
LaborFest
LaborFest was established in 1994 to institutionalize the history and culture of working people in an annual labor cultural, film and arts festival.
The “Other” Pro-Israel Lobby: The AFL-CIO and Israel
www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/9B2BB730E4C6E04B98EF1B7D614B2BFD/…
(1952–1960)
A similar pattern played out in Histadrut’s relations with organized labor in the United
States. It is evident that there was cooperation, even coordination, with Israeli officials in
many areas. This included the sharing of sensitive information about the AFL-CIO’s activities
in international labor forums and their confidential meetings with officials from the Arab
world. After sending the foreign ministry confidential reports received from Victor Reuther
(who was in charge of international affairs for the UAW) about meetings held with officials
from Egypt, Tunisia, and Lebanon, Bar-Yaacov explicitly instructed colleagues not to reveal
the source of his information.82 Irving Brown, AFL-CIO representative in Paris, not only prom-
ised that American labor officials would“do everything in their power” to prevent anti-Israel
resolutions at an International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (ICFTU) conference in
Casablanca, but immediately afterward shared with an Israeli colleague what he labeled a
“strictly confidential report” about the proceedings.83 Israeli ministers of labor and
Histadrut’s secretary-generals were often invited to speak at AFL-CIO conventions, and the
records indicate that senior AFL-CIO officials, like general-counsel Arthur Goldberg (prior
to being appointed Secretary of Labor), Walter and his brother Victor Reuther helped lobby
for, amend, and occasionally insert passages into AFL-CIO resolutions or appealed directly
to senior U.S. government officials at the request of their Israeli associates.84 Goldberg even
received confidential materials from Israel’s embassy in Washington, DC, as part of its
Hasbara campaign.85 So supportive of (and compliant with) Israeli requests had AFL-CIO offi-
cials appeared that Israel’s labor attaché had to reprimand colleagues for complaining after they
apparently did not get the attention or exact phrasing they sought at one of the federation’
s
conventions.“For some reason there exists an illusion among some of our people that the
American labor movement will agree to and accept everything we request of it,” Bar-Yaacov
wrote the foreign ministry. He cautioned,“The convention proved again that this assumption
is false, and that if, indeed, there is support for us, we can preserve it only through constant
work and lively relations with all elements within the movement.”86
Despite the close relations, there were still occasional spats and nota
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Ben Shahn’s Social Realist Art Feels Relevant Again in Landmark Survey
An old master of the Great Depression painted a portrait of America as it still may be.
www.nytimes.com/2025/05/29/arts/design/ben-shahn-jewish-museum.html
A painting of a gallery at the Whitney Museum shows sculptures from the annual survey of the nation’s artists. The walls surrounding the modern works are covered in Ben Shahn’s own realist paintings.
Ben Shahn, “Contemporary American Sculpture,” 1940, from a retrospective at the Jewish Museum. The artist depicts his own realist paintings surrounding modern sculptures.Credit…Estate of Ben Shahn/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY; via Art Institute of Chicago
Blake Gopnik.png
By Blake Gopnik
Published May 29, 2025
Updated May 30, 2025, 9:54 a.m. ET
With some artists, there’s one work that seems to capture their essential achievement.
In the long-overdue retrospective now at the Jewish Museum in New York, the entire artistic project of the American painter Ben Shahn comes clear in a single fascinating painting from 1940 called “Contemporary American Sculpture.” It depicts a gallery at the Whitney Museum hosting sculptures from that January’s survey of the nation’s artists — except that Shahn, left out of that survey, reimagines the walls surrounding those stylized modern works as covered in his own realist paintings.
Those show scenes of everyday life during the Great Depression — decrepit workers’ housing; a farmer by his shack; poor Black women at a welfare hospital — depicted as though the Whitney’s walls have been pierced to reveal the all-too-real world out beyond. It recalls how Renaissance murals pierced church walls to let in the more-real world of the Bible.
“Contemporary American Sculpture” captures what’s at stake in the most potent works in “Ben Shahn, On Nonconformity,” as this revelatory survey is called. Those works use the time-honored art of painting to make the modern world, and its signature troubles, as present as Shahn can manage. The effect is gripping, and feels utterly relevant for the troubled moment we are living in now.
For a decade or so on either side of World War II, Shahn’s achievements made him an art star, earning him a major show at the Museum of Modern Art and honors including a place in the American Pavilion of the 1954 Venice Biennale, shared with the Abstract Expressionist Willem de Kooning.
Image
Painting of three men with hats near the railroad tracks, facing the viewer. Voting posters are behind them.
Ben Shahn, “Scotts Run, West Virginia,” 1937. During the Great Depression, Shahn felt sympathy for Americans suffering the deprivations he grew up with. (This painting was based on a photograph he took.)Credit…Estate of Ben Shahn/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY; via The Jewish Museum
But it was de Kooning and his ilk who went on to dominate the art world; as Cold War reaction took hold, Shahn, a dedicated leftist, saw a slow but unbroken decline in his critical fortunes. There has barely been an uptick since. The Jewish Museum show is Shahn’s first notable survey in the United States since one at the same museum in 1976. Featuring 175 artworks and objects, photos by Shahn and his peers as well as illuminating ephemera, it was organized abroad, at the Reina Sofía museum in Madrid, where it was a big hit in 2023; the curator Laura Katzman had to work hard to find an American museum to take it.
