Talk:Martina López

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Heirs Come to Pass, 3 (Link with all info including copyright) http://www.lunacommons.org/luna/servlet/detail/AMICO~1~1~116119~103233:Heirs-Come-to-Pass,-3?sort=OCS&fullTextSearch=fullTextSearch&qvq=q:Martina%2BLopez;sort:OCS;lc:AMICO~1~1&mi=0&trs=1

Athenaxs (talk) 18:55, 23 April 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Kimberly's Peer Review[edit]

Hello! Your article is very well done. All the information is relevant to your artist, you hold a neutral tone throughout, and it is easy to navigate. In your biography the first paragraph needs a citation maybe after you state about her awoken curiosity and presenting the photographs differently. In your artwork section you need to cite more of the information. You can add another citation in Remembrance after the quote because you state the analysis of the photographs, such as the representation of the children, and in Mourning of Memory after the quote as well when you state how they were retrieved and how it relates to the memory. You need to add a citation for the award she received. Also, could you find any information about her having any solo exhibitions? In your publications, you can try to give a quick summary of each publication, just because some of the links are just cited and do not directly take you to the actual article. There are some grammatical and spelling errors also try to add more citations to back up all the analyses of the works, but overall very informative! — Preceding unsigned comment added by KimberlySolano (talkcontribs) 06:46, 15 May 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Birth year?[edit]

What references do we have for the correct birth year? It seems like different internet sources have different years, either 1952 or 1962. The Smithsonian American Art Museum website says 1952 and that's generally a reliable source. The Snite Museum of Art website, though, says 1962 and, since that is a part of Notre Dame, it would seem they should know the correct year. An internet search also turned up a UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center website with a list of artists, saying it's 1952. And then lots of other sources list one or the other, but presumably much of that is citogenesis or related. Thoughts? Is there an earlier published or more reliable source? I was trying to guess around it based on when she was in college (if she was in school in the '80s that would suggest she was in her 20s in the '80s which would imply... &c. &c.) but that's imperfect for a number of reasons and not how wikipedia works. - Procyonidae (talk) 23:57, 12 July 2022 (UTC)[reply]