This Boston artist creates murals that have a message: 鈥榃e鈥檙e still here鈥
With buildings as her canvas, Boston muralist Rixy explores the intersection聽of art and identity.聽
With buildings as her canvas, Boston muralist Rixy explores the intersection聽of art and identity.聽
When Rixy Fernandez grew up in Boston鈥檚 Roxbury neighborhood, her mother didn鈥檛 let her play outside. Highland Avenue was too dangerous. Two decades later, the interdisciplinary street artist has turned the city into her playground. Over the past several years, she has filled walls across Boston with vibrant, cartoon-inspired images.聽
Highland Avenue may feel safer these days, but the neighborhood is changing. More college students live here, as do young families and commuters. Rixy, as she is known professionally, wants to ensure the longtime residents who share her Latinx Caribbean background continue聽to see themselves reflected in her towering art.聽
鈥淲e鈥檙e still here,鈥 she says, standing in a small patch of grass beneath one of her murals, covering the side of a three-story residential building in the neighborhood. 鈥淎ll these people can ... [see the] murals and come together, versus feeling like we need to erase you or you need to erase us.鈥澛
That Highland Avenue mural, titled 鈥淧a*Lante,鈥 meaning 鈥渙nward,鈥 features an image of a woman and a dog against a colorful backdrop. Each of the eight paintings she鈥檚 created in the city is characterized by her signature style, which she describes as 鈥渟ensual, powerful women of color鈥 in an imaginative world. But each one also contains elements unique to the neighborhoods.
Rixy, who often relies on input from residents to come up with her designs, describes herself as a vessel trying to capture community identity 鈥 and then uses her paint to express it. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e a public artist,鈥 she says about her artistic process. 鈥淵our art is for the public.鈥
The artist has exhibited in galleries from Massachusetts to California to the Dominican Republic. She has been an artist-in-residence at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art and at Elevated Thought, a Massachusetts-based group focused on art and social justice. She鈥檚 active in arts education and has taught at local institutions. Several of her murals have been commissioned by the city of Boston, including a portrait of Rita Hester, a Black transgender activist who was killed in 1998.聽
She created 鈥淧a*Lante鈥 when she was chosen for the Public Art Accelerator program from Now + There, now known as the Boston Public Art Triennial. To that organization, she represented the 鈥渃haracter and tenacity and creativity of a local artist, especially a woman local artist, and a local artist of color,鈥 says Jasper Sanchez, assistant curator with the Triennial.
Rixy鈥檚 artistic process begins with observation, even if that means just lying in the grass and watching the neighborhood bustle around her. 鈥淎re there schools? What are the closest restaurants? How can I use their culture a little bit more so they feel more represented?鈥 she says. For example, a mural she painted in Cambridge, Massachusetts, includes fruit because it felt like an 鈥渁rtsy farmers market type of area.鈥澛
The artist鈥檚 work features characters that are part of an imaginative world she calls 鈥淐煤cala,鈥 which signifies female empowerment and inclusivity.聽
A mural near the Fields Corner subway station in Dorchester, 鈥淔ly, Like You,鈥 depicts a woman with a bright-green jacket and a blue-and-green bird on her finger. Rixy鈥檚 art often includes clothing inspired by video game characters, she says.
Back in Roxbury, she says she wants to acknowledge and make space for the longtime residents of color. She wants to remind people that 鈥淩oxbury is ... still so heavy with all of these cultures.鈥
Painting the three-story wall on Highland Avenue took only four days, Rixy says, but planning took a year. A lot of it was figuring out the logistics, including securing funding from grants and finding a scissor lift to borrow.聽
But it also took six months to win over Tina Andrews, the owner of the building, who finally agreed to turn one side of her house into a mural featuring a woman and a dog with long purple acrylic toenails. Originally, Rixy wanted to incorporate a cat, but Ms. Andrews doesn鈥檛 like cats.聽
The building owner says she has no regrets about her wall being turned into a mural.聽
In person and via texts and social media, Ms. Andrews says, people tell her 鈥渉ow much they love it.鈥 鈥淵ou wouldn鈥檛 believe,鈥 she says, 鈥減eople just getting out of their cars and walking up to the wall to look at it.鈥