• Home
    • Get the Podcasts
    • About
      • Contact Latinopia.com
      • Copyright Credits
      • Production Credits
      • Research Credits
      • Terms of Use
      • Teachers Guides
  • Art
    • LATINOPIA ART
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Film/TV
    • LATINOPIA CINEMA
    • LATINOPIA SHOWCASE
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Food
    • LATINOPIA FOOD
    • COOKING
    • RESTAURANTS
  • History
    • LATINOPIA EVENT
    • LATINOPIA HERO
    • TIMELINES
    • BIOGRAPHY
    • EVENT PROFILE
    • MOMENT IN TIME
    • DOCUMENTS
    • TEACHERS GUIDES
  • Lit
    • LATINOPIA WORD
    • LATINOPIA PLÁTICA
    • LATINOPIA BOOK REVIEW
    • PIONEER AMERICAN LATINA AUTHORS
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Music
    • LATINOPIA MUSIC
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Theater
    • LATINOPIA TEATRO
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Blogs
    • Angela’s Photo of the Week
    • Arnie & Porfi
    • Bravo Road with Don Felípe
    • Burundanga Boricua
    • Chicano Music Chronicles
    • Fierce Politics by Dr. Alvaro Huerta
    • Mirándolo Bien with Eduado Díaz
    • Political Salsa y Más
    • Mis Pensamientos
    • Latinopia Guest Blogs
    • Tales of Torres
    • Word Vision Harry Gamboa Jr.
    • Julio Medina Serendipity
    • ROMO DE TEJAS
    • Sara Ines Calderon
    • Ricky Luv Video
    • Zombie Mex Diaries
    • Tia Tenopia
  • Podcasts
    • Louie Perez’s Good Morning Aztlán
    • Mark Guerrero’s ELA Music Stories
    • Mark Guerrero’s Chicano Music Chronicles
      • Yoga Talk with Julie Carmen

latinopia.com

Latino arts, history and culture

  • Home
    • Get the Podcasts
    • About
      • Contact Latinopia.com
      • Copyright Credits
      • Production Credits
      • Research Credits
      • Terms of Use
      • Teachers Guides
  • Art
    • LATINOPIA ART
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Film/TV
    • LATINOPIA CINEMA
    • LATINOPIA SHOWCASE
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Food
    • LATINOPIA FOOD
    • COOKING
    • RESTAURANTS
  • History
    • LATINOPIA EVENT
    • LATINOPIA HERO
    • TIMELINES
    • BIOGRAPHY
    • EVENT PROFILE
    • MOMENT IN TIME
    • DOCUMENTS
    • TEACHERS GUIDES
  • Lit
    • LATINOPIA WORD
    • LATINOPIA PLÁTICA
    • LATINOPIA BOOK REVIEW
    • PIONEER AMERICAN LATINA AUTHORS
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Music
    • LATINOPIA MUSIC
    • INTERVIEWS
    • FEATURES
  • Theater
    • LATINOPIA TEATRO
    • INTERVIEWS
  • Blogs
    • Angela’s Photo of the Week
    • Arnie & Porfi
    • Bravo Road with Don Felípe
    • Burundanga Boricua
    • Chicano Music Chronicles
    • Fierce Politics by Dr. Alvaro Huerta
    • Mirándolo Bien with Eduado Díaz
    • Political Salsa y Más
    • Mis Pensamientos
    • Latinopia Guest Blogs
    • Tales of Torres
    • Word Vision Harry Gamboa Jr.
    • Julio Medina Serendipity
    • ROMO DE TEJAS
    • Sara Ines Calderon
    • Ricky Luv Video
    • Zombie Mex Diaries
    • Tia Tenopia
  • Podcasts
    • Louie Perez’s Good Morning Aztlán
    • Mark Guerrero’s ELA Music Stories
    • Mark Guerrero’s Chicano Music Chronicles
      • Yoga Talk with Julie Carmen
You are here: Home / Blogs / RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 01.26.24 OSCAR CASTILLO PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE CHICANO EXPERIENCE

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 01.26.24 OSCAR CASTILLO PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE CHICANO EXPERIENCE

January 27, 2024 by wpengine

Oscar Castillo: Photographer, Teacher, and Documentor of Chicano Experience

Oscar Castillo, “Farewell to 6th Street Bridge.”

Oscar Castillo is one of the premier Latino photographers in the United States. His inclusion in three early exhibits in Los Angeles in 1972 and Bellas Artes in Mexico City in 1974 established him as one of his generation’s earliest recognized Chicano media artists.

Oscar Castillo, “Moratorium in the Rain, East Los Angeles.

