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Mexicali Rose Media/Arts Center

Mexicali Rose is a grass roots communitarian organization dedicated to providing free access to artistic media for the community youth of Mexicali, Baja California.

The purpose of this project is to give bordertown youth an avenue to express themselves and reflect their environment creatively and positively through art. The center serves the artistic community in 5 distinct yet unified areas: free media and artistic workshops, community gallery, microcinema, 24-hour free and uncensored internet radio, and a community library/video library.

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"Circulation," 2014. Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego. | Photo: Cristopher Cichocki.
The site-specific installations of Cristopher Cichocki's "New Earth Art" address issues related to an increasingly toxic global environment.
TJ in China Project Space connects Baja artists looking to become more connected with the international art world limelight.
L.A.-based artist's Daniel Gibson's artwork continues to be influenced by his upbringing in the remote deserts of Imperial Valley.
Photographer Stefan Falke's "La Frontera" humanizes the Mexico/U.S. border through his portraitures of artists working in border cities.
Luis G. Hernández's informed techniques aim to pull the spectator in for a more intimate discourse on identity, politics, and aesthetics.
Mexicali Rose is a grass roots communitarian organization dedicated to providing free access to artistic media for the community youth of Mexicali, Baja California.
Artbound caught up with four of the border neomuralism scene's most prolific urban artists to talk about beginnings, influences, and work methodology.
Alonso Elias has collected emblematic work from seminal artists of the Tijuana movement.
ToroManchado
Rafael Veytia Velarde has been photographing the Mexicali border for over a decade, bestowing visibility to the neglected and misrepresented portion of Mexicali's society.
Pablo Castaneda's work is a vivid patchwork of all that is beautiful and devastating about life on the U.S.-Mexico border.
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Graffiti Row is an approximately 2 mile stretch of outsider art creations in Imperial Valley, comprised of covert, man-made rock formations depicting anything from animals to names.
Five local bands from the Coachella Valley chat about their takes on the local music scenery, the desert as influence, and the Coachella Music Festival.
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