Low & Slow: Lowrider Culture On The Border
Low & Slow: Lowrider Culture On The Border
In El Paso, Texas or Chuco, Tejas, the Lowrider is more than a weekend hobby. Lowriding is a way of life. It is not subculture to the Mexican American experience but part of a complex form of lived history and visual culture. It is a unique iteration of a deeply rooted tradition in auto-mobility. In El Paso, the lowrider could trace its earliest roots to the 1940s, most notably after the Second World War. Arguably, the trend originated in California and made its way to Texas. With the resurgence of full-scale car production after the war, affordable vehicles allowed the working class to access their own ranflas. By the 1970’s, lowriding was a well-known past time representative of a unique brand of “Americanness.” Lowriders were also part of a larger expression that included pachucos/pachucas with their zoot suit styling and cruising. This included an affinity for listening to “oldies.’’ The lowrider lifestyle with all its panache and florid expression is also a form of self-determination in the American visual landscape: a belief that Mexican-Americans resist mainstream aesthetics in favor of their own canon. In other words, to ride on one’s own terms, low & slow with ‘stilo. Low and Slow: Lowrider Culture on the Border has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities: Exploring the human endeavor. Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this exhibition, do not necessarily represent those of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Report this entry
More from the same community-collection
Pony Express at El Paso Exploreum
A young boy "rides' a pony in Old El Paso at El Paso Exploreum ...
El Paso Exploreum Children's Museum Opens in El Paso
The city's first children's museum opened on Jan. 28, 2013. The ...
El Paso Police Department Motorcycle detail - 1928
Left to Right: H.J. Williams, Harold Green, E.W. Cockran, Leo ...
El Paso Police Detectives - 1930s
Front row left to right: ?, Maywood Brandon (Drennan), Callie ...
El Paso Police Department Women's Auxiliary Police - 1951 - 1953
El Paso Police Department Jail Matrons - 1951 - 1953 Bottom Row ...
El Paso Police officer Juan Escontrias - 20s
Throughout the 1920s, El Paso's lawmen were frequently the ...
Directing traffic in front of Hotel Orndoff - 1909
El Paso police officer using hand-operated traffic signals ...