Adame is one of the original Chicano Park muralists, meaning he was among a group of artists in the 1970s who looked at the pylons under the Coronado bridge on-ramp and saw canvasses instead of concrete.
Chicano Park, in San Diego’s Barrio Logan neighborhood, is a museum in the unlikeliest of places, under a web of highway overpasses. The park's 72 murals have been exposed to the elements for 40 years, and many of them show it. Thanks to a $1.6 million grant from the federal government (and administered by CALTRANS), 18 of the murals are getting a much needed facelift.
Mario Torero, one of the original muralists, says the restoration is necessary. "It is our history. It's something that doesn’t just belong to the Barrio, it belongs to all San Diego, to the world of art, to American art, because this is very much an American art phenomenon, you know?"
Artist Victor Ochoa stands in front of three stories of scaffolding, which allow him to reach the top of one of his murals, titled "All The Way to the Bay." The scaffolding is decorated with flags and a papier-mâché Day of the Dead altar.
"This time that we have a budget is like the first time that I’ve been able to buy pigments, colors that, in my whole life as a mural painter, I’d never been able to afford."
Ricardo Duffy is overseeing the mural restoration project. He says when the murals were first painted, the artists made do with whatever supplies they could get. "At the time, artists really didn’t have money to buy paint so their resources were from car dealerships, and thrown out discarded paints, anything they could get their hands on. It wasn’t a paid mural, it was a movement by the community."
Looking around the park, the newly restored murals pop with fresh color. But inferior paint isn’t the only reason these historic murals have faded, according to Duffy. "We've seen a lot of water damage. And plus the cement expands and contracts throughout the year. There’s fog, there’s marine air, there's fallout from the traffic and soot. There’s hydrocarbons that are hitting them all the time."
Sections of some murals have even been removed by CALTRANS due to lead in the paint. Because of the restoration, those will now be filled in.
Torero says the artists are enjoying being back in the park together. "It’s kind of this reunion. Not only are we refurbishing the walls, we’re refurbishing our own spirits, because we were so together back then. We’ve gone in different directions and now we're coming back and we've grown up and really understand life a little better."
Ochoa says he's enjoying the response from the people who walk in the park every day. "They’ll walk by and then they just sit there. They don’t say nothing, but they have this really beautiful smiling face. Man, it really feels spiritual in a way, people just sitting there with their smiling faces.”
The restoration is expected to be completed in July of 2012.
Tune in to KPBS TV's Evening Edition tonight at 6:30pm to see more of the Chicano Park mural restoration project. Video and audio from Chicano Park will be posted here by 12noon.