Thursday, December 15, 2005

Texas friendly?


[Photo: Chair in my uncle Jesús Castro's yard - Crystal City, TX - 2004]

From 1999 to 2005 I lived in Lockhart, Texas. You may ask — why would a lefty from San Francisco move to Bush Country? Well, my wife decided to go the University of Texas at Austin for graduate school.

Six and half years later we’re back in beautiful California and my wife Ann has her Ph.D. She is now a professor at the University of Redlands, teaching Art History. Mission accomplished.

My tenure in Texas left an indelible mark on my wife and I. In retrospect, uprooting myself at the rather mature age of 47 was quite naive. I was not ready for the culture shock. Coming from a liberal bastion like San Francisco and San Jose to live near Austin wasn’t too bad, but much of the rest of Texas wasn’t ready to assimilate this Chicano — or as I was often called — Yankee.

Texans for some reason have a stubborn disdain for Californians. Many from the Lone Star state enjoyed poking fun at the Golden State. I must have heard this comment a thousand times, “California has too many earthquakes and is going to fall in the ocean. Sounds like a good idea to me.”

That’s the obnoxious and often arrogant side of Texas, but there is a kinder and gentler side, the side where people would start a conversation and invite you over for a visit — some iced tea. Yes, they were Texas friendly.

Today I am back in California and readjusting to the cultural norms. People in Redlands, like folks in Los Angeles, Riverside and San Diego are quite wary of strangers and avert their eyes. Starting a casual conversation with a stranger is out of the question in much of the Golden State.

In the small town of Johnson City (population 900) where I worked and Lockhart (population 9,000) where I lived, I often shook hands, waved and smiled at strangers and friends on a regular basis. Sounds corny, but I liked it.

In rural Texas, drivers had a folksy way of waving at a stop sign. It was just a quick and friendly shake of the hand, often from an old pickup. Once in a while I find myself doing that in California — but nobody waves back in Los Angeles. I’ll be stopping that habit soon enough.

At the co-op where I worked, women wouldn’t hesitate to volunteer for parenting duties like baby-sitting or picking up the kids. There was a definite sense of community and a respect for family that you don't often see in modern America. I would wonder to my self — would Johnson City or Lockhart have been a good place to raise a family. My daughters are both in their late 20s — I guess it’s too late to sign them up for 4H.

It wasn’t uncommon for co-workers to tell me about their children or grandchild. Time for conversation seemed inexhaustible and acceptable. I would hear stories of life on the ranch. I learned about raising goats and cattle. Now that I am in California, I wonder if I could ever use this information. Life in rural Texas is very different from the suburbs.

Am I glad to be back in California? Yes, it’s great to be back home. The weather is fantastic, the cultural opportunities are amazing and my wife and I are closer to friends and family.

What am I going to miss about the Lone Star state? Well the smell of oak fired BBQs to start with. The town I lived in — Lockhart — is the BBQ capital of Texas. Most mornings I would wake up and sit quietly on the porch and enjoy the great smell of oak smokers, brisket and ribs. Great BBQ was just a five-minute stroll down a quiet street. A big plate of BBQ cost me only $4 in 2005. In Lockhart, shopping, the oldest library in the state and the post office were also nearby. Yes, small town life can be convenient.

I’ll also miss listening to folks in their southern drawl explaining to this Yankee about hunting, making venison sausage, and if Ann and I were going to the Czech or German dance. What I won’t miss is being called a crazy Californian — over and over again. Listening to arrogant Texans can be tedious after a while.

I learned a lot about myself in Texas. In the end, I will adapt, and meld back into the California mainstream. Of course, this is as long as I don’t fall into the Pacific Ocean with the rest of California like so many Texans believe.

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Sunday, December 11, 2005

More Than 101 Fun Things To Do In The San Francisco Bay Area


[Photo above: Jesús and Ann in 1998 having fun in beautiful Northern California. Ah, the good ol' days!]


I can easily list thousands of great things to do in the San Francisco Bay Area. San José is only 40 minutes from Santa Cruz and 50 from San Francisco. The fun is close by in the Bay Area.

