6,000 Enjoy Opening of Desert Rider: Dreaming in Motion At The Denver Art Museum Thru Sept. 24, 2023

Information provided courtesy PressOffice@DenverMuseum.org

The Lowrider Show and Shine attracted more the 6,000 lowrider car enthusiasts and those curious about lowrider culture on Sunday, July 9, 2023 for a community-wide celebration of the artistry and presence of lowriders in Denver. It was the opening of the exhibition of Desert Rider: Dreaming in Motion.

 Photo by Brent Andeck

Several Denver metro area lowrider car clubs participated including CityWide CC Denver Chapter, Compas Colorado and Ranflita Car Club, joined the Lowrider Show and Shine event which featured several national lowriders show winners that were on display along 13th Ave.

Photo by Brent Andeck

Desert Rider, open thru Sept. 24, 2023, highlights how Southwestern Latinx and Indigenous artists express identity, pride and a sense of community by transforming vehicles – such as lowriders and skateboards – associated with the western U.S.

The exhibit explores lowrider and skateboard culture in the Southwestern U.S. challenging stereotypes and embodying both joy and hope. Artworks featured in this exhibition express artist identity, pride and a sense of community. Desert Rider will be on view in the Hamilton Building’s Anschutz Gallery. Desert Rider will be included with general admission, which is free for members and all visitors 18 and under.

Created and curated by Gilbert Vicario, former curator of contemporary art at Phoenix Art Museum, Desert Rider features works presented against the backdrop of civil unrest at the time and tie together
ideas of history, place, resistance and empowerment.

Photo by Brent Andeck

Images of customized vehicles racing through the wide-open landscapes of the U.S. Southwest became symbols not only of freedom and power, but also rebellion and nonconformity. Curated at the DAM by Victoria I. Lyall, Jan and Frederick Mayer Curator of Arts of the Ancient Americas, the Denver presentation of Desert Rider adds works by Colorado artists representing their communities in Colorado and the American Southwest.


“The themes and ideas explored in Desert Rider are universal, but uniquely presented through the viewpoints and experiences of Latinx and Indigenous artists, communities deeply connected to and impacted by the region’s complicated past and their experiences,” said Victoria I. Lyall. “Counterculture, customization, queerness, community, survival, pride and reclamation are concepts that create powerful connections for artists and visitors alike. We are thrilled to present diverse works including several by
Colorado artists including Carlos Frésquez, Juan Fuentes, Tony Ortega and Daniel Salazar.”

Photo by Latin Life Denver Media


Desert Rider showcases large-scale installations, prints, sculptures and more by artists including Margarita Cabrera, Nanibah Chacon, Liz Cohen, Justin Favela, Douglas Miles and Cara Romero. Cruising just a few inches above the pavement, a lowrider’s candy paint, chrome rims and tuck and roll upholstery reflect its owner’s style and identity.


“These vehicles also evoke a history of community empowerment and have become symbolic of these artists’ identities. It’s about pride in the ride,” said Lyall. Desert Rider begins by centering the “Lowrider”
section on Denver artists, including a commission by photographer Juan Fuentes that celebrates the city’s four decade history of cruising low and slow. Like other lowrider makers, Justin Favela’s largescale car sculpture celebrates its owner’s identity as a queer Chicanx artist. Using materials associated with Mexican
piñata—tissue paper and cardboard—Favela’s lowrider celebrates queer icons and pays homage to the recent shooting in Colorado Springs’ Club Q victims.

A section highlighting women and cars features women artists whose work challenges the perception that customized automobiles are a male dominated pastime. With Stories Better Told by Others (Cindy Corrales) [Historias mejor contadas por otras (Cindy Corrales), a series of color inkjet prints with hand painted lettering and lithographs, Liz Cohen celebrates the Lowrider Magazine cover models whose labor, personas and contributions to popularizing lowriding globally have been ignored.


In “Skating on Native Land,” artists Dustin Craig, Gregg Deal and Douglas Miles use skateboards as moving canvases to reassert control over their own histories and landscapes. “Horsepower” plays on the idea of the horse in the American west. Artists Laurie Steelink and José Villalobos consider the horse from a personal perspective. Villalobos’ customized saddles evoke the gleam of lowriders while reframing the flash and flamboyance as a celebration of queerness. Steelink’s car hood altar connects her to her Indigenous identity in a patriarchal society.


Artists featured in “La Frontera” (the borderlands), use automobile imagery and irreverent humor to highlight issues of migration and femicide. Margarita Cabrera’s Agua que no has de beber dejala correr (Water That You Should Not Drink, Let It Run) calls out the devastating impact of U.S. automotive “maquiladoras,” factories based on the Mexican side of the border, where mostly female employees perform low-wage assembly work and are exposed to harmful chemicals and hazardous work conditions.

Photo by Latin Life Denver Media


In addition to engaging with such important issues, visitors of all ages will have a chance to have fun with hands-on activities including “skating” with miniature finger skateboards in a scaled-down skate park, modeled after the Downtown Denver
Skate park; making customizable miniature paper lowriders that can be posed and “driven” around a model of significant lowrider spots in Denver; and exploring an interactive map of the Denver metro area highlighting points of significance specific to skateboarding and lowriders, to which visitors can add their own reactions and stories.


The intention of this interpretive space is to inspire intergenerational creativity and sharing. Furthermore, the map will aid guests in making connections between personal and community histories and experiences in Denver.

Desert Rider will be on view through Sept. 24, 2023, in the Hamilton Building’s Anschutz Gallery. Desert Rider will be included with general admission, which is free for members and all visitors 18 and under.


Desert Rider: Dreaming in Motion is organized by Phoenix Art Museum. It is presented with generous support from the Adolph Coors Exhibition Endowment Fund, U.S. Bank,
the donors to the Annual Fund Leadership Campaign and the residents who support the Scientific and Cultural Facilities District (SCFD). Promotional support is provided by 5280
Magazine and CBS Colorado.

Photo by Latin Life Denver Media


Planning Your Visit:
The most up-to-date information on planning a visit to the Denver Art Museum can be
found online under the Plan Your Visit tab. Use this page to find details on ticket pricing,
public transit options, and access information. General admission for museum members
is free every day. Youth aged 18 and under, regardless of residency, receive free general
admission everyday thanks to the museum’s Free for Kids programs

Cara Romero (Chemehuevi), Liquid Sunshine (Sol Liquid), 2021. Digital
© Cara Romero, courtesy of Cara Romero.