Fabrik - Issue 6

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LA’S MAGAZINE ON ART, DESIGN, ARCHITECTURE & FASHION

SUMMER 2009

PHOTOGRAPHY ISSUE: JULIUS SHULMAN • ANNENBERG SPACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY LA PHOTOGRAPHERS • EVENTS, EXHIBITS & GALLERIES

TRANSCENDING THE FRAME: JULIUS SHULMAN 1910-2009


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CONTRIBUTORS MASTHEAD Publisher Chris Davies Associate Editor Peter Frank Managing Editor Aparna Bakhle-Ellis Creative Director Chris Davies Art Direction & Design Shout Design Group Paul Soady Contributing Writers Aparna Bakhle-Ellis Peter Frank Lanee Neil Oliver O. Craig Stephens Ashley Tibbits Fashion Editor Anyes Galleani Contributing Photographer Ted VanCleave Account Executive Renee Smith Production Associate Sascha Escandon Distribution Allem Ramirez

APARNA BAKHLE-ELLIS Bollywood born and bred Aparna Bakhle-Ellis studied film at Emerson College in Boston before checking into Hotel California. A writer enthralled by the consonance and dissonance of being specifically in Los Angeles, she is also Fabrik’s managing editor. Her interests include modern art, l’écriture féminine and conscious parenting.

PETER FRANK Peter Frank is Senior Curator at the Riverside Art Museum, Associate Editor for Fabrik and is also the Associate Editor for THE Magazine LA. He was born in 1950 in New York, where he served as art critic for The Village Voice and The SoHo Weekly News, and moved to Los Angeles in 1988.

LANEE NEIL Lanee Neil is a Los Angeles-based writer who uses her craft to pursue her passions; travel, culture and enriching quality of life. Lanee has traveled extensively through Europe, Asia, Costa Rica and Russia and is currently working on a photojournalistic documentation of her time spent in India. As a lifestyle consultant, she is a contributing writer to Yogi Times.

OLIVER O. Oliver O. came from rural Colorado and couldn’t wait to trade the provincial life for the adventure of fastpaced Los Angeles. His biggest passions are designing with flair and sophistication, eating at new restaurants, and sharing his not always politically correct opinions on everything to anyone who will listen.

CRAIG STEPHENS

EDITORIAL & ADVERTISING Editorial editorial@fabrikmagazine.com Advertising ads@fabrikmagazine.com Contact 269 S. Beverly Drive, Suite 1234 Beverly Hills, CA 90212 Tel 310 360 8333 info@fabrikmagazine.com http://www.fabrikmagazine.com

Craig Stephens is an Australian born freelance writer who has lived in the U.S. (LA &NYC) since Jan. 2000. He has written for an absurd cross section of titles from Playboy to Personal Computer, Elle to Tokyo Journal, Dart International, Artweek, Adweek, Malibu Magazine, LA Weekly, Loaded and many more, from stints in London, Tokyo, Berlin and NYC. More about him at craig-stephens.com

ASHLEY TIBBITS Ashley Tibbits, a Los Angeles based-writer, has a pulsating interest in visual art that has led her to forays in criticism, curating, and creating the stuff.

INFORMATION Fabrik is published bi-monthly by Fabrik Magazine, Inc., 269 S. Beverly Drive, Suite 1234, Beverly Hills, CA 90212. Contents cannot be reproduced in part or in full without the written permission of the copyright holder. The opinions expressed are those of the artists and writers themselves and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of Fabrik Magazine, Inc. Copyright © 2009. All rights reserved. PRINTED IN LOS ANGELES

LA’S MAGAZINE ON ART, DESIGN, ARCHITECTURE & FASHION

SUMMER 2009

PHOTOGRAPHY ISSUE: JULIUS SHULMAN • ANNENBERG SPACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY LA PHOTOGRAPHERS • EVENTS, EXHIBITS & GALLERIES

ON THE COVER

TRANSCENDING THE FRAME: JULIUS SHULMAN 1910-2009

Photography by Julius Shulman. Case Study House No. 22, Los Angeles, Calif., Iconic Girls, 1960. Pierre Koenig, Architect.


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CONTENTS 8

Iconoclast: Transcending the Frame: Architectural Photographers Julius Shulman & Juergen Nogai

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Museum Spotlight: Annenberg Space for Photography

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Artful Affairs: LACMA’s Decorative Arts

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Through The Lens: The Lens of LA: From Motion to Stillness

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Cruel Summer: Fashion, LA Style

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Hot & Cool LA: Venice, California

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Design Critic: Design Divo Blanches at Villa Blanca

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Los Angeles Art Events Calendar

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Los Angeles Fashion Guide: Shopping Melrose & Robertson

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Los Angeles Art & Design Directory

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Art About Town: Peter Frank’s Exhibit Highlights

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Artist and Gallery Showcases


TRANSCENDING THE BY APARNA BAKHLE-ELLIS INTERVIEW WITH SHULMAN CONDUCTED BY ALEXANDRA BECKET

SKINNER HOUSE, BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF., 1959 • ROBERT SKINNER, ARCHITECT


FRAME

ARCHITECTURAL PHOTOGRAPHERS JULIUS SHULMAN & JUERGEN NOGAI

Š J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute (2004.R.10)


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BECKET ON SHULMAN JULIUS SHULMAN photographed one of my grandfather, Welton Becket’s earliest architectural projects in the late 30’s, the Pan Pacific Auditorium. I never saw the Pan Pacific before it was destroyed by a fire in 1989. When I came across a large format photo of it in Taschen’s “Julius Shulman, Architecture and It’s Photography,” the composition left a strong impression on me. Julius took the photo from a large empty lot to the west, so the entire auditorium filled the frame. It shows the structure’s strong horizontal layout, beautiful rounded corners and four prominent streamline modern towers reaching into sky. Buildings live on through photography and can teach us so much about our past. When I met Julius for the first time with my sister Alisa, he invited us to his home studio. Julius shared his library of negatives with us, showed us some portraits he took of our grandfaALEXANDRA BECKET ther and gave us a carefully typed list WITH JULIUS SHULMAN of photos he took for Welton Becket. We loved hearing Julius’s recollections of what it was like working with our grandfather, including specific stories such as a chance encounter they had sitting next to each other on a flight to Egypt in the 60s when the Nile Hilton Hotel was being built. The last time I saw Julius was for this interview, just a short while ago. He insisted that you couldn’t describe how to photograph a building. You have to be on site to capture a composition at that moment. As you will read, he expressed an ardent desire to take us or anyone interested in photography out to the field to learn about composition. He spoke passionately about demonstrating his technique, sharing his knowledge, and teaching others. It was inspiring and fulfilling to hear his enthusiasm for photography and his desire to share it with others. » 10

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ACADEMY THEATRE, INGLEWOOD, CALIF., 1940 • S. CHARLES LEE, ARCHITECT © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute (2004.R.10)


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SHULMAN In Built Upon Love: Architectural Longing After Ethics and Aesthetics (MIT Press), architectural historian Alberto Perez-Gomez puts forward the enticing idea that “true architecture is concerned with far more than fashionable form, affordable homes, and sustainable development.” The architecture he speaks of responds to the aspiration for an eloquent place to live. Julius Shulman’s magnificent oeuvre of photography maintains that the impression of order resonant with the occupant’s dreams is well within the domain of such architecture. A sublime lucidity anchors the compositions of spaces photographed by Shulman. Even at 98, he remained a paragon of California Cool. Though laid-back, his mastery over the medium was palpable. An exemplary eight-decade career elevated his work to iconic status and him to legend. Shulman transcended the frame by perfectly representing that invisible quality of carefree glamour, so eagerly sought throughout the world, despite its ephemeral nature. Just weeks before Julius Shulman’s passing from this world, Fabrik had the privilege of accompanying textile designer and family friend Alexandra Becket for an interview, at his Laurel Canyon residence and studio. Designed for him in 1949 by noted Modernist architect Raphael Soriano, it is now designated an architecturally significant structure, due to its being

MALIN HOUSE “CHEMOSPHERE”, LOS ANGELES, CALIF., EXTERIOR, 1961 • JOHN LAUTNER, ARCHITECT © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute (2004.R.10)

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ENNIS HOUSE, LOS ANGELES, CALIF., CIRCA 1968 • FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT, ARCHITECT © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute (2004.R.10)


