Bibliography

Mapping Resistance: The Young Lords in El Barrio and Ride or Die by Miguel Luciano

Miguel Luciano was born in Puerto Rico but has lived in New York for most of his life. He makes many exhibitions that revolve around Puerto Rican culture, history, and politics both in the Newyorican community and on the island. What is inspiring is that Luciano creates an environment where people are excited to learn about PR culture. In “Ride or Die,” he speaks on the politics in PR through vintage Schwinn bicycles showing the year of the party’s creation and the corresponding colors. In “Mapping Resistance: The Young Lords in El Barrio,” he blew up photos of the Young Lords (the New York chapter) and displayed them in the places they happened more than 50 years ago; He also did walking tours for it. I want to take a page from his book and add Puerto Rican history and symbolism in my work as a way to start a conversation and, at the same time, engage with people.

” This project featured the photography of Hiram Maristany, a lifelong resident of East Harlem who was the official photographer of the Young Lords, and a founding member of the New York chapter. Historic photographs of activist moments of the Young Lords were enlarged and installed throughout East Harlem, at the same locations where the events took place fifty years ago.” – Miguel Luciano
Ride or Die (2017) was a solo exhibition at BRIC featuring newly commissioned work – sculptures featuring customized vintage Schwinn bicycles that commemorate the traditions of Puerto Rican bike clubs in New York. This body of work, combined with paintings, additional sculpture and historic ephemera question the colonial relationship between the United States and Puerto Rico, at the centennial mark of U.S. Citizenship for Puerto Ricans (1917-2017)while exploring the current economic and political crisis on the island and its implications for the diaspora.” – Miguel Luciano

https://www.miguelluciano.com/

Bianca Granulau – Independent Reporter

Bianca Granulau is a strong independent reporter in Puerto Rico. She has consistently advocated for the island and speaks on scandals that the government tries to hide. Her work is thorough and easy to understand, even for audiences unfamiliar with PR politics. She reaches out to the communities and interviews the affected people and officials fighting for the island. In Bad Bunny’s El Apagón, Granulau explains the situation with the hurricane, blackouts, and gentrification in Puerto Rico.

“Aquí Vive Gente tells part of the story of colonial domination by showing how those with money from the mainland United States and elsewhere are flooding into the island in large numbers, displacing many native Puerto Ricans.”
@biancagraulau

Reply to @nuggettmama A victory for protesters defending natural resources in Puerto Rico. #rincon #puertorico

♬ original sound – Bianca Graulau
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