ERICK INIGUEZ

Los Angeles County, 2021 - 2022


CULTURE HUB

Tia Chucha’s Centro Cultural’s mission is to transform community in the Northeast San Fernando Valley and beyond through ancestral knowledge, the arts, literacy, and creative engagement. The organization provides year-round on-site and off-site free or low-cost arts and literacy bilingual intergenerational programming.

ARTIST

Erick Iniguez is a recently newly wed who was born and raised in the San Fernando Valley by parents who migrated from Mexico. He is a proud transfer student of Los Angeles Valley College and attended UC Santa Barbara, and a former Student Advisor and Case Manager who redirected focus to art and photography, while still maintaining connection with his community. He has been a fellow for: Arts for LA: ACTIVATE, Alliance for California Traditional Arts (ACTA) and the National Association of Latinx Arts & Culture Leadership Institute (NALAC). His approach is to capture images that indict systems of oppression that effect the world, document the lives of people of color and collective visual narratives. 

SOCIAL IMPACT INITIATIVE

Pukúu Cultural Community Services has a mission to invest in sustainable programs that bridge and improve opportunities for American Indians with culturally-based community services now and for future generations. What started as an aspiration of Rudy Ortega Sr., members of the Fernandeño Tataviam Band of Mission Indians, a northern Los Angeles County American tribe formed a non-profit organization in 1971 to better the lives of their people. The word pukúu derives from the Fernandeño Tataviam language meaning “ONE.”

As a distinct community, statistics show the poverty rate in the American Indian community is 22.5%, two and a half times the non-Hispanic/Caucasian population. In comparison to other ethnic groups, American Indians ranked poorly on measures of material lifestyle and health. American Indians have a premature death rate, dying 20 years earlier than their Caucasian counterparts. Alcoholism, diabetes, suicide, and motor vehicle accidents contributed to this high premature death rate. Poverty also hits American Indian children hard.

Approximately three out of ten Indian children will find themselves and their family in crisis. Pukúu’s commitment stands strong to helping people by adding programs in response to multiple specific needs: emergency financial assistance, education, family and child development, cultural enhancement, employment programs, and much more.

Today Pukúu continues to grow into an organization celebrating diverse tribal nations striving for the betterment of all American Indians living in Los Angeles County. Pukúu helps people who are facing deep poverty and multiple special needs, by providing one-on-one with each family and each individual to help them achieve stable and lasting wellness.


Erick Iniguez is currently running a series of photography workshops for the youth affiliated with his social impact partner Pukúu Cultural Community Services, helping the youth to tell their stories visually. Some of these workshops will be held out in the field, including the Angeles National Forest, and focus on reclaiming and reconnecting with spaces and traditional names.