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the only remaining unaltered steel frame house built by Soriano. Last year, as a cloth-bound limited edition of 1000, Nazraeli Press published by Shulman and Soriano, Julius Shulman: The Building of My Home and Studio. Still embodying his desire to narrate the beauty and livability of modern architecture, Shulman elegantly demonstrated the harmony of his own intentionally balanced environment. Although his photographs reflect what most pursue within the California dream: that intoxicating blend of ambition, success and glamour, his life and career appear the result of an incredible consistency of vision. Always the consummate professional, his impeccably kept and extensive working archives of over 260,000 prints, negative and color transparencies, since acquired by the Getty Research Institute, have graced the pages of several excellent books documenting rarely before seen mid-century modern architecture, a few of which are even devoted solely to his work. As if to humor our inquiry about whether his fastidiousness and exceptional organizational skills were innate or learned, Julius referred us to Modernism Rediscovered, the 3-volume set of books put out by TASCHEN in 2007. “They served a purpose, for the architects and the owners,” he stated. Shulman’s life work became a visual record of and testament to the complex allure this unique metropolis holds for the entire world and perhaps especially, its inhabitants. The recently released documentary film ‘Visual Acoustics: The Modernism of Julius Shulman’ by director Eric Bricker celebrates and explores the man and the truly extensive influence of his work. For Wright, Neutra, Lautner, Eames, Koenig, Schindler, Becket, Ain, Soriano, just some of the mid-century masters whose practices were observed by Shulman, responsible design was environmentally involved. “I was weaned and influenced by, on the world of architecture, of design based on integrity, the total design, indoors, outdoors.” When Fabrik asked if Shulman might like to share some observations regarding his role in helping to construct the ideology of 1960s Los Angeles, he shared the following…

“SHULMAN

— That doesn’t mean anything. Those are words. This is the kind of question that we’re asked quite frequently. When I look at a building, house, commercial building, I don’t go there in a pre- determined consideration. When I go to see a house, I look at it, take out my camera, the composition that comes out is pretty straight-forward. There’s no way of determining in advance what you’re going to do when you photograph any building, like how do I produce these compositions...the best way to describe it would be to take a group into a house or building, ‘Here we are standing, look at this space, how do you put it together, into a composition’...in other words, there’s no determined visual action. I’ve worked with Richard Neutra...in the beginning, he’d point out to me, to my assistants, what he wanted to show, or what he did not want to show. Most architects, when they call me to do a project, leave me alone, with my assistants, and we set up my own compositions, determine what i personally feel portrays the nature, the spirit of the design… With Neutra in most cases, his insistence was to show the elements which portrayed his own design. Therefore, his work which he wanted to show »

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» MAY COMPANY, LOS ANGELES, CALIF., EXTERIOR, 1947 • ALBERT C. MARTIN & ASSOCIATES, ARCHITECTS © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute (2004.R.10)

CASE STUDY HOUSE No. 22, LOS ANGELES, CALIF., ICONIC GIRLS, 1960 PIERRE KOENIG, ARCHITECT © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute (2004.R.10) »


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photographically did not persist in portraying what I would see in the same space...frequently, most frequently, I would show a Polaroid print to the client and then an 11 by 14 enlargement of each scene. Most architects were dismayed because I saw in my composition elements that had escaped their own viewing. I had to be good. That’s all. You cannot portray a scene by describing it in advance. You go in with the architect, the client, and you start working. All this initial enterprise comes out in a photograph, it represents a good estimate of what the architects wants to show. It’s a blessing to be able to do this, and I say to students who are learning photography or architecture, forget it. You cannot lay down a rule. There’s no such thing. So maybe the answer would be ...the only way in retrospect is to take a group into a building that you’d like to have a conversation about. Let’s go to the building.” FABRIK: Does LA continue to create iconic buildings and if so, please share some that have made an impression on you?

SHULMAN: Well, hell, what is an iconic building? Any one of my large prints out there on the wall could be called iconic. If you visualize, as we’re here now, a building that you’re familiar with, in downtown L.A., that we could go together sometime, early some morning, a public building, or a library downtown, walk in there with my asst. with a camera, and make a test, pull up a Polaroid picture and pass it around, this is what we’re looking at, and until we see a, b, and c, on the other hand, one of you may ask oh, but you’re not showing that part there, and you might say to make another composition, or you may find that significant enough. It is so much up to each person to make their own selection. There is no way of portraying a space better than being there on the scene. It’s a visual experience. I don’t know if we can answer a question that way. FABRIK: You were here at the very beginning of modern architecture. Did it seem like it was a revolution in architecture, did it seem like there was something happening, like there was a movement, in the 30s and 40s when all the boxier buildings, the new modern building started coming around?

SHULMAN: I can’t respond to that kind of question. I didn’t see any difference. FABRIK: Many mid-century buildings in L.A. are threatened by new development (Shulman says matter-of-factly, that’s okay) rather than restored and re-used. What’s your reaction to the planned destruction of the Century Plaza Hotel and the Century City Gateway West Tower?

SHULMAN: It so happens that the Century City Hotel was one of the very first photographs I did for editors of magazines. It’s a good building. It serves a purpose for a lot of weddings, bar mitzvahs and every kind of ceremony, funeral services. It did serve a purpose. Are we 16

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GARCIA HOUSE, LOS ANGELES, CALIF., EXTERIOR, 1975 • JOHN LAUTNER, ARCHITECT © J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute (2004.R.10)

ready now to tear it down? Is there any arbitration? Who decides how and where to tear down such type of a building, a hotel, many people say it’s been around for 20, 30, 40 years, it’s performed a function...it’s difficult. The architects have to meet with the owners, and the public would react to tearing down that wall, or another, and replacing it with something else entirely different...it’s a good building. I’ve taken some awfully good photographs of that same good building. But has it been sufficient? Or has the building been used to its use and function? No, it’s not as good as it was originally. That can happen, to authorize a change. FABRIK: Are you involved in preserving cultural architecture in Los Angeles?

SHULMAN: Of course I am. I’ll always be there working, whether it’s an old building or new building! Shulman’s instinct to stage suggestions of stories within his photographs makes them timeless revelations of our fascination with our constructions and our selves. It is to his credit that the iconic image, more often than not, occupies a greater psychic space than the iconic building. The symbiosis between the real and photographed building, as represented by Shulman’s compositions, is what gave modernist architecture its eloquence. In an era when architecture was fixated on the East Coast and Europe, Shulman articulated the quintessential image of Possibility, which was to be found ‘out west.’ » Web fabrikmagazine.com

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JUERGEN NOGAI The day after we met with Shulman, Fabrik had attended a lecture at the newly opened Annenberg Space for Photography, where photographer Juergen Nogai and architectural historian Wim de Wit, who heads the Department of Architecture and Design at the Getty Research Institute, were speaking about Shulman’s work, their collaboration over the past decade, as well as Nogai’s multifaceted career as a widely exhibited fine art and commercial photographer. Juergen Nogai was born in Germany, where he spent most of his professional life. He opened a studio more than 30 years ago doing “fine art” photography, and eventually branched out to advertising and architectural work. He also specialized in JUERGEN NOGAI WITH JULIUS SHULMAN art photography, working for museums and private collectors. When Juergen relocated to Los Angeles in 2000, he almost immediately began a very rewarding collaboration with Julius Shulman, which continues to this day. We were thrilled to ask Juergen some questions about photography as well. FABRIK: What is the value of informing the public about architecture?

NOGAI: Do we have to inform people about architecture they have to use, or do we have to inform architects about the people they are building for? I think that what defines the difference between good and bad architecture can be reduced to the functionality of buildings – how is it working, or how are we living and working in it and out of these aspects should follow a clean and exciting design. I think it is important to document the architecture in the context of the use and educate people by showing the building, and explaining it by giving them a tour with my pictures. The observer has to figure out if this kind of architecture works for him, and if he likes it or not. I try to be as objective as possible by giving him visual help to make his decision. That means, I should also be able to photograph architecture, which is not my personal favorite, and still do a good job documenting it for my client. FABRIK: What is the relationship between the photographed and the “real” building?

NOGAI: Without an architect there is no building and there wouldn’t be a photograph. Today we see a lot of “non- existent” buildings in strange virtual computer worlds. In my photography of »


WALT DISNEY HALL, LOS ANGELES • FRANK GEHRY, ARCHITECT © Julius Shulman and Juergen Nogai


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architecture, I try to be objective with my subjective eye. I try to understand the buildings I will photograph and create their unique story. Our reality is always subjective, it is what we see, realize and feel. I hope, that my clientele will find the ‘real’ building in my photographs. FABRIK: Do digital technologies alter the way you work and your experience of built spaces?

NOGAI: I am still working 80% analog with high quality large format cameras and lenses, which gives me more creative and technical possibilities, and the quality of film still feels better for me personally than digital images. I think that digital photography created more ‘shooting’ photographers, because there are no film costs involved, there is no risk. By that I mean that the thinking process comes at the end by editing countless images, instead of thinking upfront and creating your story. This means for example, that you create the right composition, find the right position / angel, watch the natural and artificial light situations, people, etc. and make a decision for the tools you have to use to capture, what you have in mind. The camera comes always at the end. I am not exploring the world through the camera, I use it to collect my ideas. My images are normally not altered, where as digital photography, because of its technology, leads itself to a lot of after the fact alteration: in light balancing, color shifting, correcting tilting lines etc., because you always have to go through the computer and its software to look at your images. All of that does not mean that digital photography is in general not appropriate, but it needs a lot of discipline and it is much better placed in press, sport and documentary photography. Let’s say it this way, why should I use a racing car for heavy loads or sight seeing tours – architectural photography needs an understanding of the building, a constructed view to tell its story, so that a recipient can understand it without a floor plan. FABRIK: Please share the names of some artists who have won your respect/admiration and why.

