By Museo Eduardo Carrillo

Curation by Nicole Rudolph-Vallerga; "Tlacuila Visions" published by Moving Parts Press 2025

Tlacuila Visions: A Conversation with the Creators

Engage with the visionary artists Yreina D. Cervántez and Celia Herrera Rodríguez behind the new artist book, "Tlacuila Visions: Apparitions and Transformations. "

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Engage with the visionary artists Yreina D. Cervántez and Celia Herrera Rodríguez behind the new volume, Tlacuila Visions: Apparitions and Transformations. Joined by editor Laura E. Pérez and book artist/publisher Felicia Rice, these creators share how Cervántez and Herrera Rodríguez embody the ancient role of the tlacuiloque (scribe-painter) to discuss the inequities, histories, and spiritual connection of the Chicane community.

Tlacuila Visions Book TourMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Tlacuila Visions: Apparations and Transformations  is the third and final book in the Califas Legacy Series, published by Moving Parts Press. The book is in the style of a Mesoamerican Codex as an accordion fold art book that positions Chicana artists Yreina D. Cervántez and Celia Herrera Rodríguez as Tlacuila storytellers in conversation with one another. Together they use imagery from their ancestral past to describe the existence of the Chicana today and always.

Celia Herrera Rodríguez working on Tlaltecuhtli installation, Celia Herrera Rodríguez, 2022, From the collection of: Museo Eduardo Carrillo
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Yreina D. Cervántez with artist Reba Diaz Castaneda Acevedo, Yreina D. Cervántez, Reba Diaz Castaneda Acevedo, Oscar Castillo, 2016, From the collection of: Museo Eduardo Carrillo
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Cervántez and Herrera Rodríguez were part of the historic Xicana feminist generation that arose in the late 1960s. Their artwork seeks to honor ancestral Indigenous ways of looking at the world that center an understanding of all life forms as spiritually connected, interdependent, and of equal worth. 

The social role of the Mexica tlacuiloque, the learned painters of “the red and the black inks,” has shaped their artistic sensibilities, guiding viewers toward in ixtli in yollotl,  toward the good hearts and faces of persons of integrity.

Felicia Rice (2025) by Felicia RiceMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Felicia Rice

Book Artist & Publisher, Moving Parts Press

Felicia Rice is an artist, letterpress printer, publisher, and educator. A native Californian rarely found far from the coast, she founded Moving Parts Press in 1977. Rice has published hundreds of books, broadsides, and prints in close collaboration with visual and performing artists, writers, and philosophers. Rice’s books and prints are held in library and museum collections worldwide, and have been included in exhibitions from Mexico City to New York and Japan. The complete Moving Parts Press archive is housed at UC Santa Barbara. She has worked closely with Museo Eduardo Carrillo on several projects, including Tlacuila Visions.

Tlacuila Visions: Apparitions & Transformations - IntroMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Tlacuila Visions: Apparitions & Transformations - Introduction

Laura Pérez (2025) by Laura PérezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Laura Elisa Pérez

Editor & Writer

Laura Elisa Pérez is a leading figure in Chicanx and Latinx scholarship. With a PhD from Harvard and degrees from the University of Chicago, she is a distinguished Professor and Chair of Latinx Research at UC Berkeley. Dr. Pérez is a visionary author and curator whose work reshapes how we view art and identity. For example, her seminal 2007 book, Chicana Art: The Politics of Spiritual and Aesthetic Altarities, fundamentally shifted the field by showing how Chicana creativity acts as a profound site for spiritual and political resistance. Through her prolific writing, Dr. Pérez illuminates the deep intellectual and aesthetic contributions of Chicanx and Latinx people, making her an essential voice in decolonial thought.

Tlacuila Visions: Interview with Laura PérezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Tlacuila Visions: Interview with Laura Pérez

Tlacuila Visions Tlacuila Visions Spread 6Museo Eduardo Carrillo

What Has Become Before
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Celia Herrera Rodríguez (2025) by Celia Herrera RodríguezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Celia Herrera Rodríguez

Artist and Educator

Celia Herrera Rodríguez is a Xicana queer visual artist/educator, whose practice reflects a multi-generational dialogue and engagement with Xicana[x] Indigenous Mexican and North American art, thought, spirituality, culture, and politics.  She is co-founder and co-director of Las Maestras Center for Xicana Indigenous Thought and Art Praxis and is a Teaching Professor of Xicana Art Praxis in the Department of Chicana/o/x Studies at UCSB. In recent years her work has been exhibited nationally including The Oakland Museum of California Art; The Cheech Marin Center of Chicano Art and Culture, Riverside, CA; The Phoenix Art Museum, AZ; and The Perez Art Museum, Miami, FL

Editor Laura Pérez on Celia Herrera RodríguezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo





Editor Laura Pérez on Celia Herrera Rodríguez

Palabra (When Words Were Created) (2018) by Celia Herrera RodríguezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Celia Herrera Rodríguez: Palabra (When Words Were Created)

Watercolor silkscreen and papercut collage on Kozu paper, 29" x 55", 2018.

Herrera Rodríguez’s artworks tells us the story of our origins and our indigenous relationship to the Earth through an imaginary world of fluid and non-binary creator spirits. Through these invented mythologies she embraces the role of Tlacuila/o (artist/storyteller).

Herrera Rodríguez shows us the creation of words through the depiction of two creator spirits peering into a woven basket with a speech scroll emerges from one being’s mouth.


