OMCA’s “Calli: The Art of Xicanx Peoples” (Through Jan. 26, 2025)
EVENT UPDATE: There are no upcoming events known for this event series - please check the organizer website for any updates.
Experience intergenerational, feminist, queer, and Xicanx-Indigenous artworks offering ancestral forms of liberation, healing, and being at Calli: The Art of Xicanx Peoples, only at OMCA, on view now through January 26, 2025.
“Calli,” derived from Nahuatl, signifies the essence of home, family, and lineage. Immerse yourself in thought-provoking original artworks, installations, sculpture, painting, photography, poetry, and more, that showcase and honor the stories of Xicanx peoples across California in this temporary “Xicanx home.”
– “Visual arts sizzle with epic installations…” at Calli: The Art of Xicanx Peoples. – SF Chronicle
Calli layers multiple artistic perspectives, featuring posters from late queer Chicana activist and professor Margaret “Margie” Terrazas Santos’ collection in conversation with contemporary works by Xicanx artists who expand the horizons of possibility, inspiring reflection and fostering dialogue about a world in which we can all belong.
Calli: The Art of Xicanx Peoples
On view in the Great Hall now through January 26, 2025
OMCA, 1000 Oak St., Oakland
Hours | Tickets | Getting ThereHOURS
– Wednesday-Sunday: 11am to 5pm
– Open Late Friday (April – October): 11am to 9pm
– Monday-Tuesday: ClosedDiscover exhibition highlights by featured artists including:
- rafa esparza’s adobe Mesoamerican stylized temple installation
- Consuelo Jimenez Underwood’s site-specific Borderline installation conveying U.S.-Mexico border issues such as land commodification, militarization, dehumanization, and its ecological effects
- Gina Aparicio’s ceramic and earth-based installation with audio composed by musician Joe Galarza, a member of Aztlan Underground
- Melanie Cervantes’ soft sculpture installation of the Aztec moon goddess, Coyolxauhqui
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