Before the onset of the social and cultural backlash that was brought on by the Reagan administration in the early eighties, Southern
California was ripe territory for the genesis and development of emancipation movements for and by African Americans, Chicanos, pacifists, Marxists,
feminists and homosexuals. Starting in the late sixties, these revolutionary waves particularly influenced practices such as
performance art,
video, installation and collaboration, which led to the construction of alternatives like
artist-run spaces, non-profit spaces and artist-run community art spaces.
In Santa Barbara, Los Angeles and San Diego, collaborative public action was constructed around utopian knowledge which was then redirected towards universities and art schools that favored the emergence of radical
pedagogies. These other manners of experimental thinking, doing and teaching permitted artists to deconstruct certain canons that were inherited from European tradition and art history, and provoked a reexamination of “the American way of life”. In the Canyon, Revise the Canon.