rafael esparza (born in 1981) is an American
performance artist who lives and works in
Los Angeles.
His work includes performances affecting his physical well-being and installations constructed from
adobe
Adobe ( ; ) is a building material made from earth and organic materials. is Spanish for ''mudbrick''. In some English-speaking regions of Spanish heritage, such as the Southwestern United States, the term is used to refer to any kind of e ...
bricks. Esparza often works with collaborators, including members of his family.
Esparza's work has been shown at multiple private and public locations, such as parks, sidewalks, nightclubs, and museums. Rafael Esparza's artistic practice delves into themes of heritage, identity, and endurance. He frequently incorporates elements of fashion, which he uses to explore the body, as well as his Mexican-American background, showcasing a deep connection to his cultural roots. His performances, which sometimes involve physically demanding tasks or ritualistic actions, invite audiences to contemplate the boundaries of art and the human experience. Esparza's adobe brick installations, a nod to traditional construction methods, serve as both artistic creations and symbols of resilience. Through his diverse body of work, Esparza challenges conventional artistic norms and prompts viewers to engage with thought-provoking concepts in unconventional settings.
Early life and education
Esparza was born and raised in
Pasadena,
California, and is the son of Mexican immigrants from
Durango
Durango (), officially named Estado Libre y Soberano de Durango ( en, Free and Sovereign State of Durango; Tepehuán: ''Korian''; Nahuatl: ''Tepēhuahcān''), is one of the 31 states which make up the 32 Federal Entities of Mexico, situated in ...
,
Mexico.
His father, Ramón Esparza, worked in construction for over 30 years and used to make adobe bricks back in Mexico.
Later on, his father taught him how to make adobe bricks to reconcile their relationship after Esparza came out as
queer
''Queer'' is an umbrella term for people who are not heterosexual or cisgender. Originally meaning or , ''queer'' came to be used pejoratively against those with same-sex desires or relationships in the late 19th century. Beginning in the lat ...
.
Esparza grew up interested in art but realized that his art was not very relatable to the
old master type of art that has been presented and critically acclaimed throughout history. As he attended
East Los Angeles College during his early twenties, he began to focus on performance art.
The Latino art collective Asco introduced Esparza to performance art and building installations.
His interest in performance art was further solidified when he attended
UCLA, where he marked the campus with different art pieces.
In 2011 he graduated from UCLA with a
bachelor's degree in fine arts.
Following his graduation, Esparza ventured to Brooklyn, where he continues to redefine artistic norms, challenge societal narratives, and engage with themes of identity and queerness, making his work an impactful fusion of personal storytelling and contemporary expression.
Work and career

Esparza's work is heavily influenced by politically charged topics such as ethnicity, gender studies, and the environment.
Esparza has claimed that he is influenced by the relationships between his ethnicities and society. He uses aspects of materiality, memory, and (non)documentation as primary tools to question and critique ideologies that have been set and remain today by past generations that may be outdated.
This influence reflects in his works as they sometimes tackle topics surrounding
Chicano and queer histories like
colonization
Colonization, or colonisation, constitutes large-scale population movements wherein migrants maintain strong links with their, or their ancestors', former country – by such links, gain advantage over other inhabitants of the territory. When ...
, male sexuality, freedom, home, and family.
Oftentimes, Esparza dives deeper into his ideologies and attempts to critique social and racial issues within mainstream art by using his art as a way of "browning the white cube", and embodying the trials and tribulations of an immigrant's life that have helped push past the narratives of traditional art spaces.
Esparza's projects typically involve collaboration around local labor and land and are done with the intent of a deeper spiritual connection.
Esparza's Staring at the Sun was a solo exhibition at
MASS MoCA, North Adams, Massachusetts, where he covered the white gallery space with adobe bricks and featured a series of new paintings on the surface of the adobe, which included
portraiture,
landscape
A landscape is the visible features of an area of land, its landforms, and how they integrate with natural or man-made features, often considered in terms of their aesthetic appeal.''New Oxford American Dictionary''. A landscape includes the ...
, and
abstraction.
Esparza's intent behind this presentation was to represent his people, not only by coloring the white space within the museum with bwon adobe bricks but also by representing the multiple immigrants that came to America due to the
Bracero Program.
It was an effort to redefine the unfair prejudice clouded over Hispanics, expressing that they do not need any fumigation, such as the adobe bricks that decay. He also wanted to create a narrative on the importance of land.
In 2013, Esparza performed ''chino, indio, negro'' with Sebastian Hernandez at Perform Chinatown 2013.
''chino, indio, negro'' was performed near the site of the
Chinese Massacre of 1871 in response to that event.
Esparza performed El Hoyo with his brother, Beto Esparza, and fellow artist Nick Duran that same year.
''El Hoyo'' was performed at
Human Resources and reflected Esparza's identity as a queer, working-class son of immigrants.
Esparza performed in
Dorian Wood's "O" video.
[Dorian Wood, Queer Artist, Premieres 'O' (Video)](_blank)
The Huffington Post. In August 2013, Esparza and Wood performed "CONFUSION IS SEX #3" at the Sepulveda Wildlife Basin. The piece was the third installment of a performance art series organized by
Dawn Kasper
Dawn Kasper (born 1977 in Fairfax, Virginia) is a New York-based interdisciplinary artist working across genres of performance, installation, sculpture, drawing, photography, video, and sound. Her often improvisational work derives from a "fascina ...
, Oscar Santos, and Dino Dinco.
The Sepulveda Wildlife Basin, the location of "CONFUSION IS SEX #3," has been used as a homeless encampment and a location for gay men to cruise for sex. In 2012, part of it was bulldozed by the US Corps of Army Engineers.
For his participation in the 2016 Made in L.A. Biennial at the
Hammer Museum
The Hammer Museum, which is affiliated with the University of California, Los Angeles, is an art museum and cultural center known for its artist-centric and progressive array of exhibitions and public programs. Founded in 1990 by the entrepreneur- ...
, Esparza created "Tierra," a field of adobe bricks from Los Angeles' dirt. The artist's sculptures and objects were buried and unearthed in
Elysian Park, a historical site of early
Latinx communities' displacement.
Esparza also collaborated with artist Cassils on Independence Day 2020 to create "In Plain Sight," which was an artwork that supported the abolition of mass immigrant detention, incarnation, and the unfair prejudice that was displayed for immigrants, especially across the border. The project was deliberately planned to be broken down into 5 parts. The first was the sky typing fleets that displayed messages over governmental institutions and facilities such as detention facilities, immigration courts, borders, and other sites of historic relevance. The steps that followed this display of art were "an interactive website, an anthology docuseries, accessible actions for the public to take to join the movement against immigrant detention, and cultural partnerships producing arts-related education and engagement."
Esparza was included in the 2017
Whitney Biennial. For the exhibition, he created "Figure Ground: Beyond the White Field,"; a gallery made of adobe bricks inside the museum.
The adobe room, made with dirt from
Los Angeles River, was used as an exhibition space by other LA-based Latino artists Esparza invited to participate. In 2018, Esparza's collaborative exhibition and performance event ''de la calle was'' his first solo museum presentation at the
Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles
The Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (ICA LA), formerly known as the Santa Monica Museum of Art (SMMoA), is a contemporary art museum in Los Angeles, CA. As an independent and non-collecting art museum (or kunsthalle), it exhibits the ...
.
Esparza used the museum's gallery for exhibition, production, and collaboration, where selected local artists and nightlife personalities worked collaboratively to produce works to display at the museum and for performance.
The performance, ''a la calle'', took place in the Fashion district of downtown Los Angeles
Santee Alley. Esparza, other artists, and queer nightlife personalities were involved in the construction of various garments, which ranged from a translucent rainbow dress to an orange hoodie with mechanical puppies strung around the neckline.