Shahn was raised in immigrant Brooklyn, where his family, who were Jewish, had landed in 1906, when he was 8. They were fleeing deprivation, antisemitism and oppression in their native Lithuania, then under Russian rule. Shahn’s father, a socialist and anti-czarist, had been forced into exile in Siberia. In the United States, the Shahns still had such struggles that young Ben had to drop out of high school to help fund the household. He landed in a lithographer’s workshop, where he mastered the fundamentals of visual art.
But his career as an artist took a while to jell, as he attended various courses in various places — New York University, the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Mass., the City College of New York. In the 1920s, Shahn, supported by a hard-working wife, Tillie Goldstein, was able to take in the high points of old master and modern art across Europe. (He arranged a meeting with Picasso but got cold feet and called it off.)
By 1933, Shahn was back in New York, assisting the great Diego Rivera on his infamous mural for Rockefeller Center, soon hacked off the wall because of its portrait of Lenin. Unlike his mentor, Shahn never quite subscribed to communist doctrine, though he shared the movement’s egalitarian aims.
For a solo show at the prestigious Downtown Gallery in New York, that same year, Shahn portrayed scenes from the saga of Tom Mooney, a labor leader falsely imprisoned for a 1916 bombing, who wasn’t released until 1939.
If the images in the survey feel more like news than comment, that’s partly because we can sense the press photos Shahn used as his sources. Though his paintings themselves aren’t close to photorealistic — his technique can be potently slapdash — their subjects have the verve of seeming caught on the fly. His image of two perjurers who helped convict Mooney has the strange perspective of a wide-angle lens, as does its newspaper source, on view at the Jewish Museum alongside other documentation that gives insight into Shahn’s art.
Image
A new photograph shows two men in suits, sitting and handcuffed in a courthouse. One, at left, has a large handlebar mustache.
A 1923 news photograph showing Bartolomeo Vanzetti (left) handcuffed to Nicola Sacco, in a courthouse in Dedham, Mass. Shahn used it as his source for a painting in the Jewish Museum show.Credit…via Boston Public Library
Image
Painting of Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco, handcuffed, in 1931.
Ben Shahn, “Bartolomeo Vanzetti and Nicola Sacco,” 1931-32, gouache on paper. This painting retains the tight cropping of its source photograph.Credit…Estate of Ben Shahn/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY; via Museum of Modern Art
The exhibition includes an earlier series on the controversial 1921 trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, Italian immigrants executed for murder despite flimsy evidence. Shahn’s painting of the two handcuffed men is cropped weirdly tight; we see that it echoes a source photo that had been cropped the same way, to save space on the printed page. Shahn borrows the feel of a photograph’s direct observation to make his painted subjects seem more directly observed by us.
In the mid-1930s, he took up the camera himself, as part of a New Deal project to document Depression hardships. His photographs in this show stand up fine against nearby ones by famous colleagues like Dorothea Lange and Walker Evans. Shahn used them as sources for the New Deal murals he was soon making — the show mostly includes them as studies — and then for many of his later paintings.
The vast majority of photographs in Shahn’s day were black-and-white and very small. They couldn’t have the sheer presence of scenes at life scale, in full color. That had been the territory once staked out in the “history paintings” of the European old masters; in the best works in the show, Shahn channels the potent “reality effect” of those paintings, but uses it to capture distinctly modern subjects and social ills, and the modern look of a photographed world.
Image
A man wearing a hat with his head in his hands and a white shirt sits on a wooden splintered bench with a newspaper, its banner headline reading “Dust Storm.”
Ben Shahn, “Years of Dust,” 1936, poster. Shahn was a fierce proponent of Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s New Deal.Credit…via Museum of Modern Art
That achievement comes especially clear in the colorful posters he made during World War II for the American Office of War Information, which show figures, at life size or larger, suffering under the Nazis and their partners. Those figures might as well be Christian martyrs on the walls of a Renaissance church. (Shahn reworked one poster about Nazi slave labor into a painting called “1943 AD,” in which a stretch of barbed wire becomes a crown of thorns on one of the enslaved.)
Shahn’s vision was too potent for the Office of War Information: It seems to have released only two of his posters.
A bit later in the 1940s, working for the Congress of Industrial Organizations — a major confederation of unions — he created other posters that used the same effects to champion causes such as colorblind hiring and voting rights. Welders — one Black and one white — loom above us in this show, as if they were just the other side of the museum wall.
Image
Black and white photograph of two men in shirtsleeves, welders’ glasses and welding helmets.
A photograph by Alfred T. Palmer, showing two welders, October 1941. Shahn used this photograph as the source of a poster, changing the race of one of the welders to Black.Credit…The Jewish Museum
Poster that echoes the two welders, one Black and one white, with a building’s frame seen in the reflection of his glasses.
Ben Shahn, “For Full Employment After the War, Register, Vote,” 1944.Credit…Estate of Ben Shahn/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY; via The Jewish Museum
Unfortunately, in the decade or so before his death in 1969, Shahn could seem more interested in modern aesthetics than in modern people and their plights. His pictures became palimpsests of allusive symbols, reheating modern styles from Paul Klee and Pablo Picasso. Toward the end of this show, we miss the immediacy of Shahn’s earlier pictures, with their close ties to an observed world. Instead, we’re offered illustrations of moral themes and spiritual subjects that can read like vaporous musings.
What Shahn couldn’t have realized, as he turned away from his potent visions of the 1930s and 40s, was that they would find new purchase almost a century later, when once again we face issues of racial injustice, and what our nation might do about it, and prosecutions that can seem to serve politics, not justice.
