Santa Fe Chicano mural slated for destruction for new museum
An iconic Chicano mural in Santa Fe painted by Mexican American artists is scheduled for destruction to make way for a new contemporary museum, generating a debate about gentrification and whose culture state and city officials are seeking to preserve.
The New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs said last month state officials have determined the “Multi-Cultural” mural whose creation was headed by Gilberto Guzman is “unstable with extensive cracking” and, therefore, beyond repair.
“No treatment is currently possible that can fully address the integrity of either the original image or the artist’s esthetic intent,” the agency said in a statement Dec. 10. “Many public art programs consider murals to be temporary with a lifespan of approximately 10-20 years.”
But writer Alicia Inez Guzman of Truchas said the destruction of the mural is evidence of the erasure of Mexican American culture in the capital city of New Mexico — the nation’s most Hispanic state. She questioned whether state officials actively engaged with Mexican American activists enough about the mural and what was at stake.