Larry Itliong and Dolores Huerta Mural San Jose

 

 

Larry Itliong & Dolores Huerta Mural in San Jose @ 4th & Santa Clara Streets SJ (Chevron Station)
Mural artists, community members, friends, and supporters in front of mural SJ 9-1-2024

 

Larry Itliong was a Filipino-American labor organizer and civil rights activist who played a key role in the Delano Grape Strike of 1965, which paved the way for the establishment of the United Farm Workers (UFW) union and better working conditions. Born in the Philippines in 1913, Itliong immigrated to the United States in 1929 and became a farm worker in California. Meanwhile it was Dolores Huerta a labor leader and civil rights activist that co-founded the United Farm Workers along with Cesar Chavez.

Two years ago Andrew Espio, Owner of 1 Culture Gallery, asked Analyn Bones to showcase one of her paintings to his cannery art show. One of the paintings showed the strike that involved Larry Itliong and Cesar Chavez but there are no murals of Larry Itliong, who was just as important as Chavez.

Artists that worked on the mural included: Analyn (Ana) Bones, Jordan Gabriel, Mel Melchon, Juan Valsquez, and Miguel Machuca. The mural began on April 21, 2024 and completed this Mural on May 3rd 2024.

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San Jose Japantown Pinoytown Mural

 

 

Pinoytown mural finished February 13, 2024
Analyn (Ana) Bones & Jordan Gabriel
Picture of Jordan, Analyn, and Abraham Menor using slow shutter & rear curtain synch
Jordan Gabriel close up
Analyn & Jordan posing in front of mural with their painting tools
Mural outline on the 2nd day of mural project

 

 

The beginnings on Pinoytown started from a 1887 Chinese immigrant settlement in San Jose that was also burned down in 1887 due to racial discrimination. Because of those reasons John Heinlein formed Heinlenville Chinatown on North 6th Street between Jackson and Taylor Streets in San Jose as a means of protection against hostility. Later on the first wave of Filipinos immigrants came to America in 1920s to the 1930s. Then during 1942 the Japanese-Americans were shipped to internment camps so some buildings and vacant buildings were filled by Filipinos and became Pinoytown. During the height of Pinoytown there were Filipino businesses and residences on both sides of 6th Street from restaurants, pool halls, barber shops, grocery stores, laundries, a church, barangay organizations, and a Filipino Youth Club. But Pinoytown declined in the 1960s due to demographic changes.

 

 The Pinoytown mural artists are Jordan Gabriel and Analyn (Ana) Bones. They were supported and assisted by Rene Munoz, Abraham Menor, and Robert Ragsac. The mural is located in San Jose Japantown on the corner of 6th & Jackson in San Jose Japantown (Kogura’s). Assistance of the mural came from Empire Seven Studios & Kogura Company and sponsored by Filipino American National Historical Society Santa Clara Valley.

 

 

https://www.fanhs-scv.org/

 

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