Less than a Week...Have You Voted Yet?

Pandemic Halloween is almost here!!


Do you know where you need to go to vote? Find out here.



If you aren’t familiar with Craft in America, based here in Los Angeles, and viewed on PBS, you should be Please check out their newest episode Craft in America: Democracy.

https://www.pbs.org/craft-in-america/tv-series/democracy/

https://www.pbs.org/craft-in-america/tv-series/democracy/



VOTE!! VOTE!! VOTE!! VOTE!!


REDCAT Presents the 17th Annual

New Original Works (NOW) Festival

Over Three Weekends This Fall

2020 New Original Works (NOW) Festival artists Primera Generación Dance Collective, Xiaoyue Zhang, randy reyes. Photo credits: Bobby Gordon; Yikai Luc Wu; jose e abad.

2020 New Original Works (NOW) Festival artists Primera Generación Dance Collective, Xiaoyue Zhang, randy reyes. Photo credits: Bobby Gordon; Yikai Luc Wu; jose e abad.


More Events You Need to Save the Date For...art, music, good times. And don't forget to vote!

Please allow me to distract you with some cool upcoming events and information you need to know about. Have you voted yet? Please do. Don’t wait until the last minute. Vote!!

Watch Councilmember Cedillo’s FREE Seventh Annual Latin Jazz and Music Festival on his custom streaming page and social media platforms on Saturday, November 7th. During and before the broadcast we are requesting contributions on Square for El Centro Del Pueblo’s 24thAnnual Turkey Giveaway and Thanksgiving meal delivery to senior citizens and families in need.

Vea el Séptimo Festival Anual de Jazz y Música Latino del Concejal Cedillo en su página de streaming personalizado y plataformas de redes sociales el sábado 7 de noviembre. Durante y antes de la transmisión estamos solicitando contribuciones en Square para el 24o sorteo anual de El Centro Del Pueblo y entrega de comidas de Acción de Gracias a personas de la tercera edad y familias necesitadas.


Made in L.A. 2020: a version
Off-site Projects by Larry Johnson and Kahlil Joseph Accessible Now

Image captions (L-R): Larry Johnson, Palmistry 2, 2020. Made in L.A. 2020: a version. Installation view at West Eighth Street and South Alvarado Street. Photo: Joshua White / JWPictures.com; Kahlil Joseph, BLKNWS®, 2018—ongoing. Two-channel fugitive…

Image captions (L-R): Larry Johnson, Palmistry 2, 2020. Made in L.A. 2020: a version. Installation view at West Eighth Street and South Alvarado Street. Photo: Joshua White / JWPictures.com; Kahlil Joseph, BLKNWS®, 2018—ongoing. Two-channel fugitive newscast. Made in L.A. 2020: a version. Installation view at Hank’s Mini Market. Photo: Jeff McLane.

Made in L.A. 2020: a version
Off-site Projects by Larry Johnson and Kahlil Joseph Accessible Now

Artist Project Updates at the Hammer and The Huntington

(Los Angeles, CA)—While the Hammer Museum and The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens await state and county public health approvals to safely reopen their galleries for Made in L.A. 2020: a version, Angelenos can get a preview of the biennial via two artist projects located around the city. The exhibition catalog, which showcases newly commissioned interventions made by artists specifically for the page and functions as another “version” of the exhibition, is also available.

Made in L.A. 2020: a version, the fifth iteration of the Hammer’s biennial exhibition highlighting the practices of artists working throughout greater Los Angeles, is cocurated by Myriam Ben Salah and Lauren Mackler, with the Hammer’s Ikechukwu Onyewuenyi as assistant curator of performance. All 30 artists included in Made in L.A. 2020: a version will be represented at both the Hammer and The Huntington—in two versions that make up the whole—with select off-site and online interventions in between.

The exhibition’s opening date is dependent on Los Angeles County guidance allowing museums to reopen to the public, in keeping with the State of California’s “Blueprint for a Safer Economy.” Updates about exhibition dates will be shared via the Hammer website and The Huntington website.

Two off-site projects are accessible now, installed throughout the city. The first episode of an artist-created podcast series conceived as part of the exhibition will be available soon. Larry Johnson’s new site-specific works are now on view on five commercial billboards in the MacArthur Park neighborhood throughout the run of the exhibition. Their content features site-specific texts and visuals. Poetic and humorous interventions into space and local geography, the billboards quote their cultural and quotidian environment. Two of the billboards are located near the intersection of South Alvarado Street and Eighth Street, two near the intersection of South Rampart Boulevard and Seventh Street, and a fifth nearby at Seventh Street and Hoover Street. The presentation is coproduced by The Billboard Creative.
 Kahlil Joseph’s ambitious installation of BLKNWS®, a conceptual news program that blurs the lines between art, reporting, entrepreneurship, and cultural critique, is installed in satellite sites around the city. Coproduced by LAND (Los Angeles Nomadic Division), the two-channel video presentations of BLKNWS® are being hosted predominantly in Black-owned businesses such as barbershops and cafés and in other sites of community gathering, as well as commercial hubs and healthcare facilities.

Six sites can be viewed without reservation, with social distancing practices in place: Patria Coffee Roasters (108 Alameda St.), Sole Folks (4317 Degnan Blvd.), Natraliart Jamaican Restaurant (3426 W. Washington Blvd.), Bloom & Plume Coffee (1638 W. Temple St.), Hank’s Mini Market (3301 W. Florence Ave.), and Go Get ‘Em Tiger (5916 N. Figueroa St.).