Back in 1933, in an essay for the Downtown Gallery show, Rivera called Shahn “magnificent,” and said his paintings captured “a complete portrait” of the reality Shahn had grown up in. At the Jewish Museum, a century later, they seem to offer a portrait of our reality, too.
Ben Shahn, On Nonconformity
Through Oct. 12, the Jewish Museum, 1109 Fifth Avenue, Manhattan; 212-423-3200, thejewishmuseum.org.
A correction was made on May 29, 2025: An earlier version of this review gave an incorrect date for the artist Ben Shahn’s exhibition at the Downtown Gallery. It was 1933, not 1939. It also misstated the date of Tom Mooney’s release from jail. It happened in 1939, not 1933. The review also misstated the frequency of publication of the artist’s New Deal photographs. They were widely disseminated, not rarely shown.
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The St. Louis Commune of 1877 w/ Mark Kruger
www.youtube.com/watch?v=pM16tT4rLuk
Premiered Mar 19, 2022
David and Matt are joined by historian Mark Kruger to discuss his eye-opening book, "The St. Louis Commune
of 1877: Communism in the Heartland" which tells the story of America's first general strike and a time communists
took over St. Louis. Topics include the 1848 revolutions, the US Civil War and postwar economy, the Paris Commune,
and the dynamics of the 1877 strikes.
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Living In Exile: Carlos Mejía Godoy
vimeo.com/806217533
2 years ago
Jon Silver – Migrant Media.avif
Jon Silver – Migrant Media
A film by Jon Silver
Migrant Media Productions
Copyright 2023
All Rights Reserved
Duplication Prohibited
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WATSONVILLE ON STRIKE (1989) by Jon Silver, hosted by Reel Work Film Festival
www.youtube.com/watch?v=7rrs85Zp4Yo&t=486s
Watsonville On Strike
(Jon Silver, 1989, 65 min, Watsonville)
Para celebrar el 40.º aniversario de la Huelga de las Conserveras de Watsonville, Reel Work (www.reelwork.org/) presentó el documental "Watsonville en Huelga". Tras la proyección, el cineasta Jon Silver, junto con la directora del Festival de Cine de Watsonville, Consuelo Alba, y seis de los huelguistas originales (más dos Hijas de la Huelga) hablaron sobre sus experiencias personales e invitaron al público a hacer preguntas.
Celebrating the 40th anniversary of the Watsonville Cannery Strike, Reel Work (www.reelwork.org/) featured the documentary "Watsonville on Strike." Following the screening, filmmaker Jon Silver, along with Watsonville Film Festival director Consuelo Alba and six of the original strikers (plus two Daughters of the Strike) spoke about their personal experiences and invited questions from the audience.
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Stalin’s Image Returns to Moscow’s Subway, Honoring a Brutal History
www.nytimes.com/2025/05/28/world/europe/stalin-image-moscow-subway.html
The Kremlin has increasingly embraced the Soviet dictator and his legacy, using them to exalt Russian history in a time of war, but he remains a deeply divisive figure in Russia.
People in a subway station look at a relief of Joseph Stalin that depicts figures on either side of him, holding up flowers.
A new statue of Joseph Stalin in a Moscow metro station reflects Russia’s efforts to rehabilitate the memory of a bloody ruler.Credit…Alexander Nemenov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Ivan Nechepurenko
By Ivan Nechepurenko
Reporting from the Moscow metro
May 28, 2025, 5:00 a.m. ET
After a nearly six-decade absence, the face of Joseph Stalin, the Soviet dictator who was not known for sparing lives to achieve his goals, is once again greeting commuters in one of Moscow’s ornate subway stations.
A new statue was unveiled by the authorities this month, showing Stalin gazing sagely into the distance, flanked by adoring workers and children holding out flowers to him. A replica of one that was removed in 1966 during a de-Stalinization campaign, the new relief quickly became an attraction, with people leaving flowers, stopping to pose for pictures, including with their children, or just watching pensively.
The sculpture is part of the gradual rehabilitation of a brutal leader who still has the power to divide Russians, 72 years after his death. The Kremlin has revived parts of his legacy in its effort to recast Russia’s history as a series of glorious triumphs that it is determined to continue in Ukraine.
Among those admiring the work on a recent visit was Liliya A. Medvedeva, who said she was “very happy that our leader got restored.”
“We won the war thanks to him,” said Ms. Medvedeva, a pensioner born in 1950, adding that she was grateful that Stalin didn’t send her father to the Gulag even though he was taken prisoner during World War II — something that was equated with treason at the time. “Yes, there were many mistakes, but everybody makes mistakes.”
In a country where criticizing government action can be dangerous, it is unclear how many people disagree with Ms. Medvedeva’s positive view, but some are dismayed, even enraged, by what they see as revisionist whitewashing of history.
Vladimir, a 25-year-old history student who refused to give his last name for fear of retribution, said he came to watch the crowd drawn by Stalin, whom he called “a bloody tyrant.”
“It is hard for me to express my own opinion,” he said. “But no other monument would draw as much attention.”
Stalin was responsible for mass purges, including the Great Terror of 1936 to 1938, when more than 700,000 people were executed, including military leaders, intellectuals, members of ethnic minorities, landowning peasants and others. Under his leadership, entire ethnic groups, like Crimean Tatars, were expelled from their homelands. His policies contributed to mass famine across the Soviet Union, including in Ukraine.
But nostalgia for the Soviet era is strong, especially among older generations traumatized by the painful transition to capitalism, reinforcing memories of Stalin as a strongman who imposed order on a sprawling country and led it to victory against Nazi Germany. His admirers see purges, famines and mass deportations as “excesses” for which overzealous local officials were mostly responsible.
