• Close-up of a textured black and white artistic wall mural depicting multiple faces, focusing on expressive eyes and facial features with bold lines and shading.

    Printmaking / Murals / Community

  • A stylized digital illustration of a girl with dark skin and braided hair, wearing a jacket with a smiley face patch, holding a helmet with a reflective visor. She stands on a surface with scattered toys and objects, with a chaotic background featuring floating objects, explosions, a UFO, and a satellite, all depicted in warm tones of orange, yellow, and red.

    Printmaking / Murals / Community

  • An artist creates a large black and white mural featuring a mythological creature with a lion's face and horns, surrounded by swirling clouds, trees, and volcanic mountains on a red background.

    Printmaking / Murals / Community

  • Paper butterflies hanging from thin wires against a blue background.

    Printmaking / Murals / Community

A man with glasses, a beard, and curly hair wearing a black shirt and a necklace, standing among paper butterflies hanging from the ceiling.

Reinaldo Gil Zambrano

Reinaldo Gil Zambrano

Reinaldo Gil Zambrano is an award-winning printmaking artist from Caracas, Venezuela, in Spokane, WA. RGZ began collecting unique stories from random social encounters that highlight the common aspects of the human identity that later enriched the visual narratives of his drawings, relief prints, installations, and murals from an early age.

His narrative raises questions of daily issues equally experienced by people across cultures and borders using relief printing as a storytelling tool for its illustration and reflection. He studies the universal idea of home and how it affects individual personalities by exploring iconography derived from the Majority World and fascinating storytelling inspired by Hispanic literature's magical realism and illustrations from the Venezuelan Rosana Farias. His wordless visual narratives challenge the limitations of the written language and bring people together to celebrate the commonality of their collective experiences.


Recent Works