Those activities ultimately sent him to jail where, he said, he had a chance to rest up, relax and reconsider. When he emerged, he began focusing entirely on custom car and motorcycle work. Then, when he found that his affiliation with the outlaw club was hampering his career as a designer and builder – a National Geographic TV show and an exhibition at the Autry Museum of the American West, he said, both got spiked because of his membership – he left the club and set out on his own.
Ordaz is 44 now, married and father of a 2-year-old son. He seems almost too mellow for his gangster past. Calm, genial and soft-spoken, heavily inked, he smokes cigarettes and smiles a lot. At his Inglewood shop, not far from his home, a dozen vicla bikes are in various stages of disrepair. One Harley awaits pin-striping, its tank poised next to the air brush station. Another, getting a ground-up rebuild, has spit its guts onto the floor, barrels and clutch basket resting on the concrete.One custom paint job depicts the late narcocorrido superstar Chalino Sanchez, whom Ordaz identifies as “like a Mexican Tupac.” Another pays tribute to the 1970s Mexican TV series “Chespirito.” Another, for a Black client, features images of African-American icons Martin Luther King Jr, Malcom X, Frederick Douglass, Huey Newton and Barack Obama. The four unfamiliar faces on the gas tank? “Those are family members who were killed by the police,” Ordaz said. In a loft high overhead are two or three vicla bicycles, the stretched and lowered Schwinns that may have been the progenitors of the current motorcycle versions.
Life in Inglewood hasn’t been easy. Ordaz says he is routinely stopped by the LA County Sheriffs, who share jurisdiction with the Inglewood Police Department, though he’s lived in the area for decades. Last year he was stopped four times in a single month. “They never say ‘license and registration’ down here,” Ordaz says. “It’s just, ‘Out of the car.’” Despite that, he says, Inglewood is home, and it’s where he feels comfortable. “There’s people here who look like me.”A new menace is gentrification. Outsiders have come to Inglewood for the central location and lower real estate prices. Every week, Ordaz says, another house changes hands. “All of a sudden, the old family is gone and there’s some white people walking a dog.” On that Sunday morning in Elysian Park, a dozen bikes bearing Malo’s handiwork were scattered along Stadium Boulevard. Though he’d only started organizing the event a week before, turnout was strong. He was greeted with back slaps, handshakes and bro-hugs by the very mixed crowd. Over here were couples arriving two-up, single females riding alone, alongside OGs on blacked-out hogs, parked next to a group of about 25 members of a three-patch motorcycle club.
Everyone seemed to be getting along, including members of sets who usually can’t hang out together without violence breaking out. “It’s amazing,” Ordaz said. “No one has ever done this before – bringing together all these people from all these sets. And everyone’s cool, and they all identify with the vicla movement.” Ordaz said it was in 2006, at a low rider show, that he saw his first proper vicla – a Harley custom painted with low rider motifs and patterns. He built his own vicla in 2008, and slowly watched the form mature. It’s not just a matter of motorcycles. For Malo, the machines and the aesthetic represent a cornerstone of a true Chicano culture that he fears is being assimilated out of existence. “I use the word ‘Chicano’ because I want it to come back again,” he says. “Latino. LatinX. That’s not me. Chicano is a way to remember where we came from, why we had a need to identify ourselves. That’s going to be lost if we don’t continue to pass it on.”The vicla scene has already moved beyond California. There’s a nascent vicla movement in Denver, Ordaz says. Denise M. Sandoval, a professor of Chicana and Chicano studies at California State University, Northridge, along with automotive historian Ken Gross, mounted a “Viva Viclas!” show in 2019 at North Carolina’s CAM Raleigh. Vicla shows were held last year in New Braunfels and El Paso, Texas, It’s even international. Australia has an annual Vicla Nationals, held in December. For all the current vibrancy, it’s unclear where vicla actually started. Sandoval believes the aesthetic traveled from low rider cars to bicycles to motorcycles – though when and where, exactly, is mysterious. Ordaz has his own theories. On the day we met at his shop, he was excited to have heard about an 81-year-old man from Texas, now living in the San Fernando Valley, who had his own vicla as a younger man. When we parted, Ordaz was making plans to meet the man and pay his respects. “This is what I’m doing now,” he said. “My whole life was bringing me up to this, to a chance to unite everyone. We’re all brothers.”
Much like lowriders this just aint my thing ( too over the top for my introverted keep it simple aesthetics ) But also just like lowriders there’s no denying the craftsmanship , engineering and artistry that goes into this .
So … as with lowriders …. I’ll respect , admire .. and appreciate .
But being in Denver … gotta tell ya .. I’ve seen no evidence of VILCA here … as in ZERO .. on the road … in the neighborhoods ..or at the shows … and lets face it … these’d be impossible to miss … but … I’ll keep my eyes open … and let you know .
😎