Yan María Yaoyólotl (born 1952) is a lesbian feminist activist and a Mexican feminist artist, painter, curator and cultural promoter.[1] She was co-founder of the groups Lesbos (1977) and Oikabeth (1978) which have their origins in the lesbian-feminist movement in Mexico.
Yan María Yaoyólotl | |
---|---|
Born | 1952 Mexico |
Alma mater | Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, UNAM |
Occupation(s) | Artist, Cultural Promoter, Curator, Activist, Lesbofeminist |
Biography
editNamed María de Lourdes at birth, she later took the Indigenous Maya name Yan and the Nahuatl Yaoyólotl as her last name. She studied philosophy at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), with a specialization in aesthetics and politics (1973-1980).
Activist in the Lesbofeminist Movimiento
editIn 1977, she co-founded the group responsible for initiating the lesbian-feminist movement in Mexico: Lesbos,[1] which had its precedent in Ácratas (1976), a group created a year before and which Yaoyólotl defines as "radical feminist, anarchist and separatist that proposed lesbian feminism."[2] It was founded by Marcela Olavarrieta along with several other foreign feminists[3] who did not want to enter public life and who worked in what was called “Small Self-Consciousness Groups.”[4] She continued in 1978 with Oikabeth I, which she also co-founded. In a 2018 interview with Luisa Velázquez Herrera, Yaoyólotl explains that Oikabeth was a member of the FHAR (Homosexual Front for Revolutionary Action) for three months, but after three months they left it, reaffirming the autonomy of the lesbian movement.[3] The group declared itself to be socialist, and it tied itself to the Mexican Communist Party, Trotskyist organizations and independent unions from at that time: STUNAM and SITUAM.[4]
Artistic trajectory
editYaoyólotl developed her pictorial talent empirically.
In 1996, she co-founded ComuArte, A.C. (impulsed by Colectivo Mujeres en la Música, A.C., founded by the composer Leticia Armijo) opening up the Palace of Fine Arts' Adamo Boari Hall to contemporary Mexican visual artists. From 2002 to 2006, she was a co-founder and director of MujerArte A.C., a collective that addressed women's issues in relation to femicide in particular, as well as domestic violence, rape, abortion and sex work, among other issues.
Her artistic focus is based in ecofeminism, Indigenous world perceptions, lesbian feminism, socialist feminism and Mahayana Buddhism.[5] She considers the creative act to be an integral part of social struggle for countries exploited by imperialism; the working class by classism; the original races and peoples due to racism and Westernization and, above all, women due to sexism.[2] She has criticized neoliberal and postmodern art, placing her emphasis on the use of art as a form of either domination or emancipation.
Yaoyólotl was distinguished for her artistic organization of the events for International Women's Day and the International Day against Violence against Women in the Mexico City's Zócalo from 1998 to 2006, along with feminist organizations and government institutions.[6]
Political beliefs
editIn addition to her artistic activity, which has always been charged with political content, she has created political theory and criticism which forms part of lesbian feminism.[7] She maintains a strong criticism of neoliberal policies both about the sexual diversity market and queer theories promoted by academia in Latin America.[2] She also criticizes the misogyny of the gay movement.[2][7] For Yan María "there can be no feminism without lesbianism or lesbianism without feminism. Lesbianism without feminism is blind, and feminism without lesbianism lacks content."[8] This statement stems from the idea that lesbianism is a political stance, and not merely a sexual practice,[2] but that it is a direct opposition to the oppression of women and an affirmation of the relationships between women as central, thus challenging androcentrism, building autonomy and breaking away from compulsory heterosexuality.[7]
Historical Archive of the Movement
editYan María Yaoyólotl safeguards the Historical Archive of the Feminist Lesbian Movement in Mexico,[9] with 9,000 documents including posters, videos, photographs, manifestos, and other documents that span 40 years of activism of the lesbian-feminist movement in Mexico.[10]
References
edit- ^ a b Thompson, Natalia (4 January 2023). "CONSTRUYENDO COMPLICADADES, RESPALDANDO RESISTENCIAS: A Roundtable Discussion on Institutional Violence in Latin American Universities". Chicana/Latina Studies. 13 (2): 322–39. JSTOR 43941446 – via JSTOR.
- ^ a b c d e Salas, Roberto Aarón Medina (Spring 2014). "Yan María Yaoyólotl y la Marcha Lésbica". Política y Cultura (41): 233–237. ProQuest 1544932037 – via ProQuest.
- ^ a b Luisa Velázquez Herrera "Menstruadora" (2018). "Corta historia del lesbofeminismo en México (Documental)".
- ^ a b MARTÍNEZ, GERARDO ANTONIO (23 June 2022). "La revolución será lesbiana". EL Universal. Retrieved 4 January 2023.
- ^ Mayer, Mónica. "ARCHIVA: Obras maestras del arte feminista en México" (in European Spanish). Retrieved 2023-01-04.
- ^ García Hernández, Laura (2007). Desbordamientos de una periferia femenina. Pneuma y Sociedad Dokins para las nuevas prácticas artísticas. A.C. ISBN 978-968-9512-00-4. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
- ^ a b c Silva, Zuleide Paiva, and Rosangela Janja Costa Araujo (2021). "Pensamento Lésbico: Uma Ginga Epistemológica Contra-Hegemônica." Estudos Feministas". Estudos Feministas. 29 (3): 1–14. JSTOR 48633555 – via JSTOR.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ "El movimiento lésbico feminista en México - Artículos de Ciudad de Mujeres". www.ciudaddemujeres.com. Archived from the original on 4 January 2016. Retrieved 1 December 2016.
- ^ Grinnell, Lucinda (November 2013). ""Amor Solidario": art and the politics of revolutionary lesbianism in Mexico City". Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies. 38 (2): 293–308. JSTOR 26587977 – via JSTOR.
- ^ Gerardo Antonio Martínez. "La revolución será lesbiana | Confabulario | Suplemento cultural" (in Spanish). Retrieved 27 April 2019.