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Telling Stories of Mexican California: Real Life & Myth Making

  • Description
  • Specs
  • Schedule

Description

Though it lasted less than three decades, California’s Mexican period (1822–1846) helped shape the distribution of land, wealth, and power after California officially entered the union in 1850. Telling Stories of Mexican California reflects on this past, and how romanticized retellings made lasting impacts on the state’s culture and popular understandings of its history.

Four people pose in a sepia-tone photograph taken outdoors in 1887. The three people in the foreground - one woman, one older man, and one young woman - are well-dressed. The women stand while the man sits on a stool between them, holding a guitar. The fourth man in the background is looking away from the camera.
Photographer unknown, Antonio Francisco Coronel, wife Mariana (left), and unidentified young woman and man, 1887. Albumen print. California Historical Society.
On an old advertising label, there is an illustration of a woman with a flower in her hair, hoop earrings, and a floral shawl in the foreground. The background shows part of a mission. The label is for the San Fernando Heights Lemon Association and has a title of Ramona Memories.
San Fernando Heights Lemon Association, Ramona Memories citrus crate label, ca. 1930. Lithograph. California Historical Society.

Telling Stories of Mexican California: Real Life & Myth Making broadly outlines California’s history leading up to statehood as a backdrop to the factual and fictional stories that emerged after the US takeover. It considers nineteenth-century Mexican American individuals and families who told their stories and looks at some of the early narratives that helped create an enduring California mythos, as well as the stories that were ignored in favor of this new, often exaggerated or fictionalized lore.

The exhibition, developed by the California Historical Society, draws extensively from the CHS Collection at Stanford and consists of 11 free-standing pop-up banners. The first three bookings of this exhibition are generously sponsored by the Henry Mayo Newhall Foundation.

Telling Stories of Mexican California: Real Life & Myth Making was organized by the California Historical Society, features the CHS Collection at Stanford, and tours through Exhibit Envoy.

Specs

Audience:
General
Rental Fee:
$1,000 + shipping via FedEx for an 8-week booking
Size:
~36 linear feet; 11 freestanding banners @ 33” w x 80” h each
Languages:
English, Spanish (via a binder)
Security:
Limited
Installation Images:
View Here

Exhibit Components:

  • 11 free-standing, retractable, pop-up banners
  • Spanish translated text in binders
  • Exhibition press kit with digital publicity images and template press release

Schedule and Availability

Past Dates

April 7, 2024 – June 2, 2024
Tuolumne County Historical Society, Sonora, CA
June 23, 2024 – August 18, 2024
Santa Monica History Museum, Santa Monica, CA
September 8, 2024 – November 3, 2024
Petaluma Historical Library and Museum, Petaluma, CA
February 2, 2025 – March 30, 2025
Menlo Park Library, Menlo Park, CA
April 20, 2025 – June 15, 2025
AVAILABLE
July 6, 2025 – August 31, 2025
Santa Barbara Trust for Historic Preservation, Santa Barbara, CA
September 21, 2025 – November 16, 2025
San Lorenzo Valley Museum, Felton, CA
January 11, 2026 – March 8, 2026
AVAILABLE
March 29, 2026 – May 24, 2026
AVAILABLE
June 14, 2026 – August 9, 2026
AVAILABLE
August 30, 2026 – October 25, 2026
AVAILABLE
November 15, 2026 – January 10, 2027
AVAILABLE

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