Image
A man adds a bouquet to a large pile of red flowers in front of a bust of Stalin, while a group of people, some also holding flowers, looks on.
Gennady Zyuganov, the leader of Russia’s Communist Party, placing flowers at the grave of Joseph Stalin on the 72nd anniversary of his death, in Moscow in March.Credit…Alexander Zemlianichenko/Associated Press
Since Vladimir V. Putin took power more than 25 years ago, at least 108 monuments to Stalin have been erected across Russia, and the pace has accelerated since the invasion of Ukraine in 2022, said Ivan Zheyanov, a historian and journalist who has kept track of the statues. One was installed this year in the Ukrainian city of Melitopol, currently occupied by Moscow’s forces.
But none of them have the visibility of the new sculpture in the subway, passed daily by legions of Muscovites changing between the main circle line and the purple line.
Yelena D. Roshchina, an English instructor walking by it, said she recalled Stalin’s death in 1953 and how people “valued him.” But, Ms. Roshchina, 79, added: “We should not go to the extremes. We always have it either black or white.”
For years the Kremlin tried to maintain something of a balance, taking note of Stalin’s repressions while opposing the liberal intelligentsia whose main ideological tenets included anti-Stalinism.
President Putin has repeatedly condemned Stalin over the years, and recognized that terrible crimes were committed under his rule. He has visited the sites of mass graves and convened human rights activists and historians to discuss Stalinism.
“It is very important that we all and future generations — this is of great significance — know about, and remember this tragic period in our history when entire social groups and entire peoples were cruelly persecuted,” Mr. Putin said in Moscow in 2017, at the opening of the “Wall of Sorrow” monument to victims of Stalinist repression. “This terrifying past cannot be deleted from national memory or, all the more so, be justified by any references to the so-called best interests of the people.”
In 2001, Moscow City Hall founded the Gulag History Museum, which vividly showcased how a system of mass labor camps led to as many as two million deaths.
But for several years, something entirely different has been happening in parallel.
The Memorial, the most prominent Russian civil rights organization founded by dissidents during late Soviet times, was declared a foreign agent in 2014. At the end of 2021, Moscow City Court ordered it to disband.
In 2017, Mr. Putin told the filmmaker Oliver Stone that “excessive demonization of Stalin has been one of the ways to attack the Soviet Union and Russia.”
After a series of lengthy trials, Yuri A. Dmitriev, an amateur historian who discovered graves of Stalin’s victims in a remote pine forest in northern Russia, was sentenced in 2021 to 15 years in prison. Mr. Dmitriev had been found guilty of sexually assaulting his adopted daughter, charges his family and friends dismissed as fabricated.
The Gulag History Museum was shut down in 2024 citing fire regulations and has not reopened. Roman Romanov, its longtime director, was removed from his post and the museum’s exhibits are being redone under a new leadership.
This April, the government renamed Volgograd’s airport for Stalingrad, as the city was called from 1925 to 1961, honoring both the colossal battle fought there in World War II and the ruler it had been named for.
“The creeping re-Stalinization of the country is dangerous not only for society, as it justifies the largest government atrocities in the country’s history, but also for the state,” said Lev Shlosberg, a Russian opposition politician and member of the liberal Yabloko party that started a petition to dismantle the monument in the Moscow metro. “Sooner or later, repression consumes the government itself.”
In the metro, activists left a framed poster in front of the new Stalin monument, a very risky protest by the standards of today’s Russia. The poster contained Mr. Putin’s quotes criticizing Stalin’s methods.
Security guards quickly removed it, and the police later detained one person who had taken part in the protest.
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Stalin’s Image Returns to Moscow’s Subway, Honoring a Brutal History
www.nytimes.com
The Kremlin has increasingly embraced the Soviet dictator and his legacy, using them to exalt Russian history in a time of war, but he remains a deeply divisive figure in Russia.Stalin did more damage to the Soviet Union than Adolph sHitler. So typical of Putin!
DAUGHTERS OF THE STRIKE
tpgonlinedaily.com/daughters-of-the-strike/
March 3, 2025
01ATDaughtersStrike_Sylvia_Wendy_Blanca-03492.jpeg
Spread the love
By Jondi Gumz
Blanca Baltazar was 12 when the historic Watsonville Cannery strike began.
When her mother — who worked in the plant — walked the picket line, she would come along, carry signs and chant in Spanish while her father picked strawberries.
Of course, she didn’t realize the 1985 strike, precipitated by wage cuts and lasting 18 months until new owners restored wages and provided health insurance, would become a milestone in labor history.
But now, 40 years later, the impact of the strike by more than 1,000 workers, overwhelmingly Latino, in two frozen food plants is being acknowledged with a Jon Silver documentary, “Daughters of the Strike,” to be screened for the Watsonville Film Festival, which opens March 6 at Cinelux Green Valley in Watsonville.
Today, Blanca is married, mother of two children, and vice president of student services at Cabrillo College in Aptos.
She is passionate about helping first-generation students succeed via education.
She talked to Aptos Times about how the strike affected her life.
She was born in Mexico and came to Watsonville with her parents at the age of 2.
Her grandfather was in the Bracero program, which allowed Mexican citizens to work in the United States on temporary agricultural contracts to give them the opportunity to earn higher wages and to address labor shortages due to World War II.
Enjoying the mild weather, the family put down roots on Kilburn Street.
Three younger siblings were born in Watsonville.