NOGAI: I am coming from classic art study backgrounds, which lead me to the ideas of the BAUHAUS. So I would say this confrontation with a broad spectrum of art and history, makes it very difficult to name single artists, but for sure a genius such as Da Vinci, challenges not only painters, video artist, musicians, but photographers as well. Among the photographers I admire, I would have to name Alfred Stieglitz, who I feel was so important for his photographic life documentary work, Andre Kertesz, with his personal photographic composition, and unorthodox camera angles, which created his personal photographic style of telling his story. The Bechers, who photographed buildings with large format cameras, in a straightforward and intensely austere ‘objective’ compositions. Reinhart Wolf, who inspired me with his incredible “Faces of Buildings”. I could go on and name more, because I am in general always 20

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BLUE JAY HOUSE, LOS ANGELES • ZOLTAN PALI, ARCHITECT © Julius Shulman and Juergen Nogai

interested in the world that surrounds me and shapes me. It is like that in my relationship to Julius Shulman. He influences me, and in some ways I also influence him. FABRIK: Do you collect art, either photography or other forms?

NOGAI: Yes, my wife and I collect art. We collect photography, paintings, weavings, etc. I am more on the side of collecting photography and my wife Jeannie, who is an illustrator, is more responsible for paintings. But we both are open for everything we are confronted and moved by. FABRIK: Please share something you love about living and working in Los Angeles. » Web fabrikmagazine.com

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NOGAI: The variety of “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly.” What I mean by that is the tension that is created between the different colorful cultures and people. The extreme contrast between wealth and poverty, the social problems. You find the glamour of Hollywood, and the people selling this glamour as “Star Maps” and organizing “Star Tours” and then on the other side you have the homeless people pushing their shopping carts through the alleys. The diverse social context gives this city a special dynamic. Los Angeles is for me a city, which is exciting in its enormous amount of different expressions in art, architecture, film, theatre and music. There are not so many places in our world with such a vibrant and diverse art scene as we have here. The extreme contrast between well thought out architecture, and then the functioning, stucco “living boxes” and over-decorated displays of wealth. It took me some time to realize that this city is permanently pushing me forward in my creative life, and also in putting me in touch with many people with whom I learned different ways of looking at our world. FABRIK: What do you most love photographing?

I’m a visual person. In that way, I try to capture what I see, and that can be people, social problems, or design in its various forms. Everything that catches my attention, I somehow freeze in my camera as a time document, or just as a creative play with color and form. Architectural photography, of course, became one of my main interests. Through this profession, I am communicating with architecture and design of all kinds, very intensely, and it became a major part in my photographic life. I feel very lucky that I can do in my life, what I love to do. As collaborators, Shulman and Nogai have produced books, publications, numerous magazine features and countless private and public assignments. Their work will be on show until August 22nd, 2009, at Craig Krull Gallery, Bergamot Station in Santa Monica, CA. In Spring 2010, there will be another show at C/O Berlin, International Forum for Visual Dialogue, in Berlin, Germany, followed by an exhibit in September 2010 at Zephyr Gallery in the Museum Mannheim in Mannheim, Germany. As well as working with Julius Shulman, Juergen works on his own assignments and projects, producing numerous books for publishers including Harry N. Abrams Inc., and Taschen. LINKS:

http://www.juergennogai.com http://www.craigkrullgallery.com http://www.getty.edu

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MUSEUM SPOTLIGHT WORDS CRAIG STEPHENS IMAGES COURTESY OF THE ANNENBERG SPACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY

ANNENBERG SPACE FOR PHOTOGRAPHY The Los Angeles art community has long been a global beacon for fine arts photography- from its stalwart art fair Photo LA through to an assortment of iconic galleries. A new venue, less bound to the rigors of commerce and with a more philanthropic premise, The Annenberg Space for Photography, offers an innovative cultural destination dedicated to both digital images and print photography by established and emerging artists. The intimate environment features state-of-the-art, high-definition digital technology as well as traditional prints by some of the world’s most renowned and emerging photographers. The exhibits change three times a year, however the common thread is exhibiting, rather than selling, exceptional photography. The Photography Space informs and inspires the public by connecting photographers, philanthropy and the human experience through powerful imagery and stories. It is the first solely photographic cultural destination in the Los Angeles area. As chief curator Patricia Lanza confides,“This is a purist exhibition space. We aren’t driven by salability. If someone wants to buy, we will refer them to the photographer concerned, but our main concern is exhibiting exciting work.” “We opened on March 25th and have had phenomenal interest from the public, having had over 20,000 people visit the space,” Patricia adds that the Annenberg’s real function is that of a conduit to connect people with the art of photography. 28

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© DOUGLAS KIRKLAND // ANDY WARHOL, PAUL MORRISEY, JANE FORTH AND JOE DALLESANDRO, 1961. Movie set of the film “Trash” Chateau Marmont Hotel, Los Angeles.

Testament to this commitment to facilitate the public’s access is IRIS NIGHTS, a regular lecture series held at the space. This public program, offered free of charge, by reservation online on a first come first serve basis, brings to life the featured exhibit with hour-long lectures by the photographers featured in the Photography Space exhibits, as well as by other notable guest artists and experts. Despite what seems a Los Angeles Times monopoly, lectures so far have included the likes of the inimitable Catherine Opie, Patrick Ecclesine, a 33-year-old commercial photographer, and Helen K. Garber, a fine arts photographer. Times photographers Kirk McCoy and Genaro Molina recently offered a talk about the joys of their daily beat . Photojournalist Carolyn Cole also offered insights into her world. Cole has spent the past 15 years traveling to distant places, capturing the news and bringing it to the readers of the Los Angeles Times. She has covered the conflicts in Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel, Sudan and Liberia, often focusing on victims caught in the crossfire. Her high impact photography, not only informs, but captures the aesthetics of light, color and composition, often under chaotic circumstances. Web fabrikmagazine.com

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© CATHERINE OPIE // ANGELA SCHEIRL.


© GREG GORMAN // BETTE DAVIS, LOS ANGELES, 1988.


MUSEUM SPOTLIGHT

The inaugural exhibition of the Annenberg Space for Photography celebrated contemporary photography through works by eight internationally renowned photographers John Baldessari, Carolyn Cole, Greg Gorman, Lauren Greenfield, Lawrence Ho, Douglas Kirkland, Kirk McKoy, Genaro Molina, Catherine Opie, Julius Shulman and Tim Street-Porter. Their work focused on the complexity and vitality of the city of Los Angeles by featuring different genres of contemporary photographic exploration – architecture, portraiture, photojournalism, and art – with interrelated themes weaved throughout. Through a relationship with the Los Angeles Times, L8S ANG3LES also featured the work of celebrated Times staff photographers and a selection of archival photographs of the city going back over 100 years. Julius Shulman and Tim Street-Porter are famous for their focus on both modern and vernacular southern California architecture. Douglas Kirkland and Greg Gorman memorably portray the city's celebrities from the industries for which LA is best known, while Lauren Greenfield's photographs probe the lives of children who “grow up in the shadow of Hollywood.” Carolyn Cole’s visual reports from international war zones are made for The Los Angeles Times as are the works of Lawrence Ho, Kirk McKoy, and Genaro Molina. Catherine Opie’s series “In and Around Home” merged personal and local issues with global perspectives. And John Baldessari added dry wit to the practice of “nip and tuck” and to “painting” one’s face in his most recent series. June 28th marked a return to photojournalism for the space with the second exhibit featuring the work of winning photojournalists and visual editors from Pictures of the Year International (POYi), the oldest and most prestigious photojournalism competition in the world. The top images are chosen from more than 45,000 global entries. Traditionally they were shown on a smaller scale at the University of Missouri at the Missouri School of Journalism. Now, for the first time ever, after 65 years of success in the Midwest, Pictures of the Year International is moving to Los Angeles, where it will exhibit over 80 prints and thousands of digital selections in its new home at the Annenberg Space for Photography, which is on view until November 2nd, 2009. Kicking off this year’s exhibit was a two-day conference-style event comprised of presentations, discussions and lectures given by the winning photojournalists and visual editors. Named the 66th Annual Pictures of the Year International Education & Awards Program, this program took place at the Annenberg Space for Photography on Friday, July 10 and in the Ray Kurtzman Theater at Creative Artists Agency on Saturday, July 11, 2009. The full-day program celebrated the work of the award recipients. Presentations by winners included Photographer of the Year Emilio Morenatti, The Associated Press; the World Understanding Award recipient Jakob Carlsen; and the Photo Editing portfolio recipient Angus McDougall, National Geographic; among others.

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© CAROLYN COLE, THE LOS ANGELES TIMES // IRAQ: WAR PAINT - AUGUST 2004. A U.S. Marine wears camouflage face paint during the battle for Najaf, Iraq where American forces spent weeks bombing and fighting their way to the city’s holy Imam Ali Shrine, before a negotiated end to the fighting.

© LAUREN GREENFIELD // “GIRL CULTURE” 2002 ALLI, ANNIE, HANNAH, AND BERIT. All 13, dressed up before the first big party of the seventh grade in Edina, an affluent suburb of Minneapolis, Minnesota.

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© TIM STREET-PORTER // SCHNABEL HOUSE, BRENTWOOD, 1991 • FRANK GEHRY, ARCHITECT.

