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You are here: Home / THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA / THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA 7.04.24

THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA 7.04.24

July 4, 2024 by wpengine

THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA: HAPPY JULY 4TH AND DÍA DE LOS REFUGIOS! RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT WITH CELIA ÁLVAREZ MUÑOZ AND MAURO MURILLO AND REMEMBERING DYLCIA PAGAN.

We’re hoping you are all celebrating Independence Day and we would remind you that while in most circle July 4th means Independence Day, for those who celebrate Saint’s Days, July 4th is also the Saint’s day for anyone named Refugio. Check out poet and narrative author Alberto “Tito” Rios as he explains what July 4th inevitably meant for him. Next fourth, you’ll have to think of the “Refugios.”

This week Dr. Ricardo Romo salutes small venue art centers in San Antonio who are showcasing great Latino art,  such as that made by artists Celia Ålvarez Muñoz and Mauro Murillo. Once again Ricardo brings insight into the great art going on in Texas!

And this week Latinopia is saddened by the loss of a legendary television producer and vociferous defender of the rights of the Puerto Rican people, Dylcia Pagan.  A lifelong nationalist who understood the history of the United States occupation of Puerto Rico which ultimately led to the island’s current bizarre status as a de facto colony of the United States.  Dylcia was motivated to take an active role in what she saw as the liberation struggle of her country by leaving her successful job as a New York and Boston-based television producer and instead joining the Fuerzas Armadas de Liberacion Nacional (FALN) whose goal was an independent Puerto Rico. Dylcia spent almost twenty years in prison for her activities which the government labeled as seditious. She passed on June 30, 2024 having received clemency in 1999. We post here a tribute by fellow television producer Eduardo Aguiar.

We hope you have a peaceful celebration of the 4th.

Tia Tenopia

Filed Under: THIS WEEK ON LATINOPIA, Tia Tenopia Tagged With: This Week on Latinopia. Tia Tenopia

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 1.30.26 ALEJANDRO DÍAZ AT RUIZ-HEALY ART GALLERY

January 29, 2026 By wpengine

Alejandro Díaz, A Latino Texan-New Yorker Exhibits at Ruiz-Healy Art Gallery. Texas native Alejandro Díaz developed an artistic practice over thirty-five years grounded in the bicultural and visual mix of South Texas and Mexico, with formative ties to Mexico City in the early 1990s. He is known for multi-media work: cardboard signs, neon, sculpture, furniture, […]

EL PROFE QUEZADA NOS DICE 1.30.26 NO PORK ON FRIDAYS – A DUAL CULTURAL LEGACY

January 29, 2026 By wpengine

The Rio Grande has long been more than a river dividing nations; it has been a meeting place of cultures, faiths, and hidden legacies.  Along its banks, towns in northern Mexico and South Texas became home to families who carried with them traditions that were not always spoken aloud.  Among these were crypto-Jews—descendants of Sephardic […]

EL PROFE QUEZADA NOS DICE 1.24.26 TWO MEXICAN FILM GREATS

January 24, 2026 By wpengine

During the 1940s and 1950s, two of the well-known Mexican actors of the Golden Age of Mexican cinema that I would see on the big screen at the Cine Azteca in the Barrio El Azteca were Arturo de Córdova and René Cardona.  The Cine Azteca was located at 311 Lincoln Street and was situated in the […]

RICARDO ROMO’S TEJANO REPORT 1.24.26 CHICANO AND MEXICAN ART AT MCNAY MUSEUM

January 24, 2026 By wpengine

The McNay Art Museum, founded in 1954 as Texas’s first modern art museum, occupies Marion Koogler McNay’s Spanish Colonial Revival mansion in San Antonio. The museum is situated on 24 landscaped acres, featuring courtyards, a fish pond, and a beautiful nature garden. The museum’s collection of over 20,000 artworks showcases 19th- and 20th-century European and […]

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