Essentials Creative

Essentials Creative Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian Artists
Creating collaborative multimedia experiences

Essentials Creative is a multimedia collective that takes inspiration from the concept of the rhizome. We believe in a non-hierarchical, interconnected approach to creating applied arts experiences. Our projects and events incorporate a range of disciplines, including photography, fashion, graphic design, video, projection, animation, and installation. We provide a platform for underrepresented ar

tists to express themselves and find support within their field, and our team is composed of individuals from diverse backgrounds. We embrace fluidity, diversity, experimentation, and collaboration in all of our projects, blurring the lines between disciplines and fostering a collaborative creative environment. We are proudly Asian-owned, Indigenous-owned, Latin-owned, Woman-owned, and LGBTQ+-owned, and we are committed to promoting diversity and inclusion in our work. Contact us today to learn more about our projects and how we can help you bring your vision to life. We are dedicated to creating art that is diverse, dynamic, and thought-provoking.

Q***r Out Here Issue 10 / Side A is out An audio zine exploring the outdoors from q***r perspectives. Side A explores th...
05/07/2026

Q***r Out Here Issue 10 / Side A is out

An audio zine exploring the outdoors from q***r perspectives. Side A explores themes of liminality: the betweenness of times and spaces, ways we merge with the more-than-human world, moments of pause and flux in our lives and identities. Side B will be released soon.

Covers by Sixto-Juan Zavala (he/they) — designer, illustrator, storyteller, and returning QOH contributor. Sixto-Juan created the covers using Rhizomatic, an experimental typeface he designed with Misa Yamamoto as collaborators in Essentials Creative for an installation at Chicago Botanic Garden.

On the typeface: “The rhizome is a non-hierarchical structure that allows for multiple outputs without a central structure. An example of a rhizomatic model is the internet; an example of a rhizomatous plant is an iris. The typeface combines geometric and organic forms, referencing digital as well as biological rhizomes. Deleuze and Guattari’s theories of the rhizome have been widely applied by many q***r theorists.”
On the covers: “These designs reference organic forms of plants as well as the digital media we use to create and edit our stories. Plants carry a significant impact in my outdoor experiences so I wanted to feature them in the cover design.”

You can check out more of Sixto-Juan’s work on their website, sjzavala.com

Plant Story Card lands at CelebrASIA Austin 2026.  A community engagement activity for the Austin Bergstrom Internationa...
05/01/2026

Plant Story Card lands at CelebrASIA Austin 2026.

A community engagement activity for the Austin Bergstrom International Airport permanent art installation.

Tell us about the plants that hold your stories. Rooted here, carried from elsewhere, still with you now.

Saturday, May 2 · 11 AM to 3 PM
Asian American Resource Center

Performances · food vendors · exhibits · cultural experiences

The monarchs came back to Mexico this winter. 64% increase this season. Homero Gómez González fought to keep loggers out...
04/03/2026

The monarchs came back to Mexico this winter. 64% increase this season. Homero Gómez González fought to keep loggers out of these forests. He was found dead in 2020. The butterflies came back to the forests he protected. The ancestors brought them home.

📹 Video Art: Essentials Creative

Portraits from the first Indigenous fashion show in Austin with Native American Cultural Center
03/18/2026

Portraits from the first Indigenous fashion show in Austin with Native American Cultural Center

DM us if you have a wall or know one.
03/13/2026

DM us if you have a wall or know one.

🌱 PLANT STORY RESEARCH 🌱Hey Austin! We’re creating art for Austin-Bergstrom International Airport that explores how comm...
02/25/2026

🌱 PLANT STORY RESEARCH 🌱

Hey Austin! We’re creating art for Austin-Bergstrom International Airport that explores how communities connect to plants and the natural world, centering Indigenous, Latin American, and Asian perspectives.

Your story could help shape a permanent artwork seen by millions of travelers ✈️

Share your plant story: https://forms.gle/qa3Mn5nMqpNDRpEQ7 or Comment Below

• What plants, places, or communities hold meaning for you?
• What flora, fauna, or food brings your ancestors to mind?
• What colors feel like home?
• What plant or food marks important family moments?
• What did elders teach you about nature?
• What symbols or patterns hold cultural meaning?

We’d love to hear from you!



Austin’s airport is expanding—and public art is part of the journey.Meet seven local artists creating new Art in Public ...
02/17/2026

Austin’s airport is expanding—and public art is part of the journey.

Meet seven local artists creating new Art in Public Places installations for AUS and help shape the cultural gateway to our city.

Saturday, Feb 28 | 10 a.m.–12 p.m
Montopolis Recreation & Community Center
RSVP: https://bit.ly/4kvE5hS

Light on walls. Words in public space. Two years ago we brought projections to SXSW with       &  centering bodily auton...
02/17/2026

Light on walls. Words in public space. Two years ago we brought projections to SXSW with & centering bodily autonomy, data freedom, and the right to move without being tracked.

📍 Austin, TX — SXSW 2024

Japan.Tokyo → Yokohama → Mitaka →The doors kept opening. We kept entering. Now we’re home and still walking through →
02/05/2026

Japan.

Tokyo → Yokohama → Mitaka →

The doors kept opening. We kept entering. Now we’re home and still walking through →

Ōme, West Tokyo. The indigo workshop at Kosoen.Sukumo, wood ash lye, sake, wheat bran, lime. Stirred twice daily. The sm...
01/26/2026

Ōme, West Tokyo. The indigo workshop at Kosoen.

Sukumo, wood ash lye, sake, wheat bran, lime. Stirred twice daily. The smell, funky, alive. When the dye grows old, it feeds the garden. They eat what grows in that soil.

We took our fabric on the train home. Some high school girls looked around, asked each other if someone smelled. We didn’t say anything. Just waited for our stop.

Address

Austin, TX

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Essentials Creative posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Business

Send a message to Essentials Creative:

Share