BxArts Factory
  • WHO WE ARE
    • Our Story, Mission & Vision
    • The Founders
    • Staff & Volunteers
    • Board of Directors
    • Contact Us
  • WHAT WE DO
    • Art Time with Bronxnet
    • Creative Corner
    • Unlocking The Artist
    • Think/Create/Share Lab
    • Nesting The Arts Project (NAP)
    • ​Bronx and Crafts Monthly
    • Art Exhibitions
    • Arts in the Community
    • #WhatsMyArt Initiative
  • EVENTS
  • STUDIO 13 GALLERY
  • RESIDENCY
  • BLOG
  • SUPPORT US
    • Donate
    • Volunteer
  • Menu Menu

Our Stories: Mario Mejivar – On The Bronx & Becoming

Our Stories

I’ve been drawing since I was a little dude in a seaside town in Honduras, where I was known as the boy who wouldn’t talk. Because my brother was born deaf and couldn’t speak, I had decided to join him and not talk either. But my silence didn’t last and once I began talking I became the boy with a thousand questions. I moved to New York with my parents. They wanted a better life for my brother so they moved to the states and found a special school for kids like him.

Growing up in the Bronx in the 70’s and 80’s, when most of the buildings were burnt or burning down, was difficult. It was a time when corrupt landlords paid people to burn down apartment buildings for the insurance policy. These slumlords left a once proud borough looking like Europe after World War II. Crime rate went up, and my very over-protective parents did everything possible to keep my brother and I busy in our apartment and out of the streets. My brother and I collected comic books, graphic novels, built models and went to the movies. While watching the old TV shows like “The Adventures of Superman” and the Adam West “Batman and Robin,” I drew. Of course, school was very important, and before we got to do all these things, we had to have our schoolwork done.

As I grew older, my teachers at All Hallows High School often caught me sketching during class. Instead of becoming upset with me, they encouraged me to join the poster club where I could draw all I wanted. I did, and alongside another talented artist in the club, we became the official artists for the poster club. I never thought of art as a career. However, I couldn’t hide the fact that art always left me satisfied and somehow centered when I did it. When it was time to pick a career I talked to my advisers and realized that I didn’t want to live a nine to five life, sitting at a desk. There’s nothing wrong with sitting behind a desk, you just must want to do that and know you’re going to enjoy it. I knew that I wasn’t.

So, I chose art and enrolled at The School of Visual Arts in New York where I majored in Fine Arts and Film. I learned a lot at SVA, not just from the great teachers, but also from my fellow students. We sat at the SVA lounge and sketched away. We looked at each other’s work and shared drawing tips, which I still use today. I also met my beautiful wife at SVA; she studied writing. I always joke that I didn’t just come out of SVA with a diploma, I also left with a future wife. After graduating from SVA, I went to work for The Remco Toy Company. Simultaneously, I decided to study at The Arts Students League of New York. There, I majored on Anatomy drawing and painting.

During that time The Disney Studios came to recruit at SVA. A friend of mine at Remco, was also a SVA alumnus, told me about their talent search for their growing animation studio. At first I wasn’t interested, I wanted to be a painter and do book jackets, and I didn’t consider animation an art form, but he talked me into it. A few months later I found myself in Florida on a 3-month internship. An amazing twenty-four year career in the animation industry followed, most of them as part of the Walt Disney Feature Animation studio in Orlando Florida and Los Angeles, California.

My work was featured in eight studio’s films, among them: “Lion King,” ” Pocahontas,” “Mulan,” “Hercules,” “Tarzan,” and “Treasure Planet My work can also be seen in the Warner Bros. film “Looney Tunes: Back in Action.” Around that time, I also reconnected with my illustration roots as an Art Director and Character Designer for several independent animation studios and as Merchandise Designer for Disney and comic covers for DC comics.

