The Cleveland Museum of Art

Collection Online as of July 10, 2026

A color lithograph with an arched top centers a photograph of a girl holding her ruffled blue, red, and white skirt wide, framed by a thick green brushstroke. Behind her, another child drinks from a red can. A collage of newspaper clippings, including a "NEW YORK POST" headline, forms a backdrop of translucent red and blue washes in a flag motif. A large, pale star is positioned at our upper right.

Life Is a Parade

1998
Location: Not on view

Did You Know?

This print is one of several that Juan Sánchez created in collaboration with Tamarind Institute, a print publisher in New Mexico.

Description

Born in Brooklyn to Puerto Rican immigrants, Juan Sánchez explores his cultural heritage throughout his artistic practice. This print uses imagery related to Puerto Rican Day parades to consider the challenges and struggles Puerto Ricans faced upon relocating to the United States, alongside iconography—such as the upside-down palm tree—that references Puerto Rico’s history. Of the print, the artist wrote that he “wish[es] for the viewer to feel . . . the extent of my people’s anguish as well as their prevailing joys.”
  • {{cite web|title=Life Is a Parade|url=false|author=Juan Sánchez, Tamarind Institute|year=1998|access-date=10 July 2026|publisher=Cleveland Museum of Art}}

Source URL:

https://www.clevelandart.org/art/2024.48.a