3425 Mission Inn Ave.
Noé Montes: Regional History, on view from October 11, 2025 through April 19, 2026 at the Riverside Art Museum, brings together three interrelated bodies of work produced over the past decade by Southern California–based artist Noé Montes. Through photographs, recorded interviews, and community workshops, Montes constructs layered portraits of the Coachella Valley, Cuyama, and the Imperial region—areas often flattened or overlooked in dominant historical narratives.
The series on Coachella Valley farmworkers foregrounds the labor that sustains vast agricultural economies while remaining largely invisible. Montes documents workers in fields and domestic spaces, pairing images with first-person accounts that speak to endurance, migration, and generational knowledge. In Cuyama, a rural valley shaped by cycles of oil extraction and farming, he traces the imprint of boom-and-bust industries on families and landscapes.
Imperial Air turns toward environmental and industrial pressures, examining how air quality and infrastructure intersect with daily life in communities long subjected to uneven development.
Across these projects, Montes emphasizes collaboration rather than observation from a distance. Workshops invite residents to reflect on personal archives and collective memory, expanding the exhibition beyond the frame of a single author. The resulting photographs resist spectacle. Instead, they dwell on gestures of care, domestic rituals, and the built environments that reveal both resilience and strain. White working-class families, Indigenous communities, Latine residents, Black communities, and others appear not as statistics but as active participants in shaping the region’s social fabric.
Curated by Dr. Catherine Gudis, the exhibition also raises urgent questions about power and storytelling. Who defines regional history, and whose experiences are excluded? By placing image and testimony side by side,
Regional History challenges extractive narratives that privilege industry over people. It affirms that the Inland Empire’s past and present are inseparable from the labor, memory, and cultural strength of its residents—communities that continue to assert agency in the face of environmental and economic pressures.
Image:
Estella Hernandez, Dia de Primera Comunión / First Communion Day, Danza de Los Viejitos © Estella Hernandez