In an episode of the PBS documentary collection American Masters, the musician Ry Cooder described the painter Vincent Valdez as “the Albrecht Dürer of Chicano artists”. This sobriquet is acceptable, given the virtuosic element of his photos, however the pathos and cinematic depth that defines Valdez’s work feels fiercer than that comparability implies. Born in San Antonio, Texas, Valdez has solid a profession as a storyteller and fearless translator of marginalised American experiences, utilizing allegory and confrontational figuration to deal with the failures and triumphs of latest US society.
Vincent Valdez: Only a Dream… is the artist’s first main museum survey, co-organised by the Up to date Arts Museum Houston (CAMH, till 23 March) and the Massachusetts Museum of Up to date Artwork (Mass Moca, 24 Might 2025-5 April 2026). Spanning portray, video, drawing and sculpture, Only a Dream… chronicles 20 years of Valdez’s inventive manufacturing, together with never-before seen work and early-career gems from his childhood and his undergraduate days at Rhode Island Faculty of Design.
Vincent Valdez, So Lengthy, MaryAnn, 2019 Picture: Paul Salveson. Courtesy Vincent Valdez
Valdez’s compositions are unflinching of their material and arresting of their directness—whether or not he’s depicting the brutalisation of Chicano our bodies in the course of the 1943 Zoot Swimsuit Riots in Los Angeles or the chilling ubiquity of the fashionable Ku Klux Klan, the artist makes use of frank, atmospheric realism to immerse the viewer within the psychic area of his topics. Nowhere in his oeuvre is that this extra evident than in his The Strangest Fruit collection from 2013, a collection of 9 work depicting Mexican and Mexican American males suspended from invisible nooses. Named after the anti-lynching track popularised by jazz singer Billie Vacation, the collection exposes the under-reported impression of state-sponsored extralegal executions within the Mexican American group, bringing that violence to mild in a stark and haunting visible language.
Because the US tilts additional and additional towards a xenophobic and authoritarian nationalism—with the nation’s cultural funding hanging within the stability—forthright, genuine voices like Valdez’s are extra necessary than ever earlier than. The Artwork Newspaper caught up with Valdez to speak politics, patriotism and portray.
The Artwork Newspaper: When it comes to your storytelling selections, when does an concept stop to be a portray and should be a sculpture or a multimedia set up?
Vincent Valdez: Over the course of two-plus many years within the exhibition, and over the course of a lifetime, actually, it has been a protracted realized technique of being true to my inventive instincts. Concepts seem in my thoughts usually throughout my sleep or after I’m standing within the bathe for no matter motive. I permit the idea to dictate the sort of execution it is going to require. So, for instance, a collection just like the Strangest Fruit work, which had been a collection of 9 or ten canvases, I attempted to maintain true to the best way that I first initially envisioned them in my very own creativeness. Not too long ago, with a collection of sculptures that I began to delve into, the subject material itself, in some situations, requires for it to be current in a three-dimensional format.

Vincent Valdez, The Strangest Fruit (3), 2013 Picture: Mark Menjivar. Courtesy Vincent Valdez
Given the best way the present US political regime is focusing on the Mexican American group, how do you’re feeling concerning the path of your work? How do you need to talk these emotions?
Even in a second like this, folks nonetheless aren’t asking these kinds of questions, particularly contained in the artwork world. The work for me personally solely stands as extra of a conviction over the course of my lifetime—the concept of my very own glimpse at our collective American social amnesia, now extra so than ever. It is all the time been my quest to attempt to allow folks to additional look at what is true in entrance of our very noses, however in some ways, Individuals select to stay painfully trapped in their very own mythology—denial. A second like this solely defines Twenty first-century America even additional; that for many communities of color, that is nothing new. This actuality has all the time been part of our existence and realities confronted in modern American society.
America offers me no scarcity of material, you recognize. However I do not actually set out within the studio to attempt to slap folks within the face or hit them over the top with a sledgehammer. I’ve all the time felt that it’s my duty, each as an artist and as a citizen, to take a stance. The good historian Howard Zinn stated: “You can not stay impartial on a shifting prepare.” And I do not minimalise my material in any means. For me, a transparent glimpse of society as I see it’s my very own means of preserving true to my very own imaginative and prescient.
Within the context of placing collectively a profession survey, does trying again in your total profession impression the method of creating new work in any respect?
After I see how a lot work contains the exhibition, Only a Dream…, over 150 works, I get a way that, OK, possibly I am able to retire (laughs). Within the exhibition, a extremely particular portion of the exhibit, a small hidden gem for the viewers in there’s a set of flat recordsdata that they introduced from my studio saved in San Antonio. On this exhibition, we encourage viewers to work together with the work, which is a uncommon factor. They open the flat recordsdata and so they can hint a chronological timeline of my creative path ranging from age three in a few of my earliest drawings all the best way to the current.

Vincent Valdez, Recuerdo, 1999 Courtesy Joe A. Diaz
One of many issues that an exhibition like this has actually offered me with is a real alternative to view my work totally as a spectator, a viewer, an viewers member, versus the creator. There’s only a few items that I do not flinch at after encountering them out on the earth, consistently selecting them aside. This is likely one of the very first instances in my life that I will simply respect and benefit from the work and this imaginative and prescient that is been unfolding like an ongoing novel over the course of a lifetime. It is given me an opportunity to mirror on what I am not as all in favour of any additional, proper? I see the gaps of unexplored territory—extra etchings or extra sculpture, possibly some extra video work. So far as material, I actually strive to not dictate that. I actually let the world outdoors the studio doorways sort of take in that, and whichever path it is going to lead me, I am prepared to observe.
Who do you think about your artwork historic predecessors?
You recognize, in all honesty, my earliest influences again within the day proceed right this moment. I have not a lot been artwork traditionally targeted. My references are filmmakers. I have been very moved over my lifetime by the dimensions of the film display. It formed a lot of my very own notion about Americanism, my American identification and my function and place on this ongoing narrative. However primarily, I began at age 9 years previous as a muralist. I cherished the dimensions of monumental murals, and I used to be trying on the Chicano muralists, who I used to be so proud to be a torchbearer for, of their historic legacy of mural-making in America. It actually gave me that grand scope of imaginative and prescient by way of a social context.

Set up view of Vincent Valdez, Eaten, 2018-19. Assortment David Hoberman, promised present to the Hammer Museum Picture: Paul Salveson
What do you suppose a mural or a mural-size portray accomplishes {that a} movie would not?
Plain presence, proper? A mural completely resides, is born and lives in a group and in some ways, I think about a movie show the identical means. You’ve gotten an viewers, it builds like that short-term group, proper? This give attention to constructing a relationship between picture and viewer, that to me was such a strong pressure in life. It was an unstated, invisible, however current communication, a dialogue, a dialog between the viewer and an image. I bear in mind seeing the power of a group that claimed these murals as their very own, protected them and enshrined them as sacred mementos of their very own histories and their very own ongoing struggles. And I believed, for me, that was it. That is what I wanted to spend the remainder of my life making an attempt to determine how one can do for folks.
Vincent Valdez: Only a Dream…, till 23 March, Up to date Arts Museum HoustonVincent Valdez: Only a Dream…, 24 Might 2025-5 April 2026, Massachusetts Museum of Up to date Artwork, North Adams, Massachusetts