SALUD: Teatro and Wellness Fair (September 18th, 2010)

Limited Edition Silkscreen Poster for TANA Salud Event by Malaquias Montoya

Salud: Teatro and Wellness Fair. This event featured a wellness fair and community Teatro performance promoting community health and took place on Saturday, September 18th from 11:30am-2:30pm (address: 1224 Lemen Ave., Woodland, 95776).

SALUD featured a wellness fair with nutritional demonstrations, family activities and health screenings from 11:30am-2:30pm with a community theater performance at 1:15pm by Teatro Espejo. Approximately 150 community members attended this event.

SALUD is part of a series of community theater performances produced by TANA in conjunction with the Network for a Healthy California, the California Department of Public Health, and the Public Health Institute.

Throughout the 2011 year TANA will be producing versions of this program with Teatro Espejo and El Teatro Campesino in Salias, Dixon, and Woodland. See our blog for information about future events.

TANA SALUD Event Flyer
Teatro Espejo performing for 150 TANA attendees
View of TANA Wellness Fair during the morning of the SALUD event
TANA Staff and volunteers at SALUD information desk

TANA 2010 Spring Event: Mural Drawing Exhibit Opening & Chicana/o Studies Mural Workshop Unveiling

June 4th, 2010: TANA hosted the opening reception for the exhibition titled Mural Drawings: 35 Years of Community Muralism. This exhibition featured the final mural preparatory drawings for projects painted through the Chicano Studies Mural Workshop. These workshops were led by Professor Malaquias Montoya through courses at the California College of Arts and Crafts or at the Chicana/o Studies Department at UC Davis. Murals featured in this exhibition ranged from community centers, schools, and neighborhood spaces throughout the Bay Area, Solano County, and Yolo County.

This opening reception also included the unveiling of the 2010 Chicana/o Studies Mural Workshop that featured a mural painted for the Pacific Coast Producers Tomato Cannery. The Pacific Coast Producers facility is half a block from TANA where workers could easily visit and view the mural in progress.

200 attendees visited TANA on June 4th to join in the Spring celebration of the exhibition and mural unveiling. Below are some images from the opening and of the drawings featured in the exhibition.

Mural Drawing: Malaquias Montoya
Mural Drawing: Chicana/o Studies Mural Workshop led by Malaquias Montoya, California College of Arts and Crafts painted at La Escuelita in Oakland
Mural Drawing: Chicana/o Studies Mural Workshop led by Malaquias Montoya, UC Davis painted at Beamer Elementary School in Woodland
Mural Drawing: Mural Workshop led by Maceo Montoya, Woodland Coalition for Youth/TANA project painted on West Street in Woodland
Mural Drawing: Chicana/o Studies Mural Workshop led by Malaquias Montoya, UC Davis painted at Will C. Wood High School in Vacaville
Mural Drawing Exhibition Installation View #1
Mural Drawing Exhibition Installation View #2
View of Attendees at TANA Spring Event

TANA Winter 2010 Silkscreen Printing Demonstration & Workshop Session

On January 30th, 2010, TANA hosted its first Silkscreen Printing Demonstration to community residents and youth. The silkscreen printing demonstration is an introductory session where an introduction to TANA is provided along with a session teaching the process of how to create a multi-colored silkscreen print or poster. This introductory session usually takes place over a 2-3 hour period. Community residents and youth who are interested in participating in TANA’s quarterly silkscreen workshops must attend the silkscreen printing demonstration which. Quarterly sessions last 10 weeks and introductory demonstrations are offered at the beginning of each 10 week session, usually in January, April, September. Photos of the Winter 2010 Silkscreen Printing Demonstration are below:

TANA Winter 2010 Silkscreen Demonstration: Workshop Introduction
TANA Winter 2010 Silkscreen Demonstration: TANA Director Carlos Jackson describes the process of registering stencils
TANA Winter 2010 Silkscreen Demonstration: TANA Director Carlos Jackson exposes a silkscreen in the dark room
TANA Winter 2010 Silkscreen Demonstration: TANA Intern Gilda Posada demonstrates the process of washing out a stencil
TANA Winter 2010 Silkscreen Demonstration: Printing the second color of a three color print
TANA Winter 2010 Silkscreen Demonstration: Printing the last color of a three color print

TANA Inaugural Exhibition: Screenprints by Malaquias Montoya & Carlos Francisco Jackson

The Inaugural Exhibition at TANA featured the artwork of TANA co-founders and directors, Malaquias Montoya and Carlos Francisco Jackson. Montoya and Jackson selected recent screenprints from their work to demonstrate various approaches to community printmaking/postermaking being employed at TANA.