JULIUS SHULMAN // KAUFMANN HOUSE, PALM SPRINGS 1947 • RICHARD NEUTRA, ARCHITECT. J. Paul Getty Trust. Used with permission. Julius Shulman Photography Archive, Research Library at the Getty Research Institute


© JOHN BALDESSARI // RAISED EYEBROWS/FURROWED FOREHEADS: \(BLUE EYEBROWS AND YELLOW EYEGLASSES), 2008. Three dimensional archival print, laminated with lexan and mounted on shaped form with acrylic paint. Courtesy of Marian Goodman Gallery, New York.


MUSEUM SPOTLIGHT

Some of the award-winning presenters included: MAGAZINE PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR Uriel Sinai, Getty Images NEWSPAPER PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR Emilio Morenatti, The Associated Press BEST PHOTOGRAPHY BOOK AWARD Jason Eskenazi COMMUNITY AWARENESS AWARD Matt Eich, Aurora Select DOCUMENTARY PROJECT OF THE YEAR Seth Gitner, Roanoke Times & roanoke.com GLOBAL VISION AWARD Balzas Gardi, VII Network ANGUS McDOUGALL OVERALL EXCELLENCE IN EDITING AWARD National Geographic WORLD UNDERSTANDING AWARD Jakob Carlsen, Freelance Again embracing the notion of photography as a documentary tool, Sport, another forthcoming show set for November, observes the work of esteemed Sports photographers Walter Iooss and Neil Leifer. Running from early November, 2009 through March, 2010, the work of two of the world’s most preeminent sports photographers come together in this compelling exhibit celebrating the athlete. Iooss is best known for his work seen on the front of Sports Illustrated (his images have been shown on more than 300 covers) as well as for his portraits of famous athletes like Michael Jordan and Ken Griffey, Jr. Leifer’s work has also been seen on numerous Sports Illustrated covers as well as well in the pages of Time Magazine. Leifer’s love of sports photography started at a young age when, as a boy in New York City, he would gain free admission to Giants games by pushing the wheelchairs of disabled patrons and then use his free ticket and camera to position himself on the field with professional photographers. Removed from the need to commodify the work it exhibits, the Annenberg Space’s future shows aim not only to entertain but also educate patrons, offering them valuable insights into both the technical and creative vision of photographers on show. Chief curator Patricia Lanza concludes, “by offering lectures and digitally documented interviews with photographers, the public has a greater insight and understanding of their work. It’s all about intimacy, where people are connected with the work on every level.”

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THE ARCHITECTURE SERIES info@dakshots.com

WWW.DAKSHOTS.COM

310.312.3928


FINE ART PHOTOGRAPHY B Y D AV I D A K N U D S E N


ARTFUL AFFAIRS WORDS ASHLEY TIBBITS IMAGES COURTESY OF THE LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART

LACMA’S DECORATIVE ARTS THE LOS ANGELES CONTEMPORARY MUSEUM OF ART’S (LACMA) permanent collection will always hold a special place in my heart. The home of David Hockney’s iconic (and locally relevant), panoramic Pop painting Mullholland Drive, Kurt Schwitters’ Dada masterful assemblage work Construction for Noble Ladies, and brilliant photographs from renowned artist Cindy Sherman’s Untitled Film Stills series, LACMA has long been a veritable venue for the who’s who and what’s what in modern art and beyond. Even in recent years of economic hardship, the museum has only grown more impressive with the addition of its Broad Contemporary Museum of Art, an adjacent museum space heavy on Pop giant like Jeff Koons, Roy Lichtenstein, and Robert Rauschenberg, all loaned by art aficionados and philanthropists Eli and Edythe Broad. But LACMA’s gifts aren’t only limited to contemporary works. Thanks to the generosity of a few local folk, the museum’s Decorative Arts Department has also recently strengthened its veins. The collection, which consists of wood, glass, furniture, metal, ceramics, and textiles of periods spanning from the 14th century to the present day, already boasts a bounty of pieces from the Arts and Crafts movement, which flourished from the tail end of the 19th century into the very early 20th century and highlighted a nature-inspired and handmade aesthetic. While the movement took place in England, Canada, and other parts of the United States, California remains a significant location in Arts and Crafts history. Until recently, LACMA already included (among many items) a beautiful cellarette from the New York-based artisan community Roycroft, lighting fixtures by the Linden Glass Company and Karl E. Kipp, furniture from Pasadena’s relished Blacker House (designed by the noted firm Greene 40

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CHEST OF TWENTY DRAWERS, Sam Maloof 20th Century, United States, Walnut wood, 40 x 77 x 20 inches.

COFFEE TABLE WITH FOUR DRAWERS, Sam Maloof 20th Century, United States, Walnut wood, 19 x 34 x 60 inches.

ÂŤ ROCKING CHAIR, Sam Maloof 1997, U.S., Cherry Wood and Ebony, 26 x 32 inches. Web fabrikmagazine.com

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ARTFUL AFFAIRS

& Greene), and a stunning mosaic-ed fireplace front from the Patrick J. King House in Chicago. Much of these items are from the private collection of donor Max Palevsky. Despite the collection having such attractions, one vocal person felt a significant absence in some of the local representation. This person, William J. Zeili, was the greatnephew of a man who ran a furniture shop with Arthur and Lucia Mathews, SETTEE, Sam Maloof two major artists of California’s Arts 1987, U.S., Birch Wood, 26 x 32 x 46 inches. and Crafts movement in the early 1900s. At the time, LACMA’s Decorative Arts and Design collection only held one work by the duo, a landscape painting. At Zeili’s invitation, the Decorative Art department, spearheaded by curator Wendy Kaplan, selected a handful of pieces including a standing candelabrum and a hand-painted chest from the South Pasadena family home. The pieces were unveiled at LACMA on June 14th, 2009. LACMA’s under-appreciated Decorative Arts and Design Collection also showcases significant works by another California woodworker, Sam Maloof. The MacArthur “Genius” Grant recipient (who died only this year) was a contemporary force in his medium du jour, his works included in many other prestigious collections such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Smithsonian Institute of Art. LACMA’s works by Maloof include a stylized-beyond-its-material rocking chair carved from cherry wood, a double-sided music stand, a minimalist settee, and an austere coffee table and chest of drawers. If these acquisitions weren’t reason enough to explore the Decorative Arts and Design Collection, this LACMA department also features Mid-century silver jewelry by Warren Carter and Ed Wiener, 15th and 16th century Netherlander and Swiss stained glass, and Art Nouveau metal vases and andirons and wooden furniture. But curator Wendy Kaplan certainly gives DUET MUSIC RACK, Sam Maloof special attention to the pieces created locally, making 1984, U.S., Walnut, Rosewood, Rubber, the collection beam California pride. 60 x 24 x 18 inches. 42

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debra kagan SATSUMA

GALLERY

BY APPOINTMENT 727-418-7500 • www.debrakagan.com


Tobi Tobin, Hollywood insider and designer to the Stars… Launches her Luxury Home Collection in sleek new storefront on LA’s distinguished Sunset Plaza Drive. The new Gallery and ‘Lifestyle’ boutique is a showroom for Exquisite Fine Art, Vintage Furniture Accessories Couture Clothing Vintage Couture Jewelry and her signature Furniture, accessories and Candle line. The launch features artist EDWARD LENTSCH — A well established midcareer painter, who works his widely, mixed media into organically textured canvas, exhibiting unique surfaces that reflect a contemplative element of both alchemy and spiritual introspection. The spiritual overtones of Lentsch’s painting are captured by his titles, where he uses mystical imagery and esoteric subjects to inspire the imagination of the viewer. TOBI TOBIN is a destination shop that exhibits the perfect synergy between exquisite fine art and its dynamic counter-point, as a welcoming continuity between the interior designer and her vision for a “Lifestyle Brand” of both the luxurious and esoteric… Whether it be the tailored restraint of plush cashmere embracing upholstered sofas and chaises accented by distinctive pieces, including twisted teak branch chairs, monolithic stone and steel tables, architectural findings and select antiquities, interior designer Tobi Tobin’s innate sense of timeless style and bohemian chic couples perfectly with a dramatic fashion-fused vision and obsession with spatial balance, weight, and flow.

OPENING SOON FOR PRESS INQUIRIES: Tobi Tobin 8601 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90069 Telephone: (310) 289-0951 Email: Meredith Russo — Meredith.ttd@gmail.com Website: www.tobitobindesign.com



THROUGH THE LENS

THE LENS OF LA:

FROM MOTION TO STILLNESS Since the 1920’s, Los Angeles has been the capital of moving pictures but only recently is it emerging as a center of fine art photography. In the 1980’s, LA had only one major photography gallery. Today, Los Angeles has over 20 galleries entirely dedicated to exhibiting the art of image making. Photo LA, an international photographic art expo, celebrated its 18th year in 2009. As confirmation of the ‘still’ movement, the first Los Angeles photography museum, the Annenberg Space for Photography opened in March. A few months later, the renovated Annenberg Community Beach House opened to display a Santa Monica Beach photo exhibit of 27 photographers’ work. Month of Photography Los Angeles (MOPLA) was launched this year by the Lucie Foundation to support and promote Los Angeles photographers by the Lucie Foundation. Los Angeles is now the second largest photography community in the United States. Fabrik Magazine highlights a few of our favorite LA photographer artists. »


THROUGH THE LENS WORDS LANEE NEIL

UTA BARTH Born in Berlin, Uta Barth’s Los Angeles home is where the art is. She is interested in perception, in how we see rather than what we see. Therefore subject matter is of little importance to her and she finds no logic in “going out to photograph.” Instead she makes images in her own home, the place where she happens to be most of the time. The images are not about autobiography or metaphors of the domestic and therefore she makes a great effort to remove personal information from the work.

