Vallejo's early works address symbolism of indigenous traditions of Mexico and the Americas through the genre of painting. Many of her works were motivated by "dreams and premonitions." Around 2010, she began appropriating American pop icons like
Mickey,
Minnie Mouse,
Cinderella,
Fred Flintstone,
Barney Rubble,
Elvis Presley(El Vis),
Marilyn Monroe (Marielena), historical figures such as
Marie Antoinette and
Louis-Auguste, and numerous American presidents, presenting them all as Mexicans with tanned skin (sometimes with tattoos) in her series titled "Make 'Em All Mexicans." In 2014, Chicano Studies scholar Karen Mary Davalos presented the paper "Linda Vallejo: An Arc of Indigenous Spirituality and Indigenist Sensibility" at the Roundtable of Latina Feminism at John Carroll University. Davalos first presented this paper at the Third Biennial National Conference of Latino Art Now in 2010. Davalos notes, “From one perspective, Vallejo has stolen, denied, and suppressed white representational power, and with a brush stroke, she has recoded it brown. Vallejo’s [Make'Em All Mexican] series is quietly disorienting, fiercely defies closure, and invokes uncertainty. Viewers have the sense that Vallejo is not yet finished with her social critique. Racial coding, she reminds us, is only skin-deep.” In 2016, she reprised "Make 'Em All Mexican" at the request of UCLA Film Professor
Chon Noriega. By "brown-washing" Hollywood celebrities
Cate Blanchett(Catarina Blancarte),
Ben Affleck and
Matt Damon (Mateo y Bernardo),
Audrey Hepburn (Aurora Hernandez),
Marilyn Monroe (Marielena), and Oscar statues (supposedly modeled after Mexican Emilio Fernandez), they suddenly became starlets of Mexican descent, which attracted a lot of press in light of the ongoing #OscarsSoWhite campaign. Regarding this body of work, Marlene Donohue observes, "The exaggerated cliches here seem deliberate, designed to remind us that however much myriad identities/realities are marketed both in academia and consumer culture as the new 'post-race' norm, the ideology of racial domination continues." She is included in the encyclopedic
L.A. Rising: SoCal Artists Before 1980. == Exhibitions ==