Skip To Content
Mural painting depicting two men, Robert F. Kennedy and Cesar Chavez
2010

Unveiling Judith Baca's RFK Mural

UCLA Professor and celebrated artist Judith Baca completes the Robert F. Kennedy murals in the library at the former Ambassador Hotel, where RFK delivered his final address in 1968.
Tags:
Share:

In 2010, after three years of toil, UCLA professor and one of the nation’s greatest muralists, Judy Baca, unveiled two works honoring the leadership and ideals of the late Robert F. Kennedy. The two murals “speak to each other,” as Baca puts it, across the 100-foot room — on the same site where Kennedy was assassinated more than 40 years earlier.

On June 5, 1968 at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles, senator and presidential hopeful Robert F. Kennedy was assassinated. He had just won the California Primary with a campaign and career built on the ideals of hope, compassion and equality.

After years of gradual decline, the hotel was demolished to make room for the RFK Learning Center for K-12. Decades after the infamous assassination, Baca would create two 12- by 55-foot pieces to commemorate the late senator’s work for justice.   

The first mural, Seeing Through Others Eyes, is a multi-scene history lesson. Six petals of a lotus blossom, each painted to contain an individual scene, represent the six societal issues that Kennedy was most passionate about: environment, intolerance, poverty, education, health and war. Figures featured in the mural include a soldier, a woman and her sick mother, and a child of poverty. These three perspectives remind us to view our current societal issues through the eyes of others. Sitting in the center of the petals are Kennedy and César Chávez. The two men are breaking bread after Chávez’s 36-day “Fast for Life.”

The second mural, Tiny Ripples of Hope, is based on Kennedy’s historic visit to South Africa in June of 1966. At the time, South Africa was in its darkest years of apartheid, while the U.S. struggled through the civil rights movement. His speech created ripples across the world, giving hope to all those who suffer segregation and persecution, then and now. In the mural, Kennedy is depicted as he was photographed in life — standing amidst an endless sea of hands reaching up to him as he stood on a car. His hands emit ripples into this sea, as he reaches down to lift up those below.  

Judy Baca is a UCLA professor of World Arts and Cultures/Dance in the UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture as well as a professor of Chicana/o Studies in the Division of Social Sciences. A native Angeleno, she rose to international acclaim for her Great Wall of Los Angeles mural. The positive impact of her research and art in local communities has led to multiple awards and honors, including a White House visit, and has cemented her own stature as a major muralist. Her murals of Kennedy serve as a monument to his cultural and historical impact; together, they form a legacy that will educate both children and adults for generations.