Blanca attended E.A. Hall Middle School, and Watsonville Cannery was close by.
The women who worked at the plant lived in the neighborhood, attended church together, sent their children to the same schools and watched soccer games in the same parks; they created a close-knit community.
Blanca’s family relied on the two incomes of her mother and her father to put food on the table.
In the winter, her father had no work in the fields, and when her mother went on strike, there was no paycheck.
With four kids, she got creative.
“We’re going to make milk,” she told her daughter.
Powdered milk. Much less expensive than bottled milk.
But Blanca did not feel poor.
“It’s just how we were growing up,” she said.
When she saw Cesar Chavez and Jesse Jackson come to Watsonville, she thought, “Wow, we have the support.”
Analysts say the unity of the striking women, their determination to not back down despite the financial hardship, was the key to getting a contract they could live with.
They wanted to be treated with dignity.
At 18, Blanca began to understand what that meant.
When Blanca advanced to Watsonville High School, the strike wasn’t discussed.
She learned about more in a Cabrillo College class on Chicano history and became president of the Organization of Latin American Students.
In her work-study job with Extended Opportunity Programs and Services, she provided academic counseling to first-generation students, which in 1990 were a tiny percentage of those enrolled. (Today a majority of graduates are Latino.)
Program director David Trevino became her mentor, advising what to do when Hispanic students faced financial struggles.
“Talk to the director of financial aid, the board of trustees, and Chicano Latino Affairs Council,” he told her.
The Vision
Learning how to navigate the system, she realized “this is why my mom and all the other women were so determined not to cross the picket line… she was understanding something positive would come out of it.”
She added, “That vision, that foresight, that’s impressive.”
She learned the importance of building a network of support — “how do we help each other to support one anther?”
She remembers the lessons she learned from her father: Don’t ever judge anybody. And be kind.
Her dad died at age 40, leaving her mom a widow.
Blanca was at Sacramento State, and her siblings were 18, 12 and 9.
She had to decide whether to come home and help her mom, or finish her degree.
She stayed, though it was not easy.
Degree in hand, she returned and got hired at Aptos High School as the migrant resource teacher.
This was fortuitous because at Aptos High, she met her husband-to-be, Faris Sabbah, who was teaching in a classroom next to hers.
They were friends for 10 years before dating.
They have been married 18 years.
Privilege
They have two sons, and Blanca said she wants them to use the “privilege” they have “to make things better.”
Zahir, 17, is already at Cabrillo studying statistics, and Amir, 15, is a freshman at Diamond Technology Institute, part of the Pajaro Valley school district in Watsonville.
Math was Blanca’s major until she got a D in one class. She switched to social science and kept math as a minor.
Blanca is close to all of her siblings.
Brother Cesar Baltazar, an All American soccer player at Hartnell College, is a counselor at Santa Cruz Community Counseling Center.
Brother Ulises Baltazar attended Hartnell College and works at Chase Bank.
Sister Wendy Baltazar graduated from UC Davis and is assistant principal at Alianza Charter School.
For 20 years, Blanca commuted to work for the Salinas Union High School District but when the pandemic hit, she wanted to work closer to home.
“I wanted to work in my community,” she said.
Cabrillo College had an opening, dean of the Academic Counseling, Career, Educational Support Services Division, and after talking with her mentor, she jumped from the K-12 school world.
When the vice president of student services left, she filled that role on an interim basis, the first Latino in that capacity, then took on the permanent position in December.
“I felt I could be of value at the executive cabinet level,” she said. Being the first carries a lot of responsibility…I’m grateful. It’s full circle to come back to Cabrillo.”
TOP PHOTO: Blanca Baltazar (from left), with her mother Sylvia and sister Wendy. • “Daughters of the Strike,” a documentary by Jon Silver
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A ‘Chicano Hieronymus Bosch’ Has an Unflinching Vision of America
Vincent Valdez depicts moments from the country’s past and present that many would prefer to forget.
www.nytimes.com/2025/05/23/arts/design/vincent-valdez-artist-massmoca-mural.html
Aruna D’Souza
By Aruna D’Souza
Reporting from North Adams, Mass.
May 23, 2025
It’s easy to see why so many people describe Vincent Valdez’s work as prophetic. Take “Requiem,” an installation he made in collaboration with his partner, the artist Adriana Corral, centered on a bronze sculpture of a dying bald eagle lying pitiably on its back.
When it was first shown at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (Mass MoCA) in 2019, it seemed to precisely capture the mood of many Americans who were fearful for the future of the country under the first Trump administration. But it was actually created two years before the 2016 election.
Likewise, “The City,” Valdez’s 30-foot-long oil painting depicting a modern-day gathering of men, women and even a baby dressed in Ku Klux Klan hoods. Shown in 2018, it could have been a direct response to the deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017. Except it, too, was made before the rally took place.
“I don’t have a crystal ball in my studio,” Valdez, 47, said in a recent telephone conversation from his studio in Houston. (He splits his time between Texas and Los Angeles.) “I’m just keeping my eyes open, especially at a moment when more and more people find it easier to just turn away from the world.”
Now museum audiences are having a chance to assess the full sweep of Valdez’s vision of America — a record of “love, struggle and survival in 21st-century America,” he calls it. His midcareer retrospective, “Just a Dream …,” opens at Mass MoCA, in North Adams, Mass., on May 25; it is the second stop for the exhibition, which debuted at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (CAMH) last November.
