Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity | Yo También | cento for Ella, Danny's mom, from books in his library
khora.substack.com
Welcome to Khôra, a dynamic online arts space produced in collaboration with Lidia Yuknavitch’s Corporeal Writing. Visit our Archive to read previous issues. Issue 16’s Featured artist Rosemary Meza-DesPlas is a multidisciplinary artist who works in drawing, painting, installation, fiber art, performance, and video. Rosemary was born and raised in the Dallas, Texas suburb of Garland. Her mother, from Allende (Coahuila), Mexico, came to the United States as a migrant farm worker; her father grew up in Tampico, Mexico. The tenacity of her eight aunts in the face of personal tragedies and adversities was an early inspiration; their narratives contributed to her embrace of feminist ideology. She says of her work:
Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity | Yo También | cento for Ella, Danny's mom, from books in his library
Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity | Yo…
Aftermath of Obliteration of Eternity | Yo También | cento for Ella, Danny's mom, from books in his library
Welcome to Khôra, a dynamic online arts space produced in collaboration with Lidia Yuknavitch’s Corporeal Writing. Visit our Archive to read previous issues. Issue 16’s Featured artist Rosemary Meza-DesPlas is a multidisciplinary artist who works in drawing, painting, installation, fiber art, performance, and video. Rosemary was born and raised in the Dallas, Texas suburb of Garland. Her mother, from Allende (Coahuila), Mexico, came to the United States as a migrant farm worker; her father grew up in Tampico, Mexico. The tenacity of her eight aunts in the face of personal tragedies and adversities was an early inspiration; their narratives contributed to her embrace of feminist ideology. She says of her work: