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Friday, May 4, 2012

Cinco de Mayo - What's it all about???

Posted this two years ago and still relevant today.


A few facts: 
Cinco de Mayo is not Mexican Independence Day. Diez y Seis de Septiembre (Sept. 16th) is Mexican Independence Day.


Cinco de Mayo commemorates the battle of Puebla against the troops of Napolean III.


The celebration of Cinco de Mayo began in the U.S. during the Chicano civil rights / student movements. The battle inspired strength and pride among Chicanos during the movements of the 60's and 70's.


Read on...



Wednesday, May 5, 2010

It's Cinco de Mayo!

U.S Postal Stamp

Painting of the Battle of Puebla

Mural by Antonio Gonzalez Orozco
depicting the arrival of Juarez and his
cabinet in Mexico City in 1867.





Its Cinco de Mayo. Here's a little history for you from Las Culturas....

Cinco de Mayo may be the most well known celebration by Latinos in the United States. It is, however, one of the most misunderstood celebrations. Is it Mexican Independence Day? Why does it seem to be celebrated by Latinos in the United States more than Mexico? Is it appropriate to celebrate a Mexican holiday in the United States? Is it a holiday just for Mexican Americans or for all Latinos in the United States?

And why is this holiday important for all Americans?

It is not Mexican Independence Day. This is a common myth, possibly made popular because the celebration centers on a battle and you can see the Mexican flag at many celebrations. The actual independence celebration is referred to as el Grito de Dolores and takes place on Diez y Seis de Septiembre (Sept. 16th).

The US and Mexico
In part due to the Mexican-American War, Mexico was still suffering the effects of a demoralized nation and an empty treasury. In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln of the United States and President Benito Juarez (a full-blooded Zapotec Indian) of Mexico both had their hands full with war. While the US Civil War was waging, Emperor Napoleon III set his army on the shores of Mexico with the added support of Spain and Britain. They had arrived to collect their debts from Mexico. This was in direct defiance of the Monroe Doctrine, which warned Europe to stay out of the affairs in our hemisphere. The army, undefeated for 50 years in Europe and Asia, started marching north to capture Mexico and eventually create a French empire that would extend to Central and South America.

Both Presidents knew it was in their interest to defeat the French and expel them from Mexico.

La Batalla de Puebla
General Ignacio Zaragosa is a key figure in the battle at Puebla, known for his guerilla tactics. He was born in Bahia del Espiritu Santo, Tejas, before Texas was part of the United States. Today the town is called Goliad. General Zaragosa was tasked with stopping an experienced force that outnumbered his poorly trained and poorly equipped recruits by the thousands.

On May 5, when the French approached Puebla, General Zaragosa and the townsfolk of Puebla defeated them soundly. The French retreated with several hundred of their troops lost in battle.

Eventual Victory
President Juarez responded by making the victory a national celebration. The little town of Puebla had defeated the strongest army in the world and would inspire all of the local armies in Mexico.

The French were also impressed. They responded by sending a force of 30,000 to finish the fight. After a year of preparation, the French defeated Puebla and started towards Mexico City. Once President Juarez was in exile and Mexico City had fallen to French control, Maximilian of Habsburg was named Emperor of Mexico. In many ways he was a benevolent ruler, but one of his decrees was that any followers of Juarez would be put to death within 24 hours of capture. President Juarez would continue to wage battle and govern his loyal followers in exile.

With the United States at peace again, European forces and support began to withdraw from the effort in Mexico. US soldiers were discharged if they decided to support the Mexican army. In 1867, Maximilian was executed for his role in a conflict that cost 50,000 Mexican lives.

A US Latino Holiday - Dignity, Justice, Destiny
Many believe that this celebration should be just a Mexican holiday, or just a Mexican-American holiday. It may be celebrated more in the US than it is in Mexican towns. Puebla, of course, continues to make this a local celebration. The destiny of the United States is linked to the tenacity and courage that the victory at Puebla invoked in the hidden armies of Mexico. The French diplomatic campaign to minimize the Spanish and Portuguese dominance in the Americas is why the region is referred to "Latin" America today.

