Albuquerque, NM
Set in the Rio Grande valley between the Sandia Mountains and the West Mesa's volcanic escarpment, Albuquerque carries one of the Southwest's richest mural traditions. Nob Hill's Route 66 corridor, Old Town's pueblo-influenced streetscapes, and downtown's converted warehouses all carry work that reflects centuries of Pueblo, Hispano, and Anglo cultural layering — painted in the extraordinary New Mexico light that has drawn artists here for generations.
Featured Artists
All artists →Frederico Vigil
New Mexico fresco master whose monumental work at the National Hispanic Cultural Center spans nearly three thousand square feet. Vigil's Nob Hill Route 66 piece is a smaller but equally exacting commission — a meditation on the road's role in the Great Migration of Dust Bowl–era families moving through New Mexico toward California, rendered in his trademark earth-pigment palette.
Roxanne Swentzell
Santa Clara Pueblo sculptor and painter whose work centers the living continuity of Pueblo culture and governance. Swentzell's Old Town mural moves beyond the tourist-facing version of Pueblo heritage to depict the actual political and ceremonial complexity of contemporary Pueblo life — a work that challenges visitors to understand what they are actually visiting.
Monica Dena
Barelas native whose Rio Grande–focused work documents the acequias, cottonwood bosque, and neighborhood life of one of Albuquerque's oldest communities. Dena works with Barelas Community Coalition to ensure her murals reflect neighborhood memory rather than outside artistic projection — a practice that has made her the community's preferred visual voice.