Material World

An interview I did with a group of some of the women involved with the Justseeds artists co-operative, back in 2010, has just been published online at the (new) Aorta blog. It can be found here: www.aortamagazine.com/blog/women-of-justseeds
Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative is a decentralized community of artists based in Canada, the US and Mexico who have banded together to collaborate with and support each other and social movements.

via remember who you are: justseeds interview now online

An interview I did with a group of some of the women involved with the Justseeds artists co-operative, back in 2010, has just been published online at the (new) Aorta blog. It can be found here: www.aortamagazine.com/blog/women-of-justseeds

Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative is a decentralized community of artists based in Canada, the US and Mexico who have banded together to collaborate with and support each other and social movements.

via remember who you are: justseeds interview now online

(via Out of the closet twice: Cartoonist Julio Salgado on coming out as undocumented and gay | Multi-American)

The art of illustrator Julio Salgado has  become synonymous with the immigrant rights youth movement, that  embraced by U.S.-raised young people who were brought here illegally or  stayed on with expired visas after their parents brought them to the  U.S. as children.
His bright, chunky characters,  sometimes depicted in graduate cap-and-gown attire, are found on  posters and t-shirts advocating for the Development, Relief and  Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act,  proposed federal legislation that would grant conditional legal status  to young people who arrived before age 16 of they go to college or join  the military. Last year Salgado created “Liberty for All,” an  online political comic strip about a young college graduate named  Libertad, or Liberty, who can’t find work beyond menial jobs.
Here is Salgado’s take on what it’s like to come out twice – or not

clicky for interview!

(via Out of the closet twice: Cartoonist Julio Salgado on coming out as undocumented and gay | Multi-American)

The art of illustrator Julio Salgado has become synonymous with the immigrant rights youth movement, that embraced by U.S.-raised young people who were brought here illegally or stayed on with expired visas after their parents brought them to the U.S. as children.

His bright, chunky characters, sometimes depicted in graduate cap-and-gown attire, are found on posters and t-shirts advocating for the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act, proposed federal legislation that would grant conditional legal status to young people who arrived before age 16 of they go to college or join the military. Last year Salgado created “Liberty for All,” an online political comic strip about a young college graduate named Libertad, or Liberty, who can’t find work beyond menial jobs.

Here is Salgado’s take on what it’s like to come out twice – or not

clicky for interview!