Las Vistas Nuevas In the summer of 1970, Baca decided to create a mural in Boyle Heights in order to bring community together. In the first team she had twenty members from four different gangs, and the group decided on the name
Las Vistas Nuevas ("New Views"). The mural they would create would show images that would be familiar to the Mexican-Americans who were living in the neighborhood. "I want to use public space to create a public voice for, and a public consciousness about people who are, in fact, the majority of the population but who are not represented in any visual way.
Raspados Mojados In
Raspados Mojados Baca used a street vendor cart as a sculptural installation to address immigration issues and the misrepresentations of Mexicans living in the United States. Los Angeles street vendors constantly sell ice cream as well as Mexican snacks, fruit cocktails, corn on the cob, and
raspados. This has brought attention to Los Angeles and has attempted to pass pushcarts loitering laws into any city. At the front of the cart a painting of a Mexican man captioned “illegal alien, undocumented worker” which is the main focus of the painting presented on the cart. On one side of the cart there is a painting of a man who is being dragged across a fence representing the Mexican/us border to the U.S. It is labeled Bracero Wars or also known as the Mexican Farm Labor Program.
Bracero is a Spanish term meaning "manual laborer" or "one who works using his arms.” The Bracero Program started on August 4, 1942, when many growers feared that
World War II would bring labor shortages to low-paying agricultural jobs. Having drawn inspiration from the culture that Baca was born and raised in she implemented this identity of La Pachuca. An identity that is a part of the
Pachuco identity and subculture that is known for challenging the societal norms within the U.S. It is also an identity that Baca herself has performed in other artworks, such as her photographed performance where Baca dressed up as a Pachuca with several photographs taken of her by
Donna Deitch, and a print titled
Absolutely Chicana (2009). The Chola is an identity within the Chicana culture that derives from the Pachuca identity, one that Baca implemented in her art work with the help of a member from the Tiny Locas gang known as Flaquita that can be seen as the chola on the far left panel.
The World Wall and other projects In 1987 she began painting
The World Wall: A Vision of the Future Without Fear, a painting that showed the world with no-violence. She believed the first step to world peace was imagining it, and she wanted artists from all over the world to help her paint it. She wanted it to be painted in panels so it could be moved around to different places. After years of planning and contributions made by artists from other countries, the painting had its debut in Finland in 1990. The idea was that when the panels traveled around the world each host country would add their own panel to the collection. Some of the countries included Russia, Israel/Palestine, Mexico, and Canada. In 1988 Mayor of Los Angeles
Tom Bradley commissioned her to create the Neighborhood Pride Program, a citywide project to paint murals. The project employed over 1,800 at-risk youth and has been responsible for the creation of over 105 murals throughout the city.In 1996 she created
La Memoria de Nuestra Tierra ("Our Land Has Memory") for the
Denver International Airport. This one was personal for Baca, as her grandparents fled Mexico during the
Mexican Revolution and came to
La Junta, Colorado. The mural's intent was "not only to tell the forgotten stories of people who, like birds or water, traveled back and forth across the land freely, before there was a line that distinguished which side you were from, but to speak to our shared human condition as temporary residents of the earth...The making of this work was an excavation of a remembering of their histories." After divorcing her husband and moving to Venice she becomes involved with "Consciousness Raising" meetings. After being invited to one of the meetings by her new landlord, Baca says she began meeting other professional women for the first time in her life. "Women who were doctors, and lawyers, and biologists, and chemists, and I had never met anybody like that. I was like completely amazed at the possibility of what was available for women". Through these she was introduced to feminist art by
Judy Chicago and inspired by a few of her works, naming ''Woman's Space, Woman's Building,
and the Feminist Studio Workshop''. ==Social and Public Art Resource Center (SPARC)==