Castillo’s collection of photos at the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center accumulated over 55 years includes more than 4,000 prints This is the largest archive for a Chicano or Latino photographer in this country. Several additional California museums have collected his photos, and, most recently, the Smithsonian Museum of American Art in Washington, D.C. acquired some of his
early important works.

Castillo is an award-winning photographer best known for documenting East Los Angeles, the nation’s largest Mexican community. The greater city of Los Angeles emerged as one of the pivotal cities contributing to Chicano politics and culture in the United States during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Dr. Chon A. Noriega, former Director of UCLA’s Chicano Studies Research Center, wrote recently: “Motivated artistically and identifying politically, Castillo photographed Chicano protests, parades, and ordinary public life in what proved a period of profound social and political upheaval.”

Oscar Castillo, “Maravilla Guadalupe Murals.”

Oscar Castillo and many other Latino artists have recently turned to art blogs and websites to make their art known. The art blog Artnet identified this emerging trend as the “Global Gallery.” Artists are exhibiting virtually which makes them no longer solely dependent on museums and galleries to display their work. As a result, I was pleased to see that Castillo’s new exhibit is listed in “onodream Gallery,” one of these online galleries [listed at the end of the essay]. There are currently ten Castillo images in the virtual gallery that anyone can immediately access. Ten more images will be added in February and another ten in March.

Oscar Castillo, “Pet Shop, Boyle Heights.”

Castillo was born in El Paso, the son of Victor Ramon Castillo and Bertha Alvarez. Both of his parents were natives of El Paso. His grandparents came to El Paso from Zacatecas and Northern Mexico respectively. His father served in the Army Air Corps during World War II and returned to El Paso after the war to attend the University of Texas El Paso. After commissioning as an officer, the senior Castillo served in the Air Force as a navigator.

Oscar Castillo, “Crystal City Workers,” 1971.

The military was an important segment of young Castillo’s life because his family moved to numerous states before settling in California where he completed his secondary education at Belmont High School in East Los Angeles. He attended a local community college but left after one year. Expecting to be drafted by the U.S. Army, Castillo joined the Marine Corps.

When Castillo finished Marine Corps Basic Training, the majority of the new Marines were being deployed to Vietnam. Perhaps because of his college training or skills identified by a battery of tests, Castillo trained as a radio operator. Over the years 1964-68, Castillo was stationed in Marine bases at Marine Corps Air Station in El Toro, California, Japan, and Camp Pendleton, California. While in Japan he decided to buy a camera. This decision to document his surroundings in Japan changed his career trajectory forever.

Oscar Castillo, “Barrio Ballet.”

Upon completing military service in 1968, Castillo returned to Los Angeles and enrolled at Valley Community College. The following year, he transferred to San Fernando Valley State College in Northridge, California where he majored in 2-Dimensional Design. Castillo also gravitated to the newly created Chicano Studies Department and enrolled in several of Dr. Rodolfo Acuna’s
history classes. Dr. Acuna learned of Castillo’s skills in photography and enlisted him to furnish photos for his book Cultures in Conflict published for use in middle-school social studies classes in California in 1970.

I met Castillo in 1970 when I joined the Chicano Studies Department as an Assistant Professor. I taught four classes of Chicano and Latin American history per semester. Castillo joined the Chicano student organization Mecha which Jose Galvan, my high school buddy from San Antonio, Texas, chaired. At the time I was teaching I was completing my doctorate at UCLA. Although I was always busy, occasionally I hung out with Castillo [we shared a mutual love for photography] and three of the Mecha leaders, Jose Galvan, Carlos Reyes, and Mario Longoria. All three of these leaders had been by chance classmates of mine in San Antonio.

In 1970, Castillo spent a college semester in Crystal City documenting the early years of the La Raza Unida Party. Castillo traveled with La Raza leader Jose Angel Gutierrez as he recruited Chicanos from South Texas and San Antonio to work in Crystal City, the motherland of Brown Power in Texas. Gutierrez succeeded in recruiting several artists from Texas A&M in Kingsville who worked
closely with Raza Unida leaders Mario Compean and Nacho Perez in San Antonio. Castillo’s photos of Crystal City politics and community life represent a valuable collection at UCLA and UT Austin and document this important period of Chicano history.

Oscar Castillo, “Castillo Family portraits at Pacific Standard Time” exhibit.

