Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

This first major retrospective of Amalia Mesa-Bains unearths her significant contributions to Chicanx/Latinx art and feminism.

Best known for her pioneering altar installations, Amalia Mesa-Bains is one of the most innovative feminist and Latinx artists of her generation. In her forty-year career as an artist, activist, educator, and scholar, she has explored the experiences, spiritual practices, and histories of Mexican American women and addressed the colonial erasure and recovery of Mexican, African American, and Indigenous Californians. Appropriately called an "archaeological" practice, Mesa-Bains's art creates sacred spaces imbued with cultural memory, leading viewers on a magical journey of discovery through what might otherwise be lost to existing canons of history.

Amalia Mesa-Bains: The Archaeology of Memory is the exhibition catalog accompanying the first major retrospective of her work, bringing her installations from the 1970s to the present together for the first time. Featuring an essay by the artist and an interview with her, the book also brings together top-tier scholars who explore the ecofeminism, migrant histories, spirituality, and politics of erasure that ground her interdisciplinary practice. As a whole, the book cements Mesa-Bains's place as a trailblazing artist within the history of art.

Published in association with the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.

Exhibition dates:
  • Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive: February 4-August 13, 2023
  • Phoenix Art Museum: November 2023-March 2024
  • El Museo del Barrio, New York City: April 2024-August 2024
  • San Antonio Art Museum: October 2024-January 2025
  • Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Arts and Culture, Riverside, CA: March 2025-August 2025

About the Author

Laura E. Pérez is Professor of Chicanx and Latinx Studies and Chair of the Latinx Research Center at University of California, Berkeley.

María Esther Fernández is Artistic Director of the Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture, Riverside Art Museum.

Table of Contents

Contents

Director's Foreword
Juli Rodrigues Widholm

Acknowledgments
Laura E. Perez and Maria Esther Fernandez

Chapter 1
Amalia Mesa-Bains: Storytelling and the Archaeology of Memory
Maria Esther Fernandez

Chapter 2
Archaeology of the Immaterial: Absence and Presence in the Installations of Amalia Mesa-Bains
Laura E. Perez

Chapter 3
Sixty Objects in My Art Life
Amalia Mesa-Bains

Plates

Chapter 4
In Conversation: Amalia Mesa-Bains's Feminisms
Lowery Stokes Sims

Chapter 5
Unruly Erotic
Jennifer A. Gonzales

Plates

Chapter 6
Flowers and Songs: Memory, Nature, and the Empowered Feminine in the Prints and Books of Amalia Mesa-Bains
Adrianna Zavala

Chapter 7
The Latino Wunderkammer
Tomas Ybarra-Frausto

Plates

Chronology
Exhibition History
Selected Bibliography
Essay Bibliographies
Works in the Exhibition
Contributors
 

Reviews

"Amalia Mesa-Bains gathers the cherished items of a woman’s life and transforms them into the sacred. In doing so, she confirms we are shamanas, visionaries, creators, culture keepers. Amalia Mesa-Bains's artistry is an alchemy of love."—Sandra Cisneros, author of Woman without Shame