Online art event supports mutual aid organization in Mexico City

Just weeks after the Covid pandemic started to rip through Mexico City the mutual aid group Ayuda Mutua was formed and has since expanded to include a dozen or so organizations and lots of volunteers and donors all over the city.

While providing despensas (weekly food baskets of basics) has been the group’s main focus, they’ve also found the time and energy to get involved in other efforts for local musicians, street vendors and marginalized communities that are struggling through difficult economic times.

On Tuesday Ayuda Mutua has put together an online event they hope will weave a stronger web of mutual support between local consumers and artists. A series of talks and online performances will include Diego Beyró of Casa Equis art gallery discussing how Covid has impacted Mexico City’s art world, performance artist Andrea Garay Almada performing a piece based on movement as a form of intercultural communication, and Wakolda Lefxarw preforming a part of Medea Mapuche by Chilean playwright Juan Radrigan among other performances and talks.

Interspersed among performances will be videos created by of some of Ayuda Mutua’s partner organizations. Casa Frida is a temporary home for women and trans persons needing refuge. Heroes Locales is an offshoot of Ayuda Mutua that has been working to support market and street vendors in the city during the pandemic.

Newspaper vendors from Mi Valedor, Mexico City’s first newspaper with a self-employment model for marginalized communities, will be sharing some of their photos with the online audience and talking about their significance.

Beneficiaries of each of these organizations will also have work in the online gallery. The gallery includes local pieces including one-of-a kind silk-screened sweatshirts, traditional handicrafts, woven goods and original paintings and photographs. Proceeds from the sales will be split down the middle between the artists themselves and the group’s mutual aid fund that purchases the weekly despensas delivered throughout the city to needy families.

“The idea is to build community and networks of mutual aid while at the same time helping local artists survive this difficult economic time. We want to show people that through mutual support we can be a stronger, more resilient community. It’s also, of course, going to be a really fun time,” says Hector Bialostozky, who is running PR for the event.

The online event is free but donations are welcome. To join the event and see the online art gallery visit the Ayuda Mutua Facebook page.

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

Did the government cover up February’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill?

0
The Sheinbaum administration strongly denies it, but prominent environmental groups, including Greenpeace and Cemda, say that nearly a month after the spill was discovered, the public was still not informed.

iPhone launches Tap to Pay in Mexico, expanding the country’s digital payment options

0
Apple's Tap to Pay is now live in Mexico, giving businesses a low-barrier path to digital payments as the country works to reduce its heavy reliance on cash.

13 Mexicans have died in US custody during the Trump administration

2
The victims ranged in age from 19 to 69 and suffered their fate in several different states across the nation, from California to Florida.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity