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Melquiades Dominguez (born October 14, 1978) is an American muralist, painter, visual artist, feminist, and activist, who has lived in the city of South Tucson, Arizona since 2007. Melquiades is married to Melissa Brown Dominguez. Melquiades and Melissa are co-owners of Galeria Mitolera[1] located in the City of Tucson.
Biography
editDominguez was born in Glendale, California and in 1980 moved to El Sereno, which is an neighborhood in the Eastside of Los Angeles. They[a] started their career as an illegal street graffiti artist going by their graffiti name of "Melo", which can be seen on all their murals and artworks. In 2002, Dominguez received an Associate of Arts degree in Graphic Design from PLATT University in Eagle Rock, California.[2] In that same year, Dominguez was doing the J. Paul Getty Museum internship at Self Help Graphics & Art in East Los Angeles. Dominguez was raised primarily by the grandfather who taught them to use visual art to communicate. The grandfather also introduced them to the Los Angeles Public Library.[2] Their grandfather was the author of the Ulysses Guide to the Los Angeles River, which he published under the faux author name of Ulysses L. Zemanova in 2008.[2]
Art
edit- 2015 Speaking for the Dead, ASU School of Human Evolution & Social Change, Innovation Gallery, Tempe, Arizona[3]
- 2014 Eco-Themed Mural, Manzo Elementary School, Tucson, Arizona[4]
- Arizona Highway, 2012 collected by Los Angeles County Museum of Art[5]
References
edit- ^ https://www.galeriamitotera.com/ [bare URL]
- ^ a b c Interview, Robles with Dominguez
- ^ Howe, Rebecca (April 9, 2015). "Exhibit explores forensic anthropology through migrant deaths". ASU News. Retrieved October 25, 2021.
- ^ Coe, Michelle A. Influential Environments: School Gardens Impacting Arizona Children's Environmental Perspectives, Master's thesis, the University of Arizona, 2015. via ProQuest.
- ^ "Arizona Highway". LACMA Collections. Retrieved 2021-11-20.
Notes
editFurther reading
edit- "Neto's Tucson: Chicanx artist makes her mark", interview with Arizona Daily Star