Yes, the Bay Area has great weather. While Austin and Redlands languish in 100+ degree weather ... San Francisco is a pleasant 75 in the summer. No wonder homes go for a premium there.


Here is my "short list" of fun things to do

  1. See the sea lions at Pier 39 in San Francisco.
  2. Visit the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art.
  3. Go to the University of California at Santa Cruz and see the redwoods.
  4. Enjoy the beautiful homes and breathtaking coastline while driving from Pacific Grove through Del Monte ending in Carmel.
  5. Go fishing off the Capitola Pier.
  6. Visit the San Jose Rose Garden (Before San Jose evolved to become the heart of Silicon Valley it was called the Garden City).
  7. Go to the Santa Cruz Beach and Boardwalk.
  8. See a special performance or contemporary art at Villa Montalvo in Monte Sereno.
  9. See the studios of emerging artists during open studios in San Jose or San Francisco.
  10. Go to Carnaval in San Francisco.
  11. Have a slice of pizza at Frida's Pizza in San Francisco's Mission District.
  12. Save gas and the environment by taking a trolly, bus, Caltrain or BART ride to somewhere new in the bay area.
  13. Drive scenic Highway 1 from San Francisco to Santa Barbara.
  14. Watch the Oakland Raiders play football at the Oakland Coliseum.
  15. Go to the world's largest flea market in San Jose.
  16. See art at Galeria de La Raza in San Francisco.
  17. Take a Red and White boat tour of the San Francisco Bay.
  18. See low riders, Banda dancers, and much more, at the enormous San Jose Cinco de Mayo.
  19. Take a cable car ride in San Francisco.
  20. Enjoy international food and listen to music all weekend long during Tapestry and Talent in downtown San Jose.
  21. Have a tasty hamburger or a crepe at the Crepevine in San Francisco's Sunset District.
  22. Go bike riding or just enjoy the flowers at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.
  23. Take in Japanese Culture at the San Jose Obon festival.
  24. See a painting by Frida Kahlo at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
  25. Shop at Bloomingdale's near Stanford University.
  26. Have some of the best Vietnamese food in the Bay Area at Tu Lan on (sleazy) 6th Street near Market. Park yourself next to the cooks and watch the cooks perform.
  27. Tour the wine country and order a beer.
  28. See art or picnic at the Yerba Buena Center in San Francisco.
  29. Have some of the best pizza on earth at North Beach Pizza.
  30. Enjoy the San Jose Jazz Festival at Cesar Chavez Plaza.
  31. Shop in the Castro, Haight Ashbury, Mission, Noe Valley, Pacific Heights, Marina or any of the unique districts of San Francisco.
  32. Have a sandwich or coffee at Robert's of Woodside.
  33. Rent a houseboat on Shasta Lake. You can get a tan while fishing.
  34. See the San Francisco Fortyniners play football.
  35. Watch for whales near Davenport.
  36. Have an ice cream at Ben Jerry's at the corner of Haight and Ashbury in San Francisco.
  37. Enjoy camping on a beach south of Carmel.
  38. Shop at San Francisco's Goodwill or Sak's Fifth Avenue stores.
  39. Fish, drink a soda and eat calamari at the Santa Cruz Pier.
  40. Listen to music or dance in a club in San Francisco.
  41. Go to San Juan Bautista and visit the Mission and shop for antiques in rural setting.
  42. Camp, hike, bike ride, fish or whatever you like in Lake Tahoe. (Several hours from the Bay Area)
  43. Have a BBQ at San Jose's Alum Rock Park. One of many parks to choose from in the San Francisco Bay Area.
  44. Have a doughnut at Rollo's in San Jose.
  45. Go fishing off the Pacifica Wharf.
  46. Dance to Salsa music in the Mission District of San Francisco.
  47. Visit the dramatic shoreline of Carmel.
  48. Have breakfast at the Pork Store in the Haight Ashbury in San Francisco.
  49. Shop and play in Capitola.
  50. Investigate San Jose State University's new Martin Luther King Jr. Library.
  51. Go to annual Greek festival in San Jose.
  52. Go to Nordstrom's in downtown San Francisco and get your shoes shined for $2.00.
  53. Picnic along the secluded San Mateo Coast.
  54. Go to the Rosicrucian Egyptian Museum in San Jose.
  55. See the sea otters and sea lions at Cannery Row in Monterey.
  56. Visit the new Mexican-American Cultural Arts Center in San Jose and see a Chicano performance or art exhibit.
  57. Take a charter boat-fishing trip out of Santa Cruz, San Francisco, Monterey, Half Moon Bay or Berkeley.
  58. Shop or eat in San Francisco's Chinatown.
  59. Visit the Green Gulch Zen Center near Mill Valley. Take a walk from there to their gardens to the beach where Alan Watts lived.
  60. Have a Taco at Taco Bell (on the beach) in Pacifica.
  61. Have lunch in downtown Mendocino. Watch out for the brownies!
  62. Have coffee at Mr. Toot's (by the beach) in Capitola.
  63. Camp at Big Basin State Park.
  64. Grab a cup of coffee at Java Beach and stroll the shores of San Francisco.
