![Meet Aria Luna, a 10-Year-Old Painter and Activist](https://fresnoalliance.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/Aria1_web-620x413.jpg)
By Eduardo Stanley
Photos courtesy of Aria Luna
When you look at Aria Lunaās painting, you know itās not kid stuff. Itās paintwork. And then you learn she is a kid. So you take again a look at her work, and perhaps youāll scratch your head. Yes, she is still a child. And she does paint.
āWhen I was six or nine months old, my dad put a pen on my hand and I started guiding my hand along making doodles or curves. But when I was two years old, I discovered I can paint or use markers. Then I started doing more colorful stuff, not just simple things,ā said Aria over the phone. āMy first drawing was an octopus.ā
She lives close to the coast in Sunnyvale, south of San Francisco, with her parents, both immigrants. Her mother, Birgitte, is an immigrant from the Czech Republic and her dad, Andres, was born in Colombia.
Ariaās passion for painting grew, and she started taking painting classes when she was six years old.
In 2019, Aria was commissioned to paint a six-foot-tall fiberglass statue of a sea lion at the Aquarium of the Bay to celebrate the return of the sea lions to the Bay Area. The statue is now on display at Pier 39 in San Francisco.
āI feel good when I see it, itās my work,ā said Aria with a tone of pride in her voice. āAnd I get to share it with so many kids and adultsā¦and elders.ā
In 2017, Aria was invited to be part of an art exhibit and she was offered to create a mural. The then seven-year-old painter decided to create āDragon Storm,ā an original story she wrote about a mother dragon protecting her egg from a fearsome fire-breathing dragon. So there is a battle. And other dragon characters, as well as other animals.
āDeep Blue,ā a six-foot-tall fiberglass statue of a sea lion that Aria Luna was commissioned to paint by the Aquarium of the Bay to celebrate the return of the sea lions to the Bay. The statue is now on display at Pier 39 in San Francisco. āFynn the Sea Dragonā: one of four Guardians of the Sea in the story of Bogo Mogo (plastic pollution of the oceans), which was created by Aria Luna. āExodus,ā illustration of the pain of family separation and detention centers. āQuetzal,ā a 40ŹŗĆ48Źŗ triptych of the Quetzal bird, part of Aria Lunaās upcoming AMAZONAS exhibit that honors the biodiversity of the Amazon. āZahara,ā portrait of an African woman in celebration of #Black Lives Matter. āSelkie Seahorseā: one of a series of sea creatures illustrating the great diversity of the marine ecosystem āMediterranean Jellyā: one of a series of sea creatures illustrating the great diversity of the marine ecosystem.
In October 2017, the wildfire in Santa Rosa destroyed more than 5,000 homes and killed 20 people. Aria decided to use the opening of the mural to raise money for the victims of the fire. At the beginning, she and her mother hesitated to raise money for fire victims through an exhibit about fire-breathing dragons. However, they comprehended the importance of the metaphor: that fire could be destructive but also the beginning of a new life.
Aria worked with the Latino Community Foundation on this project, and she raised money with her classmates for the victims of the Santa Rosa area.
Currently, she is raising funds for Latino families who have been separated or detained by ICE. She is doing so in cooperation with organizations such as KIND, RaicesTexas, Al Otro Lado and Families Belong Together.
The painting āExodusā is about Mexican and Central American kids who are in detention centers at the border. I depicted two kids escaping, however, there is danger ahead,ā explained Aria. āItās so evil to arrest kids, separate them from their parents.ā
This involvement on social issues isnāt new for Aria. She creates art to raise awareness of issues affecting our communities, including plastic pollution, wildlife and much more. Her work has raisedāand raisesāfunds for art programs, ocean conservation, wildfire relief and children in ICE custody.
In 2019, the Consulate of Mexico invited Aria to submit a piece to the Dibujo Infantil call for artists. The theme was āEste es mi MĆ©xicoā (āThis is my Mexicoā); participants were asked to portray their favorite Mexican figure. Aria portrayed Sophie Cruz, the child of undocumented parents turned activist for immigrantsā rights.
Both Sophie and Aria were born the same year, 2010. The portrait includes a landscape in the background that gives us a glance of the mountains of Oaxaca, the southern state of Mexico where Sophieās parents came from.
Aria has been featured on NBCās California Live as āthe worldās youngest exhibiting artistā and on Cartoon Network for her āartistic-activismā during the 2020 Hispanic Heritage Month, as well as in other media outlets.
When Aria isnāt painting, she enjoys playing with friends and bird watching. She is working on her new exhibit called āAmazonasā and planning a call to young people to work for a better future. āIf children are the future of the world, I want the world to be a better place to be,ā explained Aria.
Can this growing media attention change Ariaās personality? She isnāt worried. āI am glad I can spread awareness, I just want people to get inspired, to get hope and to do something about injustices.ā
To learn more about Aria’s work, visit www.arialuna.com. Contact her via Instagram (@aria.luna.art) or Twitter (@Aria_Luna_Art).
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Eduardo Stanley is the editor of the Community Alliance newspaper. Contact him at editor@fresnoalliance.com.