Mario Ayala, Mickey Mouses, 2025. Acrylic on canvas, 76 x 42 inches. The Broad Art Foundation, Los Angeles, California. Photo: Grant Guiterriez
Mario Ayala: Seven Vans
About
Mario Ayala: Seven Vans is the artist’s first solo museum presentation in the United States. Expanding on his signature shaped canvases—often depicting the back of cars with technical precision—Seven Vans debuts seven life-size van paintings created specifically for Houston. Derived from the word caravan, the van bridges histories of commerce and counterculture.
Each painting channels the sensibility and personality of its owner, functioning like a pseudo-portrait. Creating Seven Vans as a collective ensemble, Ayala has rendered members of his city without depicting their faces. Based on the artist’s real-life observations—outside his laundromat, dentist office, and skate park—Ayala invites us to engage parasocially with imagined lives.
Known for his expert application of industrial painting techniques such as airbrushing, Ayala produces witty graphic mashups and trompe l'oeil (or optical tricks) on shaped canvases. Ayala draws from visual traditions linked to his home in California, including Mexican-American muralism, body tattooing, and highway signage. Ayala’s connection to the automotive community stems from his father, a truck driver, and his own lifelong interest in car customization and lowrider culture.
Seven Vans centers the hybridity that defines Ayala’s work: the interplay of presence and absence, of fine art and popular culture. Through this singular blend, Ayala crafts a personal and imaginative visual vocabulary.
Organizers
Mario Ayala: Seven Vans is organized by Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (CAMH) and curated by Patricia Restrepo, Curator. The exhibition was was conceived of by Hesse McGraw, CAMH’s former Executive Director.
Support
Support for Mario Ayala: Seven Vans is provided by David Kordansky Gallery.
Contemporary Arts Museum Houston exhibitions are made possible by the patrons, benefactors, and donors to CAMH’s Major Exhibition Fund: Anonymous, Chinhui Juhn and Eddie Allen, Louise Jamail, Sissy and Denny Kempner, and Beverly and Howard Robinson.