  65. Visit upscale galleries in downtown Carmel or San Francisco.
  66. Have a steak at Original Joes in downtown San Jose.
  67. See a Stanford or California football game.
  68. Take photos in secluded Bodega Bay.
  69. Go to Cole and Carl in San Francisco and take a short walk to the Haight Ashbury District.
  70. Watch the Gay Pride Parade in San Francisco.
  71. Catch plenty of catfish in the San Joaquin Delta.
  72. Go to the Stanford University Chapel for a performance.
  73. Visit California's most beautiful Mission in Carmel.
  74. Take in a symphony, opera or ballet in San Francisco, San Jose or Oakland.
  75. Go to the DeSassait Photography Gallery at Santa Clara University.
  76. Take a dip and enjoy a massage at one of the many hot tubs in Santa Cruz. My favorite is the Well Within.
  77. Have Sunday brunch in downtown Carmel.
  78. Pick a quiet spot in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park and have a picnic or play a game of touch football.
  79. Buy a book at City Lights bookstore in San Francisco's North Beach.
  80. Take time for a leisurely coffee or lunch in Santa Cruz's Pacific Garden Mall.
  81. Enjoy a performance or an exhibition at the Mission Cultural Arts Center in San Francisco.
  82. Watch the Giants play baseball at the new ballpark in San Francisco.
  83. Listen to Los Lobos or other performers at Santa Cruz's Catalyst.
  84. Hike or picnic at Alum Rock Park in San Jose.
  85. Buy a pumpkin for Halloween in Half Moon Bay.
  86. Go to the Century theaters and see a movie in San Jose.
  87. See motorcycle or auto races at Laguna Seca.
  88. Picnic or play basketball at the San Francisco Art Institute. You will enjoy a great view of Fisherman's Wharf from the roof top basketball court and cafe.
  89. Inspect the archives at the Chicano Center at San Jose State.
  90. Go to downtown Los Gatos (Los Altos, Palo Alto, Burlingame, Sausalito, etc.) and observe yuppies down $6 cappuccinos.
  91. Watch out for firecrackers at San Francisco's Chinese New Years Parade.
  92. Go to MACLA in San Jose and see a Chicano art exhibit or performance.
  93. Ride your bike in affluent Woodside, Atherton, or Hillsborough.
  94. Hike in magnificent Muir Woods.
  95. Just look in the newspaper...your bound to find a festival, performance or exhibit that is just right for you in the beautiful San Francisco Bay Area.
  96. Go to a performance or exhibit at MACLA in downtown San Jose.
  97. Have a picnic at Stinson Beach.
  98. See the fish at San Francisco's Steinhart Aquarium.
  99. Go horseback riding near Uvas Meadows in San Jose.
  100. Visit the KPFA studios in Berkeley.
  101. Stroll along the beach in secluded Bolinas.
  102. Go water or snow skiing (gambling too) in Lake Tahoe. (Several hours away)
  103. Hang out with the tourists at San Francisco's Fisherman's Wharf and Pier 39.
  104. Go to annual Italian Carnaval at San Jose's Holy Cross Church.
  105. Go shopping in downtown San Francisco. There are too many wonderful shops to list. Everything from fly-fishing gear to high-end fashions.
  106. Go to the San Jose Museum of Art.
  107. Enjoy the Santa Clara County Fair in San Jose.
  108. Go to the Castro Theater in San Francisco and see a movie and an organ (music) performance during intermission.
  109. See the San Jose Sharks (NHL).
  110. Have some Japanese food in San Jose's Japantown.
  111. Go to Zellerbach Hall at the University of California in Berkeley and see a performance.
  112. Go boating in the San Francisco Bay.
  113. Go water skiing in the San Joaquin Delta.
  114. Have some corn on the cob or sushi at the San Jose Nihonmachi festival in Japan Town in San Jose.
  115. Go sailing on the San Francisco Bay.
  116. Drive to the top of Mount Hamilton and see the Lick Observatory in San Jose.
  117. See Teatro Campesino perform La Posada in San Juan Bautista.
  118. Take CalTrain from San Jose to San Francisco and back.
  119. Drop someone off at Alcatraz Island.
  120. See the giant redwoods in Big Basin Park near San Jose.
  121. Hang out at one of the many Silicon Valley watering holes in San Mateo to San Jose.
  122. Go to Japan town in San Francisco.
  123. Enjoy a California or Stanford basketball game.
  124. Take an extension class at one of the many colleges in the Bay Area.
  125. Go dancing at the Top of the Mark Hotel in San Francisco.
  126. Enjoy a sunset at any beach.
  127. Visit the Galleries of the Academy of Art University or the San Francisco Art Institue.
  128. Go water skiing at Calero reservoir or at several great area reservoir or lakes.
  129. Visit Angel Island in San Francisco Bay.
  130. Jog at the San Jose State University track.
  131. And finally ... enjoy a beautiful summer day with no humidity ... anywhere in the Bay Area. That's my little jab at life in Austin, Tejas (I lived there from 1999 to 2005) where the summers are hot and humid — winters icy cold. No wonder Texans are so cranky.

