Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Meet L.A.’s masked and mysterious ‘Skeleton of Color’

- BY NICOLE KAGAN

BUTCH Locsin’s two-car garage is full of skulls. Thirtynine skulls to be exact.

They’re not real skulls; they’re masterfull­y sculpted, intricatel­y painted styrofoam masks. When he places one over his head, he transforms into his alter ego: the Skeleton of Color.

Locsin uses the masks during his hypnotic street performanc­es when he dresses up in vibrant three-piece suits and sets off dozens of smoke grenades, swirling clouds of color around himself. He’ll march forward in glittery, silver loafers, lunging to the ground and spinning around. When he emerges from the smoke, he looks triumphant.

The Skeleton of Color lets Locsin express himself in a way the “typical Butch” can’t. “The masks empower me,” he said. “When I put them on and all eyes are on me, it just gives me this confidence, this rush.”

Locsin has performed all around the world, from the streets of L.A. to festivals in New Zealand to parades in Mexico, since inventing the character in 2014. He’s been in commercial­s, movies and music videos, and garnered roughly 250,000 followers each on Instagram and TikTok.

Shooting his mysterious smoke shows in public is no small feat. Locsin needs to find spaces large enough for the smoke to rise and spread. He also needs to fit all his camera and lighting equipment without blocking passersby and traffic. He likes going late at night to the 2nd Street Tunnel, Slauson Avenue Bridge and Bay Street.

He typically puts on the shows to make social media content, but sometimes he’ll post about a shoot on his Instagram Stories so fans can come watch in person.

Locsin developed an infatuatio­n with skulls as a kid after seeing them graffitied on the streets of L.A. His favorite Marvel character was the Punisher, an antihero whose symbol is a skull and crossbones. So, he began to design skull masks. The colorful suits and smoke grenades followed.

“I started playing around with this character and I was getting really positive feedback,” Locsin said. “And from there it just took off.”

The Skeleton of Color is an homage to Mexican culture and the Day of the Dead, a November holiday honoring the lives of past loved ones. It’s typically observed through family gatherings or the creation of shrines — and wearing skull makeup and masks. Though Locsin is Filipino American, he appreciate­s the holiday and enjoys celebratin­g it.

On social media, Locsin’s performanc­e videos are flooded with positive reactions, but whether his art upholds the original meaning of the holiday is still open to debate.

Consuelo Flores, a Day of the Dead legacy artist at Self Help Graphics, an organizati­on committed to advancing Chicanx and Latinx artists, believes personal relationsh­ips and identity are important parts of the holiday.

“It’s very important to me that this celebratio­n maintains its authentici­ty,” she said. “His work may be pretty and it may be dazzling, but I don’t think it has the substance to be an authentic representa­tion of the celebratio­n.”

Flores said there is a certain responsibi­lity that comes with cultural representa­tions in art. “It entails a level of respect and knowing what we’re doing instead of just playing with it,” she said.

However, Gabriela Rodriguez-Gomez, a Chicanx studies expert who teaches a course at UCLA on Day of the Dead visual culture, doesn’t let Locsin’s Filipino roots affect the way she views his art.

“I always say to my students, ‘First and foremost we need to acknowledg­e and respect the fact that these are traditions that were handed down through generation­s by Indigenous people,’ ” she said. “‘But you don’t have to be Mexican or of Mexican descent to understand or appreciate these visual cultures.’ When I view this work, I see someone who is appreciati­ve of a very deep-rooted tradition that is not just in Mexico but also in Latin America and many other parts of the world. I’m glad he is taking this on and loving it and finding success with it.”

Rodriguez-Gomez added that it’s important for artists to give back to the cultural communitie­s that inspire them, whether that be through financial support or raising awareness about traditions.

Locsin has made an effort to connect and collaborat­e with Mexican creators like Fermin La Calaca, a performer from Mexico. Like Locsin, Fermin wears painted skull masks. Unlike Locsin, he uses only his stage name and never removes the mask in public. The two have been collaborat­ing since 2018. Last year, they co-starred in a commercial for a Mexican canned goods company.

“At the end of the day, he’s not Hispanic but he represents the culture really well,” Fermin said.

Locsin is honored to display his art in Mexico and to have found community through the Skeleton of Color. He knows that his Day of the Dead representa­tions only scratch the surface, but it’s because he’s set boundaries for himself.

“I know it’s best to allow it to come naturally,” he said. “Once I feel I have the correct way to showcase a deeper representa­tion, I will dive deep. As the way things stand now and what I’m comfortabl­e with, the character has been an entity of celebratio­n.”

Fermin and Locsin call regularly to “pingpong ideas really intensely.” Fermin will tell Locsin how he’s working to perfect setting his hands on fire, and Locsin will explain his vision for a new mask.

“You have to understand, this is not a regular job where you work eight hours a day,” Fermin said of his and Locsin’s work. “It’s a constant thing. You’re always thinking about it.”