BLKNWS® will also be on view at the Hammer Museum and the Underground Museum, pending approval from LA County for museums to open to the public. More BLKNWS® sites will be confirmed and updated throughout the run of the exhibition. A full list and a map showing each location are available on the websites of the Hammer, The Huntington, and LAND. Major support is provided by Aubrey Drake Graham.
  SON., a platform founded in 2016 by Justen LeRoy, has created a new podcast to be released in conjunction with Made in L.A. 2020: a version The first episode will be available soon, and nine more episodes will be released at two-week intervals during the run of the exhibition. The podcast will be available on such platforms as Spotify, Google Podcasts, and Apple Podcasts. Recorded in SON.’s headquarters at the South Central barbershop Touched By An Angel, the episodes feature conversations, cultural commentary, newly commissioned music, and special guests. In the first episode, LeRoy talks to author and activist Darnell Moore (No Ashes in the Fire: Coming of Age Black and Free in America) and filmmaker and entrepreneur Curtis Taylor Jr. (The Greens Co.) with soundscape by producer Slauson Malone. Podcast updates will be shared via the Hammer website and The Huntington website. Looking toward the opening of Made in L.A. 2020: a version in the Hammer and Huntington galleries, some artist projects have been adjusted and reimagined in light of COVID-19 safety considerations, particularly performance-based works and installations. Three previously announced performance weekends will no longer take place in person. Instead, most performances will be transferred to an online stage and presented digitally. Artist and writer Aria Dean will build an ambitious sculptural installation of two-way mirrors in the Hammer Museum’s galleries as a set for a play, which will unfurl in three episodes. In lieu of live performances, each episode will be recorded within the installation and then broadcast on screens that are part of the sculpture. The three episodes of the play will also be presented online, in turn, like a teleplay.
 Jacqueline Kiyomi Gork will construct an open-air, two-room structure containing loudspeakers and a performer outdoors on the Annenberg Family Terrace at the Hammer. She will present a performance four times per week for the length of the exhibition. In concert with one another, the loudspeakers and the performer will create an evolving assemblage of sound that reconsiders public speech and its content, delivery, and reception. The creation of this work is made possible by a generous contribution from VIA Art Fund.
 Artist, archivist, filmmaker, and dancer Harmony Holiday will write, direct, and record a one-person play, God’s Suicide, about the five rarely acknowledged suicide attempts by writer James Baldwin. No longer a live performance, the recorded play will be a film premiering online at a date to be announced, and an excerpt will be presented in the galleries.
 Artist Nicola L.’s installation La Chambre en fourrure (The Fur Room), which is being recreated with the artist’s estate for presentation in the Hammer galleries, will no longer be interactive. Instead, video documentation will demonstrate the activation of the room with people stepping into the “penetrable” body shapes within the installation.
 Dancer and choreographer Ligia Lewis will present her work deader than dead in a video translation of the original performance piece. Initially developed as a choreography for 10 dancers that would “out-die” each other in corners and other “dead spaces” within the galleries to consider the notion of deadpan and “corpsing” in theater, Lewis has reduced the performance to three people and redesigned the piece as a full-fledged theatrical work to be performed in the galleries at a later date.
 Sonya Sombreuil COME TEES created a venue within the exhibition at the Hammer that will host a series of activations that will feature artists, filmmakers, musicians, and others from her community. The artists on view include Dee Alvarado, Jan Gatewood, Narumi Nekpenekpen, and Yoma Ru. Among the monthly interventions planned for the duration of the exhibition are films by Alima Lee, Maia Ruth Lee, and Fox Maxy; live music by Eartheater, Esra Padgett as Chicklette, Jasmine Nyende (of Fuck U Pay Us), and Davia Spain; and a fashion show by NO SESSO. Instead of in-person experiences, documentation videos of the interventions will be shared online. The creation of this work is made possible by a generous contribution from UGG. Writer and curator Sabrina Tarasoff—whose recent research project has been focused on the work of the 1980s “poetry-gang” that gathered at Beyond Baroque literary center for Dennis Cooper and Amy Gertsler’s Wednesday night poetry series—will revitalize this living archive through a haunted house installation at The Huntington, which will have a limited capacity of one visitor at a time. A complementary programming series will be presented at the Hammer, rallying the poets and artists who have been the subjects of her research. These programs include a restaging of Tea with Tosh, the late 1980s cable-access show hosted by the writer Tosh Berman, in which he interviewed various figures from the literary scene; a screening of Fear of Poetry (1983), a documentary about Beyond Baroque’s young poets in the 1980s, directed by Gail Kaszynski; and a panel discussion of haunted houses with the writer Dennis Cooper. Made in L.A. 2020 Artists Mario Ayala (b. 1991, Los Angeles, CA)Aria Dean (b. 1993, Los Angeles, CA)Hedi El Kholti (b. 1967, Rabat, Morocco)Buck Ellison (b. 1987, San Francisco, CA)Niloufar EmamifarChristina Forrer (b. 1978, Zürich, Switzerland)Harmony Holiday (b. 1982)Patrick Jackson (b. 1978, Los Angeles, CA)Larry Johnson (b. 1959, Lakewood, CA)Kahlil Joseph (b. 1981, Seattle, WA)Ann Greene Kelly (b. 1988, New York, NY)Jacqueline Kiyomi Gork (b. 1982, Long Beach, CA)Nicola L. (b. 1937, Mazagan, Morocco; d. 2018, Los Angeles, CA)Brandon D. Landers (b. 1985, Los Angeles, CA)SON. (Justen LeRoy) (founded 2016)Ligia Lewis (b. 1983, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic)Monica Majoli (b. 1963, Los Angeles, CA)Jill Mulleady (b. 1980, Montevideo, Uruguay)Diane Severin Nguyen (b. 1990, Carson, CA)Alexandra Noel (b. 1989, Columbus, OH)Mathias Poledna (b. 1965, Vienna, Austria)Umar Rashid (b. 1976, Chicago, IL)Reynaldo Rivera (b. 1963, Mexicali, Mexico)Katja Seib (b. 1989, Dusseldorf, Germany)Ser Serpas (b. 1995, Los Angeles, CA)Sonya Sombreuil / COME TEES (b. 1986, Santa Cruz, CA)Jeffrey Stuker (b. 1979, Fort Collins, CO)Beyond Baroque by Sabrina Tarasoff (b. 1991, Jyväskylä, Finland)Fulton Leroy Washington (aka MR. WASH) (b. 1954, Compton, CA)Kandis Williams (b. 1985, Baltimore, MD)
CATALOG AND COMPANION PUBLICATION
The exhibition catalog, now available at the Hammer store online and the Huntington Store online, draws inspiration from historical artist magazines and serves as a third “version” of the show, showcasing newly commissioned interventions made by artists specifically for the page. There also will be a companion publication published after Made in L.A. 2020: a version to include programs, conversations, and other records of the work comprising the biennial. Both publications are designed by Studio Ella and distributed worldwide by DelMonico Books•Prestel.

