Pilar Tompkins Rivas
Pilar Tompkins Rivas is an American museum executive, curator, and arts administrator. She has held leadership and curatorial positions at institutions including the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, the Vincent Price Art Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the 18th Street Arts Center. Her work focuses on narrative art, Latinx and Latin American art, youth culture, and community-centered museum practice. She has organized nationally and internationally recognized exhibitions, contributed to scholarship on contemporary art and photography, and played a significant role in expanding institutional approaches to Latinx and Latin American art. In 2022, she delivered the commencement address for the University of Texas at Austin’s College of Fine Arts.
Early Life and Education
Tompkins Rivas was born and raised in Dallas, Texas, and attended Booker T. Washington High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, where she graduated salutatorian. She earned undergraduate degrees at the University of Texas at Austin and pursued additional studies in São Paulo and Salvador, Brazil, and Florence, Italy. She later completed her master’s and doctoral coursework at Claremont Graduate University.Early career
Tompkins Rivas relocated to Los Angeles in 2001, where she began her career in community arts and mural restoration. Drawing on her background as a studio artist and trained muralist, she restored a canvas panel mural by Chicana artist Judith F. Baca at the Social and Public Art Resource Center in Venice, California.She later served as director of several prominent Los Angeles galleries, including the Patricia Faure Gallery and The Project, working with artists such as John Divola, Llyn Foulkes, Jacob Hashimoto, Mark Bradford, Julie Mehretu, Paul Pfeiffer, Aernout Mik, Yoshua Okón, Tracey Rose, María Elena González, Coco Fusco, Daniel Joseph Martinez, and Kori Newkirk.
Vexing: Female Voices from East LA Punk (2008)
In 2008, Tompkins Rivas co-curatedCareer
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)
From 2013 to 2016, Tompkins Rivas served as Coordinator of Curatorial Initiatives at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. She helped establish and codirect the UCLA–LACMA Art History Practicum Initiative and the Andrew W. Mellon Undergraduate Curatorial Fellowship Program. She also contributed to the Getty’s Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA initiative, co-curating major exhibitions includingHome—So Different, So Appealing (2017)
Co-curated with Mari Carmen Ramírez and Chon A. Noriega,Vincent Price Art Museum (VPAM)
In 2016, Tompkins Rivas was appointed Director of the Vincent Price Art Museum at East Los Angeles College, becoming the first Latina to lead the museum since its founding in 1957. There she curated early exhibitions of prominent artists including Patrick Martinez, Gabriela Ruiz, Edgar Fabián Frías, Beatriz Cortez, Guadalupe Rosales, and Umar Rashid, among others.Tastemakers & Earthshakers (2016)
Her inaugural exhibition,Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell (2017–2020)
Under her tenure, the museum presentedA Decolonial Atlas (2017–2018)
She curatedSonic Terrains in Latinx Art (2022)
In 2022, Tompkins Rivas co-organizedLucas Museum of Narrative Art
From 2020 to 2025, Tompkins Rivas served as Chief Curator and Deputy Director of Curatorial & Collections at the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. In this role, she worked closely with the museum’s founders, filmmaker George Lucas and business leader Mellody Hobson, helping to shape the institution’s curatorial vision, acquisitions strategy, and inaugural exhibitions.She played a central role in establishing the museum’s curatorial and collections infrastructure, including the development of inaugural exhibitions, the design of 100,000 square feet of gallery space, and the stewardship of a 140,000-object collection.
Under her tenure, the museum expanded its acquisitions to include works by Frida Kahlo, Robert Colescott, Alice Neel, Artemisia Gentileschi, and Criselda Vásquez, among others.
Curatorial work and Selected Exhibitions
Tompkins Rivas’s curatorial practice centers on visibility, belonging, youth culture, decoloniality, and the intersections of identity, community, and narrative.Her exhibitions have been presented in the United States, Mexico, Colombia, France, Egypt, and Italy.