Visitors to Mass MoCA will find meticulously rendered drawings, paintings, bronze sculptures, etchings, videos and even a painted truck that home in on some of the most indelible and poignant images of Chicano (or Mexican American) and Latino experience. Valdez calls his devotion to a realist style and traditional art-making techniques a form of “high-definition vision.”
ImageA view of a museum gallery. In the center is a 1953 Good Humor ice cream truck repainted in vivid, dark colors.
An installation view of “Vincent Valdez: Just a Dream …” at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston. The survey includes a 1953 Good Humor ice cream truck that Valdez transformed into a complex historical account of a crucial moment in Los Angeles history.Credit…via Vincent Valdez and Contemporary Arts Museum Houston; Photo by Peter Molick
His subjects include exhausted, defeated boxers; the funeral of his best friend John R. Holt Jr., an Iraq War veteran who took his life in 2009 because of PTSD; televised scenes of American politics and pop culture (Oliver North’s trial, Michael Jordan’s slam dunk contest); victims of racist violence against Mexican Americans; and inspirational figures from the Latino community.
Valdez’s socially engaged art finds its focus in the often overlooked presence of Chicanos, a vision planted when he was only 9 years old, and already working alongside the artist Alex Rubio on murals around San Antonio, his hometown. His commitment to painting — as well as to the historical research demanded by these compositions — was so passionate that his high school teachers let him cut class to create murals in the school cafeteria, figuring it was the best way to keep him engaged in school. He had taught himself to draw the human form via television, asking his mother to pause the VCR so he could trace the figures on paper.
Image
Valdez working on a sketch in his studio in Houston.Credit…Ariana Gomez for The New York Times
Image
Valdez preparing to color a print, “Heard Ten Thousand Whisperin’ and Nobody Listenin’.”Credit…Ariana Gomez for The New York Times
He arrived at the Rhode Island School of Design in 2000, where his penchant for anatomically precise drawings called to mind art from the Renaissance, or the 20th-century social realism of George Bellows and Paul Cadmus — decidedly out of sync with the abstract vibe.
When Valdez began working on “Kill the Pachuco Bastard!” (2001), some of his teachers balked at its frank depiction of racist and xenophobic violence, he said. The painting portrays the 1943 Zoot Suit Riots in Los Angeles, in which American servicemen attacked hundreds of predominantly Mexican American men. “I remember an instructor saying, ‘You’re never going to have a successful career if you continue to work with controversial and confrontational subject matter like this,’” he recalled.
A painting portraying the 1943 Zoot Suit Riots in Los Angeles. Several fistfights dominate the canvas.
Vincent Valdez, “Kill the Pachuco Bastard!,” 2002, oil on canvas.Credit…via Vincent Valdez and Contemporary Arts Museum Houston; Photo by Elon Schoenholz
That instructor was wrong. The painting soon caught the eye of Cheech Marin, the actor, comedian, art collector and founder of the Cheech, a center for Chicano art and culture at the Riverside Art Museum in California. On a tip from an art adviser, he traveled to San Antonio to see it. Valdez, who had moved back into his parents’ home after college, pulled it out from under his mother’s bed, Marin said in an interview. “I took one look at it and said, ‘This is great, I’ll buy it’ — it was as simple as that.”
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The painting also captivated the musician Ry Cooder, who at the time was working on “Chavez Ravine,” a 2005 Grammy-nominated concept album inspired by the story of a longstanding Mexican American neighborhood in Los Angeles demolished in the 1950s. Real estate developers promised public housing; residents, forcibly removed from their homes, got Dodger Stadium instead.
Valdez, pointing to a vase full of paint chippings from finished projects over the years, has been collecting paint chips from all his projects since 2008.Credit…Ariana Gomez for The New York Times
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The musician Ry Cooder has compared Valdez to Hieronymus Bosch and Albrecht Dürer.Credit…Ariana Gomez for The New York Times
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A photo of a hand holding a paintbrush and working on a mostly turquoise and blue painting.
Valdez calls his devotion to a realist style and traditional art-making techniques a form of “high-definition vision.”Credit…Ariana Gomez for The New York Times
Cooder had the idea of creating a painted vehicle — a homage to Chicano lowrider car culture — that would narrate the history of the event. He found Valdez’s phone number and began leaving messages, to no avail, he said in a recent interview. (“I never bothered calling back because I assumed it was a friend pulling a stunt,” Valdez said with a laugh.)
When Cooder did finally get through, he convinced Valdez to move to California. Over two years there, the painter transformed a 1953 Good Humor ice cream truck into a complex historical account of a crucial moment in Los Angeles history.
“He’s kind of a Chicano Hieronymus Bosch, or Albrecht Dürer,” Cooder said. “He has the technique, but he also brings tremendous imagination, beautiful colors and a sense of action and movement.”
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A painting of a man with his left arm around his wife, standing in front of a sheet hanging on a clothesline, with a radio and a cactus in the foreground.
Vincent Valdez, “People of the Sun (Grandma and Grandpa Santana)," 2018, oil on canvas.Credit…via Vincent Valdez and Contemporary Arts Museum Houston; Photo by Peter Molick
Portraiture plays a central role in Valdez’s practice. “People of the Sun / El Gente de la Sol (the Santanas),” from 2018, depicting his grandparents in front of a clothesline, took three years. “It’s one of the very, very few paintings that I am content with,” Valdez said. “It speaks about the labor and the toil and the determination of creating that better life and situation in America, so that your offspring have a better way forward.”
