Advocates chronicle LA's Virgin of Guadalupe street art

Oscar Rodriguez Zapata photographs a Virgin of Guadalupe painting in Los Angeles, Saturday, Jan. 21, 2023. 鈥淲henever you see a virgencita you feel safe. You know that your people, your gente, your raza are around,鈥 said Zapata, 35, who, though raised Catholic, identifies as nonreligious. 鈥淚t makes you feel welcome.鈥 (Alejandra Molina/Religion News Service via AP)

LOS ANGELES (RNS) 鈥 There鈥檚 nothing that Oscar Rodriguez Zapata enjoys more than going out for a drive to explore Los Angeles鈥 vast neighborhoods in search of the Virgin of Guadalupe.

He packs his Nikon Z6 II and a Fujifilm X100V and photographs murals, landscapes, storefronts and people across the city鈥檚 Historic South Central and Eastside to South Bay. Street vendors, lowriders and the L.A. skyline are among his favorite subjects.

But his biggest L.A. muse is the Virgin of Guadalupe, said Zapata. Murals, mosaics and other artwork depicting the brown-skinned virgin and of laundromats, liquor stores, mini markets, churches, bakeries, taquerias and tire shops.

鈥淲henever you see a virgencita you feel safe. You know that your people, your gente, your raza are around,鈥 said Zapata, 35, who, though raised Catholic, identifies as nonreligious. 鈥淚t makes you feel welcome.鈥

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January marked 10 years since he began documenting images of Guadalupe, at first on his phone for his own pleasure, but eventually taking his hobby more seriously, particularly as he noticed more and more Guadalupe images were vanishing. In late 2017, he created an Instagram profile devoted to his photos of Guadalupe murals in order to preserve them. He now has more than 6,000 followers.

Zapata focuses on examples of the Virgin on dilapidated buildings in need of a fresh coat of paint or the more intricate and colorful ones that take up entire wall space, as they risk succumbing to gentrification and displacement of Latino communities in L.A.

The Virgin Mary, he said, 鈥渋s much more than a religious symbol.鈥

鈥淚t鈥檚 part of the community and part of who we are,鈥 Zapata said.

Our Lady of Guadalupe is celebrated in many Catholic parishes across Southern California on her feast day, Dec. 12, marking the appearance of Mary to St. Juan Diego, an Indigenous man, near Mexico City in 1531. But Guadalupe finds her way into shrines and murals in Latino neighborhoods year-round, and chroniclers like Zapata document her to pay homage to the culture, faith and traditions of their L.A. neighbors.

Across Los Angeles, images of the Virgin are believed to thwart vandalism and act as 鈥減rotector(s) of small immigrant-owned businesses,鈥 according to journalist Sam Quinones鈥 2016 book of photographs of murals of the saint, 鈥淭he Virgin of the American Dream.鈥

Quinones has seen business owners commission Virgin Mary artworks on their storefronts as 鈥減urely a commercial transaction,鈥 he told an audience last April at 鈥淕uadalupe: Holy Art in the Streets of Los Angeles,鈥 an event hosted by the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies at the University of Southern California.

He spoke of Palestinian and Indian merchants who have put Guadalupe on their walls, with one man saying her image was meant 鈥渢o show people that I鈥檓 with them 鈥 that I鈥檓 not some foreigner guy,鈥 Quinones recalled.

Neither Catholic nor religious, Quinones 鈥 a reporter who has covered crime and gangs in the United States and Mexico 鈥 said he sees the Virgin as 鈥渟oftening the harshness of life,鈥 recalling that he has witnessed how people turned to her in the midst of violence. Once he started photographing her, he said, he became obsessed, turning his head every time he drove by a neighborhood market to see if he would spot a Guadalupe.

Between his reporting in Mexico and documenting Guadalupe in L.A., Quinones understood that images of the Virgin Mary served as a guiding force for undocumented Mexican immigrants 鈥渢o find a way in this new world.鈥

鈥淎ll you鈥檝e got are your guts, your wits and the Virgin of Guadalupe,鈥 he said.

