Nora Chapa Mendoza (born 1932) is a Texas-born artist.[1] She has been named Michigan Artist of the Year[2] and in 1999 she received the Governor's Arts Award.[2] In 1996, she was one of eight artists that participated in the renovation of Detroit's Music Hall.[3]
She has become well known for the forms hidden within her abstract paintings.[7] Her paintings often draw on themes of immigration and deterritorialization,[8] human rights, labor, rebellion [9] and are informed by her Mexican heritage and her experiences as an artist in Detroit.[4] She has done work including restoration, workshops, artist in residence, and murals.[4]
In 1981, she opened Galeria Mendoza in Detroit, which became the "first legitimate Latin American art gallery ever established in Detroit."[4]
She has exhibited nationally and internationally, and her work is represented in collections around the world. Her collectors include Detroit's former Mayor Dennis Archer, singer Aretha Franklin, actor Edward James Olmos, and the former president of General Motors Mr. Jack Smith. Corporate collectors include the Ford offices in Rockefeller Plaza (New York, New York), Edison Plaza (Detroit, Michigan), General Motors offices (Detroit, Michigan), and Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Michigan (Detroit, Michigan).[5]
She was named the Visual Artist of 2011 by the Wayne County Council for Arts, History & Humanities.[4]
^Hernández-Ávila, Cantú, Inés, Norma Elia (2016). Entre Guadalupe y Malinche: Tejanas in Literature and Art. Texas: University of Texas Press. p. 223. ISBN978-1477308363.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Mendoza, Nora Chapa (March 23, 2001). "Race and Culture in the 21st Century, Nora Chapa Mendoza". International Center for the Arts of the Americas at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Documents of 20th Century Latin American and Latino Art, Digital Archives. Retrieved March 1, 2016.