"Street Writers," the first-ever book on L.A. Chicano graffiti, gets republished
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [Los Angeles Times]
[Essential California Newsletter] October 1, 2021
[View in browser](
[Click to view images]( Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California [newsletter](. Itâs Friday, Oct. 1. Iâm Gustavo Arellano, reporting from Orange County. The past couple of years have been fruitful for followers of a Southern California history subject thatâs simultaneously niche and ubiquitous: graffiti. The year 2019 saw the publication of two academic books on the subject, and an anthology of the work of Chaz Bojórquez, widely considered [the godfather of L.A. graffiti]( in general and specifically the stark lines characteristic of Chicano-style wall art. Earlier this year, the Getty released âL.A. Graffiti Black Book,â a collection of 151 graffiti and tattoo artists [who offered their personalized inscriptions to the august institution.]( The latest offering in this genre is also, conversely enough, the oldest: a September reissue of the 1975 coffee-table book âStreet Writers: A Guided Tour of Chicano Graffitiâ by [Arte Povera Foto Books](. Itâs a gorgeous tome, with black-and-white shots by Italian photographer Gusmano Cesaretti interspersed with Bojórquezâs musings on graffiti and Chicano life at the time. âA Chicano kid grows up with walls of many kinds around him,â Cesaretti wrote in the bookâs intro. âWhen somebody is born into that situation there are several things he can do ⦠he can ignore the walls, and sink into apathy. Or he can become violent and try to blow up the walls.â Cesaretti felt a third option was far more liberating: tag them up. The photos are slightly overexposed, the better to capture the rawness of its subjects and their lives. Walls, fences and garage doors are blanketed with placas (tags) to the point where they look like the Gilgamesh Dream Tablet. âStreet Writersâ features graffiti from bathroom stalls to high school gyms, small scribbles to intricate gang homages. Cesaretti captions each photo with prose as sparse as the placas he captures â a typical entry is âFrogtown, Riverside: Tim, 11 years oldâ with a long-haired, defiant youngster in front of a graffitied wall thatâs ostensibly his creation. Bojórquez, then in his 20s, serves as our Virgil through a topography of Chicano Eastside in the early 1970s â not just Whittier Boulevard, but Little Valley and City Terrace, Montecito Heights and Bojórquezâs native Highland Park, from the Arroyo Seco section of the L.A. River to the 110 Freeway. He mugs for Cesarettiâs camera â but Bojórquez also offers a rendition of his most iconic image: Señor Suerte (Mr. Luck), a fedora-wearing grinning skull with fingers crossed. âThatâs what I get a big kick out of,â Bojórquez writes, regarding graffiti. âItâs right out here. Itâs not controlled. You donât get a nice surface, like a fine artist. You just do it. Itâs like being naked out there.â You donât have to like graffiti (I donât particularly care for the form â Iâm more of a Norman Rockwell stan) to enjoy this book. âStreet Writersâ works as a collection of art, local and ethnic history, but itâs also a time capsule of neighborhoods that are now either [fighting gentrification]( or wholly subsumed by it. Bojórquez even complains about this phenomenon when he notes in his opening remarks from 47 years ago that he grew up on Avenue 66 âbefore it started to get real white.â The more things change in Los Angeles ⦠but I digress. Cesaretti went on to [a celebrated career]( as a chronicler of Angeleno Chicano life â a 1978 L.A. Times story said he âknows more about East Los Angeles culture than most natives.â Bojórquez, of course, is a legend. So itâs great to see how âStreet Writersâ documented the two right at their respective beginnings, unwitting pioneers of a subset of L.A. studies that gets more and more popular every year. --------------------------------------------------------------- PROMOTION L.A. Times Food Bowl is teaming up with Outstanding in the Field to bring you a series of 5 extraordinary dinner events in iconic locations across Los Angeles and Orange County from some of L.A.âs best chefs while bringing light to important sustainability and environmental topics. [Buy tickets here](
--------------------------------------------------------------- And now, hereâs whatâs happening across California. Note: Some of the sites we link to may limit the number of stories you can access without subscribing. ADVERTISEMENT