If the French had retained power in Mexico, they would have spread south and eventually made a challenge to the United States. If Puebla had not delayed the advance of the French, Lincoln would have found a French army at the border of a divided United States. A force ready to finance and arm the Confederacy. Instead, the United States would reunite and become the most powerful army in the world. Mexico, to celebrate the success and cooperation of the two nations, has the only standing statue of Abraham Lincoln outside of the United States. Just as US soldiers crossed to support Mexico, Mexicans, as recent as the Persian Gulf War, have offered to cross national lines and fight for the United States. Latinos continue to be the most awarded ethnic group in heroic service to our military.

One of the key components that lit the fire for Cinco de Mayo and made it popular in the United States was the Chicano Civil Rights Movement, which reached its climax 100 years after the Battle at Puebla. Mexican-Americans, as the most populous Hispanic group in the United States, led the struggle to end lynching, land theft, segregation, illegal deportations and a host of human rights violations in the United States that affected all Hispanics. During this struggle, the memory of Puebla continued to inspire strength and the determination to control our destiny with dignity.

On Cinco de Mayo, ignore the Budweiser commercials and other commercialization. Find a community celebration and remember the simple folk in Mexico that affected the destiny of both nations. And remember the spirit of the men and women, Chicanos and other Latinos, who brought down the walls of segregation and abuse, returned dignity to the United States and Latinos by ending the persecution, and continue to do so today.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Sunday Sweets on Sunday Streets

If you are coming out to the Mission on May 6th for Sunday Streets in San Francisco...
be sure to stop by our 
SUNDAY SWEETS
Myself and Michele Simons have organized an edible art workshop (lovely flower cookies to decorate)
 PLUS 
a pop-up tienda / store with jewelry, gifts for you or Mom!

what:  SUNDAY SWEETS
where:   Galeria de la Raza 2857 24th St. @ Bryant
when:  Sunday, May 6 
time: 11am to 4pm
organized by:  Michele Simons, The Sugar Skull Gallery
and

Martha Rodriguez, Estudio Martita


Hope you can stop by!

Thursday, April 19, 2012

never too late. . .




It’s never too late.
Even though the world may seem like a mess…
Even though you’re not as young…
Even though you’ve made mistakes and have been afraid
It’s not too late…
Look again…
See the colors you can paint
The bridges you can build
The lives you can touch
The efforts that can make a difference
And it becomes very clear…
That it’s never too late
.

some words to consider from The Daily Buddha...~Martha 








Tuesday, April 10, 2012

working, working, working...!!!

tired bunny
Open studios are this weekend! I seem to be back to my pre-Leukemia state where I work until the last minute possible - more paintings, adding some jewelry and fretting about cleaning / arranging my studio on time. I seem to have averaged one day off per week in the last three weeks.Tired, yes! I'm happy with most of my new paintings. The jewelry looks good and will be making earrings today. Am I happy spending so much time in the studio? Yes, most definitely!! It has been completely rewarding.

1890 has finally reached the pre-open studios stage. Lots more artists in the building. You can hear hammering, sawing, voices in the hallways plus trash from cleaned studios ready to be hauled away. I love the building during this time. Its exciting to be surrounded by so much creativity and anticipation. People are at their best: funny and full of angst. There is an amazing sense of camaraderie among the artists. We are all working toward a common goal: OPEN STUDIOS!

Saw my oncologist yesterday, Dr. Kaplan, for my monthly round of blood tests. All blood work is NORMAL (doing a little dance here). For the first time we talked about the future and going off meds. No date given but this is a milestone. I invited Dr. Kaplan to Open Studios. His wife is a photographer so the two share an interest in the arts. He said he couldn't promise but would try to make it. Well...it doesn't hurt asking.

Easter was this weekend. Mom came up from San Jose and sister, brother-in-law from L.A. BIG PLANS. I think my kids and grand kids would have been happy with KFC and an easter egg hunt. Next time!

Have to get ready and get to the studio. Earrings await!!

Hope to see anyone in the area this weekend at Open Studios!

Martha


Friday, March 30, 2012

PRIMAVERA - Spring is in the Air!

Recuerdos / Memories by Martha Rodriguez

Its a new season. Here in San Francisco, it is finally raining. Storms have been blowing in. Lots of grey skies and a hint of flowers blooming.