This exhibition was on view from December 2009-April 2010

TANA Inaugural Exhibition: view of screenprints by Carlos Francisco Jackson
TANA Inaugural Exhibition: view of screenprints by Malaquias Montoya

TANA Grand Opening: December 2009

TANA Grand Opening Ribbon-Cutting Event: December 9, 2009
TANA Grand Opening/Open House: December 11, 2009 (Woodland Mayor Art Pimentel addresses TANA attendees)

For immediate release

Dec. 9, 2009

WOODLAND – University of California Davis faculty and students, local residents and government officials gathered today to celebrate the opening of a community art center dedicated to reinforcing Chicano culture through silk-screening, mural painting and other classes.

The TANA center, conceived and operated by the UC Davis Department of Chicana/o Studies, represents the culmination of a six-year quest to establish the type of community art workshop that existed in many urban settings decades ago. TANA stands for Taller Arte del Nuevo Amanecer, or Art Workshop of the New Dawn.

The center will operate out of a former Yolo County Housing Authority warehouse that has been renovated with $342,000 in federal grants. It is located across the street from a large working class neighborhood and is designed to appeal to teen-agers and other youth who live there and throughout the community.

Through silkscreen printing and mural painting, the center will attempt to cultivate the cultural and artistic life of the community, while encouraging participants to seek higher education and self-determination, supporters say.

“I want to congratulate the Department of Chicana/o Studies and the Woodland community on this remarkable achievement,” said Jesse Ann Owens, dean of the Division of Humanities, Arts & Cultural Studies. “As the daughter of a sharecropper who was the first in his family to go to college, I know first-hand the power of education.

“But access is crucial and TANA is a terrific way of bringing the university to the community and the community to the university.”

The funds that financed the conversion of the 3,600-square-foot maintenance shed into a freshly painted studio were awarded by the City of Woodland from its allocation of federal community development block grants.

Woodland Mayor Skip Davies said the project provided “a great opportunity for the city to strengthen our partnerships with UC Davis and the Yolo County Housing Authority” to benefit Woodland youth.

“The opportunity to create and study art will be a lifelong asset for those who choose to participate,” Davies said.

Lisa Baker, executive director of the housing authority, said the opening of the TANA center will be one of the year’s highlights for the agency and greater Woodland area. The housing authority provided the building under a $1 a year lease.

“The center is an opportunity to bring art education to the ‘front door’ of our housing community, while helping to engage older youth and teens,” Baker said. “It will also offer a way to improve awareness of opportunities through the arts, advanced education and UC Davis.”

UC Davis Professor Malaquias Montoya, an artist who has taught mural painting and poster making for the past 40 years, was the driving force behind the project.

“The idea is to bring people in to work together,” Montoya said. “Have young kids work with older kids. Those who have advanced can actually do work for the community, if some organization needs a poster.”

In addition to an art studio, the center will serve as an extension of the university where other UC events open to the community can be held, said Montoya and Carlos Jackson, an assistant Chicana/o Studies professor who will serve as director of the center. Community groups also will be able to use the center, Jackson said.

“You hope some kids catch on with the art, that they find an outlet for themselves and to talk about their community,” Jackson said. “But the main thing is creating community, bringing people together. This is a space that belongs to this community in Woodland and especially the immediate community, which is subsidized housing.”

The center includes a silk-screen studio and exhibition space. Classes are expected to start in mid-January and will be guided by Jackson, an artist and author of a book about Chicano art, Montoya and Maceo Montoya, a former visiting assistant professor of Chicana/o Studies.

Earlier classes conducted through the Chicano Studies Department produced existing murals at Pioneer and Woodland high schools; Beamer, Freeman and Dingle elementary schools. Additional murals located at the Carleton Club and on the side of Taqueria Guadalajara were completed by the Chicano Studies Department in cooperation with the Yolo Family Resource Center and the Woodland Coalition for Youth.

In addition to the federal grants, the TANA center received funding from UC Davis, the California Department of Education, the California Arts Council, and the Yolo County Arts Council.

About UC Davis

For 100 years, UC Davis has engaged in teaching, research and public service that matters to California and transforms the world. Located close to the state capital, UC Davis has 31,000 students, an annual research budget that exceeds $500 million, a comprehensive health system and 13 specialized research centers. The university offers interdisciplinary graduate study and more than 100 undergraduate majors in four colleges — Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Biological Sciences, Engineering, and Letters and Science — and advanced degrees from five professional schools — Education, Law, Management, Medicine and Veterinary Medicine.

Media contact(s):

TANA Grand Opening: Chicana/o Studies Students, Staff, Faculty, and Alumni
TANA Co-founders & Directors: Malaquias Montoya & Carlos Francisco Jackson
Silkscreen Print by Malaquias Montoya created at the TANA 2009 Grand Opening and Open House