Browse Items (109 total)
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Item Unavailable
Lone person ordering at food court with most items unavailable. -
Kristen we are so proud of you
Silver van in CVS parking lot. Pink balloon letters spell "Kristen we are so proud of you." -
Labor Day at Oceanside Harbor
Pen and paint sketch of Labor Day at Oceanside Harbor. -
Learning to wear a mask
A family friend made masks for our family, including making a special one for Isabel Visintainer (2) and her Minnie to help her learn how to wear a mask. -
Lined up along Craven Drive
Line of cheerers, faculty and staff. One person waving. Craven Drive by Lot B. -
Lined up to cheer on graduates
Line of staff cheering for grads. Signs are from Veterans Services. Craven Drive. -
Lonely Whiteboard
Whiteboard with work on it left as is when campus shutdown. -
Low Ridership
Metrolink [COASTER] poster showing changed train schedule due to low ridership during pandemic. -
Luann and the Virus
I didn't directly address the pandemic in my comic strip LUANN but I wanted to help. So I created a series of six images for the LuannFan page on FaceBook. This is one. -
Mandatory Coverings
Sign on beach mandating a face covering. -
Marilyn in Isolation
Being sent home from CSUSM with instructions to work from home, I was caught by surprise but I thought this would be a nice change of pace and I could find some free time to create my art. What I didn’t know was we’d be home far longer than I expected and the Stay-at-Home quarantine orders was not only coming from our university but also from our state and nation. The news on my television blared and it was nerve wrecking to hear but we couldn’t refrain from listening to it. The excitement in the voice of all newscasters made my heart beat a little faster and the news was creating quite a panic for all. It was not only in our local region but it was global!
I am a double CSUSM graduate and my research and practice has been focused on the arts and mental health. I also teach art healing courses through the CSU Shiley Institute for Palliative Care so I knew what I needed to do. I started by coping mechanisms by sketching rough drafts and dooldes in my sketchbook. It depicted what I was hearing on the news and the stress I was feeling. Then, we were told to wash our hands all the time but now we needed to wear a face mask everywhere we went? Wow, how is this happening in 2020? From sketching in my books and journals, I’d find time to paint in the evenings and on the weekends after spending long periods of time on the computer. Afterall, all communication was now via something called Zoom? What in the world is Zoom, I thought. When I was growing up, my parents taught me and brothers to go outside and play, “get away from the television, it will make you go blind”, they say.
From working in sketchbooks to painting in a small room at home, I wanted to get out. I needed fresh air and sunshine but where could I go without having to wear a mask or be near people? I took a lot of hikes and did some gardening with my husband. This inspired me to paint more. I also had the opportunity to paint an outdoor mural on a wall located in Oceanside, California, at the Muramid Art & Cultural Center founded by my friend and community partner, Joanne Tawfilis. We painted animals and nature on outdoor walls and they were to enclose a cultural garden.
Our nation’s political status was (and still is) a brewing hot pot and stress continues to grow. So many questions, so many uncertainties drove me to create more so I could process what was happening. I painted flowers and nature, colorful animals and people. I painted national symbols and the crisis we are experience during a pandemic. Art is the tool I use, to help me process, connect and communicate with other and to cope through this crisis.
This Covid19 pandemic continues, our global crisis’ continue, so I continue to create.
#ThankANurse
#ProtectOurEarth
#HumanityandLove
#Covid19Sucks
#StayAtHome
#WearAMask
#LovePrevails
#ArtHeals
#MakeArtNotWar -
Masked Shoppers
Shoppers pushing a cart after shopping and wearing face protection. -
Masked up SUV
"White SUV wearing a giant protective face mask! Banner reads ""Congrats Jasmine""
""1st Gen Go Jazz Woot! Woot!"" Parking Lot F." -
Masks
Photograph of 29 masks made over the previous weekend for donation to Rady's Childrens Hospital, San Diego. Not something I ever dreamed I would spend my weekend doing. Using Indonesia batik fabrics from a prior career. -
Masks at the park
While on an afternoon walk, we came upon this group having a gathering at Mulberry Park. -
Measured Family, 2020
My husband and I hadn’t been to my mom and dad’s house in San Diego since the start of the stay-at-home order, and about six weeks later, we decided we'd head down from our house in Escondido and visit them. My mom had set up chairs on the front porch for the four of us, and she had also put out a tape measure to show everyone that we were correctly maintaining our six-foot social distance. -
Michael, Criselda, and Justin Yee celebrate graduation
In CVS parking lot. Michael, Criselda and Justin Yee next to white convertible with sign. -
Monster zoom meeting
Over a year ago my daughter did not know what zoom was. Now it has been a part of her life for a long time now during the pandemic. She has started creating fictional characters [that] have group chats. -
Muramid Art & Cultural Center Outdoor Murals by Marilyn with Joanne
Photographs of mural at Muramid Art & Cultural Center in process of being painted by Marilyn Huerta. Photographs by Joanne Tawfilis.