MOHN AWARDS
Funded through the generosity of Los Angeles philanthropists and art collectors Jarl and Pamela Mohn, The Mohn Award ($100,000) and the Career Achievement Award ($25,000) will be selected by a professional jury, and the Public Recognition Award ($25,000) will be determined through a public vote at both locations. All the artists in the exhibition are eligible to receive the awards.

In 2018 Lauren Halsey received the Mohn Award for the community-oriented installation The Crenshaw District Hieroglyph Project (Prototype Architecture); Daniel Joseph Martinez received the Career Achievement Award; and EJ Hill received the Public Recognition Award. Other past Mohn Award recipients include Adam Linder (2016), Alice Könitz (2014), and Meleko Mokgosi (2012).

RELATED PROGRAMS
There will be a full slate of related public programs presented online throughout the run of the exhibition, including film screenings with Hedi El Kholti, a series of panels by Kandis Williams, Beyond Baroque-related programs organized by Sabrina Tarasoff, short curator-led talks about individual artists in the exhibition, and more. Please check the Hammer website and The Huntington website for further details.

ABOUT MADE IN L.A.
The Hammer’s biennial exhibition series Made in L.A. focuses exclusively on artists from the Los Angeles region with an emphasis on emerging and under-recognized artists. The biennial debuts new installations, videos, films, sculptures, performances, and paintings commissioned specifically for the exhibition and offers a snapshot of the current trends and practices coming out of Los Angeles, one of the most active and energetic art communities in the world. Made in L.A. began in 2012 with subsequent iterations in 2014, 2016, and 2018, and followed the tradition of the Hammer Invitational exhibitions, which occurred every two years and included Snapshot (2001), International Paper (2003), Thing (2005), Eden’s Edge (2007), Nine Lives (2009), and All of this and nothing (2011). Made in L.A. 2012 was organized by a team of curators from the Hammer Museum and LAXART: Hammer senior curator Anne Ellegood, Hammer curator Ali Subotnick, LAXART director and chief curator Lauri Firstenberg, LAXART associate director and senior curator Cesar Garcia, and LAXART curator-at-large Malik Gaines. Made in L.A. 2014 was organized by Hammer chief curator Connie Butler and Los Angeles–based independent curator Michael Ned Holte. Made in L.A. 2016 was organized by Hammer curator Aram Moshayedi and LAXART director Hamza Walker. Made in L.A. 2018 was organized by Hammer senior curator Anne Ellegood and associate curator Erin Christovale, with curatorial associate MacKenzie Stevens.

CREDIT
Made in L.A. 2020: a version is organized by the Hammer Museum in partnership with The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens.

The exhibition is organized by independent curators Myriam Ben Salah and Lauren Mackler, with the Hammer’s Ikechukwu Onyewuenyi, assistant curator of performance. 
 
Made in L.A. 2020 is presented by

 
The exhibition is made possible in part by the Mohn Family Foundation and members of the Hammer Circle. Major support is provided by Apple Music, Bill Hair, Mark Sandelson and Nirvana Bravo, Darren Star, The Fran and Ray Stark Foundation, UGG, and VIA Art Fund. Additional funding is provided by Emily and Teddy Greenspan, Michael Silver, Forest Hill Entertainment, and the Pasadena Art Alliance.
 
This exhibition is part of The Huntington’s Centennial Celebration, which is made possible by the generous support of Avery and Andrew Barth, Terri and Jerry Kohl, and Lisa and Tim Sloan. This exhibition’s presentation at The Huntington is also supported by The Philip and Muriel Berman Foundation, Maribeth and Hal Borthwick, and The Ahmanson Foundation Exhibition and Education Endowment.
 
Made in L.A.: a version is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.

The Virtual Brewery Artwalk • Fall 2020

Join us for a live virtual tour of the world's largest artist colony brought to you by LA Art Tours. This event is free and open to all. SEE HOW ARTISTS LIVE AND WORK
The Brewery Arts Complex is a live/work artist colony located in downtown Los Angeles. Explore the 12 acre complex from the comfort of your home. Discover new original artwork, talk directly to the artists and view historic architecture as dozens of resident artists (virtually) open their studios during this unique online event brought to you by LA Art Tours.HOW TO PARTICIPATE
LA Art Tours will host 2 virtual tours per day (Sat Oct 24 & Sun Oct 25) via zoom webinar. Sign up today! Registration and scheduling info is on our website. www.breweryartwalk.com/virtual-artwalkFor those unable to participate via zoom, we will also be live streaming the tours on the Brewery Artwalk website, Facebook live and Youtube live. FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT:
www.breweryartwalk.com
www.laarttours.com




Less than One Month...October is Here!