Brenda Perez created the Restorative Justice for the Arts project to help restore and preserve what she calls 鈥渨indows into the spiritual landscape鈥 of L.A. A doctoral candidate in psychology, Perez has researched how sacred Indigenous symbols and community art can help heal trauma and resist discrimination.

鈥淲hen murals with her image are whitewashed, it鈥檚 a sacrilegious act,鈥 Perez said, recalling a Virgin Mary image on a liquor store wall that was recently painted over. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 something that everyone must respect because it鈥檚 a culture.鈥

Nichole Flores, an associate professor of religious studies at the University of Virginia, said religious and political leaders must work to preserve public art, including murals of the Virgin of Guadalupe, that, she said, 鈥渟hapes and grounds certain communities.鈥

Images of Guadalupe, whether embodied in elaborate public murals or displayed on taco trucks, sanctify spaces and 鈥渋nvite us to think about how we can relate with each other across our differences,鈥 said Flores, author of 鈥淭he Aesthetics of Solidarity: Our Lady of Guadalupe and American Democracy.鈥

Flores has explored how Guadalupe images shape Chicano communities in Denver, Colorado, where residents have used Guadalupe to stand against gentrification in their neighborhoods.

She recalled asking Denver-based Chicano artist Carlos Fresquez about the significance of his Guadalupe artwork on the side of a liquor store. To the artist, the image was simply a way 鈥渢o give a sense of place,鈥 Flores said, adding that wherever Guadalupe is, 鈥測ou will know that Mexicans, Mexican Americans, Chicanos are present there.鈥

Illustrating her is a way of saying, 鈥淥ur people are present here,鈥 Flores said. Painting over or covering Guadalupe artwork, 鈥渇eels like an affront to our dignity and personhood.鈥

Growing up in the L.A. County city of Paramount, Nydya Mora, a youth librarian with a background in urban planning, said the Virgin of Guadalupe 鈥渨as everywhere all the time.鈥

鈥淚 just grew fascinated by the creativity that she inspired in people 鈥 the creation of these amazing, beautiful, unique murals,鈥 said Mora, 33.

In 2012, as she was wrapping up her undergraduate degree at Cal Poly Pomona, Mora began to capture Guadalupe street art, thinking of creating a coffee table book for her Catholic mother 鈥渢o show an appreciation for our culture.鈥 An Instagram account where she posts her photos of 鈥渁rtistic expressions of devotion in LA鈥 has amassed more than 13,000 followers. Mora has also put together a Google map of her Virgin of Guadalupe sightings.

One of her more striking images shows a statue of the Virgin atop a bollard at a mini market parking lot in Compton. The shrine is embellished with votive candles and vases filled with flowers propped against the post.

Her photographs are scheduled to appear later this year at a museum on the grounds of Forest Lawn Memorial Park, a cemetery in the city of Glendale.

Mora, who grew up culturally Catholic but is not religious, said Guadalupe represents what she cherishes the most: 鈥淢y mom, my culture and my cities.鈥

鈥淭o see her (Guadalupe) in the streets of Los Angeles, that鈥檚 a form of pride for myself,鈥 she said.

Zapata agrees. On a recent Saturday in January, he drove to Boyle Heights in the city鈥檚 Eastside to shoot a spray-painted image of Mary on the side of Valerio Family Barbershop.

George Valerio, part owner of the shop, said he commissioned the mural to pay homage to his family鈥檚 Catholic faith and to growing up Mexican in the San Gabriel Valley city of El Monte.

Before heading out, Zapata marked the street and specific neighborhood where Guadalupe was featured. Simply captioning the location of the photo with 鈥楲os Angeles鈥 doesn鈥檛 fully capture its essence, Zapata said.

鈥淚 want to represent the people in the community,鈥 he said.

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This article was produced under a grant from Fieldstead and Company, Inc. supporting journalistic exploration of the ways faith traditions inspire artistic creativity.

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