Selected exhibitionsInaugural Exhibitions, Lucas Museum of Narrative Art You Belong Here: Place, People, and Purpose in Latinx Photography, Princeton University Art Museum; Michael C. Carlos Museum Sonic Terrains in Latinx Art, Vincent Price Art Museum Liquid Light, Vincent Price Art Museum Frieze Projects, Frieze Los Angeles Gabriela Ruiz: Full of Tears, Vincent Price Art Museum Carolina Caycedo: Apariciones / Apparitions, Vincent Price Art Museum Umar Rashid: The World You Know Is a Fiction, Vincent Price Art Museum Regeneración: Three Generations of Revolutionary Ideology, Vincent Price Art Museum Guadalupe Rosales: Echoes of a Collective Memory, Vincent Price Art Museum Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell, VPAM; Frost Art Museum; National Museum of Mexican Art; Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art Home—So Different, So Appealing, LACMA; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston A Universal History of Infamy, LACMA; Charles White Elementary; 18th Street Arts Center Tastemakers & Earthshakers, Vincent Price Art Museum A Decolonial Atlas, VPAM; Tufts University; Union College; Cairo Biennial; Oficina de Proyectos Culturales Asco and Friends: Exiled Portraits, Triangle France Bas Jan Ader: Suspended Between Laughter and Tears, Pitzer College Art Galleries; Museo de Arte Zapopan Vexing: Female Voices from East LA Punk, Claremont Museum of Art; Museo de las Artes, Guadalajara
- MexiCali Biennial, Mexicali and Los Angeles
Publications
Aperture “Latinx” issue and national exhibition tourIn 2021, Tompkins Rivas served as Guest Editor of Latinx, Issue 245 of Aperture magazine, a landmark publication examining more than a century of image-making by Latinx photographers and artists. The issue brought together portfolios, essays, and archival materials that foregrounded the role of personal, vernacular, and community-based photography in shaping Latinx visual culture. In her introduction, Tompkins Rivas emphasized the importance of family and personal archives in documenting histories often absent from mainstream institutions, noting that the first images that came to mind were “the personal photographs that have helped me piece together the story of my family’s history as Latinos in the United States.”
The issue received significant critical attention. Writing in the Los Angeles Times, columnist Carolina A. Miranda compared its impact to the influential 1990 exhibition Chicano Art: Resistance and Affirmation , describing Latinx as “a thoughtful introduction to photography by Latino artists — a place to start looking into histories that have been neglected.”
Following the publication, Tompkins Rivas organized a related exhibition, You Belong Here: Place, People, and Purpose in Latinx Photography, which toured nationally for several years. The exhibition opened at the Princeton University Art Museum in 2023 and later traveled to the Michael C. Carlos Museum at Emory University. Featuring works by artists such as Guadalupe Rosales, Hiram Maristany, Reynaldo Rivera, Laura Aguilar, and John M. Valadez, the exhibition expanded on themes introduced in the Aperture issue, highlighting the centrality of Latinx photographers in documenting community histories, cultural identity, and everyday life.
Selected Publications
Latinx, *Aperture Magazine*, Issue 245, 2021 Yolanda González: Sueño de Familia / Dream of Family, VPAM, 2020 Dialogues in Time: Charting Genealogies and Intersections of Gender, ArtBo, 2018 Regeneración: Three Generations of Revolutionary Ideology, VPAM, 2018 Home—So Different, So Appealing, LACMA; MFA Houston; UCLA CSRC, 2017 A Universal History of Infamy, LACMA, 2017 Forêt Intérieure/Interior Forest, 18th Street Arts Center, 2016 18th Street Arts Center 2012–2013, 18th Street Arts Center, 2014 L.A. Xicano, UCLA CSRC, 2011 ;Winner, 2012 Independent Publisher Book Awards, Gold Medal, West-Pacific Best Regional Non-fiction
Winner, 2012 international Latino Book Awards, 1st Place, Best Art Books Bas Jan Ader: Suspended Between Laughter and Tears, Pitzer College Art Galleries, 2010 Vexing: Female Voices from East L.A. Punk, Claremont Museum of Art, 2008 MexiCali Biennial, 2006
Publication Management
Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell, VPAM and UCLA CSRC, 2017- Winner, Independent Publisher Book Awards
- Winner, International Latino Book Awards
Media and film appearances
Tompkins Rivas has appeared in several film and television programs, including:ASCO: Without Permission — SelfArtbound — Consulting ProducerModern Art Blitz — GuestSpeaking engagements
- Museum of Modern Art
- Princeton University Art Museum
- Michael C. Carlos Museum
- Aperture Foundation
- Getty Research Institute — “Imaginaries of LA: Guadalupe Rosales and Pilar Tompkins Rivas”
- Getty Villa — “Picture Worlds: Storytelling on Greek, Maya and Moche Pottery”
- Los Angeles County Museum of Art — “Celebrating the History of Murals in Los Angeles with Judy Baca,” with Michael Govan and Pilar Tompkins Rivas
- University of Texas at Austin