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Josefina Quezada (circa 1925 - May 2012)[1] was a Mexican-born Chicana muralist, photographer and supporter of the arts in Los Angeles. There are twelve murals in Los Angeles created by Quezada.
Quezada was born in Mexico City.[2] She grew up in the Mexicaltzingo neighborhood of Guadalajara.[3] In the 1940s, she studied at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM).[3] She first came to Los Angeles in 1971, when she was hired to restore David Alfaro Siqueiros' América Tropical mural.[4][5] She and Jaime Mejía opted to preserve the mural at the time.[6] Quezada worked with Shifra Goldman and Jesús Salvador Treviño to document the mural and the work done to preserve it.[2] Quezada spent around thirty years living in the United States.[3]
In 2005, Quezada was honored by the Jalisco Secretary of Culture for her decades of work as an artist.[7]
Quezada died in Mexico in 2012.[2]
Quezada made two murals in Mexico and twelve in Los Angeles.[7] She was also a noted photographer.[7] The Los Angeles Times wrote in 1975 that her "laborious bordertown genre scenes need to break out of a stiff, confining style."[8] Quezada's work connected "women's labor in Latin America to Chicana labor in the United States."[9] Oscar Castillo who has documented the work of Chicano artists, said that she gained inspiration from family in friends when choosing what to paint.[2]
In 1978, a mural she designed, Tree of Knowledge, or the "Read" mural, was completed by artists from the Chicana Action Service Center (CASC).[10] Tree of Knowledge uses symbols to emphasize understanding one's own "historical roots," and is also a celebration of "the community of readers."[11] The mural was restored by the Social and Public Art Resource Center (SPARC) in 2012.[12]
Quezada created a mural with Michael Schnorr for Chula Vista High School in 1982.[13] In 1983, she was part of a show of mural art at El Centro Cultural de la Raza at Balboa Park.[14]
Her work was featured and honored in the Second Women's Biennial of photographers in 2005 in Guadalajara.[3]
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