The artist relates this time “when words were handed out” to colonialism when indigenous language and traditions were taken away

“To lose your language is traumatic. You are stunned into silence and as you learn other languages it replaces meaning… I became aware that the Earth itself makes meaning, it leaves clues.”
—Celia Herrera Rodríguez

Celia Herrera Rodríguez on Palabras (When words were created)Museo Eduardo Carrillo

Celia Herrera Rodríguez on "Palabras (When words were created)"

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Abuelita Walkingstick (2004) by Celia Herrera RodríguezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Celia Herrera Rodríguez: Abuelita Walkingstick

Hand-painted (watercolor and colored pencil) silkscreen on Mulberry paper, 25" x 38", 1994-2004.

In this piece Rodríguez reframes the act of remembering who we are and our Indigenous connection to the earth as metaphorical seeds who carry seeds within ourselves.

Her imagery of “Abuelita Walking Stick” shows a curved figure in high heels and a green dress walking between the moon the Earth and Venus and is witnessing us as seeds that become part of the atmosphere.

“It’s the specificity of trying to remember that relocates us as indigenous that relocates us as indigenous peoples to the place of origin that I believe matters...”

Celia Herrera Rodríguez on "Abuelita WallkingStick"Museo Eduardo Carrillo





Celia Herrera Rodríguez on "Abuelita WallkingStick"

Tlacuila Visions Tlacuila Visions Spread 4Museo Eduardo Carrillo

Canto Ocelotl / Jaguar Incantations
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Yreina D. Cervántes (2025) by Yreina D. Cervántes and Lluvia HigueraMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Yreina D. Cervántez

Artist

As a child of the 50’s and 60’s growing up in southwest Kansas and rural Southern California I witnessed injustices and had experiences I did not have words for which became the impetus for a lifelong dedication to social justice. Eventually my path led me to study art, becoming the first university graduate in my family. My art reflects more than fifty years of exploration working in diverse media, and is informed by Native Mesoamerican spirituality/cosmology, Mexican art traditions, Chicanx/Latinx poetics, and a Xicana-Indigena feminist thought and perspective.

Expressed are issues of environmental justice, human rights, and themes of the Sacred; specifically in regards to Xicana/Latina agency and the decolonized feminine body as contested space and site of transformation. A complex layering of symbolism and text from many sources characterize the compositions in my artwork, creating a hybrid language of contemporary glyphs, and a rich visual narrative. Cervántez is Professor Emerita, Department of Chicana/o Studies, California State University Northridge.

Editor Laura Perez on Yreina D. CervántezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Editor Laura Perez on Yreina D. Cervántez

Big Baby Balam (1991/2017) by Yreina D. CervántesMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Yreina D. Cervántez: "Big Baby Balam"

Watercolor, 24” x 18”, 1991-2017.

In this self portrait she is depicted as a Tlacuila and  wears ancient Olmec, Teotihuacan, and mesoamerican symbols and glyphs invoking the spirits and entities relating to the powers of lighting, water, regeneration, the great jaguar Nahual, and maize.

She wears a huipil  top with the pattern of a Jaguar pelt 

On her hand she identifies herself as Tlacuila (artist painter scribe) through the glyphs of the balam (Jaguar) and scribe.

This work is a response to NAFTA policies that have negatively impacted Mexico displacing and further colonizing indigenous lands and peoples.

Yreina D. Cervántez on "Big Baby Balam"Museo Eduardo Carrillo

Yreina D. Cervántez on "Big Baby Balam"

Protectors de la Naturaleza ¡Presente! (2020/2023) by Yreina D. CervántesMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Yreina D. Cervántez: "Protectors de la Naturaleza ¡Presente!

Acrylic on wood panel, 24” x 18", 2020-2023.

This painting acts as an ofrenda for those Human Rights and Environmental Protectors who died because of those who opposed their activism. In the painting Cervántez features three such activists who were all murdered violently  in the past ten years.

Berta Cácares, Lenca Water Protector

1971- 2016
Honduran Environmental Activist and Indigenous Leader.
Co-founder of the Council of Popular and Indigenous organizations of Honduras.

Homero Gómez González

1970-2020
Mexican Environmental Activist, Agricultural Engineer, Politician
Manager of El Rosario Monarch Reserve.

Eugui Roy Martínez Pérez

2009-2020
Student of Biology at the Technical Institute of the Valley of Oaxaca.
Dedicated to the care, defense, and preservation of reptiles and amphibians.

Yreina D. Cervántez on " Protectors de la Naturaleza ¡Presente!"Museo Eduardo Carrillo

Yreina D. Cervántez on " Protectors de la Naturaleza ¡Presente!

Felicia Rice on Collaboration of Tlacuila VisionsMuseo Eduardo Carrillo





Felicia Rice on Collaboration of Tlacuila Visions,

Tlacuila Visions (detail) (2025) by Felicia Rice, Celia Herrera Rodríguez, and Yreina D. CervántezMuseo Eduardo Carrillo

Palabra
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Credits: Story

Tlacuila Visions: Apparitions and Transformations was published by Moving Parts Press with funding from Museo Eduardo Carrillo in 2025 in an edition of 1000 copies. View the full digital copy of the book on the Museo Eduardo Carrillo website.

For more information, visit the Moving Parts Press website.  

For more on the Tlacuila Visions Team:


Felicia Rice
https://movingpartspress.com


Yreina D. Cervántez
Iconic LA mural SAVED: "La Ofrenda" by Yreina Cervantez Returns
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lSHDS6cotNU


Celia Herrera Rodríguez
https://celiahrodriguez.com/ 
https://celiahrodriguez.turnpiece.net/


Laura E. Pérez
https://vcresearch.berkeley.edu/faculty/laura-perez


All art image rights reserved to the artists Yreina D. Cervántez, Celia Herrera Rodríguez, and Moving Parts Press. Photos of Yreina D. Cervántez by Lluvia Higuera. 

Writing by Laura E. Pérez, Nicole Rudolph-Vallerga, and Felicia Rice.
Curation by Nicole Rudolph-Vallerga, Director Museo Eduardo Carrillo

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.