Tlacuilas y Retrateras
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Tlacuilas y Retrateras was one of the first feminist art collectives in Mexico. It was founded in May 1983 by Ruth Albores, Consuelo Almeda, Karen Cordero, Ana Victoria Jiménez, Lorena Loaiza, Nicola Coleby, Marcela Ramírez, Isabel Restrepo, Patricia Torres and Elizabeth Valenzuela based on a feminist art workshop taught by Mónica Mayer at the Academia de San Carlos, National School of Plastic Arts (UNAM).[1]
The name of the group refers to the Nahuatl tradition of tlacuilos: men and women who, under the protection of the Goddess Xochiquetzal, “focused on the expression and interpretation of the universe of beliefs that ancient peoples held about time, space, their history and knowledge,”[2] that were represented in murals and codices.
In 1984, the Tlacuilas y Retrateras collective separated shortly after presenting their controversial work La fiesta de XV años.[3]
The social movements and revolutionary ideas that swept through the world during the 1960s and 1970s also had an important impact on the arts. Significantly, groups emerged with an active critical political stance as they confronted social problems that demonstrated the possibilities of using art to facilitate social transformation.[4]
The second wave feminist movement, which had begun in the United States and Europe, gained strength along with these social movements. The questions raised by feminism are also evident in the postures of various artists, who exercised "... with greater impetus their right to self-representation, to talk about themselves, to socialize and denounce the problems they faced as women based on the slogan ‘The personal is political.’ Thus, they carried out a series of practices that included, for example, the re-appropriation of their body and the positive reinterpretation of it, challenging gender stereotypes, the questioning of everything understood as feminine and the active participation in protests using aesthetic elements."[5]
In Mexico, feminist women's groups organized in the 1970s, and the ideas of women's liberation that were traveling around the world were also influencing Mexican women's’ artistic practices,[6] Mónica Mayer, Magali Lara, Lourdes Almeida, Yolanda Andrade, Carla Rippey, Rosalba Huerta, Lucila Santiago were some of the artists whose work represents their reflection on being women and their condition in society. But it was not until 1983, that the first art collectives with openly feminist political positions were formed: Tlacuilas y Retrateras in May, Polvo de Gallina Negra in June and Bio-Arte in November.[7] The three pioneer collectives collaborated in some actions together, although each with its own specificities.
Tlacuilas y Retrateras originated during the course on feminist art that Mónica Mayer taught at the San Carlos Academy from 1983 to 1984. Using as a point of departure the social context, group dynamics and the reading of texts written by historians, theorists and art critics such as Linda Nochlin and Lucy R. Lippard, that this group of visual artists, photographers, historians and art critics -Mayer's students- decided to form a feminist art group.[8]