    Once, I told a Texan I was from God's Country. She asked me what part? I said California. She immediately scolded me saying California was the "devil's playground." She proclaimed Texas is God's Country and gave me a long list of reasons why she "hated" California and Californians. I won't repeat her comments.


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My Favorite Places in Northern California


Northern California is truly my favorite place on earth ... no doubt about it! Growing up in San José, California was truly a gift. For over forty years the Garden City, later called Silicon Valley, provided me a central jump-off point to explore the beauty of Northern California. The regions combination of great weather and diverse culture can not be matched. Here is a short list of my favorite places.

1) Downtown Carmel: Great beaches, quaint architecture, an abundance of galleries and restaurants, that's what makes Carmel special. And to top it off, the most beautiful California Mission is just a mile away.

2) Lake Tahoe: Crystal clear lakes, hiking, cycling and fishing too. I would recommend taking a day or two hike in the Desolation Wilderness Area, starting off with a boat taxi ride at Echo Lake. The many lakes and the hike are at the wondrous elevation of 9-thousand feet. The view is literally breathtaking.

3) Santa Cruz/Capitola: I have spent many hours fishing off the Capitola and Santa Cruz Piers. Nothing could be better than relaxing in the warm sun, munching on some local calamari and being refreshed by the cool Pacific Ocean breezes. If you have time spend a few hours in downtown Santa Cruz for shopping, hot tubs (The Well Within) and lunch. Next to the Capitola Pier is also a quaint shopping area and a great beach. Santa Cruz of course has the famous Boardwalk Amusement Park. Kids and some adults love it!

4) The San Francisco Art Institute: A block and a half from that crooked Lombard Street, high on a hill overlooking the bay is the San Francisco Art Institute. As a student I enjoyed the vistas from atop the SFAI. A decade later I would bring my children to enjoy the views and have a picnic. The galleries show a contemporary mix of student and faculty work. On the roof there is a basketball court and an earthy restaurant. BBQs on lazy San Francisco afternoons are not uncommon.