After thirteen years in California, my wife and I decided it was time to come back home. We wanted our first born to grow up around our family. Now, I’m back at SVA teaching animation and anatomy. I am also illustrating and co-publishing picture books for my company, MoonBear, where I get to combine my formal drawing skills with the principles of acting and dynamic poses that are the hallmark of animation art. And I’m having a great time doing it. I’ve continued my work with major companies, working with studios like Warner Brothers again on “Tom and Jerry” films.

Since coming back to The Bronx, it’s been amazing to see how much it has changed since I was a kid. From a place with burned buildings and empty lots, to a beautiful town of growth, with new homes and businesses sprouting everywhere. I’m proud to be a Bronxite, where I can bring my experience and share it. I feel so fortunate to be part of a great organization like BxArts Factory. I can now give back to fellow Bronxites, the young and the seasoned, who also want to express themselves as artists.
​
*Edited by Rosemary Rivera and Natalie N. Caro

March 20, 2017/by BxArts Factory
https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/13568891-10206310178343445-4466966067086947966-o.jpg 248 248 BxArts Factory https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bxaf_headerlogo_clrtrans2.png BxArts Factory2017-03-20 20:39:062020-06-24 20:42:29Our Stories: Mario Mejivar – On The Bronx & Becoming

Our Stories: Art At Home by Laura Alvarez

Our Stories

When I reflect on the presence of Art in my life, I can only say it was always there. My mother is an artist and my father is a scientist who loves art. Our vacation consisted of always visiting old historic european places and museums. We appreciated art as a family.

Growing up, everyone always encouraged me to use my imagination and participated in my crazy inventions, theatre productions, ballet choreographies and costume making projects. They encouraged the development of my imagination and creativity by empowering me.

My  community involvement began at fourteen. As a student in high school, I spent an entire summer of environmental volunteering, riding bikes through my hometown in Spain, trying to stop uneducated farmers from starting fires that would burn the forest, and identifying illegal spills. Later, I went on to France to work on a project where we built a recreation park out of an old castle and restored a historical washing place at a little lost town in the middle of Normandy. When I look back, I realize I’ve always been involved in some kind of community-advocacy roll.

Living life is a traumatic experience for most of human beings. If you find the way to channel frustration, ideas, creativity, imagination, fears, instead of burying them in the depths of your soul, you can overcome everything.

Whatever kind of Art form that attracts you, that’s the one is going to save you from being angry, frustrated, or incomplete.

I landed in New York eight years ago and never imagined that I could be a part of something like BxArts Factory, a project that brings together both of my passions, Art and Community. I believe Art means nothing without Community and vice versa.
​
By bringing art to Bronx households, I hope that everyone we work with feels as empowered and free as I felt growing up.

November 13, 2016/by BxArts Factory
https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/laura_1_orig.jpg 743 1100 BxArts Factory https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bxaf_headerlogo_clrtrans2.png BxArts Factory2016-11-13 21:40:542020-06-24 21:49:28Our Stories: Art At Home by Laura Alvarez

Our Stories: Art at Home by John Maney

Our Stories

I’m proud to sit on the Advisory Board for the BxArts Factory, because the arts have played such a major role in my life.
​
I grew up in a place, and at a time where segregation in schooling was a reality. The elementary school I attended was a mix of mainly black, Native American, and Mexican American, with a few lower income whites.  The teachers were all white, and most seemed much more concerned with disciplining children, rather than teaching them. Students were often yelled at and even beaten.
I had a hard time reading, which I found out later was the result of dyslexia. This often led to embarrassment in class, which I tried to cover up, like most kids, by being a class clown. My teachers didn’t see that I was struggling, but chalked it up to me being ‘stupid’ and undisciplined. So, I was yelled at, and at times beaten.

By the time I reached Junior High, my self-esteem was very low, and I wanted to drop out of school. I got in fights, and even joined a gang for short time. But then something amazing happened, I took my first art class, and my teacher saw real talent in the pictures I drew, and painted. They were often of bleak winter scenes, and people with arms and legs balled up and confused. She found something very expressive in them, and would ask me about what they meant. Eventually, she inspired me to paint happier pictures. I even ended up making a green, red poke-a-dot, paper mache’ dragon, that she put on display.
Art gave me a voice that I didn’t have before; It opened a door inside me that I didn’t even know existed. For the first time, I had a teacher who believed in my voice.

