Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez

Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez (born June 21, 1970) is a writer at Marvel Entertainment, Editor-in-Chief at Darryl Makes Comics LLC, Art Director/Owner at Somos Arte and Studio Edgardo creative services, and creator of La Borinqueña, a new and original comic book character that has grown into a cultural phenomenon and a nationally recognized symbol of Puerto Rican patriotism, social justice, and equality for all.[1]

Edgardo MIranda-Rodriguez, Editor-in-Chief of Darryl Makes Comics, at a Nov. 2014 book signing for DMC #1

New Jersey-born and Bronx-raised, Miranda-Rodriguez considers himself, above all, a Nuyorican.[2]

Early life

Miranda-Rodriguez experienced the effects of poverty and racism as a Puerto Rican in New York City in the 1970s and 1980s. However, he had a loving family in his mother and siblings, with whom he could endure these times. In her efforts to help him find an outlet, his mother sparked a creative impulse.[3] This love of comics spurred his interest in the visual arts, which he pursued in and out of school. In his early teen years, Miranda-Rodriguez and his family lived for a time in Puerto Rico. This was a brief, but inspiring period for Miranda-Rodriguez, when his creative talents were encouraged,[4] and where his connection to Puerto Rico deepened.[5]

After returning to the mainland United States, the family eventually settled in Syracuse, NY for Miranda-Rodriguez' high school years. Having overcome his earlier schooling interruptions, he would graduate high school with honors and go on to Colgate University on a full scholarship.

Education and activism

Though Colgate University seemed far removed from the South Bronx, Miranda-Rodriguez experienced discrimination and racism, experiences that served to spark his passion and purpose.[3] "I started college in 1989 and became a campus activist."[6] Miranda-Rodriguez was active in the Latin American Student Organization and the Office of Undergraduate Studies program, mentoring students, organizing events, and creating community. One event in particular, would shape his personal and professional trajectory.

In 1992, I met Iris Morales, a community organizer in East Harlem who had been a leader in the Young Lords, the 1970's Puerto-Rican political movement. She was a lawyer and I was in awe...That year I helped organize the first conference produced by the Latin American Student Organization at Colgate. It was a Young Lords Party reunion. Morales was slated to be my keynote speaker, but after a family emergency she suggested I ask Luis Garden Acosta, who ran the El Puente community center in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, to speak in her place.[4]

At his Colgate graduation, Miranda-Rodriguez was awarded the Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Award, for the senior having enriched the student of color community.[6] Soon after the ceremony, he made his way to Williamsburg, Brooklyn to work for Garden Acosta.[7] El Puente was founded in the spirit of liberation theology and rooted in the legacy of the Young Lords. In this environment, Miranda-Rodriguez was able to nurture his artivism. He curated culturally and socially conscious works, producing and promoting events such as El Puente's poetry slams in the early 1990s, some of which featured the yet-to-be-discovered poet & playwright, Tony-winner Lemon Andersen. Miranda-Rodriguez sought to motivate young people's interest and passion for personal activism and community leadership by integrating hip-hop culture in the classroom, bringing in artists as guest speakers, to include Crazy Legs, Rosie Perez, Q-Tip, Tony Touch and Bobbito Garcia.

At El Puente, Miranda-Rodriguez helped found and run an annual conference called '¡Muévete! The Boricua Youth Conference' (muevete is Spanish for 'move yourself') for almost 10 years. During his time at El Puente, Miranda-Rodriguez would be reunited with his mentor, Iris Morales, who sought him out to be the Artistic Director for her award-winning PBS POV documentary, ¡Pa'lante, Siempre Pa'lante!

Throughout his time with El Puente and ¡Muevete!, Miranda-Rodriguez also kept honing his craft, strengthening his graphic design skills working at Latino web magazine Mi Gente. This was a most providential connection, as it was where he met Joe Quesada, who would become Marvel Comics' second-longest running Editor-in-Chief (after the great Stan Lee).[4]

Professional life

Somos Arte

After leaving El Puente, Miranda-Rodriguez founded Somos Arte (Spanish for 'we are art') Creative Arts Services, a design studio that focused on graphic design, web development, artwork/video production, and branding. Somos Arte initially focused on providing creative services to nonprofit arts/community-based organizations and educational institutions, to include the Hip-Hop Theater Festival (now Hi-ARTs), Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute, and ASPIRA of New York. Somos Arte's work attracted the attention of high-end clients such as Pantene, Marvel Comics, and HBO.[8]

