Guest commentary: Xavier Montes (Big X): In Requiem

On the shoulders of this giant Chicano Artist sigimos adelante!

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Armando Vazquez

By Armando Vazquez / Guest contributor

Many folks, I am sure, knew Xavier better than I did, the Maestro got around and everyone that met X loved him! Big X was/is a renowned Master Chicano Artist/Activist legend in Santa Paula and well known, respected, and loved in Oxnard, Ventura and throughout Ventura and Los Angeles County. For over 50 years I have proclaimed, like a madman screaming out in the American art wasteland and to the world, that Chicano art is one of the most magnificent, creative and important art movement of our contemporary art world and society! Xavier Montes’s art is a definitive, important, convincing and unique testimonial to my proclamation. Big X, as much as anyone put Chicano art on the national and international art map as one of the most important art movements of the contemporary art world.

As much as I loved and respect the Maestro’s art and music, it was the sweet loveable giant of man that I came to love and deeply respect. I loved and remember Big X for his most humble, gigantic, and loving servant’s heart and spirit. Big X was quiet spoken and reserved, almost shy when he was preforming or exhibiting his prodigious artistic talents at the Café on A.  X was always a loving, willing and giving gentlemen who never said no to our at-risk youth and their families Café on A when we asked for his participation or to preform.

Xavier Montes playing his Harp. Photos by Jose Moreno.

Debbie and I met Xavier way back in around 1998, just after we opened the Acuna Art Gallery at the Café on A in downtown Oxnard. We need to find a musician that would play a couple of hours at our KEYS Leadership Academy graduation. We contacted Xavier and he quickly and graciously accepted the gig that would begin our long and wonderful three decade relationship. That evening X walked in with his wonderful loving smile and humbly picked out a poorly lit corner of the Café on A. X was so unassuming that almost no one noticed him set up. Big X came in that evening dressed in his trademark white pants, shoes, guayabera and his white brim. Without fanfare X began to play his Harp, and within a few magnificent clarion notes he brought the huge Café on A audience of wild, boisterous and kinetic energy of over 100 amped up youth, their families, community leaders and dignitaries to complete and total mesmerizing standstill. That was the power of music, art and love that X brought to our community. Any one that ever heard X play will never forget that special moment in their lives. That was the gift that Xavier gave to our gente and the world.

Los dos Maestro Artistas; Ray Cirerol y Big X

After every evening performance, when we closing up, relaxing sharing intimate and heartfelt ruminations, he would smile at me y con un abrazon de meros hermanos Big X would literally pick me up off the ground and affirm to me,

“Hey vato you and Debbie are doing great work here for the chavalitos y nuestra gente. Nunca te rajes y adelante vato” it was his traditional goodbye that he delivered to me over the three decades that brought us closer and closer together as Chicano artistas, activists y hermanos.

Big X hanging with the homies at Café on A

In his hometown of Santa Paula Big X was for decades a major arts and culture ambassador and activist of the first order, artfully helping to forge and carve out a Chicano art and cultural presence and identity in the very conservative farming community of Santa Paula. X was the founder and driving force of the De Colores Festival that brought Chicano artist, musicians and performers to downtown Santa Paula for a glorious weekend of world class art, cultural education and community bonding. It was Xavier that first invited me to participate in his personally curated De Colores Art Exhibition. X then shared all of his contacts and resources in the Chicano art world that he had with me so that I could invite these wonderful artist to our own Acuna Arts Gallery at the Café on A in Oxnard. That is the kind of homie X was, he always lovingly gave much more than he received. Late in Xavier’s life he took on the noble task of teaching art and music to the kids of Santa Paula and beyond. The youth and the parents loved him and they will miss him. We all that knew him will miss him. As an iconic Chicano artist and musician Xavier was honored by the Latino Art Network as one of the Gran Maestros del Arte of California late in his artistic career.

Jose, Jack, Louie y Xavier at Café on A.

My dear camarada Xavier is dead, so is Magu, Carlo Almaraz, Felix Perez, Frank Martinez, Julian Vergara, Lil Mickey, Jose De la Pena, Gavan, Francisco Magdaleno, Markie Lareva, many other of my artist homies and I fear that they will all be forgotten. Their magnificent works, their art and cultural contributions will be render to the dust bind of obscure American art history.  That just the sad state of affairs in America when it comes to “ethnic” artists and their work, buried and forgotten.  So the senior Maestra Chicana artistas, the greatest most creative living force of artists currently creating and producing art in the world today will soon be gone, one by one. What will be their fate?

— Armando Vazquez, M.Ed., founding member of CORE and the Acuna Art Gallery and Community Collective.

For more information about Xavier “Big X” Montes, see:

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