Castillo also served on the staff of Con Safos Magazine and as a contributor to La Raza Magazine which covered the major events of the Chicano Movement. His photos of the 1970 Chicano Moratorium [A march against the Vietnam War] are highly significant to historians studying that era. I recommended Castillo to my British friend, Bruce Tulloh, a former Olympian and writer for the London Observer who wanted to document famed Indigenous runners in Mexico. Castillo traveled with Tulloh to the Sierra Madre in Northern Chihuahua for a story on the amazing Tarahumara Indian [Raramuri] runners known to run dozens of miles through mountainous terrain with exceptional endurance.

After Castillo graduated from California State University Northridge and completed his studies in Film Production at UCLA in 1974, he worked briefly in television production. From the 1980s to the present he has worked as a freelance photographer and media artist. He also worked for 18 years at the City of Pico Rivera as a city photographer and art instructor.

Oscar Castillo, “Home Shrine.”

Castillo is the consummate urban photographer. This is the first time anyone has documented East Los Angeles with greater precision and understanding. In his artist statement, he elaborates on his artistic values: “My photography carries on my early memories of community, family, and a sense of place, although I have chosen to look at a much larger extended family and community.”

__________________________________________________

Copyright 2024 by Ricardo Romo. All photos copyrighted by OScar castillo and used with permission. Oscar Castillo’s works can be seen at this website: https://onodreamgallery.com/section/496976-OSCAR%20CASTILLOBehind%20The%20Scenes.html

___________________________________________________

 

Filed Under: Blogs, Ricardo Romo's Tejano Report Tagged With: Dr. Ricardo Romo, Ricardo Romo's Tejano Report

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 5.31.25 LATINOS INFLUENCE NEW YORK ART SCENE

May 31, 2025 By wpengine

Latino Artists Are Influencing the New York City Art Scene. I love New York City [NYC], a city with world-class museums, brilliant theatre, opera and orchestra venues, fabulous art galleries, artists’ studios, and more than twenty-three thousand restaurants to delight and often surprise every taste. What I love best about this great city is its […]

BURUNDANGA BORICUA DEL ZOCOTROCO 5.23.25 – EMINENT DANGER

May 23, 2025 By wpengine

In 2012, in Puerto Rico there were 13,000 farms; in the recent agricultural census, between 8 and 10,000 farms are recorded; a substantial decrease in the figure reported for 2012. At present, the agricultural sector of the Puerto Rican economy reports approximately 0.62% of the gross domestic product, which produces 15% of the food consumed […]

BURUNDANGA BORICUA DEL ZOCOTROCO 5.23.25 MORE ON THE NEED TO GROW

May 23, 2025 By wpengine

The title of the documentary, The Need to Grow by Rob Herring and Ryan Wirick,  is suggestive. Its abstract character is enough to apply in a general and also in a particular way. The Need to Grow applies to both the personal and to so many individuals. At the moment, the need for growth in […]

MIS PENSAMIENTOS with ALFEDO SANTOS 5.31.25

May 31, 2025 By wpengine

Bienvenidos otra vez a La Voz Newspaper. Como pueden veren la portada de este ejemplar, tenemos al maestro de la musica de Mariachi Zeke Castro. As you read his story you will discover the long trajectory of his career across the United States and his impact of Mariachi music education in the Austin Independent School […]

More Posts from this Category

New On Latinopia

LATINOPIA ART SONIA ROMERO 2

By Tia Tenopia on October 20, 2013

Sonia Romero is a graphic artist,muralist and print maker. In this second profile on Sonia and her work, Latinopia explores Sonia’s public murals, in particular the “Urban Oasis” mural at the MacArthur Park Metro Station in Los Angeles, California.

Category: Art, LATINOPIA ART

LATINOPIA WORD JOSÉ MONTOYA “PACHUCO PORTFOLIO”

By Tia Tenopia on June 12, 2011

José Montoya is a renowned poet, artist and activist who has been in the forefront of the Chicano art movement. One of his most celebrated poems is titled “Pachuco Portfolio” which pays homage to the iconic and enduring character of El Pachuco, the 1940s  Mexican American youth who dressed in the stylish Zoot Suit.

Category: LATINOPIA WORD, Literature

LATINOPIA WORD XOCHITL JULISA BERMEJO “OUR LADY OF THE WATER GALLONS”

By Tia Tenopia on May 26, 2013

Xochitl-Julisa Bermejo is a poet and teacher from Asuza, California. She volunteered with No More Deaths, a humanitarian organization providing water bottles in the Arizona desert where immigrants crossing from Mexico often die of exposure. She read her poem, “Our Lady of the Water Gallons” at a Mental Cocido (Mental Stew) gathering of Latino authors […]

Category: LATINOPIA WORD, Literature

© 2025 latinopia.com · Pin It - Genesis - WordPress · Admin