Being sent home from CSUSM with instructions to work from home, I was caught by surprise but I thought this would be a nice change of pace and I could find some free time to create my art. What I didn’t know was we’d be home far longer than I expected and the Stay-at-Home quarantine orders was not only coming from our university but also from our state and nation. The news on my television blared and it was nerve wrecking to hear but we couldn’t refrain from listening to it. The excitement in the voice of all newscasters made my heart beat a little faster and the news was creating quite a panic for all. It was not only in our local region but it was global!
I am a double CSUSM graduate and my research and practice has been focused on the arts and mental health. I also teach art healing courses through the CSU Shiley Institute for Palliative Care so I knew what I needed to do. I started by coping mechanisms by sketching rough drafts and dooldes in my sketchbook. It depicted what I was hearing on the news and the stress I was feeling. Then, we were told to wash our hands all the time but now we needed to wear a face mask everywhere we went? Wow, how is this happening in 2020? From sketching in my books and journals, I’d find time to paint in the evenings and on the weekends after spending long periods of time on the computer. Afterall, all communication was now via something called Zoom? What in the world is Zoom, I thought. When I was growing up, my parents taught me and brothers to go outside and play, “get away from the television, it will make you go blind”, they say.
From working in sketchbooks to painting in a small room at home, I wanted to get out. I needed fresh air and sunshine but where could I go without having to wear a mask or be near people? I took a lot of hikes and did some gardening with my husband. This inspired me to paint more. I also had the opportunity to paint an outdoor mural on a wall located in Oceanside, California, at the Muramid Art & Cultural Center founded by my friend and community partner, Joanne Tawfilis. We painted animals and nature on outdoor walls and they were to enclose a cultural garden.
Our nation’s political status was (and still is) a brewing hot pot and stress continues to grow. So many questions, so many uncertainties drove me to create more so I could process what was happening. I painted flowers and nature, colorful animals and people. I painted national symbols and the crisis we are experience during a pandemic. Art is the tool I use, to help me process, connect and communicate with other and to cope through this crisis.
This Covid19 pandemic continues, our global crisis’ continue, so I continue to create.
#ThankANurse
#ProtectOurEarth
#HumanityandLove
#Covid19Sucks
#StayAtHome
#WearAMask
#LovePrevails
#ArtHeals
#MakeArtNotWar -
Nationwide Shortage
This work is a sculptural installation created in response to the COVID-19 Pandemic. A trip to the grocery store will never be the same. Walking down aisle after aisle of empty shelves is something we have never before experienced. Panic has caused people to buy up supplies in bulk and hoard them, leaving other community members without. If only you could enter a store without wondering, will they have what I need? The food, supplies, toilet paper my family is out of? If only the shelves could stay stocked. What would you but to get you through this crisis? What our country needs, however, is something you can’t find on the store shelves.Tags Student reflections -
No Mask No Food
Patron leaving a takeout order from restaurant with a sign advising that if you don't have a protective mask you can't takeout food. -
No Toilet Paper
Empty shelves at Target where toilet paper is normally stocked when people wipe out the supply by hoarding. -
Officers at the parade
CSUSM K9, Armor, and CSUSM Police Officer David Angulo! -
One per elevator
Signage in the elevators in CSUSM Kellogg Library. -
Online Worship
Banner raised on side of local church advertising that services are now "on line" due to being prevented from having in-church meetings due to guidelines concerning COVID-19 pandemic.