A fresh month brings a fresh batch of poetry from Poet’s Place. We need poetry during these weird and zany times. Please go over to Linda’s page and check out what she has to offer this month.

It’s less than a month until Election Day, but you can start voting now. Did you get your voter information in the mail? If you haven’t, you may want to make sure you’re registered to vote. I received mine the other day and am going back and forth on whether I want to vote ASAP or wait until Election Day, which happens to be my birthday. Hmmm. At least I have a moment to decide.

Did you check out the Highland Park Independent Film Festival this passed weekend? What a fun event and so well done, considering the pandemic getting in the way. They made it a drive-in over at the Eagle Rock Plaza and it was perfect! Cudos to my friends over there! Check out their website to learn more about what films were shown and who won the festival awards.

I look forward to seeing what they do next year!!

I look forward to seeing what they do next year!!


Erace-ism.jpg

Save the Date! HPIFF Drive-In October 2-3

7th ANNUAL HIGHLAND PARK INDEPENDENT FILM FESTIVAL

ANNOUNCES 2020 PROGRAM LINE UP

To be screened

AT THE DRIVE-IN

(LOS ANGELES, CA – September 2020) The Highland Park Independent Film Festival (HPIFF), the grassroots Northeast Los Angeles based festival that is a first of its kind is doing something for the first time again for the NELA community. Every year, HPIFF celebrates the art of independent film and in 2020, it will be no different except for one thing: it will be a Drive-In experience.    The group of filmmakers who put on the show decided that this year’s content providers deserved a big screen too so armed with possibility, they searched and found a partner in the Eagle Rock Plaza management where they will proudly showcase the array of quality films for the 2020 line up. HPIFF announced their program line up for the 7th annual edition. The showcase includes 22 Short Films ranging from live action narrative, comedy and documentary and across the spectrum in genres. Included are 5 World Premieres2 US Premieres and 2 Los Angeles Premieres.

The HPIFF Drive-In will take place for two nights on October 2nd and 3rd.  Cars will be line up in a first come first serve basis starting at 7 pm and show starts at 8 pm at the Eagle Rock Plaza located at 2700 Colorado Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90041. VIP ticket option are available for the first two rows. Music by DJ AmA on Friday night and by DJ CEEZ on Saturday night. Engagement on the screen will start at 7 pm for those early arrivals! Pre-Sale tickets available now and going fast at www.hpifilmfest.com.

The two programs feature filmmakers from NELA, Los Angeles, the US and around the world. The Friday program titled From NELA W/Love: Cinerama spotlights films ranging from narratives of sci-fi, drama, action and thrillers. This line-up includes a World Premiere in Foghorn, a US Premiere in Fear of the Woods and an LA Premiere in Sunshine Room, a semi-finalist in the Student Academy Awards about how cutting-edge technology allows a young woman to grow up alongside her beloved Abuela but her financial realities threaten to erase their relationship - for good.  The Saturday program, From NELA W/Love: Dramarama showcases strong narrative dramas, a documentary and a sprinkle of comedy.   We are excited to boast of 4 World Premieres in Tristan and Isaac, Where the Stars Look Different, Menagerie, and We Belong Here and 1 US PremiereWilderness in this line-up.  The lone documentary is Jimmy Alvarado’s “Eastside Punks: Episodes 2 - The Brat” focusing on East L.A. legends The Brat formed in the late 1970s and how they quickly cornered the market on smart, taut pop delivered with righteous punk fury by one of the tightest bands in the area.

Judging the films in competition will be Joe Palladino - Academic Advisor for Film Studies Program at UCSB and Awards will be announced at the end of each night.

 

COMPLETE LIST OF FILMS and MOVIE TIMES

 

Friday, October 2nd, 8 PM

We Choose To Go directed by Marlene Emilia Rios

Sunshine Room directed by Nick Lopez – LA Premiere

Green Cobra directed by Sigurd Culhane

Get Away directed by Christine Donlon, Amelia Morck

A Beautiful Nightmare directed by Kevin Lee Maxwell

Foghorn directed by Anna Salinas – World Premiere

The Fixer directed by Michael Schilf

TGIF the 13th - A Voorhees Vacation directed by Christopher Abbey

APPyness directed by Ryan Turner

Luvsik directed by Norman Bertolino

Fear of the Woods directed by Titus Paar – US Premiere

 

Saturday, October 3rd, 8 PM

Eastside Punks: Episodes 2: The Bratt directed by Jimmy Alvarado

Coupled directed by   Emma Sofia Fazzuoli

Acuitzeramo directed by Miguel Angel Caballero

Bye Luna directed by Alexis Duran

Tristan and Isaac directed by Michaela Myers – World Premiere

Are You My Mommy directed by Gavin Michael Booth

Where the Stars Look Different directed by Daniel Addelson – World Premiere

Wilderness directed by Andrew Vasquez – US Premiere

Lydia Chlamydia directed by Juan Escobedo – LA Premiere

Menagerie directed by Lauren Mahoney – World Premiere

We Belong Here directed by Anna Lian Tes – World Premiere

 

For all synopses of films, www.hpifilmfest.com


About Highland Park Independent Film Festival (HPIFF)

We founded this festival with the express mission to promote the art of film. HPIFF is the first of its kind in Highland Park. Our grassroots organization invites filmmakers who produce the most unique and captivating independent cinema to share their work with our community. We foster emerging and established filmmakers providing forums for screening projects, networking with professionals, and mentoring students. To this end, our organization consists of three components: the Highland Park Independent Film Festival, which is an annual event held the first weekend in October featuring the works of filmmakers from Highland Park and around the world; the HPI Film Series, which consists of film screenings or participation in events designed to build community through film including the HPIFF Summer Film Series in association with the Arroyo Arts Collective and La Tierra De La Culebra Art Park, Lummis Days and Occidental College; and the HPIFF Mentorship Program, which offers film education primarily at Franklin High School and Monte Vista Elementary but open to schools throughout Northeast Los Angeles. (Example of our programming with the students: https://vimeo.com/367333606). Since our debut in 2014, we have mostly programmed at our home, the historic Highland Theatre, located off the Figueroa corridor of Historic Route 66. In addition to screenings of feature-length and short films, guests enjoy red carpet events, industry mixers, and panel discussions with film professionals. We are always searching for successful collaborations with local businesses, organizations and schools in the area. We build community through a shared love of film.

