ARTS NEWS
San Antonio's Tejano Conjunto Festival seeks artists for 2026 poster

Last year's winning poster featured the late Flaco Jiménez.
In just six months, Tejano Conjunto fans from across the globe will head to Alamo City for the 44th Annual Tejano Conjunto Festival en San Antonio 2026, the largest celebration of its kind in the world. One of the things that will draw them will be the winner of the annual poster contest.
Open to students middle school age to college as well as amateurs and professional designers, the poster contest is a chance for artists to both celebrate Tejano Conjunto culture and be seen by thousands of people worldwide as their work is used in all official promotions.
“Each year, the Tejano Conjunto Festival Poster Contest brings together creativity and cultural pride,” said Cristina Ballí, Executive Director of the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center, who sponsors the festival and contest. “It’s a long-standing tradition that not only promotes Conjunto heritage, but it also gives emerging and professional artists alike a chance to be part of something meaningful.”
The grand prize winner will walk away with $2,000 and be honored at a ceremony Friday, May 15, 2026 at 5 p.m. CST, at the Tejano Conjunto Festival at Rosedale Park, on San Antonio’s Westside, the birthplace of Conjunto music. Other winners in various categories will be featured in the program as well.
Last year, the prize was won by Robert Sosa of San Antonio. Sosa previously took first place in 1983 and 1985 with art celebrating Conjunto pioneer Don Santiago Jiménez Sr., only to pick up another win in 2024 with a tribute to his his son, Conjunto legend Flaco Jiménez.
Submissions for the contest are open at the Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center website. Art must be themed around Tejano Conjunto music and contain the words “Tejano Conjunto Festival en San Antonio 2026.” Special note: any depictions of accordions must be button accordions, not piano accordions, as the latter is the more traditional Conjunto instrument.
Submissions close Monday, January 26, 2026 at 5 p.m. CST, and winners will be announced on Thursday, February 19, 2026. There is no entry fee.
The festival is a beloved tradition that draws 10,000 visitors a year. It centers on traditional Tejano Conjunto music and dance, and has become the template for South Texas Tejano celebrations across the U.S.

The Briscoe Western Art Museum's upcoming exhibit, "Tejanos Legacy: Another American Origin Story," will include this oil painting that depicts a fandango, or dance, from the mid-19th century. Courtesy of the Briscoe Western Art Museum