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Azienda News:
- Wayne Alaniz Healy - UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center
Wayne Healy, co-founder of East Los Streetscapers, discusses his life and work with Roberto Tejada; they are joined by Patricio Villagomez, Streetscapers' project manager
- Disappearing Murals erase Boyle Heights history
Painted in 1983 by the East Los Streetscrapers, a collaborative public art studio co-founded by Wayne Alaniz Healy, the mural shows local musician Margarito Gutierrez playing a fiddle, while El Piporro, a famous Mexican actor, singer and songwriter, plays an accordion
- Wayne Alaniz Healy – U. S. Department of State
His art is recognizable by vigorous draftsmanship, dramatically angled composition and strong colors The work is in public and private collections on six continents
- ¡Murales Rebeldes!: These Disappearing LA Murals Mirror Their . . .
El Corrido de Boyle Heights, or The Ballad of Boyle Heights, was painted in 1983 by the East Los Streetscapers, an artist collective that painted a number of murals across Los Angeles'
- East L. A. always has a place in his art - Los Angeles Times
He is probably best known for a series of iconic murals, a trail of history laced along walls of civic buildings, nursery schools and garages around the city, county and beyond
- El Corrido de Boyle Heights mural - grconnect. com
Pictured playing the fiddle is Margarito Gutierrez, Il Piporro on the accordion, and Joe Alaniz enjoying the music The artists were assisted by Paul Botello, David Morin, and Ismael Cazarez
- Corrido De Boyle Heights | Mural Conservancy of Los Angeles
In this mural, local musician Margarito Gutierrez (descendent of mariachi Vargas de Teclitlan) is playing his vurtuoso fiddle while Il Piporro plays accordian Joe Alaniz (1933-1967) tears himself away from his shrimp and garlic to enjoy the music, and a newlywed couple dances
- Boyle Heights - scalar. usc. edu
The street art became very popular in the 1970s as the Chicano political movement became very prominent in the Boyle Heights neighborhood The art from this time period often displayed brown-pride messages and told stories of the struggles many Latinos went through and faced at the time
- A Boyle Heights Housing Project’s Murals Are Time . . . - LA Weekly
Artist David Botello painted his first mural when he was in third grade It was a collaborative effort with another third grader, Wayne Healy Together they covered a chalkboard-sized piece of
- Murals of Boyle Heights - ArcGIS StoryMaps
In 2002 the Japanese American National Musuem (JANM) had an exhibition titled Boyle Heights : The Power of Place This exhibit highlighted the importance that Boyle Heights played as an ethnically diverse community
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