From January 20 - March 3, 2018, at the Commonwealth and Council Gallery, Rafa Esparza, in collaboration with Beatriz Cortez and other artists, had an exhibition named ''Pasado mañana''- meaning Spanish “the day after tomorrow.” This exhibition features artwork based on the foundation of immigrant labor that is used to create a future among subjects such as race, class, and culture to become possible.
On September 21, 2019, Esparza held a performance in Washington named the Indestructible Columns. It was held on the south side of the White House on the 52-acre park, Ellipse. He was wearing a black blazer, a possible reference to the abolitionists of the 18th and 19th centuries. He encased himself in a concrete cylinder from the waist down, made by Timo Fahler, and spent two hours chipping away at the concrete to free himself. Esparza said that this was his way of deconstructing the supporting systems that have upheld the inhumane white supremacist ideologies. Esparza did this performance to make a statement about the 45th president separating families at the border in intolerable conditions. In 2018/2019 Trump began implementing different travel bans and heavy restrictions on existing immigration policies. All of these contributed to the separation of families at the border due to rapid deportation and the consistent denial of entry into the US.
In 2020, Rafa Esparza collaborated with Eamon Ore-Giron and Gala Porras-Kim for the Art Basel 2020; their exhibition was also featured at Commonwealth and Council Gallery. This exhibition featured Esparza’s paintings that were created on Adobe- his artwork was dedicated to confronting white supremacy through the history of colonial violence. While also connecting to the indigenous people of the Americas and their connection to the land. Esparza created a painting of his older brother that showed him in a nostalgic rendition of a pre-Instagram photograph. Esparza has also created painted works on adobe that evoke the fantasies and real-world experiences of the
Latinx queer community.
November 30, 2022, fo
Miami Beach Art Basel''L.A Times Image Magazine,'' ''Commonwealth and Council art gallery collaborated'' with rafa esparza on his performance of "''Corpo RanfLA: Terra Cruiser”'' ''.'' The performance consisted of an out of commission repurposed 25 cent mechanical ride that was transformed into a cyborg lowrider cruiser. People that were given a ticket to ride the listened to a recording of esparza recounting a story of creating CorpoRanfLA and the passage of time. This piece was one of the few that was not for sale at Art Basel, It was for performance only. Fellow riders included L.A. artists Gabriela Ruiz, Karla Canseco, Victor Barragán, and Rosales, all of whom had helped bring the piece together.
This exhibition builds upon a previous performance he had done in collaboration with Mario Ayala, Tanya Melendez, Paul Marcus Rodriguez and Fabian Guerrero titled "''Corpo ranfla, 2018"''. For that performance esparza was spray painted fuchsia pink, detailed with roses, and various portraits to resemble the infamous lowrider Gypsy Rose. Esparza’s 2018 performance was an ode to the intersexuality of queer lowrider culture that he experienced. He used his body to display himself as a kind of human lowrider, welcoming sexualization by typically hyper-masculine men. Alongside him on stage were Fabian Guerrero as his photographer and Sebastian Hernandez acting as the model displaying the lowrider. They wanted to take back the feeling of not being welcomed in these car shows due to the toxic environment. In lowrider culture they take the paint jobs of their cars very seriously, thinking of it as its own artform and beauty. Esparza paid homage to this by recreating his favorite car at the time, Gypsy Rose. This exhibition explored the public gay cruising sites that intersected with public lowrider cruising sites. This performance expressed the different connotations of the word "
cruising". The performance started at
Elysian Park in Los Angeles where many car enthusiasts cruise with their lowriders, but also many gay men cruise for sexual encounters. This location was the perfect intersection for both worlds. To end this performance esparza performed a dance alongside Sebastián Hernández at the
Mayan Theater
The Mayan Theater in Los Angeles, California is a landmark former movie palace and current nightclub and music venue.
