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255 Sanctuary in Practice: Art, Advocacy, and Survival with Dalia Palacios

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Manage episode 475459336 series 2364022
Content provided by Javier Proenza. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Javier Proenza or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Episode Title: “Sanctuary in Practice: Art, Advocacy, and Survival with Dalia Palacios”

In this luminous and profoundly intimate episode of What’s My Thesis?, host Javier Proenza is joined by teaching artist and community advocate Dalia Palacios, whose multidisciplinary practice and lived experience offer a compelling meditation on resilience, displacement, motherhood, and the transformative power of art.

Palacios, born and raised in Echo Park, Los Angeles, recounts her early creative awakening amid housing insecurity, gentrification, and cultural dislocation. Her trajectory—from riding buses and bicycles across the city, to leading youth art workshops that reflect current gallery exhibitions—unfolds with honesty and urgency. With a voice shaped by community organizing, lived trauma, and poetic resolve, Palacios articulates the many roles she occupies: artist, mother, educator, survivor, and advocate.

A former resident artist at Arts at Blue Roof, Palacios reflects on the pivotal experience of having a dedicated studio for the first time—a moment that catalyzed a deeply collaborative and experimental body of work, incorporating embroidery on paper, recycled materials, sculpture, and storytelling. The residency not only fostered material exploration but also offered a vital container for healing postpartum depression and longstanding mental health challenges exacerbated by the pandemic lockdown.

Throughout the conversation, themes of intergenerational trauma, the stigmatization of mental illness in Latino communities, and the tension between art world access and grassroots engagement are explored with vulnerability and depth. Palacios shares how art has remained her sanctuary from childhood through motherhood, offering a rare continuity of purpose across ever-shifting landscapes.

Highlights include:

  • Her work with students at Angel’s Gate Cultural Center and the exhibition Black in Place

  • Memories of learning to draw in Tijuana and formative punishment-as-creativity exercises

  • Her advocacy against gentrification through graffiti, wheatpasting, and stencil work

  • The profound role of community support in her healing journey

  • The collaborative joy of working on a public mural with L.A. Commons and artist John Treviño

  • Insights into applying for artist residencies as a parent and self-taught practitioner

Palacios’s reflections are a reminder that the act of making art—especially in community—is a radical form of care. Her work speaks to the invisible labor of motherhood, the architecture of survival, and the quiet brilliance of those who create despite the odds.

Follow Dalia Palacios on Instagram @blissone and stay tuned for her forthcoming website.

Keywords: Dalia Palacios, LA artist, teaching artist Los Angeles, postpartum depression art, Arts at Blue Roof, Angel’s Gate Cultural Center, gentrification graffiti, art and healing, Latinx artist mental health, public mural Los Angeles, L.A. Commons, John Treviño, community-based art, artist parent residency, What’s My Thesis podcast.

  continue reading

262 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 475459336 series 2364022
Content provided by Javier Proenza. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Javier Proenza or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

Episode Title: “Sanctuary in Practice: Art, Advocacy, and Survival with Dalia Palacios”

In this luminous and profoundly intimate episode of What’s My Thesis?, host Javier Proenza is joined by teaching artist and community advocate Dalia Palacios, whose multidisciplinary practice and lived experience offer a compelling meditation on resilience, displacement, motherhood, and the transformative power of art.

Palacios, born and raised in Echo Park, Los Angeles, recounts her early creative awakening amid housing insecurity, gentrification, and cultural dislocation. Her trajectory—from riding buses and bicycles across the city, to leading youth art workshops that reflect current gallery exhibitions—unfolds with honesty and urgency. With a voice shaped by community organizing, lived trauma, and poetic resolve, Palacios articulates the many roles she occupies: artist, mother, educator, survivor, and advocate.

A former resident artist at Arts at Blue Roof, Palacios reflects on the pivotal experience of having a dedicated studio for the first time—a moment that catalyzed a deeply collaborative and experimental body of work, incorporating embroidery on paper, recycled materials, sculpture, and storytelling. The residency not only fostered material exploration but also offered a vital container for healing postpartum depression and longstanding mental health challenges exacerbated by the pandemic lockdown.

Throughout the conversation, themes of intergenerational trauma, the stigmatization of mental illness in Latino communities, and the tension between art world access and grassroots engagement are explored with vulnerability and depth. Palacios shares how art has remained her sanctuary from childhood through motherhood, offering a rare continuity of purpose across ever-shifting landscapes.

Highlights include:

  • Her work with students at Angel’s Gate Cultural Center and the exhibition Black in Place

  • Memories of learning to draw in Tijuana and formative punishment-as-creativity exercises

  • Her advocacy against gentrification through graffiti, wheatpasting, and stencil work

  • The profound role of community support in her healing journey

  • The collaborative joy of working on a public mural with L.A. Commons and artist John Treviño

  • Insights into applying for artist residencies as a parent and self-taught practitioner

Palacios’s reflections are a reminder that the act of making art—especially in community—is a radical form of care. Her work speaks to the invisible labor of motherhood, the architecture of survival, and the quiet brilliance of those who create despite the odds.

Follow Dalia Palacios on Instagram @blissone and stay tuned for her forthcoming website.

Keywords: Dalia Palacios, LA artist, teaching artist Los Angeles, postpartum depression art, Arts at Blue Roof, Angel’s Gate Cultural Center, gentrification graffiti, art and healing, Latinx artist mental health, public mural Los Angeles, L.A. Commons, John Treviño, community-based art, artist parent residency, What’s My Thesis podcast.

  continue reading

262 episodes

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