Her influences are not found in the history of photography, yet she makes photographs because the camera is the closet thing to the human eye. She lists the Light and Space movement, artist Robert Irwin and Robert Ryman along with Brian Eno’s ambient music and the atmospheric writings by Joan Didion as points of departure that inspire and inform her Zen-like practice. Her visceral and hauntingly beautiful images have been shown in galleries and museums around the globe. She has also been a recipient of the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship in 2004 and the Broad Art Foundation USA Artist Fellowship in 2008. Numerous monographs have been published on her work. www.tanyabonakdargallery.com

LENA HERZOG As an intellectual heavyweight, linguist, and philosophy graduate, Russian born Herzog utilizes photography to ponder the big questions of life in both direct and abstract ways. Her passion developed when she took pictures at a bullfight with her grandfather’s old Kiev camera. She simply followed the handwritten note in his leather case saying, “At high sun close to 16 at 1/125th” and much to her amazement, the pictures actually captured the emotional intensity of her experience. Since then, her images continue to reveal intimate and raw moments of humanity around the globe whether she’s shooting flamenco dancers in Spain, Buddhist pilgrims in India or burlesque performers in New Orleans. She also works as a still photographer on set with her husband, award-winning filmmaker Werner Herzog. www.lenaherzog.com Web fabrikmagazine.com

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THROUGH THE LENS

MARC VALESELLA Building Corners. Hairy Legs. Guns. Storage Units. These are some of the peculiar subjects Marc Valesella extracts beauty from as an archeologist unearths buried treasures. FrenchAmerican Valesella’s keen eye was first discovered in 1977 by the fashion magazine Mode International. He traded the fast life of the Parisian fashion world to live and work in Los Angeles “where the high contrast light of the city facilitates my Chiaroscuro style” in his words. As a supreme nostalgic, he explains why he still gets excited every time the shutter releases on his camera, “I love the impossible quest of stopping time of a moment that will never exist again. But what’s really excites me is how the photo moves the viewer emotionally. I believe beauty can change the world: beauty is everywhere among us but takes discipline to see it.” Valesella is also a self-taught master printer. www.marcvalesella.com www.craigkrullgallery.com

DANIEL WHEELER The jack-of-all-trade artist returns to his first love of artistic expression and literally makes a splash with his photography series, “GULP”, shot under water in swimming pools revealing a dream-like, ethereal landscape of Los Angeles. He explains why Los Angeles is his muse, “It’s a city in a desert that has been turned into a garden megalopolis. The resulting disjuncture between incredible physical beauty and abjection here creates an almost unbearable tension. It is repugnant and seductive at the same time. I love that and work toward the same thing in the things I make.” His watery images are only a part of Wheeler’s Generative Urban Landscape Project (GULP) that has spanned over four years and includes drawings, sculptures and performances. www.bigobjects.com • www.duncanmillergallery.com 48

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MARK WYSE Wyse, student of the great photographer Stephen Shore, uses the idea of the camera as a dispassionate recording device as well as the larger question of how artists' conscious and unconscious intentions manifest themselves in photographs. Nazraeli Press, his book publisher, speaks of his talent in the context of Los Angeles, “It’s no surprise Mark Wyse hones his artistic vision in LA. His images, rich with rapture of light and detail both confound and embrace photographic conventions.” Before Nazraeli, he self-published a book with a title that leaves nothing to the imagination of its subject matter that launched his career, “17 Parked Cars in Various Parking Lots on the Pacific Coast Highway between My House and Ed Ruscha’s”. A photo from his “Marks of Indifference” series was recently featured in the Reality Check: Truth and Illusion Photography exhibit at the Metropolitan Museum of New York and he is a visiting faculty member at UCLA. www.wallspacegallery.com

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Cruel Summer Photography by Anyes Galleani Styling by Travis Wayne Hair & Make Up by Gordon Bahn Featuring Kelly (Q Models) & Cheron (I Model)

BATHING SUIT SPACE SAFARI BY COSTUME DEPT. AND POSSO VEST SKIN GRAFT DESIGNS // SHOES VINTAGE CHANEL, PROVIDED BY WASTELAND


LONG SLEEVE SWIMSUIT COSTUME DEPT • SHORTS GERONIMO COLLECTION HARNESS VEST SKIN GRAFT DESIGNS


SWIMSUIT ASHLEY PAIGE • NECKLACE CALDWELL SUTHERLAND DESIGNS BOOTS JEFFREY CAMPBELL, PROVIDED BY WASTELAND


THIS PAGE AND OPPOSITE: SWIMSUIT ASHLEY PAIGE • SKIRT MARIA BIANCA NERO NECKLACE JOIA, PROVIDED BY WASTELAND • BOOTS JEFFREY CAMPBELL, PROVIDED BY WASTELAND



SWIMSUIT SPACE SAFARI BY COSTUME DEPT. AND POSSO DRESS SKIN GRAFT DESIGNS • SHOES YOTAM SOLOMON


SHIRT ROJAS • BATHING SUIT ASHLEY PAIGE • LEGGINGS COSTUME DEPT. NECKLACE CALDWELL SUTHERLAND DESIGNS


DRESS ROJAS • LEGGINGS COSTUME DEPT.


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HOT & COOL LA

HOT&COOLLA

WORDS LANEE NEIL

VENICE, CA

PAMELA BARISH Is that a vintage piece you’re wearing? No, it’s a 2009 Pamela Barish design. Pamela’s clothing line for women embodies a modern yet timeless essence. You could easily envision Scarlet Johanssen or Audrey Hepburn at a summer soiree in one of Pamela’s playfully sophisticated floral print dresses. Her designs are a rare find in today’s trend obsessed fashion worldthey allow a woman’s personality to make an impression rather than her outfit.

ed to buy some cute dresses. She said yes and wrote me a check.” After 30 years of designing for rock stars to Neiman’s, she opened her store in 2004 with a line of ready-to-wear clothes in addition to her made-to-order clothes.

“I don’t follow fashion at all,” Pamela explains her individuality in design. “I hardly look at magazines. I like what I like, what is sensible in the most whimsical way.” A lot of ladies like what she likes too – including Meg Ryan, Rosanna Arquette, and Cher to name drop a few.

Her spring/summer line of figure flattering dresses, sheer ruffled blouses and bohemian ankle length skirts are only appreciated fully in person. Truly, each garment inspires awe as you experience the luscious fabrics and supreme craftsmanship. In this economy, it’s vital to support local and support people who produce fine quality. Pamela Barish is a quintessential example of both – a resident of Venice for almost two decades and visibly committed to creating clothes that emphasize all that is feminine: elegance with a stitch of sass.

Speaking of Cher, seventeen year old Pamela had a fortuitous encounter that would launch her career. “I was walking down the street in Beverly Hills with a bunch of hippie dresses, and I ran into Cher,” she says. “I asked if she want-

1327 1/2 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 314-4490 Wed – Sat, 11-5 pm www.pamelabarish.com

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STRANGE INVISIBLE PERFUMES Ever been entranced by a scent that instantly took you back to childhood memories of playing in your grandma’s backyard laced with lilacs or a romantic trip with your lover to the spice-laden land of Morocco? Sensory memory is powerful and owner Alexandra Balahoutis capitalizes on this by using stories and memories as inspiration for her natural and ecofriendly fragrances and bath/body products. Born and raised among the aromatic Hollywood hills, she was destined for an olfactory based life. At the market, while other children asked their mothers for candy, Alexandra pleaded for a bottle of Turkish rose water. Even at seven years of age, Barbie’s perfume bored her. Fourteen years later she began her official quest for capturing the wild territory of botanical perfumery; diligently seeking how to deliver luxurious, authentic fragrances without using synthetic essences. In 2000, she set herself apart in the fragrance world by launching the Strange Invisible house of fragrances that adheres relentlessly to three essential components: pure aromatic plants, reverent distillation and evocative design. L’Invisible, the signature scent of amber, rose, lemon and ylang ylang, is chameleon-like as it changes with the person wearing it. A portion of the sale of the musky Magnolia Street, inspired by New Orleans, goes to support postKatrina reconstruction projects. One of Alexander’s spring 2009 creations, Urban Lily, has been elegantly likened to Grace Kelly essence. You can also get your very own essence encapsulated. At the back of the store is a rose colored glass room where Alexandra, based on a detailed questionnaire about your memories and lifestyle, designs a custom-tailored fragrance all about you. 1138 Abbot Kinney Blvd Venice, CA 90291 (310) 314-1505 www.strangeinvisibleperfumes.com