History
The Mayan Theater opened in August 1927 as a performance arts theater.
Leon Hefflin Sr. rented out the Mayan Theater d ...
. Both of these performances focus on how there is lacking feminine and queer expression in this hyper-masculine space.
The 2022 revision of the original ''Corpo ranfLA'' (2018) includes a cyborg component that subverts the traditional narrative of the mechanical aiding the human. He demonstrates how technology can aid human efforts to plan seeds for the future. He is also interested in conveying the history of
anthropomorphism
Anthropomorphism is the attribution of human traits, emotions, or intentions to non-human entities. It is considered to be an innate tendency of human psychology.
Personification is the related attribution of human form and characteristics t ...
, which is prevalent in Indigenous communities. The practice of performance art effectively allows him to map out the complex relationships between people and things. The lack of feminine and queer expression in this hyper-masculine space is the focus of both these performances, as well as the photoshoot accompanying the feature piece about ''Corpo ranfLA'' in the Los Angeles Times. This shoot, documented by Estevan Oriol, features esparza wearing an outfit designed by
Bárbara Sánchez-Kane
Barbara Sánchez-Kane is a Mexican menswear fashion designer. She is known for her experimental and political statements mixed with her fashion designs.
Early life and background
She is from Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico, and was born around . Her ...
. In her signature sculptural and subversive manner, Sanchez-Kane designed a metal cyborgian piece of armor for one of esparza's hands, along with a white billowing dress. esparza's collaborators, including
Guadalupe Rosales
Guadalupe Rosales (born 1980) is an American artist and educator. She is best known for her archival projects, “Veteranas and Rucas” and “Map Pointz,” found on social media. The archives focus on Latino backyard party scenes and undergrou ...
and Karla Ekatherine Canseco, are also in Sanchez-Kane pieces.
Use of style
Along with the way he dresses the body in ''Indestructible Columns'' and both renditions of ''Corpo ranfLA'', esparza embraces fashion and style as a fundamental element in his practice. He believes that fashion is the manifestation of a plethora of religious, sexual, and racial identities and narratives. esparza and his collaborators intend to give a voice to those marginalized historically and in today's society. His fashion performance in 2018, ''a la Calle'', merges the personal with the public by meshing
streetwear
Streetwear is a style of casual clothing which became global in the 1990s. It grew from New York hip hop fashion and Californian surf culture to encompass elements of sportswear, punk, skateboarding and Japanese street fashion. Eventually hau ...
with elegance. esparza speaks to the role of adornment and fashion within the wider queer community. He explains how fashion functions as a way of expressing one's identity in a heteronormative world, and queer expression emerges even in the vibrant colors of low rider cars.
Public art collections
Esparza's work has been showcased at many notable public art institutions. The institutions include:
*
Vincent Price Art Museum
The Vincent Price Art Museum (VPAM) is an art museum located at East Los Angeles College in Monterey Park, California, US.
The museum is named after American actor Vincent Price who donated portions of his personal art collection to the coll ...
, Monterey Park, CA (2013)
*
Clockshop, Bowtie Project, Los Angeles (2014)
*
Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, CA (2015)
*
Armory Center for the Arts The Armory Center for the Arts, also known as the Armory, is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit visual arts organization located in Pasadena, California. The Armory provides community arts education programs for all ages and exhibitions of contemporary art, mos ...
, Pasadena (2015)
*
Hammer Museum
The Hammer Museum, which is affiliated with the University of California, Los Angeles, is an art museum and cultural center known for its artist-centric and progressive array of exhibitions and public programs. Founded in 1990 by the entrepreneur- ...