5) Highway 1: This two lane highway grips the California Coast and can only be described as glorious. My favorite sections are Highway 1 at Big Sur and San Mateo County. I fondly remember slow weekday afternoons reading the newspaper on a desolate beach while catching glances of whales passing by.

If you are planning a trip to Northern California feel free to contact me to get some (more) tips

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Jesús Manuel Mena Garza Biography


[Photo: My father, picking cotton in Texas circa 1925]

Photographer, artist, and audiovisual producer, Jesús Garza's artistic vision was shaped by his boyhood in San José, California, and later nurtured at Roosevelt Junior High, San José High, San José State University, the San Francisco Art Institute, and the Academy of Art College.

From the beginning, Garza's images have their source in his migrant farm worker heritage and his immersion in the dynamic political and artistic culture of El Movimiento, the political movement that emerged during the mid-60s seeking social justice for Chicano/as.

Jesús was born in 1952 to Eusebio and Guadalupe Mena Garza in San José, California. Guadalupe grew up in Crystal City, Texas, although she was born in nearby Carrizo Springs. Eusebio hailed from Coahuila in Northern Mexico and came to Texas as a child with his parents. The Garza family settled in Crystal City where Eusebio later met and married Guadalupe.

Jesús' parents worked their entire lives as farm laborers migrating through the central and western regions of the United States during the picking season and returning each winter to Crystal City. In the mid-40s, Manuel, Eusebio's eldest brother, led the extended Garza family to San José in search of increased opportunities.

Jesus' parents and siblings worked in the fields of Santa Clara Valley while living in various migrant labor camps. Growing up in San José during the 1960s, Jesús saw his city change from an agricultural oasis south of San Francisco to the capital of Silicon Valley. During the 50s and 60s, the Garza family's eight children picked fruit and vegetables at orchards and farms that later became prized locations for the computer industries chip manufacturing plants.

During this period, Jesus' parents bought a house in a racially diverse, working-class neighborhood. Guadalupe began working at local canneries, although she continued in the fields at various times of the year. Jesús worked in the fields during summers, on weekends throughout his school years, and during college.

Garza notes, "My parents were very modest. I don't remember having any long conversations with either of them. My father usually sat in the corner reading the Spanish language newspaper. My mother could not read or write, but she definitely had a keen mind. She knitted, crocheted, made quilts and clothing like most mothers of the period. She enjoyed gardening and especially tending to her roses. Today I grow roses in her memory."

Throughout Jesús' childhood, the Garza family returned to Crystal City several times to see members of the familia that had remained behind. During one trip when he was ten years old, with his mother, brother David, and several members of his brother-in laws family all stuffed in the car, he saw a sign posted on a rural Texas saloon stating, "No Mexicans or Dogs Allowed." Although the adults ignored the sign and entered the saloon without incident, the experience made a deep impression on Jesús.

Later in 1969, Jesús happened to be in Crystal City during the historic high school walkout when young Chicano/as angrily protested racist policies that denied them opportunities afforded Anglo students. In this small South Texas town, he witnessed the impact of poverty, segregation, and activism, an encounter that shaped his future political and community involvement.

Jesús' family could not afford a camera or record player. At age eleven, he bought himself his first camera at la pulga, the San José Flea Market. This simple twin lens box camera captured his initial portraits of close friends and neighborhood buildings, subjects he would record throughout his career. A few years later at Roosevelt Junior High, Garza witnessed the magic of the darkroom and its photographic processes for the first time. Under the supportive tutelage of instructors Prospero Anaya and Ron Root at San José High, Garza began to craft his photographic style and technique.

Drawn to the position of outside observer, the documentation of events and people formed the primary initial focus of Jesús' photographic work. He served as photographer for both the school newspaper and yearbook and discovered photojournalism as his calling. Mentors Anaya and Root closely guided him in course work every semester during high school and exposed him to the artistic environment of Bay Area galleries and museums during field trips with the Photo Club. As a result, when he graduated in 1970, Garza had a thorough understanding of photographic processes, techniques, and equipment.

