Desierto Peregrino

Perla del Desierto, acrílico/tela, 147 x 147 cm, 2020

Miguel Valverde

Luz de Tierra, acrílico/tela, 146 x 295 cm, 2024

Paintings by Miguel Valverde

December 5, 2025–February 28, 2026

_________________________________

Closing Reception: February 28, 5:00–7:00 PM

Admission: $10.00/person  Click to purchase non-member admission
Free for Museum members and SRSU students, faculty, and staff
Click here to become a member

5:00–6:00: Artist talk with Miguel Valverde and his guest, Carlos A. Rohana, director of Museo Regional de Ojinaga

There will be signed prints for sale by Miguel as well as an unveiling of a mural he is donating to the Museum of the Big Bend.

_________________________________

Visual artist Miguel Valverde of Chihuahua City, Mexico, has more than two decades of experience devoted to the exploration of color, identity, and cultural symbolism.

His body of work spans muralism, sculpture, and graphic art, blending traditional techniques with a contemporary aesthetic that creates a dialogue between Mexico and Europe.

Valverde has participated in solo and group exhibitions in museums and galleries across Mexico, the United States, Germany, Austria, Belgium, and Slovakia. His work is distinguished by the integration of desert imagery, lucha libre (Mexican wrestling), nature, and the duality between life and death, offering a profound reflection on heritage and collective memory.

_________________________________

Through his art, Miguel Valverde dares to reveal to us the essence of northern Mexico—unfolding a vision that reaches deep into its landscapes, alive with color, flora, and fauna. The climates themselves are painted through color: vast scenes stretching from the Baja California Peninsula to the deserts of Sonora and Chihuahua, where temperatures swing from the searing 48°C to the biting -14°C—lands that know nothing of half measures.

Mexico cannot be defined by a single color, nor by a single identity. It holds as many as its living world — as its plants and animals, its legends and music, its silences and its boundless biodiversity. To recognize what the North embodies is to rediscover love and pride for the land where we were born, the land we behold through this Desert Pilgrim.

—Ricardo Flores Martínez, Manager, Museum of Tequila and Mezcal

Rodadora, acrílico/tela, 80 x 60.5 cm, 2020

El Guardían, acrílico/tela, 36 x 28.3 cm, 2024

Cañon del Pegüis, acrílico/tela, 200 x 136 cm, 2023