 

HPIFF Team:  

Co-Founder & Artistic Director: Alessandro Gentile (Cinematographer, Film/Docu Director)

Co-Founder & Development Director: Mark Reitman (Music Producer, Sound Designer & DJ)

Co-Founder & Executive Director: Marita De La Torre (Actress, Writer, Film & Theater Director)

Production Coordinator / Producer: April Ibarra (Theater & Film Director)

Associate Producer: Terrence Butcher (Film Blogger)

Associate Producer: Max Solomon (Film Producer)

Brand Designer: Kristopher Lee Bicknell of Absurd Digital Imagery (Graphic Designer)

2020 Highland Park Independent Film Festival Sponsors include:

Presenting Sponsors: California Arts Council, Eagle Rock Plaza and Uptown Gay & Lesbian Alliance

Contributing Sponsor: Soquel Arts Collective

Media Sponsors: Boulevard Sentinel and LA Art News

 

Connect with HPIFF:

Website: http://www.hpifilmfest.com/

Facebook: @highlandparkindependentfilmfestival

Twitter and Instagram: @hpifilmfest


The Democratic Convention is On...

Have you registered to vote yet? Have you received any voter information yet. You should have. Anyway, he picked Kamala and I’m over the moon happy. The convention started tonight. Strange times we’re in, for sure. So I’m posting mid month to start warming myself up for the push to election day. If anyone has a poster or something they’d like posted here, send it on. As long as it’s not too over the top, it may get posted.

Below are a few save the date kind of items, like the Highland Park Independent Film Festival.


Or check out the art shows currently up at Cactus Gallery. Sandra has her annual Loteria show, which is a collector and artist favorite.


If you want to learn something new you can take a class either virtually or safely in person. This is a tad bit of shameless self promotion. Not entirely, but a bit. Take a class through These Hands Makers Collective, such as borosilicate glass chain making, or Torch fired enamel pendants with decals, or even silver metal clay. Yes, I teach all of those classes, and you need to see the other classes Denise offers. 15% off if they use the code: LAARTNEWS for a limited time. So many!! And they’re totally cool. Most are online, except for mine. Problem child that I am…


Three Months Until We Vote! August is Here!

It’s that time of the month and I’m updating this here site. You want some poetry? We’ve got your monthly dose over at Poet’s Place. Linda always has a fun array of talent to share what needs to be shared.


I am the biggest sucker for miniatures and love to put them into my art and jewelry whenever possible. I also am completely in love with the work of Tatsuya Tanaka’s work. Over at This is Colossal, they show his newest Covid appropriate pieces, which are amazing. Go check them out, then come back for more.

All images © Tatsuya Tanaka, shared with permission

All images © Tatsuya Tanaka, shared with permission



Wear a Mask! It's July and We're Going Backwards!

Happy July!! Summer’s here! And we’re shutting down again. Well, how about that. In the meantime I’ll show you where the poetry is from Linda, and some suggestions on stuff to do from the Getty, among other things. Scroll down for more. And by the way, 4 months from today is election day. Expect us to get loud and political as we get closer to election day.

Furgatch House (San Diego, Calif.), (detail, image 4613-9K), Julius  Shulman, 1970. Architect unknown. © J. Paul Getty Trust. Getty Research  Institute, Los Angeles (2004.R.10)

Furgatch House (San Diego, Calif.), (detail, image 4613-9K), Julius Shulman, 1970. Architect unknown. © J. Paul Getty Trust. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles (2004.R.10)


Check out their July newsletter.

Check out their July newsletter.



Is it November Yet?

Well, how is everyone doing? Crazy times. I find myself exhausted from being in disbelief constantly. What the hell else could go haywire? I know, plenty. In the meantime, here’s some poetry from Linda Kaye and her friends, over at Poet’s Place. I really appreciate that she gathers this together every month. Thanks Linda.

Now about November. The most important election in our lifetime is coming. What are we going to do to insure that DJT is a one term president? We all need to work together donating to candidates in the Senate races that will unseat scumbag Republicans, help people register to vote, create art to promote voting and changing the shit show in Washington. Let’s do this together. Submit writings, posters, suggestions, and we can work on this together.



A New Month Amid a Pandemic - Happy May!!

Strange times we are living in. Trying to figure out what day it is? Does it matter right now? Not really. So here are some things to amuse you as you stay home and stay safe. We’ve got poetry from Linda over at Poet’s Place and some web sites to visit, as well as some information you may find interesting.


If you find yourself inspired to learn something new, wander over to Maker News, the craftier page here at LA Art News. There are virtual class suggestions and a video from one of our sponsors, Bullseye Glass. Everybody needs to make something. Go make something!


Submit through Film Freeway link on homepage

Submit through Film Freeway link on homepage

https://www.hpifilmfest.com/index.html


Tricks and Triumphs: The Pastey Whyte Story

Here’s a cool article written about Artist Pastey White that’s in Sold Magazine. Enjoy!


There's More Poetry and Plenty of Other Things to Find During These Strange Times

My buddy Linda Kaye has put together another installment of Poet’s Place. Wander on over to that page and check it out and all of the poetry that has been posted already. If you’re a poet, you can reach out to her and share. We’ll see if it ends up in a future Poet’s Place posting.