L.A. STORIES A secret USC payout had a catch: Images of ex-dean using drugs had to be given up. My colleague Paul Pringleâs blockbusters on tawdriness in Trojanland just donât stop! [Los Angeles Times]( Minority of sanitation workers report being vaccinated, worrying homeless advocates. Because garbage collectors and power washers donât want law enforcement and firefighters to beat them in the public-employee pandejo sweepstakes. [Los Angeles Time]( Activists want to rename Pershing Square. Gen. John J. Pershing won World War I for the U.S. and commanded a troop of the famed Buffalo Soldiers â but he also pursued Pancho Villa, quashed Lakota uprisings and participated in the takeover of the Philippines. [L.A. Taco]( A concatenation of sprawls. How, in 21st-century Los Angeles, can we continue to nurture the hardy roots of rasquachismo to yield new and more inclusive Latinx-urbanist aesthetics? If none of this makes sense, then you definitely need to read this great personal essay. [Places Journal]( Our daily news podcast If youâre a fan of this newsletter, youâll probably love our new daily podcast, âThe Times,â hosted by columnist Gustavo Arellano, along with reporters from across our newsroom. Every weekday, it takes you beyond the headlines. Subscribe [on Apple Podcasts]( and follow [on Spotify](. POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT The state eviction moratorium ends soon, but rent relief will still be available. California slowly tries to get back to the Before Times â you know, when evictions were rampant because people canât afford the rent. [Los Angeles Times]( A journey through China: memories, bones and a reinvented past. My colleague, Beijing bureau chief Alice Su, traveled more than 4,300 miles across the nation to visit cites crucial to its ruling Communist Partyâs past and present. [Los Angeles Times]( Bruceâs Beach can return to descendants of Black family in landmark move signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom. The history-making move to give back Manhattan beach seaside property will be celebrated by reparations advocates and social justice leaders across the country for years to come. [Los Angeles Times]( Berkeleyâs Marcia Freedman, first out lesbian in Knesset, dies at 83. After making history in Israel, she settled in the Bay Area and launched a legendary career as an advocate for womenâs, senior and LGBTQ rights. [The Forward]( CRIME AND COURTS Newsom approves sweeping reforms to law enforcement. The changes include raising the minimum age for officers to 21 and allowing badges to be taken away for excessive force, dishonesty and racial bias. [Los Angeles Times]( After a pandemic-year surge in murders, Los Angeles sees even more bloodshed. In 2021 the city has already recorded 285 homicides. Young Black and Latino men are dying at disproportionate levels. [Crosstown LA]( âWhy I am suing UCLA.â Anderson School of Management professor Gordon Klein writes his rationale for filing a lawsuit against my alma mater for defamation and loss of financial opportunities. [Common Sense with Bari Weiss]( Johnny Cashâs âAt Folsom Prisonâ at 50: An oral history. This album will never get old. [Rolling Stone]( Support our journalism [Subscribe to the Los Angeles Times.]( ADVERTISEMENT
HEALTH AND THE ENVIRONMENT California will consider mandatory water restrictions if dryness continues this winter. Oh, yeah â that drought. [Los Angeles Times]( At this one-stop shop in Santa Rosa, you can outfit your entire home sustainably. Advanced Energy Center sits in the downtown of âCaliforniaâs Cornucopia.â [Next City]( CALIFORNIA CULTURE Do more people need to know about âThe Life and Adventures of JoaquÃn Murieta?â: Iâm quoted in this great essay about the novel about Californiaâs original outlaw hero. [Bay Nature]( The United Farm Workers was more than Cesar Chavez. Speaking of California micro-histories, Iâm perpetually fascinated by the historiography on the UFW. [Jacobin]( Shohei Ohtani makes it clear â improve Angels or heâs gone. The American League MVP shoo-in has implied to the English- and Japanese-language press he wants Halos owner Arte Moreno to stop with his weak-salsa approach to running a major league franchise. [Los Angeles Times]( Free online games Get our free daily crossword puzzle, sudoku, word search and arcade games in our new game center at [latimes.com/games](. CALIFORNIA ALMANAC Los Angeles: As I was driving to Van Nuys. 88 San Diego: I saw a truck with seven hives. 82 San Francisco: Each hive had seven bees. 75 San José: Each bee had seven peas. 85 Fresno: Each pea had seven steaks. 91 Sacramento: Steaks, peas, bees and hives. 89 Bishop: How many were there going to Van Nuys? 83 Please let us know what we can do to make this newsletter more useful to you. Send comments to essentialcalifornia@latimes.com. ADVERTISEMENT
Thank you for reading the Los Angeles Times
Essential California newsletter.
Invite your friends, relatives, coworkers to sign up [here](.
Not a subscriber? Get unlimited digital access to latimes.com. [Subscribe here](.
[Los Angeles Times]
Copyright © 2021, Los Angeles Times
2300 E. Imperial Highway, El Segundo, California, 90245
1-800-LA-TIMES | [latimes.com]( *Advertisers have no control over editorial decisions or content. If you're interested in placing an ad or classified, get in touch [here](. We'd love your feedback on this newsletter. Please send your thoughts and suggestions [here](mailto:newsletters@latimes.com). You received this email because you signed up for newsletters from The Los Angeles Times.
[Manage marketing email preferences]( · [Manage newsletter subscriptions or unsubscribe]( · [Terms of service]( · [Privacy policy]( · [Do Not Sell My Personal Information]( · [CA Notice of Collection]( FOLLOW US [Divider](#) [Facebook]( [2-tw.png]( [Instagram]( [YouTube](