@article{UHR, author = {}, title = { Making Muralist Jokes: Asco's Contestation of the Mural and its Challenge to Chicano/a Aesthetics}, journal = {Utah Historical Review}, volume = {4}, year = {2014}, keywords = {Chicana/o; Chicano/a Movement; Chicano/a Identity; Murals; Muralism; Chicano Civil Rights Movement; Conceptual Art; Chicano/a Art; Mexican-Americans in the United States; Chicano/a Aesthetics; Chicano/a Nationalism; Performance Art; Identity Politics;}, abstract = {The onset of the Chicano civil rights movement in the United States saw the rise of one of the most emblematic forms of public, monumental art: Muralism. The Chicano/a artists that aimed to highlight issues pertaining to their communities considered the Mexican Mural Movement of the 1920s-30s-and its tropes, icons, and codified histories-a direct predecessor. Soon thereafter, many Chicano/a artists began to construct a strong sense of identity through their work. Although muralism, the Chicano medium form par excellence, was an empowering form of community social art and visibility, many Chicano/a artists found its impositions on Chicano/a identity limiting and constricting because it established an \"official\" form of Chicano/a art making. Active from 1972-1985, the Chicano conceptual avant-garde group Asco sought to redefine the confines of Chicano/a art-making by clashing the established parameters of traditional Chicano/a culture with clandestine and ephemeral art making, thus questioning the veracity of a fixated, or rather walled, Chicano/a identity. Asco deconstructed the artistic limitations the Chicano/a art conventions of their time imposed on them and approached the static medium of muralism through public performances, interventions, happenings, site appropriation, and graffiti. Through a study of their approach to muralism, this paper aims to demonstrate Asco's challenge to the medium and how it successfully expanded and redefined the possibilities of creating Chicano/a art.   }, issn = {2374-1570}, pages = {109–124}, url = {https://epubs.utah.edu/index.php/historia/article/view/1172} }