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EQUATOR BOOKS Endangered species to preserve: the earth’s natural resources, the humpback whale, the U.S. economy, and now the eclectic eQuator bookstore. Upon its eminent danger of extinction, non-trust fund owners Michael and Philip created a “Save the Equator” campaign complete with a hand-painted thermometer indicating how much money is still needed to stop another local, small fish business from being flushed down the toilet. Opened with just pure passion for art and books in 2004, eQuator is an airy minimalist garage space designed by local architect Raina Alomar featuring hard-to-find books and art shows from local artists. It is a serious intellectual hub framed by the laid back, zany energy of Venice. Do your part for the bibliophile in you by buying a must-have vintage issue of Playboy, a coffee table photo book of surfing or circus freaks, an LP of a Blue Note musician, a controversial piece of art by owner Michael or a gift card which you can snag right on their website. As of June 2009, eQuator opened a coffee shop to further stimulate, via caffeine, lofty pontifications about literature and creative endeavor. 1103 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 399-5544 www.equatorbooks.com

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Next time you need a break from the urbanite ‘rabbit-life’ philosophy; visit Tortoise General Store and Tortoise Gallery to be reminded that speed and quantity does not always equate to happiness and true wealth. Tortoise General Store 1208 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 www.tortoisegeneralstore.com Tortoise Gallery 1342 1/2 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 www.tortoiselife.com

TORTOISE GENERAL STORE AND GALLERY

ALTERED SPACE GALLERY

Slow and steady wins the race, according to owners Keiko and Taku Shinomoto. They discovered this ‘tortoise-life’ philosophy after quitting their high-powered jobs in Japan and living day to day as a turtle would with only the shell on their back.

Desperately needing a creative outlet outside of her grueling law practice, Sand Brim opened Altered Space Gallery featuring mostly local artists in 1995. Even though the arts-craftsdesign gallery relocated a few times and finally settled in Venice since 2004, Altered Space has stayed true to its mission: promoting and featuring artists that have mastered their medium with a balance of artistry and craft.

After noticing human lifespan was increasing yet man-made products’ lifespan were decreasing encouraging consummate consumerism, they dedicated themselves to promoting in Taku’s words, “things which have been here for a long time, things which were made by hand with heart… (using) techniques which have been fostered through history”. They opened Tortoise General Store in 2003 selling only the highest quality Japanese items like Snow Peak camping gear (which is like the Hermes of outdoor lifestyle), designer Yanagi’s strikingly simple kitchenware or a hand-sewn baby kimono onesie. Nothing is ‘lost in translation’ as the Shinomoto’s less-is-more aesthetic has been wildly received. So much that in 2008, they opened a gallery a block down the street highlighting Japanese art, vintage jewelry, hinoki soaking tubs and furniture designed by Taku himself. Currently, the Tortoise gallery is featuring the work of woodblock artist and Soto-Zen Buddhist monk, Shodo Iwagaki. Check their website to find upcoming Japanese artist appearances and shows. 66

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Todd Reed, one of their most sought after fine art jewelers, fashions raw diamonds and recycled gold into evocative, striking rings and bracelets. Wood furniture maker for over 30 years, Richard Patterson’s craftsmanship is apparent- each piece is hand carved and not a single nail is used to assemble one of his whimsical tables or chairs. Altered Space also features artists in ceramics, paintings and glass. On the first Friday night of every month where Abbot Kinney shops and galleries keep the doors open and the wine flowing until 10 pm, Altered Space is always a festive gathering full of locals and tourists socializing and enjoying the creative atmosphere. Currently, Raphael Sloane’s series of photographic images called "Endangered Plants" are on display. 1221 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 452-8121 www.alteredspacegallery.com

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DESIGN CRITIC WORDS OLIVER O.

DESIGN DIVO BLANCHES AT

Villa Blanca EVER WONDERED WHAT happened to the cast of Dallas? No need to miss them anymore, because the new Villa Blanca restaurant in Beverly Hills is their local hangout. At 6:30 pm, it is an already buzzing scene of the formerly famous and fabulous. Most were probably in high school when Elvis had his first hit. Opened, as one of the world’s fastest renovation jobs, after only three weeks of closing the former restaurant Trilussa, designer and owner Lisa Vanderpump Todd spun the once humble corner of Brighton and Camden like a disco ball into an airy Mediterranean-by-the-sea world. White couches and white billowy curtains serve as the backdrop to highlight the metallic Villa Blanca emblem that adorns everything from the staff uniforms to their private labeled wine and champagne. The overstated emblem throughout the restaurant reminds me of the Juicy or Christian Audigier movement that I call ‘brand name masturbation’ – the inability to resist slapping their moniker on bizarre places like the seat of a fleece pant suit or a car air freshener. Lisa and Ken Todd, who also own Weho’s SUR and twenty other clubs and restaurants in London, know their assets and audience. Keenly capitalizing on Los Angeles, home of the beautiful people, they only hired servers with looks that could distract from the important elements of a successful restaurant: quality food served by knowledgeable, professional servers. As my 68

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friend and I sat at the bar for a pre-dinner cocktail, we couldn’t help but be awestruck by our bartender who was more beautiful than his signature Hendricks gin gimlet, which was outstandingly well balanced and perfectly desirable. Avoid sitting at the bar if possible unless you’re tucked into the corner seats, it’s like perching yourself on the 405 freeway trying to avoid the oncoming traffic of servers and guests going in and out of the Camden side door. Looking forward to finding out if I could forgive the Caesar Palace circa 1980’s décor by the culinary craftsmanship of Chef Francis Dimitrius, formerly from Koi; we checked in with the snarky English host revealing much man cleavage and chains. The moment finally came when we were seated among another busy thoroughfare. Much like the décor, the menu is also tiresomely familiar – California nouvelle cuisine with winks to Asian, Italian and Mediterranean influence. Although, the menu is a safe bet for people who prefer proverbial. Let’s see, Tuna Tartare… check. Caprese salad…check. Peppercorn Filet Mignon…check. There were some surprises like the truffle mushroom pizza and the deliciously delicate yuku and pink champagne sorbets. The biggest astonishment of the evening was the strangely mesmerizing outfits worn by the female servers. They looked like something Cher would wear as a tour guide of Disneyland’s Jungle Cruise ride.

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Maybe you’ll be seeing this glam safari wear trend premier on the next Project Runway episode. Aside from my sharp observations and opening in an economic climate that devours restaurants for a bedtime snack, Villa Blanca is chock-full of happy diners from lunch to dinner. VB fills a glamour gap by offering a sparkling, affluent ambience that captures the essence of everything the world expects of Beverly Hills 90210. Web fabrikmagazine.com

Villa Blanca 9601 Brighton Avenue Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 859-7600 www.villablancarestaurant.com Delights: Reasonable Prices, Rubbernecking Galore, Eager-to-Please Wait Staff Doozies: Mafia Rude Valet

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LOS ANGELES ART EVENTS CALENDAR DOWNTOWN/PASADENA

HOLLYWOOD / WEST HOLLYWOOD / CULVER CITY/BEVERLY HILLS

LOOK GALLERY Leverage THRU AUGUST 30, 2009

ACE GALLERY

“Leverage” brings together several large and larger photo-collages – or, perhaps, photo-structures – by Lever Rukhin, who arranges contact sheets of city streets into surprising and ominous apparitions. In his mural-size montages, up until August 30, Rukhin manages to find grotesque faces, metamorphosing animals, and other creatures at once threatening and comical. Gallery Hours: Mon.-Fri., by appointment. LA Merchandise Mart, 1933 S. Broadway, Suite 111, Los Angeles, 90007. For more information: (213) 748-1113; www.lookartists.net

Gary Lang: Circles Lines Grids THRU AUGUST 29, 2009

Gary Lang’s “Circles Lines Grids,” large, obsessively painted abstractions consisting of those three elements, vibrate with coloristic variety and detail. The photographs comprising Jay Mark Johnson’s “Spacetime,” full of distortions and lens tricks, bump and flow and metamorphose. Opposite in their textures, Lang’s paintings and Johnson’s photos, on view through August, reach similar levels of optical intensity. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10-6 pm. 9430 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly Hills, 90212. For more information: (310) 858-9090; www.acegallery.net

REDCAT Olga Koumoundoros: Demand Management

CALDWELL JIMMERSON

THRU AUGUST 23, 2009

60’s Olga Koumoundoros’ installation “Demand Management,” through August 23, protests the increasingly unequal distribution of wealth in the United States by hurtling through the air a cascade of large household objects – bed, chair, kitchen appliances, etc. – made of papier-mâché. The objects define an imposing arc, almost as if describing a graph of declining household income. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 12-6 pm. 631 W. 2nd Street, Los Angeles, 90012. For more information: (213) 237-2800; www.redcat.org

THRU AUGUST 29, 2009

Until August 29, “60’s” cuts across artistic practice in southern California during that fabled decade. Most of the 14 artists shown were better known in their day than in ours, but the reputation of some (Roger Kuntz, June Harwood) is already returning, while that of others (Tom Eatherton, Philip Hefferton, Clark Murray) is bound to bounce back. The show ranges from pop to minimal, sculpture to photography. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11-6 pm. 8568 Washington Blvd., Culver City, 90232. For more information: (310) 815-1100; www.cardwelljimmerson1.xbuild.com