Hello Hoodlum!Tomorrow, Sunday April 5th at 4pm PDT, get ready for TEA TIME with REVEREND DAN live on Twitch.tv! Wild Rock 'n' Roll for your afternoon refreshment! Grab a cup and I'll see you tomorrow at https://www.twitch.tv/ReverendDanKXLU

Hello Hoodlum!

Tomorrow, Sunday April 5th at 4pm PDT, get ready for TEA TIME with REVEREND DAN live on Twitch.tv! Wild Rock 'n' Roll for your afternoon refreshment! Grab a cup and I'll see you tomorrow at https://www.twitch.tv/ReverendDanKXLU



For more information.

For more information.


Over at This is Colossal.

Witty ‘Coronavirus Tourism’ Posters Advertise the Thrilling Adventures of Staying Home

Witty ‘Coronavirus Tourism’ Posters Advertise the Thrilling Adventures of Staying Home


Check out our newest page, Maker News.

Take a virtual class at These Hands Collective in Venice (really from the comfort of your own home)

Take a virtual class at These Hands Collective in Venice (really from the comfort of your own home)

This is the place to come to learn something. How to make things…learn about people that make cool things and everything in between. Go make something!


LA Art Show is Two Weeks Away

Highlights
FEATURED EXHIBITION
The M.C. Escher Experience
Featuring the world's largest collection of M.C. Escher's work. 
Presented by Walker Fine Art
For over 40 years, Walker Fine Art has assembled the largest collection of Escher works in the world, and will showcase the “rarest of the rare” at the 25th Annual LA Art Show. The M.C. Escher Experience runs the span of the artist's entire career, and will include rarely seen lithographs, wood cuts, engravings, and mezzotints, as well as the artist’s iconic custom furniture. Many of these will be shown in California for the first time ever. In addition to seeing the artist’s work up close, LA Art Show attendees will have the opportunity to become Escher. A special photo-booth will recreate his iconic sphere self portrait with you in the reflection.
DIVERSEartLA 
TRANSCENDIENTS: Heroes at Borders 
Created by artist Taiji Terasaki, in collaboration with Japanese American National Museum (JANM)
TRANSCENDIENTS is a unique collaboration between artist Taiji Terasaki and JANM that honors the “heroes at borders,” individuals that advocate and fight for those who face discrimination, prejudice and inequity at borders both physical and conceptual.
This participatory exhibition spotlights important figures working to overcome and transcend borders that reinforce discrimination, inequity, and intolerance. Whether it be those fighting to rectify human rights injustices and to counter anti-immigrant sentiments and actions, members of the LGBTQ+ community seeking equal rights, women pressing for equal pay, or religious adherents who want to worship in safety, these heroes use their personal experiences to build bridges of understanding that connect us at the core of our collective humanity.
NEW PROGRAMMING
The European Pavilion 
The European Pavilion is a brand new programming section comprised of contemporary European galleries, with an emphasis on exhibitors and artists from Spain, Italy, and the UK. The pavilion will be a celebration of the profound influence that European art has had on the world, with participating galleries curating exhibits that highlight the various movements and stylistic developments that have defined much of Western art. Within this new section will be a special exhibit showcasing Catalan artists from 1900 to present, offering a glimpse into the modern art history of the region. This first year will shine a spotlight on the Catalan Modernism Movement, which was an avenue for Catalonia to set itself apart from the rest of Spain and establish a form of independence. The Movement is stylistically characterized by motifs, shapes, colors and concepts inspired by nature, with the artists adapting physical shapes from nature and using natural light, colors and symbolism throughout their work.
FEATURED EXHIBITION
ICONOCLASTS
New Photo-Realistic Portrait Sculptures by Kazu Hiro
At art fairs across the world, you've seen the eerily realistic sculptures of the heads of Abraham Lincoln, Frida Kahlo, Andy Warhol and other pop-culture luminaires created by Oscar-award winning makeup artist and sculptor Kazu Hiro. Now, for the 25th annual LA Art Show, Kazu will present a retrospective of his work, and unveil several new pieces that have never been seen before. The artist will be in attendance at select times throughout the fair.
DIVERSEartLA
MOLAA Pride
By artists Leo Chiachio and Daniel Giannone
Presented by Museum of Latin American Art
In order to commemorate local and international LGBTQ+ communities around the world, The Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA) is presenting an installation about diversity and pride in collaboration with world-known Argentinian artists Leo Chiachio and Daniel Giannone. The 112 ft. long textile installation was created by the artists in collaboration with more than 3,000 members of the Long Beach and Los Angeles communities during the artists’ MOLAA residency between March and May of 2019. Visitors and community members were invited to contribute  their own messages about the meaning of diversity and acceptance to the banner, before it was carried by over 100 volunteers at the Long Beach Pride Parade in July 2019. The Museum highlights underrepresented voices in Latin America, the US and around the world. This installation represents the commitment of MOLAA towards the values of diversity and inclusion for all.
FEATURED EXHIBITION
THE SUE WONG SIGNATURE
A Showcase by Iconic Chinese & Hollywood Fashion Designer Sue Wong
This year, legendary Chinese fashion designer Sue Wong will be honored in the new FASHION programming section of the fair, displaying nearly one dozen of her iconic gowns. Wong's dresses are astonishing, employing the revered age-old couture techniques implemented by the finest fashion houses in Europe, and evoking the allure and glamour of various eras such as Weimar Berlin, 1930s Shanghai, Precode Hollywood and Manhattan’s gilded Jazz Age. Her gowns have been worn to Hollywood awards ceremonies by stars such as Anne Hathaway, Kim Kardashian, Jessica Biel, Minnie Driver, Reba McEntire, Tyra Banks and more. Serendipitously, this year, the LA Art Show will be taking place the same weekend as the Oscars.
DIVERSEartLA
Performance
Diversity Walks And Talks
By artist Miss Artworld
Attendees are invited to strut their stuff down a runway and showcase what makes them unique. A variety of participants will be pre-selected and interviewed about what diversity means to them, and the interviews will play at the runway. At select times throughout the fair, spectators will also be recruited live to walk the runway. A photographer will document all individuals and their photos will be instantly displayed on a nearby wall. Like LA’s fashion and celebrity culture, this performance is all about high energy, fast pace and confidence!

