Motor Trend: Concept Car Drawing - He Will Be Your Light - Lowrider Arte
Concept Car Drawing - He Will Be Your Light - Lowrider Arte
LOWRIDER is where style, identity, music, family, and street legacy come together. Every show, every feature, and every build is part of something bigger — a culture that turns heads, brings people together, and makes you want to be part of it the second you see it roll by.
NPR's A Martinez talks with Denise Sandoval, professor of Chicana and Chicano studies at California State University, Northridge, about how lowrider culture has endured and spread.
Lowriders aren’t just cars; they’re moving pieces of art, dipped in paint so rich it tells its own story. They shine, they dance, they float down the street like poetry on chrome. But why do they grab people the way they do? Simple. You don’t see them every day.
1964 Chevrolet Impala named "Gypsy Rose," owned by Jesse Valadez, on display in the Petersen Automotive Museum. [1] . It is considered one of the most iconic lowriders ever built. [2] A lowrider or low rider is a customized car with a lowered body that emerged in the post-WWII, 1940s-1950's era. [3] .
“Lowrider” is the name used for cars transformed into cultural expressions and for the dedicated aficionados who make and drive them. Historically, lowriders were mostly Latino men from Texas, the Southwest, and southern California.
Here are 10 old-school cars that had a huge influence on the lowrider scene. It’s impossible to discuss the history of lowriders without highlighting the importance of the Chevrolet Impala.