ARMORY CENTER FOR THE ARTS Drama of the Gifted Child: The Five Year Plan

EDWARD CELLA GALLERY

THRU AUGUST 30, 2009

“Drama of the Gifted Child: The Five Year Plan” is a daunting title for an exhibition. But it makes sense to those who remember the pop-psych book of the 1980s and/or are familiar with the current path young artists are expected to follow. The exhibition, up until August 30, brings together artwork that “suggests the relationship of artists to career goals and academics that has fostered the opportunity for success as a contemporary artist today.” The artists include Bari Ziperstein, Kelly Sears, Christopher Russell, Amy Robinson, Marco Rios, Julie Orser, Julie Lequin, John Knuth, Spencer Douglass, and Dan Bayles. Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Sunday, 12-5 pm. 145 N. Raymond Ave., Pasadena, CA 91103. For more information: (626) 792.5101; www.armoryarts.org

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Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Gehry, Lebbeus Woods, Richard Neutra THRU OCTOBER 10, 2009

Cella, a recent transplant from Santa Barbara, specializes not just in contemporary art but in classic and contemporary architectural drawing, and this first display of such work in the new mid-Wilshire gallery, on view until October 10, includes work by two famous Franks – Lloyd Wright and Gehry – along with Lebbeus Woods, Richard Neutra, and preparatory studies for the Empire State Building and the World Trade Center. 6018 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90036. For more information: (323) 525.0053; www.edwardcella.com

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LOS ANGELES ART EVENTS CALENDAR HONOR FRASER

MANNY SILVERMAN GALLERY

Bitch is the New Black

Michael Goldberg

THRU AUGUST 29, 2009

THRU AUGUST 15, 2009

“Bitch is the New Black,” running until August 29, takes its title from an interaction on Saturday Night Live during the 2008 presidential campaign, but here it’s repurposed to describe the attitude(s) and approach(es) of 14 newly prominent women artists whose work could be characterized as neo-feminist. The work is at once heady and tough, no-nonsense and comical, sexy and dour. Artists include Kirsten Stoltman, Mindy Shapero, Anna Sew Hoy, Amanda Ross-Ho, Cathy Opie, Ruby Neri, Shana Lutker, Annie Lapin, Pearl C. Hsiung, Krysten Cunningham, Rosson Crow, Andrea Bowers, Kathryn Andrews, and Cathy Akers.

This is the gallery’s first Michael Goldberg exhibition since the indefatigable and much-loved New York abstract expressionist died two years ago. The show concentrates on Goldberg’s later work, when his expansive slashes had given way to denser, more lyrical markings, his palette had lightened and intensified, and his energy danced in every corner of the canvas.

Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10 - 6 pm. 2622 S. La Cienega Blvd., Los Angeles, 90034. For more information: (323) 837-0191; www.honorfraser.com

Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10-5 pm. 619 North Almont Drive, Los Angeles, 90069. For more information: (310) 659-8256; www.mannysilvermangallery.com

SUSANNE VIELMETTER LOS ANGELES PROJECTS Patrick Wilson THRU AUGUST 29, 2009

KOPLIN DEL RIO West Coast Drawings THRU AUGUST 29, 2009

“West Coast Drawings” is the gallery’s eighth such survey, rounding up over 20 artists who work in – well, at least around and near – traditional representation. The figure figures prominently, of course, but there are still life and landscape subjects on view as well. Organized by Seattle artist Norman Lundin, the group hanging in Culver City until August 29th includes artists from the northern end of the West Coast; a selection of 19 southern Californians showed in Seattle in July. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Fri. 10- 5:30 pm, Sat. 11-5:30 pm. 6031 Washington Blvd., Culver City, 90232. For more information: (310) 836-9055; www.koplindelrio.com

Patrick Wilson’s latest paintings and works on paper, on view through August 29, continue his investigation of color and transparency in geometric formats, but take more and more liberties with those formats, shifting panels and overlaying unlikely combinations and discovering new translucencies. The large canvases are the most striking, but some of the oddest, most intriguing things happen in the smaller-scaled series. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11-6 pm and by appointment. 5795 West Washington Blvd., Culver City, 90232. For more information: (323) 933-2117; www.vielmetter.com

WESTERN PROJECTS We’re Not the Jet Set THRU SEPTEMBER 5, 2009

THE LOFT AT LIZ’S Diverted Destruction THRU SEPTEMBER 15, 2009

The gallery’s second annual “Diverted Destruction” show, up through September 15, displays work created from objects rescued from landfill. That is, instead of throwing away things like used teabags, crushed soda cans, junk mail or package wrapping, the artists – Juan Rosenfeldt, Sandy Schimmel Gold, Lark Pilinsky, Melinda Altshuler, Maddy Le Mel, and Steve Olson – make art of them.

“We’re Not the Jet Set,” on display until September 5, pairs the diaristic collages and notations of punk princess Exene Cervenka (also featured in the Craft and Folk Art Museum’s “Celestial Ash”) with the hilarious word interventions Wayne White visits on cheesy vintage lithographs. Who knew neo-Pop could be this much fun? Gallery Hours: Tues.-Fri. 11-6 pm, Sat. 11-5 pm. 3830 Main Street, Downtown, Culver City, 90232. For more information: (310) 838-0609; www.western-project.com

453 S. La Brea Ave. Los Angeles, 90036. For more information: 323.939.4403, ext 6. www.theloftatlizs.com

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LOS ANGELES ART EVENTS CALENDAR 18TH STREET ARTS CENTER

WESTSIDE

Post-American L.A. THRU SEPTEMBER 26, 2009

BERGAMOT STATION: GALLERY LUISOTTI Nighttown THRU AUGUST 22, 2009

“Nighttown,” referencing James Joyce’s Ulysses, runs through August 22 and compiles the night-enshrouded photo-images of some of America’s leading photographers – Dike Blair, Frank Gohlke, Robert Adams, Henry Wessel, Michael Ormerod, Lewis Baltz, Shirley Irons, Mark Ruwedel, and John Divola – along with Japan’s Toshio Shibata. Shibata’s Tokyo shots date from the early ‘80s, while Gohlke’s, Wessel’s, and Baltz’s at least a decade earlier, from back when they were leading the exploration of the modern American landscape.

The latest politically tinged theme show at this activist West Side art center, “Post-American L.A.” examines the waning of American worldwide hegemony and how this is impacting both our world and our country, right down to our city streets. On view until September 26 is work by Chen Shaoxiong, Vincent Ramos, Adrian Paci, Glenn Ligon, Vincent Johnson, Ashley Hunt, Hugo Hopping, Sandra de la Loza, and Carolina Caycedo. Gallery Hours: Mon.-Fri., 11-5:30 pm. 1639 18th St., Santa Monica, 90404. For more information: (310) 453-3711; www.18thstreet.org

LA LOUVER Rogue Wave ’09

Gallery Hours: Tue-Fri 10:30-6 pm; Sat 11-6 pm. 2525 Michigan Ave., Building A-2 (Bergamot Station) Santa Monica, 90404. For more information: (310) 453-0043; www.galleryluisotti.com

THRU SEPTEMBER 19, 2009

The gallery’s annual summer survey of new and underexposed talent, now in its fourth year, has become the must-see show taking us from one season to the next. “Rogue Wave ’09,” installed until September 19, includes work by Matt Wedel, Fran Siegel, Tia Pulitzer, Kaz Oshiro, Dianna Molzan, Annie Lapin, Richard Kraft, Olga Koumoundouros (who has her own installation at REDCAT), Micol Hebron, and Erin Cosgrove.

BERGAMOT STATION: FRANK LLOYD GALLERY West Coast Sculpture THRU AUGUST 29, 2009

The by-now-classic three-dimensional work of six California artists comes together until August 29 under the no-nonsense rubric of “West Coast Sculpture.” Recent work by Larry Bell and John Mason of Los Angeles and northern California’s Robert Hudson is paired with Ken Price’s early-70s “Geometric Cups,” a late bronze by Peter Voulkos, and ceramic work by the late Robert Graham.

Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10-6 pm. 45 North Venice Boulevard, Venice, 90291. For more information: (310) 822-4955; www.lalouver.com

OTIS COLLEGE OF ART & DESIGN BEN MALTZ GALLERY Superficiality and Superexcrescence THRU SEPTEMBER 12, 2009

Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 11-6 pm. 2525 Michigan Ave., Building B5B (Bergamot Station) Santa Monica, 90404. For more information: (310) 264-3866; www.franklloyd.com

BERGAMOT STATION: SHOSHANA WAYNE French Connection THRU SEPTEMBER 5, 2009

Nicole Cohen’s video-projection installation “French Connection,” up until September 5, is an impressionistic documentation of the Pennsylvania town French Azilum that had been built as a possible refuge for the exiled French queen Marie Antoinette. The failure of the project through no fault of its own perfumes Cohen’s already beautiful installation with a captivating poignancy.

