Amalia Mesa Bains is an artist and cultural critic who has worked to define Chicano and Latino art in the United States and in Latin America. Mesa-Bains is best known for her large-scale installations and interpretations of traditional Chicano altars and ofrendas.
Her work explores Mexican American women’s spiritual practices, addresses colonial and imperial histories, the recovery of cultural memory, and their roles in identity formation. She also uses aesthetic strategies to as ways to express experiences historically associated with Mexican American women and as sites for Chicana feminist reclamation. Mesa-Bains was born in Santa Clara, CA.
American Academy of Religion
November 24, 2024
San Diego, California
2016. Hispanics in Philanthropy.
2013. Fresno Art Museum, Fresno CA
2010. Milagro Recipient in the name of Gloria Anzaldua.
2008. 13th Annual Recognition Award.
2007. Moore College of Art and Design
2003. Presented by the Mexican Heritage Plaza
1996. League of Women Voters of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA
1995. Stanford Center for Chicano Research, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California
Latinas Abriendo Camino, Bread and Roses Cultural Project, Inc., New York, NY
Missions Girls Services YWCA, San Francisco, CA
Women’s Caucus for Art, Philadelphia, PA
1994. SFSU Alumni Association, San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA
1993. The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, Chicago, IL
Association of Hispanic Artists, New York, NY
1991. INTAR Hispanic Arts Center, New York, NY
1990. The Chicana Foundation of Northern California
The Association of American Cultures, Washington, DC
Expansion Arts Panel, Artists in Residence Panel, Visual Arts Panel, Overview Panel
1989. Mission Cultural Center, San Francisco, CA
San Francisco, CA
California State University, Monterey Bay, Seaside, CA
1997 - 2014Division for Integration, San Francisco Unified School District
1983-90San Francisco State University, San Francisco, CA
1971on Instagram