Mexican Sopes As Made By Elvira And Diana
Keep reading

if i look back, i am lost

Janaina Medeiros
Stranger Things
h
No title available
No title available
Mike Driver

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

No title available
Sade Olutola

titsay

shark vs the universe
untitled

Kaledo Art
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ

JVL
cherry valley forever

★
taylor price

#extradirty
seen from Netherlands

seen from Canada
seen from Netherlands
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from France
seen from Iraq

seen from Togo
seen from Uzbekistan

seen from United States
seen from Mexico

seen from Finland
seen from Türkiye
seen from Pakistan
seen from Ukraine

seen from Canada
seen from Brazil

seen from Egypt
seen from Germany

seen from Iraq
@latinalalala
Mexican Sopes As Made By Elvira And Diana
Keep reading
“This is a photograph showing six Mexican American railroad workers probably in Kansas City, Kansas. They worked for the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway and lived in box cars.” Date: Between 1945 and 1950 Source: Kansas Historical Society
Pixar’s animators seem willing to go anywhere in pursuit of fresh enchantment. They plunged to the ocean’s depths in Finding Nemo, took to the sky with helium balloons in Up, and entered a child’s mind in Inside Out. Now, in the movie Coco, they — and we — are visiting the afterlife.
We get there alongside young Miguel (voiced by Anthony Gonzalez), who lives with his shoemaking family in a Mexican village. He’s a happy kid, except for one thing: His family has lived an entirely music-free existence for three generations. His grandmother (Renee Victor) has forbidden it all — no no blowing into soda-bottles, no listening to passing car radios, and absolutely no mariachis.
Miguel knows why. Years ago, his musical great-great-grandfather grabbed his guitar and left, never to return. On Dia de los Muertos — the Day of the Dead — when it’s said the deceased return to visit their families, no one so much as mentions great-great-grandad. Which means Miguel gets a bit of a shock when he strums a guitar in a cemetery on that day, and finds himself and his street puppy Dante — get it? — transported to the land of the dead.
It’s an eye-popping, and lively sort of Hades, with streets paved in fluorescent flower petals, and skeletons performing production numbers about dancing papaya seeds.
In ‘Coco,’ Pixar Finds Joyous Life — In Death
Photo: Pixar
Una calavera viajando en #metrocdmx 💀🚇Vía: @pabloemmasalazar “Ahorita llegó! Esperenme !!!! #cdmx #metro #calavera #díade muertos
Navajo women at Gallup Inter Tribal Indian Ceremonial, Gallup, New Mexico Creator: New Mexico Tourism Bureau / New Mexico Magazine Date: 1955? Negative Number HP.2007.20.587
Zoot Suit premiere outside theater 1981
Sign posted during Flores family land dispute, Tierra Amarilla, New Mexico Photographer: Sydney Brink Date: 1988 From the Santa Fe New Mexican Collection, Negative Number HP.2014.14.968
Corazones
José Hernández is the son of Mexican migrant farm workers and spent his childhood picking strawberries in California. Now, he’s an astronaut. Dreams do come true.
follow @the-future-now
Please visit my website www.jakeprendez.com and tell your homies, reblog, share etc! I got my t-shirts, prints and post card/sticker packs online. I’m just a cool Chicano artist/ scholar and dad trying to make it. Your support is greatly appreciated.
You can also email me at [email protected] if you are interested in bringing me to your college or university to exhibit/lecture. Bio is on my website.
La obra de Gabriel Figueroa
Just a reminder that your ancestors are watching over you, working with you and sometimes they speak to you through your art or song or cooking without you realizing it. Open up and listen to them. This was completely unintentional. The painting was a self portrait/tribute to my ex wife and a good bye/letting go painting. A friend pointed out the similarities to the Mayan Vision Serpent which was a blood letting ceremony that was about shedding your skin and moving on. Listen to your ancestors and let them do their work.
www.jakeprendez.com
Juan Manuel Montes may be the first “DREAMer” deported under Donald Trump
Federal authorities deported 23-year-old California resident Juan Manuel Montes, who has lived in the U.S. since the age of nine and twice received Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals protections under Barack Obama’s administration, in what appears to be the first case of a DACA-protected “DREAMer” being deported under President Donald Trump.
According to USA Today, Customs and Borders Protection officers approached Montes in Calexico, California on Feb. 17, after Montes had left his wallet in a friend’s car.
Just three hours later, Montes found himself deported to Mexico.
“Some people told me that they were going to deport me; others said nothing would happen,” Montes told USA Today. “I thought that if I kept my nose clean nothing would happen.” Read more (4/18/17 5:40 PM)
follow @the-movemnt
Update: Juan Manuel Montes is suing the Trump administration
Montes and his attorneys are suing the Trump administration, “demanding that the federal government turn over key information about his sudden deportation,” and arguing that immigration officials failed to show any legal basis for deporting Montes.
“We look forward to presenting our case to the court, because our client has the right to know why and how he was physically removed from the United States when he had permission to live and work here,” Montes’ attorney, Mónica Ramírez Almadani, said in a statement from the NILC. Read more (4/19/17 6 AM)
Please visit my website www.jakeprendez.com and tell your homies! I got my t-shirts, prints and post card/sticker packs online. I’m just a cool Chicano artist/ scholar and dad trying to make it. Your support is greatly appreciated.