Through Miranda-Rodriguez' earlier connections with Marvel's Joe Quesada, Somos Arte was commissioned to curate Quesada's first solo art show, "Santerians" that focused on Quesada's characters of the same name - the first Latino superhero group, based on the Santeria religion. The success of this show and Quesada's work inspired Miranda-Rodriguez to curate an art show presenting art work about the 6 black characters from across the Marvel Universe: The Black Panther, Storm, Luke Cage, The Falcon, Blade and War Machine. It was a groundbreaking exhibit, a celebration of these characters' legacy and a clarion call for the inclusion of more characters of color. Quesada himself was a fan:

I think Edgardo was able to open some eyes of people who were not familiar with how the world of comic art was so multicultural," he said. "It’s not just guys in capes but socially relevant content and a great story to tell.[9]

In 2016, Miranda-Rodriguez debuted his original comic book character for Marvel, Abuela Estella. He and Darryl McDaniels wrote the story for Guardians of Infinity No. 3, where the Puerto Rican grandma introduces a Taino-inspired origin for the tree-like alien, Groot.[10] Also in 2016, Miranda-Rodriguez provided album cover art for The Hamilton Mixtape, a reimagining of the songs from the Tony-winning Best Musical, Hamilton.

Studio Edgardo

A division of Somos Arte, Studio Edgardo focuses on using Miranda-Rodriguez' art-direction to work with comic book artists on "non-comic book" projects. Studio Edgardo has worked with Phil Jimenez (DC/Marvel), Koi Turnbull (DC/Marvel/Aspen), Le Beau Underwood (DC/Marvel), Lee Loughridge (DC/Marvel), and Raul Treviño (DC/Marvel).[11]

In 2013, Miranda-Rodriguez convened other comic book artists to create depictions of the cultural history of East Harlem, known better as El Barrio. Their work was presented in an app commissioned by the Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute (CCADI) to preserve the history of the community. The app debuted with the opening of CCADI's new location in 2015. Called, Mi Querido Barrio (Spanish for 'my beloved neighborhood'), the app presented Miranda-Rodriguez and the other artists' work as markers in a virtual tour of the community.[12]

Darryl Makes Comics (DMC)

Darryl Makes Comics is an independent comic book imprint launched in 2014 by Darryl McDaniels - comic book fan, and one-third of the hip-hop group, Run-D.M.C. McDaniels brought Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez in to serve as Editor-in-Chief, and Atlantic Records executive Rigo "Riggs" Morales as Senior Editor.

The imprint's first series was titled, "DMC". DMC#1 was a nearly 100-page graphic novel set in 1980s New York City, featuring the superhero, DMC, battling for justice in an alternate universe. Miranda-Rodriguez is the editor and creator, developing the 13-year old Puerto Rican, LAK6 (real name Leticia Lebron), introduced in DMC #1.5.[13]

La Borinqueña

Based on the positive response he received for the character of Abuela Estella he created for Marvel, Miranda-Rodriguez recognized a cultural void in the comic book universe and was inspired to create a main character to provide "a stronger presence for the Puerto Rican and Latino community."[14] This inspiration came as Miranda-Rodriguez was approached by the organizers of the National Puerto Rican Day Parade. They wanted to honor him for his work with Marvel and DMC. Seeing the Parade as a unique platform, Miranda-Rodriguez proposed an original comic book to be introduced at the 2016 Puerto Rican Day Parade in NYC. With the name La Borinqueña taken from the Puerto Rican national anthem, Miranda-Rodriguez sought to integrate the history and indigenous traditions of Puerto Rico with the modern day sensibilities demanded by the multiple crises facing its people.[15]

La Borinqueña, also known as Marisol Rios De La Luz, is an Afro-Boricua woman with a Chinese-Dominican best friend,[16] modeling the unity Miranda-Rodriguez hoped Latinxs would aspire to. Just as important to the story is that Marisol lives in Brooklyn, and is a community activist and environmental studies student at Columbia University.[17] Miranda-Rodriguez notes that in tackling such 'villains' as voter rights, climate change and police accountability, it is Marisol's activist and academic identity that could be potentially more powerful than her superhero self: "She doesn’t fight crime, per se. She’s a symbol of hope."[1] On March 4, 2017, Miranda-Rodriguez embarked on a national [comic] book tour, starting in Philadelphia.[18]