The 25th annual LA Art Show will feature over 100 galleries from more than 18 countries. The confirmed exhibitors include:

CORE

Artlink International

Building Bridges Art Exchange

CM2 Space

Cospace

East Art Center

Fabrik Projects

In The Gallery

Jane Kahan Gallery

K Contemporary

Kylin Gallery

Mizuma Art Gallery

Patrick Painter Gallery

Salt Fine Art

SM Fine Art Gallery

Tanya Baxter Contemporary

Thomas French Fine Art

Timothy Yarger Fine Art

Walker Fine Art

YOD Gallery

Zeal House


EUROPEAN PAVILION

3 Punts Galeria

Anquins Galeria

Arionte Arte Contemporanea

Art Mozaika

Arte Globale

Dk Arte Galleries

Fine Art Consultancy

Galería de Arte María Aguilar

Galerie Wolfsen

Galleria Bea Villamarin

Galleria Stefano Forni

ImageNation Paris

L' Arcada Galeria d'Art

Neue Kunst Gallery

Pigment Gallery


MODERN + CONTEMPORARY

5Art Gallery

Abend Gallery

Acacia Gallery

Arcadia Contemporary

Art All Ways

Art Gangnam Gallery & Company

Art Unified

Artifact

Artspace Warehouse

Arushi Arts

BG Gallery

BIAA (Beloved in Art Association)

Blinkgroup Gallery

Bruce Lurie Gallery

Caelis Galeria

Carla Elena Art Collection S.A. de CV

Century Guild Museum of Art

Chic Evolution in Art

Coagula Curatorial

Conde Contemporary

Connect Contemporary

Copro Gallery

Cross Mackenzie Gallery

Daphne Alazraki Fine Art

Elaine Kim Gallery

Emma Hack Gallery

Gallery 1261

Gallery Artwall

Gallery Harang

Gallery Karo

Gallery Kitai

General Investment Group

Himmeljord Art

House of Fine Art HOFA Gallery

J & J Art

Jaymay Gallery

John Natsoulas Gallery

K + Y Gallery

Kahn gallery

KR Martindale Gallery

Lustre Contemporary

Mandarin Fine Art Gallery

Mark Blackburn

Melissa Morgan Fine Art

MRG Fine Art

Panter & Hall, London

Rebecca Hossack Gallery

Rebecca Molayem Gallery

Rehs Contemporary

Rele Gallery

S. E. A.

Seaside Gallery

Simard Bilodeau Contemporary

The Gallery Steiner

Tian Qing Gallery

Trading Boundaries Fine Art

Trinity House paintings

Ukiyo-e Project

Untitled Editions

Wallspace LA

Walter Wickiser Gallery

Watanuki Ltd / Toki-no-Wasuremono

Wyoming Working Group

Young Art Gallery


ROOTS

Galerie Fledermaus

Hayden & Fandetta Rare Books

Linwoods Art

M. S. Rau Antiques

NB Gallery

Rehs Galleries

The Artworks Gallery


WORKS ON PAPERDTR Studio

Gallery 1202

The Verne Collection


PROJECT SPACE

Aspen Art Gallery

Bancs Gallery

Bert Green Fine Art

Bev's Fine Art

East-West Culture & Arts Foundation

Fabrik Projects

Galerie Bruno Massa


DESIGN LA ART

Charon Kransen Arts

Gallery All

Provident Jewelry


Things to Do This Coming Weekend

BEYOND EMBODIMENT
January 25-March 20, 2020Opening Reception:
Saturday, January 25, 2020 / 6–9 pm

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Brand Library & Art Center
1601 W. Mountain St. Glendale, CA 91201

Interactive Performance: “Proximity Cinéma” by Tiffany Trenda
Saturday, January 25, 2020 / 7:30pm
“Proximity Cinéma” by Tiffany Trenda Artists: Kelly Akashi, Symrin Chawla, Gisela Colon, Gilda Davidian, Sandra de la Loza, M Eifler, Maru García, Dahn Gim, Sanglim Han, Claudia Hart, Xandra Ibarra, Huntrezz Janos, Yuehao Jiang, Anna Kostanian, Qingyi Li, Jacki Morie, Kelly Nipper, Cindy Rehm, Silvia Rigon, Martine Syms, Hiromi Takizawa, Tiffany Trenda, VJ Um Amel, Lisa Diane Wedgeworth, Amia Yokoyama 

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Beyond Embodiment features 25 pioneering female, non-binary, and trans artists whose work probes the boundaries of body and being. Physicality, identity, and presence are explored in actual as well as virtual space; biological systems, from the primordial to the post-human, are examined and transfigured by technology. The exhibition presents an expansive array of media, including sculpture, photography, video, animation, painting, collage, ceramics, neon, bio-art, scent technology, interactive media, augmented reality, and performance. Situating the body as form and function, material and process, site and portal, these artists investigate the potentialities of the human condition. 