Immediately out of high school, Garza worked for the summer as a cinematographer at the Chicano Film Institute of San José. Here he also established himself as a photographer, documenting the struggles of Chicano/as in the Santa Clara Valley. When he entered San José State University in the fall of 1970, he studied Photojournalism under Dr. Joe Swan and participated in the progressive causes of the time including antiwar demonstrations and protests that sought increased access for Chicano/as to education and media.

At SJSU Garza served as president of three campus organizations, as a member of the UFW Support Committee, and as a member of the Community Alert Patrol, or CAP, where he took photographs of police in the field to monitor and document police brutality. Through his participation in these events and organizations, Jesús met Cesar Chavez, Corky Gonzales, José Angel Gutiérrez and other Chicano/a leaders.

In 1973, the artist/activist expanded his creative endeavors from photography to broadcasting by producing radio programs with the Chicano/Puerto Rican Radio Collective, known simply as La Cosa Nueva. As member and later president of C/N, he developed unique bilingual radio programs for several Bay Area stations including KSJS, KPFA-B and KKUP. These Chicano/a-centric programs featured news, public affairs, and music from popular groups such as Malo, Azteca, Sapo, and Santana.

During the 70s, La Cosa Nueva's programs could be heard throughout the San Joaquin Valley and the Bay Area. Garza said, "The early 70s was a great time to socialize (party). I was very shy in high school, but after a couple of years in college, I was definitely into the swing of things. We had a great time working in radio. It was not uncommon to mix drinks and party at KSJS. It is my firm belief that some people participated in the political struggles of the period because of a deep-felt commitment to the cause. Others participated because they wanted to party. Both were valid reasons."

Concurrently with his involvement in the university and broadcast communities, Garza served as Treasurer, Gallery Director, and Resident Photographer at El Centro Cultural de La Gente of San José where he produced various exhibits of his work and other San José and Bay Area artists. In addition, he continued to exhibit his work in galleries throughout the Bay Area and Mexico. Then in 1974, he curated the first major retrospective show of Chicano/a art produced at the San José Museum of Art.

Later that year, he toured Mexico as resident photographer with Teatro de La Gente, Teatro Campesino, Teatro Quetzal and others as part of the Quinto Festival de Teatro Chicano, to document this historic event. This theater conference and series of performances, organized by Adrian Vargas and members of Teatro Nacional de Aztlán, was the first major conference in Mexico City to bring together theater workers from the United States, Mexico, and Latin America.

After seeing Jesús' work increasingly include fine art photography, close friend Antonio Perales Fierro, who had previously attended the San Francisco Art Institute, suggested that Jesús consider expanding his artistic training. After reviewing his portfolio, the prestigious Institute offered him a full tuition scholarship that he accepted in the fall of 1974. While he enjoyed the short respite from San José's more traditional art scene, criticism of his "Mexican" subject matter prompted Jesús to return to San José by mid-semester where he finished his degree at San José State by 1978.

In 1975 he met his first wife Esperanza Molina Maldonado. They were married in 1976. She was a bight student at DeAnza Community College and performed in local Chicano theater. They were married for three years and produced two children, Estrella and Esperanza. My now ex-wife lives in Lathrop, California and we see each other at our children's parties. My daughter Esperanza married José Santa Cruz in 1996 and they have two children, Marissa and Antonio. My eldest daughter Estrella married Jimmy Dodge in 2004 and they have one daughter named Ava Juliet. Esperanza works in Marketing, Estrella works in sales, José works in the Sheriff’s Department and Jimmy works for UPS. They all live in San José, California.

Now back to the past (1976) ... while completing his journalism degree, Jesús worked for one year at San José's KXRX/KEZR radio and later moved to Salinas to serve as a sports anchor and reporter for KSBW Television. Six months later he took over as News Director at KOMY, a bilingual radio station in Watsonville, where he produced programs for four years. These experiences left an indelible mark, making the artist keenly aware of the power of electronic media and technology in our society.