If paintings like “The City” offer up a troubling vision of America, Valdez’s continuing series “The New Americans” points to what it could be. (“The City,” “The New Americans” and a 2018 series titled “Dream Baby Dream,” showing mourners at Muhammad Ali’s funeral, are part of a trilogy, “The Beginning Is Near.”)
“I want to paint Americans in the 21st century who, in my eyes, are still fighting the good fight, not for power, not for profit, not for fame, but because it’s still simply the right thing to do,” he said. Subjects include Sennett Devermont, a legal rights activist known as Mr. Checkpoint and founder of the AFTP (“Always Film the Police”) Foundation; his partner and sometime collaborator Adriana Corral; and the jazz musician and music education advocate Wynton Marsalis.
The artist Teresita Fernández, another subject, has been a longtime admirer. “There is a particular, very sharp sensitivity to the way Vince brings power to the act of looking,” she said in an email. “He’s very tenderly seeing layers of personhood, revealing a second, deeper layer of portraiture that’s much more subtle and intimate, beyond broad ideas of identity.”
A painter, seen from above, works on a canvas taller than him in his studio.
Valdez works on his in-progress painting “The New Americans (Adriana)” in his studio in Houston.Credit…Ariana Gomez for The New York Times
His approach — showing both the lows and the highs of American experience — seems to resonate with museumgoers. Patricia Restrepo, a curator at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston and an organizer of the exhibition, said that attendance there included a huge number of first-time visitors and multigenerational families, many Latino.
“Parents would bring in their young children and really engage in uncomfortable and critical conversation about the ways in which white supremacy continues to operate and continues to harm them,” she said.
“I think Vincent really is able to usher in difficult conversations through the strategy of beauty and technical mastery,” she added.
Not everyone is so comfortable when confronted with the art. When “Kill the Pachuco Bastard!” was shown at the Smithsonian almost 20 years ago, Valdez recalled that curators insisted on installing it behind a curtain.
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A 30-foot-wide painting of people dressed in Ku Klux Klan robes and hoods at night.
“The City,” by Valdez, is a 30-foot-wide oil painting depicting a modern-day gathering of men, women and even a baby dressed in Ku Klux Klan hoods.Credit…via Vincent Valdez and Contemporary Arts Museum Houston; Photo by Peter Molick
And when the Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas at Austin bought “The City,” the museum kept it in storage for two years while curators considered how to display it. When they put it on view, it was hung behind a wall with content warnings for visitors who might have been troubled to see such a frank depiction of the K.K.K. Though the museum was criticized by some for its handling of the presentation, no significant protest materialized.
That painting developed out of Valdez’s study of Texas history, during which he learned that between 1848 and 1928, 547 Mexican Americans were lynched in Texas and California. The piece was also informed by his interest in the artist Philip Guston, who depicted Klan figures in his work during the 1960s and ’70s, and by his own unsettling encounter with a K.K.K. rally as a teenager.
“I didn’t make the painting to be controversial or have a shock value,” Valdez said. “My goal was to create a 30-foot mirror of America, to recreate the kinds of tensions I felt in the air outside my studio.”
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A painting of a man in a Western shirt and western hat wearing only one shoe.
Vincent Valdez, “The Strangest Fruit (3),” 2013, oil on canvas.Credit…via Vincent Valdez and Contemporary Arts Museum Houston; Photo by Mark Menjivar
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A painting of a shirtless man with a shaved head and tattoos all over his chest, arms and face.
“So Long, Mary Ann” is named after a Leonard Cohen song. Credit…via Vincent Valdez and Contemporary Arts Museum Houston; Photo by Peter Molick
He had tackled the subject with an earlier series, “Strangest Fruit,” depicting Chicano men — modeled by family and friends — in poses suggestive of victims, hanging against blank backgrounds like the martyred saints of the Renaissance. “No one was bothered by those paintings,” he noted. “People are more comfortable seeing the victims of violence than the perpetrators.”
Both CAMH and Mass MoCA made the decision to present “The City” straightforwardly; at Mass MoCA, it is one of the first things visitors see. “Vincent is unflinching,” said Denise Markonish, who co-curated “Just a Dream …” “We, as a museum, should be too.”
The payoff of close looking is apparent in works like “So Long, Mary Ann,” Valdez’s searing 2019 portrait, whose name alludes to a Leonard Cohen song about heartbreak. It shows a young man — shirtless, with a shaved head, tattoos covering his body. But push past the surface, past the current discourse around tattooed Latino gang members, and his expression is mournful, tender and vulnerable. Look closer still, and you will see a tiny cross reflected in the young man’s eye.
It’s this attention that makes Valdez a singular artist, Markonish said. “He paints a picture of his grandparents with as much care as he paints the Klan,” she said. “In taking the time to render these things, he’s confronting them in a really intimate way. He’s doing himself what he is asking us to do, which is not look away.”
Vincent Valdez: Just a Dream …
May 25, 2025, to April 5, 2026. Mass MoCA, 1040 Mass MoCA Way, North Adams, Mass.; 413-662-2111, www.massmoca.org.
30-Foot Painting of the K.K.K. Puts a Museum to the Test
July 16, 2018
Aruna D'Souza writes about modern and contemporary art and is the author of “Whitewalling: Art, Race & Politics in 3 Acts.” In 2021 she was awarded a Rabkin Prize for Art Journalism.
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Buried history of sexual torture under now-defunct law in Japan recalled a century on
mainichi.jp/english/articles/20250509/p2a/00m/0na/019000c
May 12, 2025 (Mainichi Japan)
Toshiko Yamada is pictured as a student in this photo from her autobiography "Nagai Tabiji" (A long journey).
