M
A R K V A L L E N - A short
Biography
Born
in Los Angeles California in 1953 to
parents of Mexican and Spanish heritage,
Mark Vallen has been creating socially
conscious artworks for as long as he can
remember. Being a teenager in the 1960's
sensitized him to politics and alternative
cultural movements, and like many others
of his generation he became involved in
the Civil Rights and anti-War movements.
By 1971, at the age of eighteen, he had
already published cartoons in the Los
Angeles Free Press, the Black Panther
Party newspaper, and self-published his
first street poster, a pre-Watergate
artwork titled, "Impeach Nixon!"
Vallen studied Art at community college
and attended the prestigious Otis Parsons
Art Institute of Los Angeles, but still
considers himself to be largely self
taught. He forged a style shaped not so
much by how others painted, but what they
painted. Vallen has a firm commitment to
figurative realism, and he's derived
inspiration from the rich heritage of
Artists working as social critics and
documentarians. His influences range from
Goya and Daumier, to the German
Expressionists and the Mexican Muralists.
In the late 1970's and early 80's Vallen
became involved in the nascent Punk Rock
scene of Los Angeles. The Artist produced
a myriad of Drawings, Prints, and
Paintings based on those experiences, with
the intent of not only documenting the
underground cabaret-like scene, but of
stirring the passive observer out of the
role of voyeur and into the active one of
participant. In 1979 the Artist worked for
a short time at SLASH magazine (the West
Coast's premier Punk propaganda organ),
and created two cover illustrations for
the infamous publication. He also played a
minor role in the production of "The
Decline of Western Civilization", the
classic Punk Rock documentary by Director
Penelope Spheeris. Concurrent to his
involvement with the Los Angeles Punk
scene, Vallen also developed fraternal
ties to the large Central American refugee
community of L.A., which was then seeking
asylum from the terrible wars engulfing
the region. Sympathetic to the refugee's
plight, Vallen was the first to create and
distribute political posters on the
streets of Los Angeles in the late 70's.
Those artworks combined text with original
images, and were expressions of solidarity
with a people who were largely invisible
to mainstream America. Moreover, Vallen's
posters were bilingual, reviving a
tradition that had reached it's zenith in
the late 60's Chicano Arts movement.
Vallen's exhibitions have been many and
wide ranging. In January 2000, two of
Vallen's Prints were included in an
exhibition of political posters at the
Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York
City. Another of the Artist's Prints was
included in the traveling exhibit and
book, "Just Another Poster? Chicano
Graphic Arts in California", which
was organized by the University Art Museum
- University of California - Santa
Barbara. In early 2003 his Punk Portraits
were a featured part of the Los Angeles
Kantor Gallery's inaugural exhibition.
Today the Artist is concentrating on easel
painting, and he currently works and
exhibits with ARTINO, an L.A. group of
Latino figurative painters who have come
together to bring a greater appreciation
of Latino Art to the world. Members work
in a variety of styles and mediums with an
emphasis on their Latino cultural roots.
Vallen helped to organize "¡El Grito!
Liberation of the Spirit", an ARTINO
exhibition at the Lankershim Art Gallery
celebrating Mexican Independence Day. Mark
Vallen views his Art as being part of a
contentious culture, a continuum of a
challenging, questioning aesthetic,
examining some of the basic precepts of
our society. His work shares a purpose
with Artists past and present who have
grappled with difficult issues and taken
uncompromising stands on them. He
continues to create Art in the belief that
it can make a difference in our world, and
that there can be no social progress
without it.
You can contact Mark Vallen
at: vallen@art-for-a-change.com
Mark Vallen's artworks can be viewed and
purchased from the following online
locations: www.artino.us
www.art-for-a-change.com |
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