After his divorce in 1980, Garza moved back to San José and renewed his photography career by opening FotoMedia in downtown San José. In addition to offering photography and producing photography workshops, he provided a range of media services including advertising, graphics, and public relations. Several years later Jesús moved his business to a larger studio in his old neighborhood on North 13th Street where he served a diverse clientele ranging from the modest nuns at Holy Cross Catholic Church, to neighborhood families, to the strippers at Maria's Night Club. Commercial clients included Intel Corporation, Altera Corporation, Vallco Fashion Park, San José State University and various magazines and newspapers.

Resuming the exhibition of his work in 1987, Garza produced several photographic series employing both traditional and alternative processes. These projects ranged from two public slide presentations viewed both by traffic and pedestrians to silver and alternative process prints. One of the most notable of his exhibitions was produced by the Mission Cultural Center in San Francisco in 1992. They selected him to participate in a group show of eight photographers. Later that year, unfortunately, he closed his studio and moved to a safer neighborhood because gangs and drug dealers made parts of his old "barrio" increasingly dangerous.

In 1994 Jesús met his wife to be, Ann Marie Leimer at a San Francisco coffee shop, but first the radio world claimed him (once again) in 1995. He traveled to Globe, Arizona, to serve as the News Director at KJAA Radio located next to the San Carlos Apache Indian Reservation. He found himself immediately at odds with station management when he chose to broadcast news from all communities, not just the conservative groups supported by the station's owner. As a result, Garza returned in the fall of 1995 to San Francisco, a more progressive city. A year later, he married his girlfriend Ann.

In the Bay Area, Jesús became a faculty member for the Motion Picture and Video Department at the Academy of Art College in San Francisco for the next several years. At the Academy, he taught and presented workshops on photography and film while exhibiting in San Francisco galleries including El Balazo and the Luggage Gallery. During the mid-90s he also produced and hosted, "The Barrio Experience." This Saturday afternoon radio show was broadcast by Stanford University's KZSU-FM. The program featured Latin music, bands, and interviews. Garza notes, "I really enjoyed working with Stanford students. It was amazing to gain insight into their privileged world."

While in San Francisco, Jesús and Ann shared an avid interest in art and diverse cultures. Together they embarked on a journey that would take them to Texas. On May 15, 1999, Jesús moved to the Lone Star state so Ann could pursue her dream of a Ph.D. in Latin American Art at the University of Texas at Austin. Garza noted, "I have now come full circle and returned to Texas, the state my parents left for a better life in California." In 2000, Jesús and Ann bought a 1927 bungalow-style home in Lockhart. Here Jesús and Ann grew roses, just as Jesús’ mother did in San José. They served as a daily reminder of her creativity. The couple share Lupe's love of flowers.

Lockhart, known as the "Barbecue Capital of Texas," is 25 miles south of Austin, 15 miles east of San Marcos, and 60 miles northeast of San Antonio. Jesús' waistline was proof of the great comida (food) here! Jesús and Ann enjoyed fishing and camping at Padre Island. They both enjoyed dancing to Tejano music at various church jamaicas and visiting familia in Crystal City.

Garza paid the mortgage and his wife's tuition by working full-time at Pedernales Electric. Lyndon B. Johnson and Hill Country ranchers founded the electric cooperative in 1938. Today, the folks at PEC know that they are sitting on a gold mine. Like many utility companies, PEC likes to milk their customers for all they were worth. Garza worked for the co-op for more than five years doing public relations. In press releases, magazine articles, television and radio commercials he would tell the co-op's members to please conserve electricity; all the while the co-op was spending their money like drunken sailors.

Garza kept his hand in radio by working at KLBJ-AM in Austin. At this news station, he worked part-time as a news anchor and reporter. Attempting to be objective at this conservative station planted firmly in a liberal bastion like Austin was quite a challenge. But he enjoyed it.

In retrospect, if Garza only new what Texas was like, he would of never of left his beloved Bay Area. Happily, Garza is back in beautiful California and his wife has her Ph.D. Was going to Texas worth it? Only time will tell.

Garza currently resides in Redlands, California with his wife (now) Dr. Ann Marie Leimer. In the fall of 2005 she was awarded a professorship in the Art and Art History Department at the University of Redlands. Ann and Jesús plan to make this area their home.

