Best Chicano Art Space
At first glance, Xolo Coffee looks like your average cafecito spot tucked in a strip mall off 16th Street — but step inside and you’ll find it’s more like a dynamic gallery of Chicano pride. The space is home to “Visions in Paint,” a rotating exhibit of Mexican-American and lowrider-inspired artwork that includes vintage photography, pinstriped trunk-lid paintings and portraits that appear out of an old East L.A. photo album. The chairs rock custom tuck-and-roll, and chrome is everywhere, including a Dayton wire wheel which doubles as a flower pot. Even the espresso machine is custom-painted. But the artistry doesn’t stop at the espresso bar. Next door, there’s a tattoo shop with the same old-school soul. It’s owned by the same family and run by El Whyner, a local legend who’s part photographer, part tattoo artist, part custom car builder, part Lowrider Magazine photographer and writer — and full-on culture keeper. Pop-ups here are legendary: lowriders packed into the lot, wartime sirens screaming, zoot suits and hoop earrings in full effect. Xolo Coffee: curated caffeine, handmade snacks, chrome and cultura.