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Several Roadrunners help honor Uvalde victims in mural project

San Antonio muralist Ana Hernandez '17 paints a mural of Maite Yuelana Rodriguez in Uvalde
San Antonio muralist Ana Hernandez '17 paints a mural of Maite Yuelana Rodriguez in Uvalde
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AUGUST 1, 2022 — When people drive or walk past the murals of Amerie Jo Garza and Maite Yuleana Rodriguez they are greeted by some of the brightest smiles ever.

They will learn that Amerie Jo loved art and being a Girl Scout and that Maite dreamed of becoming a marine biologist one day.

These are just two of 21 murals in the “Healing Uvalde” project that will memorialize and honor the two teachers and 19 students who lost their lives during the mass shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas, May 24.

“Art heals. It’s one of the practical aspects of art that many people don’t see. I’m talking about all the fine arts such as music, poetry, creative writing, dance—all of that helps heal,” Abel Ortiz ’99, owner of Art Lab Contemporary Art Space in Uvalde, said.


“I felt if I could contribute somehow, maybe we could help the families ease their pain even just a little bit.”


Healing Uvalde

Following the horrific May 24 tragedy, Ortiz—who has a been a part of the Uvalde community since 2003 after becoming a professor at Southwest Texas Junior College—knew he wanted to do something to help the community that immediately embraced him almost 20 years ago.

“The day after the tragedy, I was watching the reports and one of my former art students, Kimberly Rubio, was hugging her husband Felix who was being interviewed and he said, ‘These deaths will not be in vain. These students will not be a number,’” Ortiz said. “That got me thinking how I needed to take some form of action. And as an artist of course, we’re going to think about art first.”

Ortiz wanted to paint some murals on his gallery’s building, but after thinking further, he believed this was something that needed to go across the entire community.

Together with the Collectors of Chicano/Latinx Art and Allies, a group for collectors of Chicano art on Facebook, Ortiz approached the San Antonio Cultural Arts Center to help spread the word of his initiative.

“Once they helped spread the word, I started getting responses from San Antonio and other areas in Texas,” Ortiz said. “Eventually I got a response from Monica Maldonado who runs a non-profit in Austin called MAS Cultura. We brought her on board as a project manager. She had a lot of connections with muralists from all over the state.”

Twenty-one portrait muralists from around Texas, as well as dozens of artists assistants, are coming together to contribute to this project, including several Roadrunners such as San Antonio muralist Ana Hernandez ’17, artist Gabi Magaly ’20 and Alina De Leon, a current UTSA fine arts student and Uvalde native.





As the artists continue to spend their weekends completing murals, Ortiz said they are already having a heart-felt healing effect on those who see them.

“We had a truck driver and his family stop by the mural of the teacher Eva Mireles on their way to Houston. His wife got off and said, ‘There is light in Eva’s face. There’s a glow coming out of her face that you captured,’” Ortiz said. “It’s that connection to the community these murals will have that will be very much ongoing. People have cried when seeing them. Some of the family members have gone by and cried in front of the mural.”


EXPLORE FURTHER
To help support the Healing Uvalde Mural Project, donate to GoFundMe.

The emotional connections people feel when they see these murals are where the healing process begins, Ortiz added.

“At the end of the day, I want these students and teachers to never be forgotten and remembered forever,” Magaly said. “We want to remember who they were as an individual before this tragedy. Their families and the community will have a place to come visit them. They will have a place to come eat with them or talk to them.”