Los Angeles Times

Mural artist hopes to win this fistfight

- GUSTAVO ARELLANO

‘ I wonder if the fist would’ve been brown if this would’ve happened.’ — JESUS LOZANO

Lucia Daniella SaldivarLo­zano approached her canvas on a recent December morning: a curbside utility box in Sylmar that she had painted three times in the last month.

Only to have vandals deface her work thrice.

The 20- year- old took stock of the necessary materials for the day. Brushes, rags, rolls. Cans of acrylic and spray paint. Cutouts of monarch butterflie­s so Saldivar- Lozano could stencil them around her installati­on’s centerpiec­e: a raised black fist.

Family and friends served as cheer squad and security team.

Wendy Lozano stood next to her daughter while a cousin f lanked SaldivarLo­zano’s left side. Her dad and uncle hung out across the street; a friend manned the corner. A police SUV swooped by every couple of minutes and sometimes parked in front of the artist to make sure she was OK.

“My mom is praying to Santo Niño for our safety,” said Lozano, a 45- year- old fifth- grade teacher. “We knew it would elicit some type of controvers­y. But never would I imagine this. It’s out of control.”

“It’s more on them,” Hector Saldivar, 47, said of the vandal. “They get fright

ened about what they don’t know.”

“I get it, but I don’t get it,” added Lozano’s brother, Jesus. “I wonder if the fist would’ve been brown if this would’ve happened. Well, the streets are now watching.”

Everyone looked on as Saldivar- Lozano first applied a layer of blue paint to cover up the whitewash that someone had splattered on just days earlier. She then used a different shade to create a sunburst that subtly drew eyes toward the middle of the box. Next came the butterflie­s, followed by the fist, round and proud and accentuate­d with white lines so that the fingers popped.

Cars passed by and honked or shouted thanks — except for the man who screamed from a truck: “Hey, gang members, get out of here!”

“Yeah, we’re city- funded gang members!” Lozano shot back. She then turned to her daughter. “Well, mija, you’re now a chola.”

The Cal State Northridge junior is softspoken, more interested in pop art than agitprop, and wants to move on to her next project. She never planned on becoming a case study for today’s culture wars.

Now, the Van Nuys native vows to return to her firstever public- art commission as long as she needs to.

“It’s important to see the issues we are experienci­ng,” Saldivar- Lozano said as she waited for the vibrant monarchs to dry. “I hope what I went through opens up a dialogue. Even in our own community, we have racism.”

This censorious saga has a happy ending of sorts: The artwork now has a protective layer lacquered on by city workers to make it easier to remove any future desecratio­ns.

But what should’ve been a celebratio­n of public art is instead a reminder of the times we live in, when a college student has to worry about her safety just because someone gets triggered by an homage to Black Lives Matter.

Saldivar- Lozano planned for none of this when she saw a contest on Instagram in the fall for local artists. The nonprofit 11: 11 A Creative Collective had received a grant through the office of Los Angeles Councilwom­an Monica Rodriguez to beautify 39 utility boxes throughout the eastern San Fernando Valley with the theme of social justice.

Co- founder Erin Stone described SaldivarLo­zano’s design — in addition to the black fist and the butterflie­s, another side of the electric box bears the slogan “Be the Change” — as “really good.” The artist said she hoped the work would inspire “Black and Chicano communitie­s [ to] lift each other up and both see and support the issues we are experienci­ng.”

She finished the box in mid- November, sent Stone a photo as proof for payment, and that was going to be that. Until the first defacement.

“I wasn’t surprised because I wasn’t naive,” Saldivar- Lozano said.

The second time around?

“I was like, ‘ Someone is dedicated to their cause.’ ”

The third time was the scariest. A white man with a mullet screamed at Saldivar- Lozano, her mom and cousin, “I don’t want this in my community! You better not put it up! All lives matter! Racist scum!”

The man’s seething anger was captured on audio.

Just hours after Saldivar- Lozano finished, someone — presumably the mulleted moron — came by not only to splash a red X over the fist but also to detail bloody cuts across its wrist. At that point, 11: 11 advised Saldivar- Lozano that maybe it was time to move on from the Black Lives Matter theme.

“Emotionall­y, it makes our blood boil that these expression­s of justice and equality are rejected by people in a community that’s primarily people of color,” Stone said. “From a practical standpoint, we have to say [ the project] is still a thing of beautifica­tion. If this thing is further tearing us apart, how long do we continue to do that? We don’t have an answer to that right now.”

But Saldivar- Lozano showed up for Round 4.

“I don’t want to change my art because of racist behavior,” she said. “It’s important not to change it. It would show we’re OK with that behavior. I don’t think it’s OK.”

Both of her parents agreed.

“I’m proud of her,” Saldivar said. “The art belongs to the community, not a vandal.”

“She understand­s the importance of what she’s doing,” added Lozano. “It shows her resilience to artists who feel their art is not being honored.”

The fourth painting took about an hour. Her support squad eventually grew to about 15. Joseph Zeccola showed up in matching Yankees jerseys with his toddler son. “I wish I lived around here,” said the high school teacher, a colleague of Lozano. “I’d be walking around the block every hour with a dog, and just saying, ‘ I’m going to get whoever’s messing with Lucia. We’re not backing down, bigot.’ ”

“I want to support because what she’s doing is positive,” said Sylvia Garcia, who showed up after hearing about the drama around the mural. “That’s what it takes to make the world better — small steps of support.”

After Saldivar- Lozano finished — the final touch was her first autograph in the bottom corner of the utility box — everyone applauded and asked for photos.

“It’s like your quinceañer­a, mija — strike your pose,” Lozano told her daughter, who seemed f lustered by all the attention.

“It’s encouragin­g and nice,” she said. “But as an artist, I’m more introverte­d.”

Suddenly, a beat- up late-’ 90s Toyota Camry screeched up to the scene, and a woman bolted out. Gracie Leyva of San Fernando said her daughter had told her about the mural.

“We need something good here, so thank you,” said the 67- year- old. She whipped out a $ 20 bill and offered it to SaldivarLo­zano. When she wouldn’t take it, Leyva stuffed it into Saldivar- Lozano’s pocket, with the admonition, “Get lunch! Get lunch!”

Everyone exhaled and cheered anew.

The mural has been defaced two more times in the wake of the riot at the U. S. Capitol, the last time with a paintball gun. I checked in with SaldivarLo­zano, who said she was “not at all surprised but extremely disappoint­ed.”

She will return.

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? LUCIA DANIELLA Saldivar- Lozano with her off icially sponsored mural on a utility box in Sylmar.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times LUCIA DANIELLA Saldivar- Lozano with her off icially sponsored mural on a utility box in Sylmar.
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 ?? LUCIA DANIELLA Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? Saldivar- Lozano repaints, for the fourth time, her homage to Black Lives Matter.
LUCIA DANIELLA Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times Saldivar- Lozano repaints, for the fourth time, her homage to Black Lives Matter.

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