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Curated by Laura Darlington and Selwa Sweidan Image credit: “Venus Iteration” by Sanglim Han

brandlibrary.org/galleryhttp://brandlibrary.org/gallery


“Perceive Me” by Kristine Schomaker

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Cynda Valle
Odalisque Mashup
40x60 inches
medium; spray enamel, leaves and oil on linen

Ronald H Silverman Fine Arts Gallery, Cal State University LA
5151 State University Drive
Los Angeles CA 90032
Dr. Mika Cho, Director, Fine Arts Gallery

 

Plus-Size artist Kristine Schomaker challenges societal norms of beauty and ‘Fat Phobia’ by presenting her body through the eyes of 60 artists.  

Opening Reception: Saturday January 25, 5-8pm

On view January 21 to February 24

Artist Talk with Alexandra Grant Sun February 2, 2-4pm
Artist Talk with Leslie Labowitz-Starus Sun February 16, 2-4pm
Artist Panel and Closing Reception Sat February 22, 2-4pm

https://www.kristineschomaker.net/
Instagram: @kristineschomaker

In “Perceive Me,” plus-size artist Kristine Schomaker challenges society, the art world and herself to become more accepting of our differences, especially differences in size. She issued the challenge here in Los Angeles - a city known for its unrealistic images of the female body - by asking 60 artists to do nude portraits of her larger-than-average form. Rather than shaming Schomaker for her size, the artists celebrate it with paintings, drawings, photographs, sculptures, video and a 3D print. 

Los Angeles artist Sheli Silverio responded with a 57-inch-tall watercolor painting. “Kristine invited me to be part of her "Perceive Me" project in which I got to use my lens to interpret her; Her body, her authenticity, her power, her femininity, her bravery, HER. In the process of doing so, I took the opportunity to explore myself. It's been good for my heart. I think part of understanding ourselves, happens in relation to the world around us. But we also know that the social standards need critique more often than not. The way "Perceive Me" reflects and shifts the idea of perception of self allows for this criticism. It opens space for everyone involved, artists and viewers, to reflect upon how they see themselves, how they look at others and what weight and significance we place on all of that.”

Schomaker’s work has often touched upon perceptions of the female body, an issue that has been a challenge for her since her youth. She hated having her photo taken because she didn’t want her body and face, which she saw as less-than-ideal, being memorialized in photos. She developed an eating disorder, but she never lost sight of the need to express herself in her art.

And with “Perceive Me,” the artist, curator, and instigator found a way to celebrate herself in addition to educating the larger world about acceptance.

“Posing and modeling for these 60 artists, I felt like a supermodel. I felt thin, bold, beautiful, classy, elegant, sexy,” she said. “The artwork that was created is amazing. Then I looked in the mirror… I was the same. But I knew I was saying something that needed to be said.”

"Perceive Me" opens with an exhibition at California State University, Los Angeles Jan. 25, 2020. The opening reception is Jan. 25, 2020 6-9pm. The show runs through Feb. 22, 2020.

Over the next couple of years, “Perceive Me” will travel to Coastline Community College Art Gallery, McNish Gallery at Oxnard College, Mesa Community College Art Gallery, College of the Sequoias in Visalia and the Museum of Art and History in Lancaster.

“‘Perceive Me’ is not just an exhibition or a catalog or Instagram posts. It is a platform for empowerment, for owning who we are, for being unique and authentic, for taking back our bodies in the #metoo movement, for being true, powerful and strong no matter what body shape, size, color, gender we are. ‘Perceive Me’ is for everyone,” Kristine Schomaker

Artists who collaborated in the project include Amanda Mears, Anna Kostanian, Anna Stump, Ashley Bravin, Austin Young, Baha Danesh, Betzi Stein, Bibi Davidson, Bradford J Salamon, Caron G Rand, Carson Grubaugh, Catherine Ruane, Chris Blevins-Morrison, Christina Ramos, Cynda Valle, Daena Title, Daggi Wallace, Dani Dodge, Debbie Korbel, Debby and Larry Kline, Debe Arlook, Diane Cockerill, Donna Bates, Elizabeth Tobias, Ellen Friedlander, Emily Wiseman, Geneva Costa, Holly Boruck, J Michael Walker, Jane Szabo, Janet Milhomme, Jeffrey Sklan, Jesse Standlea, John Waiblinger, Jorin Bossen, K Ryan Henisey, Karen Hochman Brown, Kate Hoffman, Kate Kelton, Kate Savage, Katherine Rohrbacher, Kerri Sabine-Wolf, Kim Kimbro, L Aviva Diamond, Leslie Lanxinger, Mara Zaslove, Marjorie Salvaterra, Martin Cox, Monica Sandoval, Nancy Kay Turner, Nurit Avesar, Phung Huynh, Rakeem Cunningham, Serena Potter, Sheli Silverio, Susan Amorde, Susan T. Kurland, Sydney Walters, Tanya Ragir, Tony Pinto, Vicki Walsh

 

About Kristine Schomaker:

Kristine Schomaker is a Los Angeles based multidisciplinary artist, art historian and curator. She received her BA in Art History and an MA in Studio Art from California State University Northridge. Schomaker has been exhibiting her work since the late 1990s. She has had solo exhibitions throughout Los Angeles including “Plus” at Ark Gallery in Altadena, “Mirror, Mirror!” at Gallery H Phantom Galleries LA, Hawthorne, California, “And One Man in His Time Plays Many Parts” at the Los Angeles Art Association, “Plus” at Moorpark College Art Gallery,  “A Comfortable Skin,” at Kerckhoff Hall Art Gallery UCLA, Los Angeles, California and “Ce n’est pas une Peinture,” at TRACTIONARTS, Los Angeles, California. Schomaker has also been featured in numerous group exhibitions.

 

In addition to working as a practicing artist, Schomaker is an independent curator, the founder of Shoebox PR and publisher of the online contemporary art magazine Art and Cake.