Kimberly Barzola

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Barzola speaking at a reproductive justice rally in Boston in 2022.

Kimberly Barzola is a socialist artist and multilingual organizer from Salem, Massachusetts.

Murals

In 2019, Barzola painted a mural paying homage to the hard work of Latin American coffee farmers in Chelsea, MA.[1][2]

She won a grant from the city of Boston to connect residents to nature and build community through a mural-making project in East Boston, as part of the series, Stories From the Garden.[3][4]

In 2020, Barzola painted a mural at the Punto Urban Art Museum depicting Tupac Katari and Bartolina Sisa, two indigenous revolutionaries who fought for freedom in 18th-century Peru, where Barzola's family is from.[5][6]

Printmaking

In 2020, Barzola's piece, Kawsachun Pachamama, was featured in an international Anti-Imperialist Poster Exhibition.[7]

In 2021, Barzola was hired to make art that embodied environmental stewardship and social justice for the Living Landscapes Conference at Boston University.[8]

Her print of Taghreed al-Barawi resisting during protests in Gaza was published in The Palestine Poster Project Archives.[9][10]

In January 2022, US-based organization The People's Forum published an international collaborative exhibit: Líneas Vitales/Vital Lines, which brought the artwork of Cuban artists and US artists together to protest the United States embargo against Cuba.[11][12] Barzola's work was featured, incorporating Che Guevara, and drawing inspiration from socialist futures.[11]

Barzola has also collaborated with The People's Forum with art to support Haitian liberation.[13]

In February 2022, Barzola's relief print was published in a Tricontinental interview with Héctor Béjar.[14]

Organizing

Personal life

References

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