
Black & Brown in the Inland Empire and Beyond
Jacob Adame (Briar Rosa), Freddy Calderon, James Coats, Yadira Dockstader, Xochitl Flores, Bonnie Gutierrez (blu), Samantha Herrera, Alexander Jovanie Howard, Duan Kellum, Gabe Lara, Juwaun Mccrary, Yulileth "Julie" Ordonez, Christopher Perez, Jesse Ramirez, Irene Monica Sanchez, Toni Sanchez, Denise Silva, Maryam Trebeau, Ida Tyus, Alondra X
The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture of the Riverside Art Museum
3581 Mission Inn Avenue, Riverside, CA 92501
Tue-Sun 10am-5pm, Thu until 8pm
Admission
Adult: $15.95, Senior (65+ years): $10.95, Educator: $10.95, College Student: $10.95, Children (13-17 years): $10.95, Children 12 and under: Free, Museum for All: $1 per person for up to 4 people with EBT, SNAP or WIC card
RAM (Riverside Art Museum & The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture) members: Free
About
Born out of a process grounded in collaboration and education, this exhibition brings together the voices and visions of artists and community members who took part in a series of workshops led by local historians, academics, and longtime residents of the Inland Empire. These workshops served as a space to uncover and engage with the layered histories of the region—touching on redlining, segregation, education inequity, language politics, migration, and more. Participants examined how these systemic issues have shaped—and continue to shape—the lived experiences of Black and Brown communities across time and geography. Armed with this deeper understanding, artists created work that responds directly to these historical truths. Each piece—whether created individually or in collaboration—serves as a visual dialogue between past and present, art and activism, memory and imagination. The result is an exhibition that not only highlights injustice, but also uplifts the voices and stories of those who have long fought to be seen, heard, and remembered. Black Brown in the Inland Empire and Beyond invites viewers to witness these narratives, to reflect on the enduring impact of structural inequality, and to celebrate the creativity, strength, and solidarity that emerges when communities tell their own stories.