3581 Mission Inn Ave.
Chicano Camera Culture: A Photographic History, 1966 to 2026, on view from February 7 through September 6, 2026 at The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture, offers the first sweeping survey of Chicana/o/x lens-based practices across six decades. Bringing together approximately 150 works by nearly 50 artists, the exhibition traces how photographers have documented, shaped, and reimagined their communities from the civil rights era to the present day. Curated by Elizabeth Ferrer, it unfolds thematically and intergenerationally, revealing a dynamic continuum rather than a fixed canon.
The exhibition begins in the charged atmosphere of the late 1960s and 1970s, when artists such as Luis C. Garza and María Varela used the camera as a tool of activism. Their photographs chronicled marches, organizing efforts, and daily life within the Chicano movement, asserting visibility and dignity at a pivotal historical moment. Soon after, figures like Louis Carlos Bernal expanded the field, embracing photography as an expressive art form and turning intimate domestic spaces into sites of cultural affirmation.
By the 1980s and 1990s, experimentation flourished. Artists including
Laura Aguilar and Christina Fernandez infused portraiture and conceptual strategies with personal and political urgency. Aguilar’s unflinching self-portraits confronted questions of body, sexuality, and marginalization, while others employed staged imagery and darkroom manipulation to challenge inherited narratives. Across these decades, portraiture remained central—a means of self-definition and autonomy in the face of misrepresentation.
Contemporary practitioners build on this foundation through installation, digital platforms, and hybrid approaches that reflect twenty-first-century realities. The exhibition extends beyond traditional prints to encompass constructed scenes and multimedia works, underscoring the camera’s evolving role in cultural expression. Presented across The Cheech and the historic Julia Morgan Building of the Riverside Art Museum, this landmark survey affirms photography as both witness and architect of Chicano identity—honoring its past while charting its expansive future.
Image:
Laura Aguilar
“Plush Pony #2,” 1992
from the “Plush Pony” series
Silver gelatin print, 11 x 14 in.
© Laura Aguilar Trust of 2016