Palpitations will no longer be on display at SDMA… but the Tryptich has been donated to the museum, so you may be able to see and hear it there n the future. Until then, we’ve included  a glimpse of some of the paintings here, and I’ll end with the one called  Seikilos Epitaph, which I’ve learned is the world’s oldest surviving complete musical composition. It was found written on an ancient Greek tombstone…and if you look closely, you’ll see its words inscribed in English on Marianela’s piece.

 

Seikilos Epitaph

 

                 While you live, shine.
                Have no grief at all.
                Life exists only for a short while 
                And time demands its toll

 And for a fine musical conclusion, go to this 3-minute performance of Seikilos Epitaph by the YK Band on You Tube.

PalpitationsThe Cadence of Heartbeats - on view until Feb 22, 2026
The San Diego Museum of Art 
Balboa Park, San Diego. 


Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net

Friday, January 30, 2026

The Art of Banksy: Without Limits at the Activity Center of the Del Mar Fair Grounds

 by Patricia Frischer





The story of Banksy is without doubt one of the most amazing art sagas of the last 30 years. His secret identity plays into his subversive philosophy. In fact is he a man, a woman or even a collective? They/he is openly anti-establishment and therefore a hero to a whole generation. But his success in the high-end market is the twist that makes the story complicated. 

That old Groucho Marks comment, “I wouldn't want to belong to a club that would have me as a member.” seems to apply. As does the one by Mark Rothko who withdrew his painting from the Four Seasons in New York, stating, “anybody who will eat that kind of food for those kind of prices will never look at a painting of mine”.

Banksy arranged for his  Girl with Balloon (2006) painting that sold in 2018 for over a million at auction, to be shredded when the hammer came down. It was retitled Love is in the Bin and sold in 2021 for $25 million.  This show gives a wide selection of works unofficially attributed to Banksy. No one really knows who makes the money from the sales but a company called Pest Control is set up as the authentication specialist and they make money from this service.  

This show has about 200 artworks, with some certified originals which are not identified and many, many replicas/reproductions.  This is a traveling exhibition produced by Sorina Burlacu started in 2019 in Romania and has been in as London, Vienna, Seoul, Singapore, Melbourne, São Paulo, Mexico City, and multiple U.S. locations.  The work we all know is the stenciled pieces created right on the walls and they remain favorites. Some of these originals have been torn off their walls and changed hands. Yes, he makes fun of the police, but he often humanizes them. So it is the social currency which is the lasting value of his works.

The array of other works in this exhibition is rather staggering. There is a room full of master works that have been commandeered like the Monet that has old shopping carts dumped into the pond. Classical sculptures are cleverly vandalized.  But there are also album covers, installation like the bathroom, the phone box, the hotel room.

Try to allow time to watch the video documentaries, the hologram of Banksy speaking (no, you never see his face but the hoodie is a trademark outfit), the mirror room. Banksy has been involved in many conflict-affected areas which are showcased. Below is a drawing he gave to a hospital during COVID to show how nurses are the real heroes of our communities.  A sculpture of a boat load of refugees was so poignant. There are ways at the exhibition to contribute to MV Louise Michel - a charity that helps refugees and rescues migrants in distress at sea in the Mediterranean. Parker Edison is the project manager who took an empty shell at the Activity Center at the Del Mar Fairgrounds and transformed it. The Parker Edison Project is a KPBS podcast featuring insightful conversations about creativity and community.


































CD disk cover

Album cover




Dismaland



“Exit Through the Gift Shop.” 


Magnets so everyone can afford their own Banksy...better yet make one for yourself. 



Don't forget to look up. 

Don't forget to look down. 


The Art of Banksy: Without Limits
Del Mar Fairgrounds Activity Center
2260 Jimmy Durante Blvd, Del Mar 92014
On view through April 19, 2026
Exhibit hours:
Noon to 8 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays
10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays
10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sundays
 Tickets start at $22