Centro Exhibitions

About Centro Exhibits

Inside Centro Cultural De La Raza!

Video displays a walk around video tour of Centro’s gallery during the Roberto R Pozos Solo exhibition in 2024

The Centro offers a gallery space for emerging and experienced artists to showcase their work to the San Diego / Tijuana Region and international visitors. Our volunteer curators bring diverse artistic visions to life. We feature exciting new exhibits and recurring ones, such as Day of the Dead and Enero Zapatista. Each exhibit opens with a reception where you can meet the artists, enjoy live entertainment, purchase artwork, and support local talent. Most exhibits are free, donation-based, or offered on a sliding scale.

Current Exhibits

This image has a red. green and white background with letters describing an upcoming show title "Chicanografia" on  the evolution of neighborhood letterform scripts,  the opening is on August 2nd from 5 to 10 p.m.

Chicanografia

las letras de los barrios de aztlán

Dates: August 2 - August 28, 2025

You're invited to the opening celebration of CHICANOGRAFIA, a powerful new exhibit by Daniel Placas, on August 2, 2025, from 5:00 to 10:00 PM at the Centro Cultural de la Raza. The evening will feature a sacred blessing by Aztec dancers, live music, a lowrider culture display, and merchandise.

Admission is free, and the exhibit will run throughout the month.

CHICANOGRAFIA began in 1997 as a project to document the unique tradition of placazos Chicano graffiti lettering rooted in Mexican-American communities of the Southwest. These styles predate East Coast graffiti by decades and reflect deep cultural expression and identity. Based on over twenty years of field research in San Diego, the exhibition highlights four distinct lettering forms and explores their connection to Chicano history, resistance, and community storytelling.

Come experience this exhibit and connect with the artists, and culture keepers who continue to carry this legacy forward.

Borderlands Visions:

Anti-Border Futures Exhibit

Extended Run now at The Woo Studios! 2212 Main St. SD, CA 92113

Part of the An Artist’s Duty Exhibit
Opening August 2nd, 3p-8p
Dates: August 2 - September 26, 2025

Centro Cultural de la Raza Anti-Border Futures is the final installment in Centro Cultural de la Raza’s Borderlands Visions series, centering creative resistance to the violence of borders. Rather than accepting imposed divisions, the exhibition imagines revolutionary alternatives to living, connecting, and belonging beyond borders.

Inspired by Chicana queer theorist Gloria Anzaldúa’s notion of the border as “an open wound,” the exhibit embraces contradiction as a starting point for transformation. For those who live at the border, the pain is real—as is the power to reimagine the world. Featuring works by XoQUE, Cog·nate Collective, Eagle and Condor Liberation Front collective, Colectivo Subterráneos and artists from the Kumeyaay nation, and others across the méxico–u.s. borderlands, the exhibit also includes a striking pieces by internationally acclaimed artists Einar and Jamex De la Torre.

Anti-Border Futures invites reflection, dialogue, creativity and the radical act of imagining life without borders—political, sexual, geographic, or psychic. It’s a space to be whole and to dream together beyond artificial divides.

With sections curated by:

Alessandra Moctezuma
Featuring Nanzi Muro, Katie Ruiz, Ana Andrade

Alessandra Moctezuma is Gallery Director and Professor of Fine Art at San Diego Mesa College, where she leads the Museum Studies program and teaches courses on Chicano Art. Ms. Moctezuma has extensive experience as a curator, instructor, artist, and in public art administration. Besides being the gallery director at the college, she has curated exhibitions for art spaces and museums, including unDocumenta (2017) at the Oceanside Museum of Art as part of the Getty’s initiative Pacific Standard Time LA/LA and a retrospective of Chicana artist Judith F. Baca, Memorias de Nuestra Tierra, for the Museum of Latin American Art, Long Beach (July 2021 – March 2022).

XoQUE Collective

XoQUE is a border art collective of diverse identities that revolve around women who are Xicana/x, Mexicanas, and Native, committed to social and racial justice. The word XoQUE can be translated to “crash” or “collision” in Spanish. The “X” is Nahuatl or Indigenous for the “Ch” in Chicana/x, and “X” marks the spot in colliding with the status quo and in providing a visual counter-narrative. XoQUE centers on multiple voices and dynamic interactions between artists, people, and ideas that crash and hold space for authentic feminine selfhood. Members include Berenice Badillo, Selina Calvo, Sandra Carmona, Jennifer Clay and Shirish Villaseñor.