After graduating from a San Fernando Valley high school and going to automotive trade school, Locsin got a job at an L.A. Fitness. One day, after eight years of selling gym membership­s, he quit on a whim and enrolled in community college to take painting, life drawing and photo editing classes.

“A lot of my classmates had practiced art their whole lives,” Locsin said. “But my artistic renaissanc­e came late. I had to push myself to match the standard of what I saw around me.”

His masks start as hollow, styrofoam semicircle­s. But after sculpting them with sandpaper, covering them in Bondo body filler (typically used to repair cars) and smoothing the imperfecti­ons with his fingers,

Locsin finishes the masks in a variety of ways. He’s covered masks in fake marigolds, pearls, mirror shards and gemstones. He’s affixed hats on top, and painted others with hundreds of detailed brushstrok­es. He’s glued 20,000 beads onto masks while watching “Game of Thrones.”

“With every new mask I make, I always ask myself, ‘How can I be innovative? How can I be different?’ ” Locsin said.

Some masks have names, like “Rojo” or “Mr. Suave.” Locsin’s favorite mask is named Malakai. A simple, seafoam-green skull, Malakai was one of the first masks Locsin created; he believes it brings him luck. He wore it during his first performanc­e in downtown L.A., traveled with it around Europe, brought it to a Day of the Dead parade in Mexico City and used it while filming a music video for French Montana (who bought two masks for $3,500 apiece afterward). Locsin doesn’t typically sell his masks. He wants his character to be one of a kind.

Locsin’s suits are another crucial aspect of his performanc­es. In college, he went thrifting for suit pieces at Goodwill. The clothes often fit loosely and didn’t match. Now, he gets his outfits tailor-made. The last time he counted, there were 37 suits in his closet. He rotates through them for his shoots.

“The smoke, the outfits and the masks are all coordinate­d based on color theory,” Locsin said. “Nothing is random. It’s all stuff I learned in my art classes.”

When he was working at L.A. Fitness, Locsin never dreamed of becoming a performanc­e artist. Now, he brings one of his masks with him to the gym. He says he is more comfortabl­e with it on than off.

“The mask makes him an amplified version of himself,” said Cesar Ramirez, one of Locsin’s close friends. “It gives him this charisma.”

Locsin’s life now revolves around the Skeleton of Color.

“This is something that I’ve dedicated myself to for the last seven years,” he said. “I want to create an image that will outlast me.”

DON J. SALGADO

Our father, Don J. Salgado, lived a long life despite dying of a terrible illness that he had endured for the last 20 years before his passing in 2020. He was a quiet man who enjoyed watching the L.A. Dodgers and Muhammad Ali. — Pat Salgado

Los Angeles

HELEN MONDY

I still miss her more than I can express. She was my particular person, lovely, wise and hilarious. I hear her calling my name in my dreams and see her butterflie­s (she called them buddyflys) on my daily walks. Her love abides. — Leslie Mondy

Los Angeles

LUCILLE CANNON

My mom died at 54, when I was 14 years old. She was a wonderful mother and a talented seamstress. She was elegant and stylish even though she never had much. I wish I’d had more time with her. — Mary Alice McLoughlin Lakewood

GLORIA GUZMAN

My sister, the sweetest, loving, caring, hardworkin­g, selfless person whose life was taken too soon. You were the best mom to your boys, who continue to need you as we do too. There isn’t a day we don’t think of you. We love you and miss you, sister.

— Susie Guzman Rosemead

LUIS ISABEL MARTÍNEZ

They say he was a meek man, alguien bien calladito. But I always knew it took great courage to leave everything he’d known to plant the American seeds that have now borne three generation­s. Te extraño abuelito.

— Fidel Martínez

Los Angeles

DON AND MYRTLE PHILLIPS

Mommy and Daddy, we all miss you! You left us too soon. Since you’ve been away, you have a great granddaugh­ter and two beautiful new granddaugh­ters-in-law! I thank you for giving us so much. — Kimberley Boehm

San Diego

KARAN NEVATIA

All it takes is the first guitar strums of “No Scrubs” to automatica­lly hear your off-tune Chilli rendition. It brings a smile to my face every time. You left us way too soon, dude. I miss you every day. Say hi to Left Eye for me. — Tomás Mier

ESPERANZA GOMEZ

I lost mi abuelita after a 10-year battle with Alzheimer’s disease. I miss her so much. I’d do anything to have a taste of her caramelize­d plátano maduro frito, stuffed with queso fresco and served with a side of crema. — Alejandra Alarcon Hawthorne

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? BUTCH LOCSIN, a.k.a. the Skeleton of Color, wears skull masks in his smoke shows on L.A. streets.
BUTCH LOCSIN, a.k.a. the Skeleton of Color, wears skull masks in his smoke shows on L.A. streets.
 ?? Photograph­s by Wesley Lapointe Los Angeles Times ??
Photograph­s by Wesley Lapointe Los Angeles Times
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States