, Los Angeles (2016)
*
Bemis Center for Contemporary Art, Omaha, NV (2017)
*
ArtPace, San Antonio, TX (2018)
*
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2018)
*
Performance Space New York and the Ellipse, Washington, D.C. (2019)
*
Kohn Gallery
Kohn Gallery is an art gallery established in 1985 and located in Hollywood, California. The space, under the direction of gallerist Michael Kohn, has exhibited works by seminal Pop artist Wallace Berman, Colombian painter Maria Berrio, María Ber ...
, Los Angeles (2020)
*
Commonwealth and Council
Commonwealth and Council is an American contemporary art gallery located in Koreatown, Los Angeles.
History
The gallery was founded in 2010 by artist and curator Young Chung. It began in his apartment on Commonwealth Avenue and Council Street i ...
, Los Angeles (2021)
Art Basel Miami Beach (2022)
MASS MoCA (2019)
Exhibitions
1. Exhibition at the Whitney Biennial (2017):
Rafa Esparza exhibited his installation "Tierra" at the Whitney Biennial in 2017. "Tierra" was a large-scale, site-specific adobe brick sculpture that explored themes of labor, immigration, and the intersection of queer and Chicano identities.
2. Collaboration with Beatriz Cortez at the Hammer Museum (2020):
Esparza collaborated with fellow artist Beatriz Cortez for the exhibition "Pasado mañana" at the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles in 2020. The exhibition featured a mix of sculptures, murals, and adobe structures that addressed themes of futurism, indigenous culture, and the environment.
3. Solo Exhibition "STILL" at Commonwealth and Council (2019):
In 2019, Rafa Esparza presented a solo exhibition titled "STILL" at the Commonwealth and Council gallery in Los Angeles. The show featured a series of new sculptures and installations that continued his exploration of identity and place.
4. "Tierra. Sangre. Oro." at the Ballroom Marfa (2018):
Esparza presented the solo exhibition "Tierra. Sangre. Oro." at the Ballroom Marfa in Texas in 2018. The exhibition included an immersive adobe installation that delved into the historical and contemporary impacts of colonization on indigenous communities.
5. "Pasado mañana" at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery (2019):
Following their collaboration at the Hammer Museum, Rafa Esparza and Beatriz Cortez exhibited their joint project "Pasado mañana" at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery in 2019, further exploring themes of utopia, migration, and the future.
6. Article in Artforum - "Material Histories" (2019):
Rafa Esparza's work and artistic practice were featured in a 2019 article titled "Material Histories" in Artforum magazine. The article discussed his use of adobe as a material to address issues of colonization, identity, and cultural preservation.
7. Exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (ICA LA) (2018):
Esparza was part of a group exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (ICA LA) in 2018. The exhibition, titled "Selections from the Collection of the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles," showcased pieces from the museum's collection, including Esparza's artwork.
8. "Landscapes for People" Public Art Project (2019):
In 2019, Rafa Esparza participated in the "Landscapes for People" public art project in Los Angeles. He created an adobe platform at the Los Angeles State Historic Park, providing a communal space for gatherings and reflection.
9. "Golden State" Performance (2018):
Esparza staged the performance art piece "Golden State" at REDCAT (Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater) in Los Angeles in 2018. The performance involved constructing and deconstructing an adobe brick sculpture while engaging with themes of labor and belonging.
10. Co-curator of "Queer Califas" Exhibition (2020):
Rafa Esparza co-curated the exhibition "Queer Califas" at the Vincent Price Art Museum in Monterey Park, California, in 2020. The exhibition highlighted the work of queer artists and activists in California, exploring their contributions to the state's cultural landscape.
References
35.https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/arts/miranda/la-et-cam-rafa-esparza-ica-la-20180625-story.html
36.https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/15/style/latinx-artists-designers-new-york-los-angeles.html
37.https://hammer.ucla.edu/exhibitions/2016/made-in-la-2016/rafa-esparza
External links
Website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Esparza, Rafa
Living people
Performance art in Los Angeles
American performance artists
American artists of Mexican descent
Queer artists
American LGBT artists
1981 births