On the publishing front, Garza's photographs were published in Cesar Chavez, Amazing Americans, McGraw-Hill. The Fight in The Fields, Susan Ferriss, Harcourt Brace & Company. The Devil in Silicon Valley: Race and Mexicans in Northern California, Dr. Stephen Pitti, Assistant Professor of History and American Studies at Yale University, Princeton University Press. In 2003, Jesús’ documentary photographs were included in the exhibition Chicano Now/Visions that toured the US.

Garza has developed an extensive archive during his thirty years as a photographer. His collection includes Imágenes Xicano, a series of documentary photographs from the 70s that provide a unique history of the Chicano/a movement and form a primary core of his photographic production. These photographs continue to be used in books, articles, and exhibits. These images are also the foundation of his new book, Chicano Photographer. Garza also has produced a PowerPoint presentation entitled Chicano Photographer. It is available free to qualified schools and nonprofits. Go to www.jmmgarza.com for more information.

Other photographic series include his images of Chicano Theater (another book project) during the 70s, Mexico, Arizona, and New Mexico. While in Texas, Jesús documented the character of the region, especially the unique architecture and other features of communities like Lockhart, Gruene, and Crystal City. Jesús currently operates JMM Garza Media Services, and his website at www.jmmgarza.com.

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Globe, AZ Photo Series


Like the sun-baked buildings that dot the desert landscape, the inhabitants of Globe and Miami, Arizona, survive gracefully, showing their age. The two cities live next to each other huddled in the hills. The heat that punishes Phoenix spares the high desert. In the Hill Country of Central Arizona, residents find themselves at a crossroads between national trends and their desire to control and define their community. Taken during the summer of 1995, these photographs reveal an America still rural and conservative.

This area came into existence when the San Carlos Apache Nation ceded valuable portions of its reservation to powerful mining interests. Crushed, fired, and processed, the copper extracted from the red and green rock created wealth for multinational corporations for more than a hundred years. The white sticky powder heaped high along the highway is part of the regions legacy. Arizona's Cobre (Copper) Valley would be a mecca for tourists, if not for the scarred hills.

My photographs evoke nostalgia for Americana, remnants you still find scattered in remote and untouched parts of our country. When I first came to Globe, I was struck by the eerie silence at night. There were no sirens or gunfire from the barrio to awaken me. The stars sparkled brightly, the air smelled clean, and, like the 50s in California, you could purchase leaded gas because no smog regulations exist. With so few people in such a large area, pollution laws were lax. Los Angelinos can be envious of some things in the Cobre Valley.

During the process of taking these photographs, I recalled my youth in San José, California. I remembered fondly how San José once had a downtown with small friendly theaters, department stores, and a sense of community. I remembered when prune orchards lined Main Street and Intel, Apple, and Silicon Graphics were fantasy. Everything changed with the invention of the integrated circuit. That is when San José was radically and forever transformed into Silicon Valley, the center of high technology. My hometown has since grown ponderous and fruit orchards have given way to bland warehouses and suburban strip malls.

Even though my hometown has evolved into a big city, I find solace knowing that small communities like Globe and Miami remain the same. My images of these communities document not only the environment, but also reveal its beauty by abstracting the details. I focus on the texture of a building, emphasizing the elements of the photograph that translate into the subtle but essential tonal values.

I rejoice in photographing sun-baked buildings with peeling paint; they give evidence to history's passing. The faded coffee shop sign and Gibson's Clothing Store remind me of a bygone era, before the new Wal-Mart took away their customers. My work documents a precarious rural America whose sites have become curios to be immortalized on photographic paper, their value increasing with every new mall erected in Seattle, Austin, and Cleveland. This vanishing America gains value by remaining the same.
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The images in this series were shot on a Hasselblad 500CM/150 T*. The negatives were scanned on a Scitex Leaf Scanner.

Please feel free to contact me should you have any questions about my pictures or text. I look forward to hearing from you.

The photogrphic series is located on my web site: http://www.jmmgarza.com/html/Gibsons.html

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