The Asco art collective emerged at the height of the Chicano civil rights movement in the 1960s and 1970s. When filmmaker ...
In 1997, the Archives of American Art received a donation of 20 linear feet of research material on the Chicano art movement in the United States and Latin America, compiled by Dr. Tomás ...
Or at least, that's one origin story. There are many others, as would only befit this hard-to-pin-down group, which is now ...
Without Permission” chronicles the story of a 1970s Chicano art group named “asco.” Their name translates to “nausea” or ...
In the 1970s, a group of Chicano teenagers got together in East Los Angeles to make art. They staged a Christmas parade in outrageous homemade costumes. They tagged the L.A. County Museum of Art.
Without Permission' is a superbly edited and assembled chronicle of a 1970s Chicano art movement in Los Angeles.
In the 1970s and ‘80s, traces of the artist collective Asco, named after the Spanish word for “disgust,” could be seen all over East L.A. The then-teenage creatives pulled all kinds of high ...
The decades-spanning art and activism of the Chicano collective ASCO — named after the Spanish word for “disgust” — gets a generously researched and superbly edited portrait in filmmaker Travis ...