Low-riding works of art
Lowrider cars these days are far more than trickedout automobiles with gravitychallenged rear suspensions and ear-rattling exhaust systems that seem to cry out for police to ticket their drivers.
In their finest format, they have morphed into museum-quality works of art, appearing in shows around the world from Paris’s Louvre to Washington’s Smithsonian.
But while museumgoers have learned to appreciate these creatures that sprang from the garages of American teenagers in the years after the Second World War, lowrider historian Denise Sandoval says the eye-popping, airbrushed paintings, plush interiors and chrome-plated wheels and engines that have come to define them have quietly fomented something more — a new genre of contemporary art.
It’s a genre Sandoval hopes to expose to a wider audience through The High Art of Riding Low, a wideranging exhibition of low-rider-inspired fine art including paintings, sculptures, serigraphs, photographs, drawings and, of course, automobiles created by the world’s most accomplished Chicano artists.
The show, which opened July 3 and runs until next June, is the third low-rider exhibition that Sandoval, a Chicano studies professor at California State University, Northridge, has curated at Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles since 2000.
It features its share of some of the finest low-rider cars created, among them the late Jesse Valadez’s Gypsy Rose, which was encased in glass for display on Washington’s National Mall earlier this year when it was inducted into the U.S. Historic Vehicle Register. The long, sleek Chevrolet is bathed in bright pink and covered with intricately painted roses.
Other cars in the L.A. exhibit radiate a rainbow of colours, including some with murals of beautiful women, landscapes and skeletons representing Dia de Muertos, the Latino holiday honouring loved ones who have died.
But placed right alongside these V8-powered treasures are dozens of paintings and other museum works created by such prominent gallery artists as Gilbert (Magu) Lujan and Frank Romero, who form half of the contemporary art world’s Los Four, the first Chicano artists group to have a showing at a major institution, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, in 1974.
“Basically, we’re focused on looking at the low-rider car as both artistic inspiration and art object,” says Sandoval. “We’re taking artists from the museum gallery world and merging them with low-rider artists. So we’re bringing these two worlds together.”
It’s an effort perhaps best exemplified by the contrast found upon first coming face-to-face with the stunningly colourful, detailed Gypsy Rose, parked just outside the entrance, and then entering the hall itself to see the other works. The Associated Press