Celia Herrera Rodriguez (born November 26, 1952, in Sacramento, California [1]) is an educator, painter, and performance and installation artist. [2]
Rodriguez is originally from Sacramento, California and she was born on November 26, 1952. [3] She has taught programs including Chicano Studies at the University of California, Berkeley for seventeen years. [4] She has also been an Adjunct Professor in the Diversity Studies program at California College for the Arts of the San Francisco Bay Area. Herrera Rodriguez is also the co-founder and co-director of Las Maestras Center for Xicana[x] Indigenous Thought, Art and Social Practice at UCSB, where she teaches Chicana[x] Art History and Studio Practice in the Department of Chicano and Chicana Studies. [5]
Rodriguez received her B.A. in Art and Ethnic Studies from CSU-Sacramento. She also received her M.F.A. in Painting from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She went on to study Art History, in 1987, Theory and Criticism at the Art Institute of Chicago. [6]
This work was originated presented in III Bienal Internacional de Estandartes Tijuana 2004. [7] Its title means " A Prayer on Four Roads".
This production was created by Cherrie Moraga in 2005, with Herrera Rodriguez creating the set and costume concepts. [8]
The multimedia performance was created in 2006 and presented at the Glass Curtain Gallery, in Chicago, Illinois. [9]
Her series of artworks was published in 2011, in a collection of essays by Cherrie Moraga: “Xicana Codex of Changing Consciousness, Writing 2000- 2010". Alexander, Jacqui. “Pedagogies of Crossing.” Google Books, Duke University Press , 2005 [11]
Celia Herrera Rodriguez (born November 26, 1952, in Sacramento, California [1]) is an educator, painter, and performance and installation artist. [2]
Rodriguez is originally from Sacramento, California and she was born on November 26, 1952. [3] She has taught programs including Chicano Studies at the University of California, Berkeley for seventeen years. [4] She has also been an Adjunct Professor in the Diversity Studies program at California College for the Arts of the San Francisco Bay Area. Herrera Rodriguez is also the co-founder and co-director of Las Maestras Center for Xicana[x] Indigenous Thought, Art and Social Practice at UCSB, where she teaches Chicana[x] Art History and Studio Practice in the Department of Chicano and Chicana Studies. [5]
Rodriguez received her B.A. in Art and Ethnic Studies from CSU-Sacramento. She also received her M.F.A. in Painting from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She went on to study Art History, in 1987, Theory and Criticism at the Art Institute of Chicago. [6]
This work was originated presented in III Bienal Internacional de Estandartes Tijuana 2004. [7] Its title means " A Prayer on Four Roads".
This production was created by Cherrie Moraga in 2005, with Herrera Rodriguez creating the set and costume concepts. [8]
The multimedia performance was created in 2006 and presented at the Glass Curtain Gallery, in Chicago, Illinois. [9]
Her series of artworks was published in 2011, in a collection of essays by Cherrie Moraga: “Xicana Codex of Changing Consciousness, Writing 2000- 2010". Alexander, Jacqui. “Pedagogies of Crossing.” Google Books, Duke University Press , 2005 [11]