OSAKA — A century has passed since the promulgation in April 1925 of the Peace Preservation Law, which stripped away freedom of speech and thought in Japan. Before its abolition in 1945, over 100,000 people were apprehended under the law, and over 1,000 are believed to have died due to torture or illness. It was a dark period, during which many women were also oppressed and subjected to unimaginable sexual torture.
Kan Harada, 74, a former Kyoto Prefectural Assembly member from Kyoto's Nakagyo Ward, recalls the day when his mother, Toshiko Yamada, shared her painful past with a writer visiting their home.
"They stripped her naked and pressed a cigarette against her lower body," Harada said with a detached tone. "What terrible humiliation it was."
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Kan Harada talks about the torture his mother, Toshiko Yamada, received under the Peace Preservation Law, in Kyoto's Nakagyo Ward on March 18, 2025. (Mainichi/Ken Uzuka)
Harada was in high school at the time and hearing his mother's account for the first time, he was shocked. He was unable to ask her the details of what happened before she passed away in 1998 at the age of 87.
Yamada was born in 1911 in the western Japan city of Tottori. After graduating from a local girls' high school, she moved to Tokyo, where she worked for a doctor. Her experiences there changed her life.
Discrimination and a labor movement
The doctor Yamada worked for would shun poor patients, refusing even to issue death certificates necessary for burial to laborers without money. Witnessing such discrimination based on people's financial status, even after death, Yamada quit her job and began working for the Musansha Shimbun, a newspaper affiliated with the Japanese Communist Party. She also worked in small factories, and became involved in movements to support laborers.
The Peace Preservation Law broadly targeted communists and those involved in labor movements. In 1928, an amendment upgraded the maximum sentence under the law to death. Senji Yamamoto, a House of Representatives member from the Labor-Farmer Party who opposed this amendment was assassinated by a right-wing extremist. Many laborers attended his funeral, and police apprehended participants en masse.
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The official Japanese government gazette of April 22, 1925, reports the promulgation of the Peace Preservation Law in this image from a National Diet Library search.
Yamada was among those taken in by police, and she was apprehended repeatedly after this on the grounds of violating the same law, and tortured. According to her autobiography "Nagai Tabiji" (A long journey), she was detained for over a month at a police station in Yokohama. Yamada refused to give her name or the names of her friends, and the Special Higher Police responded by striking her with bamboo swords and hitting her legs with an iron ball in a bag. She was stripped naked with her hands handcuffed behind her back, and a cigarette was pressed into her lower body. She was eventually sentenced to prison for five years.
Focusing on women's and antinuclear movements
After her release in 1937, Yamada married a man who had supported her through letters during her imprisonment, and the couple moved to Manchuria (now northeast China). After escaping attacks by Soviet soldiers and facing hardship, they returned to Japan, and settled in Gunma Prefecture after World War II. Yamada went on to dedicate herself to local women's movements and the antinuclear movement.
"I think my mother was great for continuing to stand with vulnerable workers and never wavering in her beliefs, despite enduring terrible sexual violence and torture," says Harada. He followed in her footsteps, joining a textile company in Kyoto and eventually taking part in a labor dispute. After effectively being dismissed from the company, he engaged in activities with a local shopping district association. Following his tenure as a prefectural assembly member, he became the chairperson of the Kyoto prefectural headquarters of an alliance seeking state redress for victims of the Peace Preservation Law. He has continued to call for the government to apologize to victims of oppression and compensate them.
In recent years, Harada has been concerned about the introduction of legal system changes that could potentially lead to thought control, like the Act on the Protection of Specially Designated Secrets and the establishment of the crime of conspiracy (officially the preparation of acts of terrorism and other organized crimes).
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People wave flags and a banner in a demonstration against the Peace Preservation Law on Feb. 11, 1925.
"Depending on how those in power think, there is a risk it could lead to the kind of oppression we saw in the past. If we remain silent, we might once again face a dangerous era," he said.
'Erotic terror' buried in history
The kind of sexual torture Yamada endured was not an exception. "Prejudices against the Communist Party and labor unions, combined with misogyny, led to many women being humiliated," says 78-year-old Kimie Oishi of the Osaka Prefecture city of Sakai, who serves as vice chairperson of the central headquarters of the alliance seeking state compensation. "The sexual torture of women under the Peace Preservation Law was absolutely vile, and was described as 'Erotic Terror.' People could not even speak of it to their families, and it has long been buried in history," she said.
According to the alliance, there are women who have conveyed accounts of the torture to succeeding generations. One victim, Chiyoko Ito, a social activist from Nagano Prefecture, was subjected severe torture and died at 24 from causes related to mental illness. Her life has been depicted in numerous biographies and films. Takako Nakamoto, a proletarian writer from Yamaguchi Prefecture, wrote about being stripped naked, having a broom thrust into her, and being choked. Another woman from the Tokyo island of Hajijojima left a testimony saying she was stripped naked and molested, and tortured until she lost hearing in her left ear.
Oishi notes that many women refused to turn from communism even when they were tortured in prison. "They probably were able to endure the torture because they believed that militarism would eventually end and a democratic society would certainly come. I want people to learn more about the history of such women's suffering," she says.
(Japanese original by Ken Uzuka, Osaka City News Department)
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Buried history of sexual torture under now-defunct law in Japan recalled a century on – The Mainichi
mainichi.jp
OSAKA — A century has passed since the promulgation in April 1925 of the Peace Preservation Law, which stripped away freedom of speech and thought in