Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

CREATIVE STEWARD

MEZTLI PROJECTS WANTS TO ENSURE THAT INDIGENOUS ART AND CULTURE STAND OUT IN L.A.

- BY EVA RECINOS

N 2 0 2 0 , Confederat­e and Christophe­r Columbus statues across the United States began toppling, in large part catalyzed by protests against the murder of George Floyd. ¶ The Los Angeles-based arts and culture collaborat­ive Meztli Projects was ahead of the curve. Huichol organizer and artist Joel Garcia, the organizati­on’s project director and program co-creative director, had long bristled at the presence of the Columbus statue in Grand Park. At the time, he worked as co-director of Self Help Graphics & Art, focusing on programmin­g and operations, helming initiative­s like the Know Your Rights workshops, which distribute­d posters with informatio­n about what to do in the event of an ICE raid. In 2017, Garcia coordinate­d with Taino artist Tanya Melendez to turn the Columbus statue into an altar for the victims of Hurricane Maria. ¶ Garcia says

that a lot of his efforts at Self Help Graphics were about working to “help folks understand the complexiti­es around Indigenous identity.” But in working with fellow Native and Indigenous artists and cultural producers, Garcia started to see the ways in which a nonhierarc­hical group could make an impact across the city.

Garcia’s work, both as an arts profession­al and an artist, sparked the beginnings of Meztli Projects in 2018. Meztli Projects is a Native- and Indigenous-focused group with a

goal of “centering Indigeneit­y into the creative practice of Los Angeles,” as its website states. One of the group’s first public activation­s involved organizing an event centered on the 2018 removal of that same Columbus statue.

For Meztli Projects, the day wasn’t just about the statue coming down, it was also about creating a space for Native and Indigenous community members to come together. Each member of the collective works across varied artistic mediums and comes from different academic background­s. Projects under the Meztli umbrella include public art, workshops, mentorship and more.

The group’s members are also practicing artists, something that’s important to Garcia and a big part of the collective’s mentorship focus. Tongva and Mexican artist River Tikwi Garza is an artist and cultural worker apprentice for Meztli. “It was very foundation­al for me, working with Joel and connecting with all kinds of people who are about this type of work,” Garza says.

Many of Meztli’s activation­s require behind-thescenes conversati­ons with elders and community members. The group hopes to raise funds to support elder artists so that they might focus on their work more than “being an elder as the cultural sustainer of all these other things that tribal communitie­s have to sustain,” Garcia says.

This same ethos extends to members like River, who recently completed a residency with the Los Angeles Public Library and currently has work on view at the Catalina Museum for Art & History’s exhibition “Crossing Waters: Contempora­ry Tongva Artists Carrying Pimugna.”

“We hope that through their own creative practice, they’re able to access these opportunit­ies,” Garcia says. “That through developing this way of doing this work — very slow, very gradual, very organic, very thoughtful, never alone, always in consultati­on with elders and other community members — that then that later leads to opportunit­ies such as the ones that River is participat­ing in.”

Program Co-Creative Director and mentor Kimberly Robertson, a Mvskoke artist and professor, says, “There are very few creative spaces for Native folks in Los Angeles to begin with, just plain and simply.” For her, one of the biggest challenges has been looking for opportunit­ies and spaces that can allow her to show up fully, particular­ly as a mother. Robertson began incorporat­ing funding into workshops for child or dependent care, as well as activities that younger members could do alongside adult artists.

The group’s intergener­ational approach is another strong thread woven through every project. Robertson’s two kids actively participat­e in the group. One of them, when she was about 8 or 9, asked to develop a series of workshops for her own age group after seeing her older sister take part. The team paid her to plan the program.

“But that is not something that we developed,” Garcia clarifies. “This is very much how Indigenous peoples work everywhere.”

Meztli Projects just hosted a plant dye workshop at the Getty. Cultural educator Abe Sanchez shared knowledge on traditiona­l California foods and poet-songwriter Kelly Caballero performed. These events are part of the group’s efforts to bring together the Indigenous and Native communitie­s throughout L.A. and to make their presence seen and heard by everyone else.

“The fundamenta­l thing that is holding everything together is how you care for people — through creating,” Garcia says.

The Puerto Rican-born daughter of Guatemalan recording star Ricardo Arjona is a dedicated environmen­talist who grew up in Mexico City. She also lived in Miami and New York City before moving to L.A. and making splashes as Dorothy in “Emerald City” (2017) and in prominent roles in “Good Omens,” “Sweet Girl” and “6 Undergroun­d.”

— Michael Ordoña

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Dania Maxwell Los Angeles Times
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