Now that Spring has arrived, I'm proud to say that I will be participating in a new art showing called Primavera / Spring. I will have approximately 8 paintings shown (inculding Recuerdos, above)  along with various work of artists Maya Gonzalez, Shiloh Sophia McCloud and Margo Rivera-Weiss. The exhibit has been curated by Bird Levy and will be held at Puerto Alegre Restaurant here in San Francisco.

Here are the details:

WHERE: Puerto Alegre Restaurant
               546 Valencia St, San Francisco, CA 94110  View Map
  
WHEN:    April 3, 3 to 5pm - OPENING until May 8, 2012

WHO:     Martha Rodriguez, Maya Gonzalez, Shiloh Sophia McCloud and Margo Rivera-Weiss

to RSVP, please go to: https://www.facebook.com/events/319224934799791/

Would love to see you at the opening!!
          

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Estudio Martita & Spring Open Studios

Bird on Cactus - part of desert series




Martha Rodriguez / Estudio Martita, Studio 318

 invites you to...

OPEN STUDIOS  at 1890 Bryant Street Studios

40 Artists at 1890 Bryant are opening their doors to the public for... 

Spring Open Studios weekend: April 14-15 12 to 6pm. 

 

Preview Reception: April 13, 6 to 9pm 

to get the art collector's view of the studios before the event. 
Refreshments are served. Admission is FREE.

for more information:

Sunday, March 25, 2012


all Quiet on the blog front... but lots going on in studio and beyond

I guess its really been a month since I lasted posted. I managed to get my two paintings into the Latino Cancer Summit Art Show here in San Francisco in July. YEAH!!! I'm also going to be in a show called Primavera on April 3rd through May 8th with three other women artists here in San Francisco. The show will be at Puerto Alegre restaurant in the Mission. I also managed to get one of my paintings, GRATITUDE published this year in the Mujeres de Maiz 2012 Zine. Finally, Mission Open Studios are around the corner at the fabulous 1890 Bryant. They open April 13th with a Friday night preview and continue through April 14th and 15th from 12 to 6pm.. More to come on open studios and my Primavera show in the next few weeks.

The reason I started this blog post was to celebrate the great team I belong to on Etsy: The SFetsy Team. They started a new team activity with members creating Treasuries from a theme. Last week was, "What I Wore and Where I Went." Since most of my time is spent at the studio (and at home too) I decided to title mine, "Another day at the studio." I chose all SFetsy members and their work. It was great fun putting this together. I guess I won the weekly theme treasury (WOW!) and had lots of people look at it. Well....read the post below from the SFetsy Blog and take a look and see what I did. They also featured a necklace I made featuring friend Diana Gaspar's beautiful Frida pendant! I am so grateful. Its so nice to be rewarded when you do something for fun!!

Martha

p.s. Have had to slow down for the past few days. Caught a horrific cold and now sidelined. I know there is something called balance where in  my post Leukemia hospitalization and remission state, I have to find.ways of slowing down. Haven't quite found the balance.necessary to create, pursue as much as I can. Honestly, I have to realize when I don't take the time to rest enough, my own body forces me to.

I'm a terrible patient when I have a cold. Things are harder to figure out when your head hurts, sinus ache, ears are plugged plus you have a nagging cough. See, I told you I'm a lousy cold patient. I'm actually, finally, getting better - but you'd never know it!


READ THE ETSY TEAM BLOG POST BELOW...

SATURDAY, MARCH 24, 2012


Treasury Team Presents: What I Wore and Where

We had over 1000 views this week on our collective treasuries featuring SFEtsy team members within the theme of "What I Wore and Where."  Thanks to Sarah,LisaMarthaKatyFleurKathleenAshleighMoria, and Maggie for adding their vision!

Our featured treasury with way over 300 clicks, views, comments and hearts is Martha of estudiomartita. (Congrats to Lisa for a close second!)  Her treasury also included exclusively items made by Bay Area artists in our team!  Martha's own shop carries jewelry and housewares inspired by an eclectic blend of Latino and pop-art cultures.  A favorite of mine is her "Frida in her Garden" necklace featuring a carving made by Artist Diana Gaspar.
Frida in Her Garden, Necklace by Martha of estudiomartita
And her winning treasury:
Building: cement walled, old mayonnaise factory.
Temperature: COLD.
Tenants: bundled artists, drinking tea, visiting, working.
Location: SF Mission 
Style: hipster chic, paint splattered shirts, pants, scarves, knit hats, aprons.