Cog•nate Collective

Cog•nate Collective develops research projects, public interventions, and experimental pedagogical programs in collaboration with communities across the US/Mexico border region.

Since being founded in 2010, their work has interrogated the evolution of the border as it is simultaneously erased by neoliberal economic policies and bolstered through increased militarization – tracing the fallout of this incongruence for migrant communities on either side of the border.

Colectivo Subterráneos (Underground Collective)

Colectivo Subterráneos is a multi-generational group of Oaxacan artists, primarily composed of young people, who create relief prints and murals to illuminate social issues. The collective formally started in 2021 with just six members and has since grown to over thirty members. They maintain a multipurpose space in the center of Oaxaca where they make, show, and sell art and run a free art school called Escuela de Arte para el Pueblo (Art School for the People). Social movements in Oaxaca and beyond have shaped their artistic and political traditions. Inspired by internationalist leftist artists, their name purposefully aligns them with working-class, exploited, and oppressed communities who occupy spaces below the upper class and outside of top-down politics and social hierarchies. 

Borderlands Visions Committee

The Borderlands Visions Committee is made up of Centro board members and staff. They meet biweekly to oversee the events, programming, and budget related to the Borderlands exhibit funded by Mellon

Also featuring works by:

Alexa Macías Mojica Julia Hernandez, Ana Villalpando, Mariana Alvarez, Julie Freeman, Lauryn Dove, ITA, Roberto Camacho, Nico Fronterizo, Soledawg, Ale Uzarraga, Alejandro Morales Riveron, Jade Amargo Verdeflor, Maya Grace Misra, César Miranda Trejo, Sandra Carmona, Lerida Armendariz

Upcoming Exhibits

The image features the word "TEO" outlined in yellow letters, set against a background of people watching TV from a red truck. It includes the event time and date: September 6th, from 4:00 to 8:00 p.m. At 2004 Park Blvd San Diego.

TEŌ a photography & installation exhibition featuring intentionally sourced local photographers from San Diego and Tijuana.

The intention with this show is to highlight our unique lived experiences as Chicanx/Latine individuals who live in one of the most major militarized border cities in the country. We also aim to connect with our communidades en Los Angeles, San Francisco, Tucson, Chicago ~ the diverse spaces in which Chicanos/Latinos take up ~ in sharing our struggles and challenges as a people trying to survive on this stolen & colonized land.

PREVIOUS Exhibits

Enero Zapatista

Enero Zapatista is a month-long series of politically and culturally conscious events on unceded Kumeyaay land that commemorate the uprising of the Ejército Zapatista de Liberación Nacional (EZLN)/Zapatista Army of National Liberation, better known as the Zapatistas, in January 1994. For 21 years, San Diego has held Enero events every January, with over 10 years of hosting a closing concert and art exhibit at the Centro Cultural as part of the month’s activities.

This past January’s exhibit was titled We Teach Life: Towards Other Geographies and Calendars, which was itself the third part in our four-part series Borderlands Visions

Roberto R. Pozos

Solo Exhibition

The Roberto R. Pozos Solo Exhibit featured the works of longtime border resident and artist, Roberto R. Pozos. Pozos, originally from Calexico, really captures the essence of life on the U.S./Mexico border. From individual portraits of fronterizas/os to realistic landscapes depicting the trials and tribulations, the angst and the joy of life en la Frontera, Pozos’ solo show brought much life, laughter and joy to the Centro Cultural de la Raza.

Indigenous BorderLands

Borderlands Visions III

Indigenous Borderlands: Weaving Nepantla, Remembering Sacred Relations at Centro Cultural de la Raza! This exhibition weaves together the connections, community, and history shared by Indigenous peoples, challenging conventional norms to create a space of healing, reflection, and unity.

It is an attempt to situate the historic connection that Chicano Mexicanos have had with our land bases, but also as a tribalized community, acknowledging that we are also on unceded Indigenous Kumeyaay territory. We’ve, historically, always had important political, cultural, sacred, and historical connections to Indigenous peoples of this area.