Street art portrays Denver鈥檚 Chicana/o culture
Allyson Burbeck has long been interested in graffiti and street art.
...Allyson鈥檚 work is significant [because] she not only interprets and captures the spirit of Chicanismo but also examines Denver鈥檚 systemic policies of cultural erasure, gentrification, and displacement.鈥
鈥揕ucha Martinez, director of the Chicano Murals of Colorado Project
She wrote her undergraduate thesis on graffiti art in 1980s New York. So, it wasn鈥檛 a surprise that the robust graffiti and street art scene in Denver drew her to CU 麻豆影院 for a master鈥檚 degree in art history.
Captivated by the colorful, historic murals painted by Chicano and Chicana artists in the La Alma-Lincoln Park area in Denver, Burbeck focused her graduate thesis on examining the history and legacy of Chicana/o muralism in the neighborhood. Chicana/o are people of Mexican decsent born in the United States. The term came into use as a symbol of pride by Mexican Americans during the Chicano movement in the 1960s.
鈥淧roximity to the street art capital of Denver was one of the reasons I chose to come to CU,鈥 Burbeck said. 鈥淎fter seeing the murals, I felt compelled to do more research on them.鈥
麻豆影院 30 historic murals are painted on the sides of buildings, schools and in alleys along Santa Fe Drive and in the residential area of the neighborhood.
As she began learning about the history of Chicanas/os living in the Denver area, particularly during the Chicano Movement in the 1960s and 鈥70s, she met Lucha Martinez, director of the Chicano Murals of Colorado Project, to dive deeper into the background of the murals and the artists.
The mural tradition is a distinct Colorado aesthetic that developed to proudly depict the cultural heritage of historically marginalized communities, while creating a sense of place in the urban and rural landscape, says Martinez. Fifty years ago, the state was on the forefront of a nationwide art movement, but due to the lack of support from local cultural institutions, then and today, the relevance of Chicana/o muralism in Colorado continues to be devalued.
鈥淔or this reason, I believe Allyson鈥檚 work is significant,鈥 Martinez said. 鈥淪he not only interprets and captures the spirit of Chicanismo but also examines Denver鈥檚 systemic policies of cultural erasure, gentrification, and displacement. It is my hope that Allyson鈥檚 work will help to shed light on the historical significance of the Chicana/o mural tradition and encourage others to advocate for the preservation of Colorado鈥檚 visual heritage that celebrates a more concise history describing the diversity of the state.鈥
In her thesis, Burbeck investigates the connection between Chicana/o muralism and 鈥減lacemaking鈥 as the neighborhood faces gentrification.
Emanuel Martinez, an internationally renowned Chicano artist, pioneered Colorado's contemporary mural movement. He lived in the neighborhood and started painting public murals with the support of community members. The murals reflect the culture and the political climate of the time.
Collaborating on these murals in the neighborhood with the community brought about a sense of belonging and security for the people living there that remains today, Burbeck wrote in her thesis.
She looked at the idea of Aztlan, the ancestral homeland of the Aztecs, and related the place of origin to Chicano history and art. Although the exact location of Aztlan is unknown鈥攊t is theorized to be in the American Southwest or northern Mexico鈥攊t represents the genesis of cultural identity for Chicana/o peoples.
Burbeck says that many of the Denver murals evoke the Aztlan concept to demonstrate the connection between contemporary Chicana/o community and an ancient culture and history. The idea of Aztlan instills a feeling of home and belonging.
Artists and community members are still creating murals in Denver.
鈥淭here is still a strong Chicana/o community in La Alma-Lincoln Park, although gentrification is taking place,鈥 Burbeck said. 鈥淭he community is working with the organization Historic Denver to have the neighborhood designated as a historic cultural district in the city of Denver. That would give them more control over the changes that could happen to the neighborhood and give the Chicana/o community a greater ability to protect these extraordinary murals.鈥