Not long after this, I taught myself to read. In high school, I went from hovering around the bottom of the class, to hovering around the top, which landed me an acceptance into a good college.

Art, and a good teacher of art, changed my life.

So, now I do what can to share the arts with others, whether it is the visual arts, or literary arts. The BxArts Factory is all about doing this, and that is why I’m involved with them.  I’m proud to sit on the Advisory Board for the BxArts Factory, because the arts have played such a major role in my life.

November 11, 2016/by BxArts Factory
https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/1478963604.png 176 212 BxArts Factory https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bxaf_headerlogo_clrtrans2.png BxArts Factory2016-11-11 21:49:502020-06-24 21:53:43Our Stories: Art at Home by John Maney

Our Stories: Art At Home by Yolanda Rodriguez

Our Stories

BxArts Factory began with a vision in mind.  That vision is the collection of the experiences of an amazing group of people, including me.  I have seen how art and community made a difference in my life as I made The Bronx my new home in 1997.  I wrote, and served and that connected me to this new community.  It helped me cope with the new world and language around me.  Art was familiar, it was a language that I knew how to speak, it was a recognizable force that drove me closer to achieving my dreams.    I saw myself in art, in a time when I didn’t belong any place or any time.  Art help me remain sane, navigate my soul, my mind and my feelings as I suffered prejudice, was misguided, taken advantage off, or made fun off.  I knew where to go to feel safe.  Art took me back to that moment when I wrote my first poem and I loved it, took me back to the sounds of waves, of the wind, the smells of fresh brewed coffee, took me back to my mother and father’s voices, art took me back where I belong, now.
My father was a teacher, a farmer and an artist.  My mother created beautiful dresses, arts and craft projects, macramé, baking goods and work as a case worker. Both my parents surrounded us with creativity.  I created many memories with them. I watched my father work the clay that he collected from the banks of the river in Maunabo, and made beautiful vases.  I saw how my mother turned a piece of fabric into beautiful master pieces.  The patience and the love will forever stay with me.  I will always remember that my parents wanted us to learn and create with them.  My siblings and I became little apprentices.  We worked with clay, we painted, we baked, we cut fabric, we went to collect materials to create art to the beach or country side.  We were all a creative family.  That was part of my upbringing.  I just can’t imagine a life without art.
BxArts Factory is born out of that understanding.   We know first-hand the power that art has in the lives of the misplaced.   Art does make a difference in the lives of those that create it and in the lives of those that need to experience it.  No one should be denied the right to create.

 

November 6, 2016/by BxArts Factory
https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/1478442736.png 238 197 BxArts Factory https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bxaf_headerlogo_clrtrans2.png BxArts Factory2016-11-06 22:09:292020-06-24 22:13:52Our Stories: Art At Home by Yolanda Rodriguez

Our Stories: Art At Home by Laura Olivera

Our Stories

​Art was recording music from the radio to later write the lyrics on pause and play mode in my composition book of rhymes.  Art was laying on the bed for hours staring into the ceiling wondering “what is life” and my purpose as I naively scavenged through pages of the Word searching for understanding, the answer. Art was Bob Ross’s happy little trees and admiring my name done in my dads signature graffiti. Art was the depth of my mothers thoughts hand written between layers of loose leaf –Art is my Life-Art became me… A kid who grew up Bronx, filled with beauty, edge and tenacity during the great 90’s.

November 6, 2016/by BxArts Factory
https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bbd8e062e99873e1911a00561ca98980.jpg 160 251 BxArts Factory https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bxaf_headerlogo_clrtrans2.png BxArts Factory2016-11-06 22:06:372020-06-24 22:09:00Our Stories: Art At Home by Laura Olivera

Thinking of Home: Story-Telling and Video Stories Community Project

Exhibition News, Exhibitions, Our Stories

Saturday, March 26
From 5:00 p.m. to 
8:00 p.m.
Bronx Music Heritage Center Laboratory
1303 Louis Nine Boulevard
Bronx, NY, 10459

BxArts Factory, in partnership with the Bronx Music Heritage Center, collaborated with the Neighborhood Shopp Senior Center La Casa Boricua to bring you the stories of a group of senior citizens from our community.
​Poets Peggy Robles-Alvarado, Bonafide Rojas, El David & Andres Chulisi Rodriguez will present original works inspired by their stories, including their journeys to the United States and their lives in the Bronx.