Personal life

Miranda-Rodriguez is married to Kyung Jeon-Miranda,[6] a Brooklyn-based fine artist.[19]

Exhibitions

  • 2007: Curator, The Santerians: The Art of Joe Quesada, the first solo art show by graphic artist Joe Quesada, then Editor-in-Chief of Marvel Comics
  • 2009-2010: Curator, Marvelous Color, exhibit featuring black characters from across the Marvel Universe.
  • 2014: Featured Artist, Mi Querido Barrio, the Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute's Augmented Reality Exhibition & Tour. Work: Art Direction of Young Lords' Garbage Offensive of 1969, an augmented reality piece, part of El Barrio's historical preservation project.
  • 2016: Featured Artist, CTRL+ALT: A Culture Lab on Imagined Futures, the Smithsonian's Asian Pacific American Center (APAC) exhibit exploring the future. Work: La Borinqueña
  • 2016: Curator, Guardians of Loisaida, an exhibit featuring original artwork from, and inspired by, Miranda-Rodriguez' debut as a Marvel writer.
  • 2016: Curator, Café con Comics: Boricuas in the Comic Book Industry, an exhibit featuring Puerto Rican comic book artists at the Center for Puerto Rican Studies, at Hunter College, CUNY.
  • 2017: Featured Artist, Citicien - Nueva York: A #DefendPR Multimedia Art Group Exhibit, a traveling exhibition which premiered at Clemente Soto Vélez Cultural & Educational Center.

See also

References

  1. Ramirez, Tanisha Love (2016-05-17). "This Nuyorican Superhero Represents Hope And Solidarity For Puerto Ricans". Huffington Post.
  2. Córdova, Zoraida. "'La Borinquena' Is A Puerto Rican Superhero Who Proves You Don't Need Powers To Make A Difference".
  3. Acevedo, Marielis (2016-06-10). "La Borinqueña: A Superheroine for All Puerto Ricans". voicesofny.org.
  4. Blanco, Octavio (2017-01-13). "Comic book maker creates a female superhero for Puerto Rico". CNNMoney.
  5. Latimer, Brian (2016-05-16). "Marvel Comics' Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez Discusses 'La Borinqueña'". NBC News.
  6. "With La Borinqueña, his new Afro-Latina superheroine, Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez '93 is taking the world by storm". Colgate Scene. August 2016.
  7. "A Puerto Rican Nerd on a Mission". La Respuesta. 2016-02-16.
  8. "Somos Arte | Creative Services Studio". www.somosarte.com.
  9. Gonzalez, David (2010-02-28). "Helping to Do Good by Looking Good". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  10. González, Carolina (2016-01-29). "Cosmic Latina Grandma Takes Over Latest Guardians of the Galaxy Comic". The Atlantic.
  11. Barbot, Matt (2013-02-13). "Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez: Comic Books and Sorta Ricans | Art, Culture | Remezcla". Remezcla.
  12. Bond, Michaelle. "With a Virtual Tour, Preserving the History of East Harlem". New York Times City Room.
  13. Pittman, Taylor (2015-10-21). "Meet Fierce Puerto Rican Teen Superhero LAK6". Huffington Post.
  14. DeJesus, Jaime (2016-12-28). "Brooklyn artist puts Puerto Rican superhero on the map with La Borinqueña". brooklynreporter.com.
  15. Betancourt, David; Betancourt, David (2016-05-11). "As Puerto Rican superhero makes debut, her writer brings 'the power of our people' to comics". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286.
  16. Rosario, Richy (2017-01-09). "'La Borinqueña' Saves Puerto Rico And Puts On For Latinxs Women Everywhere'". Vibe.
  17. Yuhas, Alan (2016-07-04). "Borinqueña: Puerto Rico's new superhero fights crime – and a political crisis". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077.
  18. Crimmins, Peter (2017-03-02). "Puerto Rican superhero comic book launches national tour in Philadelphia — NewsWorks". Newsworks.org.
  19. "Kyung Jeon | P.S.1 Studio Visit". momaps1.org.
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