About Margaret “Quica” Alarcon

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I am a Xicana (Taíno-Otomí),  an indigenous identified woman born and raised in East Los Angeles. I am a professional artist, educator and cultural worker. My creative interests include painting, drawing, printmaking (silkscreen & Intaglio), and the ancient art of amoxtli book making and papel picado.

I am a classically trained and educated artist with degrees in Illustration & Studio Art with a Masters in cross-cultural education & MFA in Fine Art.

As an educator & community cultural worker for over 25 years, I co-developed a Los Angeles, grassroots, women's, community arts organization called Mujeres de Maíz, (Women of Corn). Here I worked in a variety of publishing and media projects with cross-cultural aspects of the art world along with many artists of all ages and backgrounds, while providing instruction and guidance to many young, and emerging artists. 

My professional work visually translates, documents and reinterprets the history of my ancestors through a personal, contemporary context that reconnects everyday life to the sacred. My work involves actively sifting and reworking within the roots of identity, spirituality and memory.

My studio work has been published in several books and journals, more recently in, “Voices from the Ancestors: Xicanx and Latinx Spiritual Expressions and Healing Practices,” where I discuss the power of healing from personal trauma through art making.

I have exhibited my work in several galleries and museums throughout the country, most recently at the Manetti Shrem Museum in Davis, California. In 2015, I was one of 5 artists chosen from a national pool of applicants, who were sent to the Taller Experimental de Gráfica in Havana, Cuba, for an unprecedented, one-week printmaking exchange. This amazing and rare opportunity was provided through MOLAA, in partnership with Self Help Graphics & Art (SHG) and the Richardson Center for Global Engagement. 

Curriculum Vitae/ Résumé

Education

​2014    M.F.A. Studio Arts 

California State University, Los Angeles, California

Area of Research/Practice: Chicana/o Art History, Indigenous Cultures of the Americas, Eastern & Western art history, textiles, mixed media, sculpture, printmaking

2010    M.Ed. Education

National University School of Education, La Jolla, California

Area of Research: cross-cultural, arts education and special education.

1997    B.F.A. Illustration

Art Center College of Design, Pasadena, California

Illustration- 2D & 3D media, classical drawing & painting, mixed media, graphic design, and printmaking


Selected Group Exhibitions

2024 TBA

2022

Let Me Talk, Brand Library & Art Center, Glendale, CA

2019   

Xicanx Futurity, Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art - Davis, CA

 2018    

Entre Tinta y Lucha: 45 years of Self Help Graphics & Art, Cal State Los Angeles Fine Arts Gallery, Los Angeles, CA

WOMXN WARRIORS: Honoring The 50th Anniversary of The Walkouts & Intergenerational Organizing, Self Help Graphics: Galeria Otra Vez, Los Angeles, CA.

2016   

This Used to Be Mexico, Avenue 50 Studio - Highland Park, Los Angeles, CA

Body Politic, Avenue 50 Studio - Highland Park, Los Angeles, CA

International Printmaking Exchange: L.A. Havana. Preview ExhibitionLA ART SHOW, Los Angeles, CA.

2015    

Time: Present, Past, and Future. National Women’s Caucus for Art (WCA) 40th Anniversary.  Website Exhibition.

Mujeres de Maiz: Madre, Mother, Avenue 50 Studio - Highland Park, Los Angeles, CA.

2014 

Stairway to Heaven: Thoughts on the story of the Virgen de Guadalupe. Avenue 50 Studio, Highland Park, Los Angeles, CA.

GLAMFA: Greater Los Angeles Graduate MFA Exhibition, California State University, Long Beach, CA

Now Trending, 2014, Alpay Scholarship, Juried University Student Exhibition, The Palos Verdes Art Center, CA

2012    

From a Whisper to a Roar: Women Artists Charting Their Own Course. WCA 40th Anniversary, Avenue 50 Studios - Highland Park, CA

2009 

Mujeres de Maiz: La Sagrada (That Which is Sacred), Farmlab Public Salon - Los Angeles, CA

 2008

Mujeres de Maiz: Somos Medicina (We Are Medicine), Self Help Graphics: Galeria Otra Vez, Los Angeles, CA.

 2006     

Reflections of 8 Natural Women, Láfia House Gallery Brewery Arts Complex. Los Angeles, CA.

2000-03  

Just Another Poster? Chicano Graphic Arts in California, University of Texas, Austin & University of California, Santa Barbara

 US National Art Tour:

  • Crocker Art Museum and La Raza/Galería Posada - Sacramento, CA.

  • Jersey City Museum - Jersey City, NJ.

  • Oakland Museum of California - Oakland, CA.

  • Fowler Museum - University of California, Los Angeles.

  • University Art Museum - University of California, Santa Barbara.

  • The Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art - University of Texas, Austin.

 2002    

Celebración del Dia de los Muertos, Snite Museum of Art: Mestrovic Gallery, University of Notre Dame, Indiana

3 Generations of Chicana Art: 30 Years of Contemporary Chicano and American Art Traditions, Rike Gallery, University of Dayton, Ohio


 Exhibitions Curated

2009      Mujeres de Maiz: La Sagrada (That Which is Sacred)

Farmlab Public Salon. Los Angeles, CA.

 

2008    Mujeres de Maiz: Somos Medicina (We Are Medicine) 

                Self Help Graphics: Galeria Otra Vez. Los Angeles, CA.


Bibliography and Press

2020   

  • Voices From the Ancestors: Xicanx and Latinx Spiritual Expressions and Healing: The University of Arizona Press, by Lara. Medina & Martha R. Gonzales, pg. 74, 85-87, 167n, Plate 6.

1998 to 2018 

  • Mujeres de Maiz Flor Y Canto Series: volumes 3-14, community arts & publication series. 

2017

  • Dia de Los Muertos: A Cultural Legacy, Past, Present & Future. Exhibition Catalog, Self Help Graphics & Art, Los Angeles, curated by Linda Vallejo, Betty Brown, Ph.D. pg. 17, 18.

  • Chicana/o Remix: Art and Errata since the Sixties, by Karen Mary Davalos. pg. 173.

2010

  • Corn Women of East LA: 13 Years of Art and Activism, by Olga García Echeverría. La Bloga, (Interview concerning community involvements).

2006

  • Womyn Image Makers: A Colectiva of Queer Indígena Visionaries, Spectator: USC Journal of Film and Television Criticism.by Sandra Alvarez and Susy Zepeda. Chicana Spectators and Media Makers: Imagining Trans Cultural Diversity. Ed. Osa Hidalgo de la Riva. Vol. 26. No. 1, pp. 127-134, (Illustrations).

2003

  • Borderlands: Critical Subjectivity in Recent Chicana Art Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies.Vol 24, Number 2 & 3, pp.104-121. by Judith L. Huacuja, University of Nebraska Press, (Art analysis & criticism).

2002

  • Day of the Dead, A Day for Remembering, by Joseph Dits, South Bend Tribune, South Bend, Indiana, (Art analysis and criticism). 

  • A Spirit Reborn: Chicana Artist Finds Redemption and Renewal in Ofrenda, by Julie York Coppens. South bend, Indiana: South Bend Tribune. (Interview, art show observation and criticism).

2001

  • Just Another Poster? Chicano Graphic Arts in California, by Holly Barnet-Sanchez. University of California, Santa Barbara.  Seattle and London: University of Washington Press pp. 142, 144, (Art analysis and criticism).

2000

  • El Imaginario Chicano: La iconografía civil y política chicana en Estados Unidos de América 1965-2000, by Katerina Brezinova. Karolinum Press, Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic, (Art analysis and criticism for Ph.D. Dissertation).