Additionally, artist and videographer Melanie Gonzalez will present a series of short video-stories/documentaries created to further highlight their stories. This event will also be the culmination of our art exhibition, Memories Un-Remembered: Thinking of Home (Longing).

FREE EVENT

March 18, 2016/by BxArts Factory
https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/5429136.jpg 340 340 BxArts Factory https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bxaf_headerlogo_clrtrans2.png BxArts Factory2016-03-18 09:47:572020-06-25 09:50:31Thinking of Home: Story-Telling and Video Stories Community Project

South Bronx Love Letter

Arts in the Community, Our Stories

Join us for an evening of art, musical performances and community discussion centered on the immigrant experience and Bronx love.

Artist Not4Prophet will perform original songs inspired by Joe Hill, a Swedish immigrant, songwriter and labor activist, and recount stories from his own life experiences in the Bronx. Following the performance, all attendees are invited to share stories, memories, and ideas in a story circle, and contribute a love note to the Bronx on our “South Bronx Love Letter” interactive station.

This event is presented in conjunction with BxArts Factory ‘s exhibit “Memories Un-Remembered,” a collection of visual stories exploring immigration, nostalgia, displacement, adaptation, and gentrification.

The Bronx Music Heritage Center Laboratory is located at 1303 Louis Niñé Blvd. Take the 2 or 5 trains to Freeman Street, or the BX 19 bus.

“South Bronx Love Letter” is a series of workshops and community events that showcase storytellers, artists, and community members sharing their love for the Bronx through true life stories, poetry, and art. This series aims to affirm the stories of people who have been living in the South Bronx and pouring their love into it, putting forward an image of the Bronx as defined by the people who live there.
Visit www.fiveborostoryproject.org/south-bronx-love-letter for updates on upcoming events!

This is a Free Event Open to the Public

March 9, 2016/by BxArts Factory
https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/4719167.jpg 381 295 BxArts Factory https://bxartsfactory.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/bxaf_headerlogo_clrtrans2.png BxArts Factory2016-03-09 09:53:552020-06-25 09:56:18South Bronx Love Letter

The BxArts Factory’s mission is to bridge the accessibility gap between the arts and the community.

BxArts Factory sponsors regular art exhibitions at venues in the Bronx, organizes programs and networking events for artists, develops emerging artists through workshops and educational programs, collaborates with other organizations and local businesses to strengthen ties to the community and increases community engagement with art through workshops, street fairs, and other events.

Get BXAF News

  Blog Archives

Blog Categories

  • Advisory Committee
  • Anniversary
  • Art at the Bar
  • Artist Residency Project
  • Arts in the Community
  • Block pARTy
  • Blog
  • Boogie on the Boulevard
  • Bronx and Crafts
  • Contest
  • Diartspora Documents
  • DocuSeries
  • Donations
  • Exhibition News
  • Exhibitions
  • Film
  • Fundraising
  • LAN Project
  • Launch
  • Logo
  • Murals
  • Nesting the Arts Project
  • Our Stories
  • Paint the Night
  • Studios
  • The Creative Corner
  • Think/Create/Share Lab
  • Uncategorized
  • Updates
  • Using Our Voices
  • Virtual Events
  • Visiones Culturales
  • Workshop Series
  • YouTube

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

240 East 153rd St.
1st Floor
Bronx, NY 10451
929-614-4344

All content © BxArts Factory, under license or otherwise noted.
Website design & development by Tectonic Seven

CONTACT US |  LOGIN

PRIVACY POLICY  |  TERMS OF USE

Scroll to top