On view until September 12, “Superficiality and Superexcrescence” brings together 13 local artists who are deeply committed to the superficial. That is, they investigate in various ways how outward appearance actually reveals and manifests inner substance “as code, nuance, and implication.” The artists include Catherine Sullivan, Tia Pulitzer, Kori Newkirk, Joel Morrison, Blue McRight, Elad Lassry, Kurt Kauper, Elliott Hundley, Salomón Huerta, Lia Halloran, Marcelino Gonçalves, Rebecca Campbell, and Amy Adler. Gallery Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10-5 pm, Thurs. 10-7 pm. 1st floor of the Bronya and Andy Galef Center for Fine Arts 9045 Lincoln Blvd., Los Angeles, 90045. For more information: (310) 665-6905; www.otis.edu/public_programs/ben_maltz_gallery/

Gallery Hours: Tues.-Fri. 10-6 pm; Sat. 11-5:30 pm. 2525 Michigan Ave., Building B1 (Bergamot Station) Santa Monica, 90404. For more information: (310) 453-7535; www.shoshanawayne.com 72

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TED VANCLEAVE FINE ART PHOTOGRAPHY

The Los Angeles Architectural Series View portfolio at www.tedvancleave.com Contact: ted@tedvancleave.com or 323.377.4879


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ART & DESIGN DIRECTORY Pacific Design Center Showrooms

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NANCY CORZINE B305 310-652-4859 nancycorzine.com OSBORNE & LITTLE B643 310-659-7667 osborneandlittle.com PACIFIC HIDE AND LEATHER B447 310-657-9802 pacifichide.com PAFID B408 310-855-9808 pafid.com

STEVEN HARSEY/PIERCEMARTIN B427 310-659-7820 stevenharsey.com

PROVASI COLLECTION B460 310-657-3040 provasicollection.com

MICHAEL TAYLOR DESIGNS B542 310-360-8118 michaeltaylordesigns.com

MOURA STARR B547 310-854-9100 mourastarr.com

STARK CARPET CORPORATION B629 310-657-8275 starkcarpet.com

POTTERTON BOOKS G154 310-289-1247 pottertonbooksusa.com

MENZIE INTERNATIONAL B267 310-475-2331 menzie.net

MONTANARI GROUP G281 310-659-5348 montanarigroup.com

PETER LANG SHOWROOM B407 310-652-0700 peterlangshowroom.com

POGGENPOHL U.S., INC. B188 310-289-4901 poggenpohl.de

MCGARY & CO. B420 310-659-0456 mcgaryandco.com

SOUND ENVIRONMENT M4 310-854-4473 STARK & DARIUS RUGS B466 310-289-5200

PINDLER & PINDLER, INC. B530 310-289-0200 pindler.com

MARTIN PATRICK EVAN B457 310-652-2292 martinpatrickevan.com

SOOFER GALLERY B226 310-659-3044

PAUL FERRANTE B362 310-854-4412 paulferrante.com

PIERRE DEUX G152 310-657-9400 pierredeux.com

MAGNI DESIGN, INC B273 310-623-1623 magni.com

SOCIAL VIBE B261 310-659-9900

RALPH PUCCI WEST COAST B203 310-360-9707 ralphpucci.net RAOUL TEXTILE LIBRARY G160 310-657-4931 raoultextiles.com ROBERT ALLEN_BEACON HILL B484/B499 310-659-6454 robertallendesign.com RODENBECK ASSOCIATES B200 310-659-1051 rodenbeck.com S. HARRIS/FABRICUT/VERVAIN B470 310-358-0404 fabricut.com SCHEFFEY GROUP, THE B245 310-657-8922 thescheffeygroup.com SCHUMACHER & CO./PATTERSON, FLYNN & MARTIN, ROSECORE B489 310-652-5353 fschumacher.com

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SUMMIT FURNITURE, INC. B135 310-289-1266 summitfurniture.com SUPERVISION B120 310-652-9510 supervisionav.com TAI PING CARPETS B400 310-652-3058 taipingcarpets.com TEATRO (AUDIO VIDEO INTERIORS) G280 310-657-0104 avinterior.com THEMA, LLC B300 310-659-8400 thema-llc.com THOMAS LAVIN B310 310-278-2456 thomaslavin.com TODD HASE FURNITURE B370 310-657-6768 toddhase.com TROY ADAMS DESIGN G292 310-657-1400 troyadamsdesign.com UMBRIA LIVING, INC. B233 310-691-8905 umbrialiving.org VILLA SAVOIA M6 310-860-8978 villasavoiainc.com WILDFLOWER LINEN G285 310-360-9899 wildflowerlinens.com WILLIAM HAINES DESIGNS M32 310-288-0220 williamhaines.com WILLIAM SWITZER & ASSOCIATES B515 310-855-1135 williamswitzercollection.com WOLF GORDON, INC. M5 310-652-1914 wolf-gordon.com

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ART GALLERY & MUSEUM HIGHLIGHTS

ARTABOUTTOWN WORDS PETER FRANK

CRAFT AND FOLK ART MUSEUM Celestial Ash: Assemblages from Los Angeles, Ancient Gods and Modern Politics: Mithila Painting THRU SEPTEMBER 18

The four artists in “Celestial Ash” have been influenced to varying degrees by the eccentrically exquisite work of (New York-based) surrealist box-maker Joseph Cornell; but they all share his spirit of poetic happenstance, a love of objects for their ability to “rhyme” with one another. Like Cornell, all four eschew political and social issues, the kind of subjects for which southern California assemblage (as practiced by the likes of Edward Kienholz and Wallace Berman) is traditionally best known. Rather, they practically dream their structures, their juxtapositions, their ruminations on reality which invariably turn reality on its head. Michael McMillen, who shows an assemblage installation incorporating sound and film as well as objets, is the best known visual artist among these four Los Angelenos, but Exene Cervenka, who exhibits elaborately collaged and drawn journal entries, is of course famed as a punk rocker. Matjames, formerly of New Orleans, has a notable back story as well, his intricate assemblages resulting from his flight from Hurricane Katrina and ensuing post-traumatic stress, but the memory boxes of self-taught painter Gail Greenfield Randall come from just as personal a place, triggered as they were

by the death of her grandmother. No less visually or circumstantially compelling are the narrative Mithila paintings – part cartoon, part votive, part social commentary – of the women of Bihar, a rural region of India. The Mithila pictures conflate the intimate with the worldly, the religious with the profane, and anger with humor, and comprise one of the world’s great contemporary folk art traditions. For more information, please visit: http://www.cafam.org

LOS ANGELES COUNTY MUSEUM OF ART (LACMA) Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea THRU SEPTEMBER 20

Over the past two decades art in South Korea has been swept up into the international discourse of contemporary art, and you’re as likely to find young artists in Seoul – and young Korean expats in Berlin or LA – doing politically tinged or personally revealing video, performance, and installation as you are doing abstract sculpture or hyper-realist painting. For “Your Bright Future,” departing LACMA curator Lynn Zelevansky and Houston Fine Arts Museum curator Christine Starkman brought forth the most avant garde work in the Korean artistic firmament – finding a dozen artists

THE ASYLUM OF LOST THOUGHTS, 2009 MICHAEL C. McMILLEN PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ARTIST ON EXHIBIT AT THE CRAFT & FOLK ART MUSEUM THRU SEPTEMBER 18

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ART GALLERY & MUSEUM HIGHLIGHTS

who, even when they are directly emulating the approaches of other international experimentalists, do so with a unique flair, energy, poetic sensibility, and in many cases concern with the social and political conditions of their rapidly evolving country. The works range in shape, size, and message from the exuberantly colorful hyper-consumerist mega-installations of Choi Jeonghwa, which festoon the outside of the museum, to Minouk Lim’s video projections laden with recent Korean history, from the hilarious but socially charged situations set up by Gimhongsok to Do-Ho Suh’s huge, extravagant house sculptures. Such capsule descriptions do a disservice to the poignancy, mystery, audacity, and sometimes phenomenal craft these artists bring to their work – part of what distinguishes them, as individuals and as Koreans, from the rest of the international crowd. While at LACMA, don’t miss “Pompeii and the Roman Villa: Art and Culture around the Bay of Naples,” a stunning archaeological/artistic display that looks at the artistic heights reached at, well, exactly the wrong time in the shadow of Vesuvius, through October 4. For more information, please visit: http://www.lacma.org

in Wien/Wien in L.A.” connects our city’s first resident modernist architects, the Austrian-born Rudolf Schindler and Richard Neutra, to five of their more-or-less direct post-modernist – actually neo-modernist – inheritors. Zaha Hadid and Peter Cook/Archigram are based entirely in Europe, but the other three – Hitoshi Abe, Morphosis, and Eric Owen Moss – have major offices here. All five competed in a competition sponsored last fall by the Vienna University of Economics and Business, but the Vienna-LA connection is clearly one of style and spirit; the clean lines and dynamic compositions that animated the geometric thinking of Neutra and Schindler recur with a vengeance in the work of today’s leading architects, so their presence in Vienna brings the city’s architectural heritage, nurtured a continent away, back home. Moss is the subject of his own exhibition nearby. “If Not Now, When?” is something of a polemic against the grid, which Moss describes as the dominant form for organizing architectural structure since the dawn of Western civilization. Instead, he proposes examining the curve, “a contrary ordering mechanism,” as “a different spatial prospect – the possibility of a center.” Moss’s installation dramatically counter-poses curve with grid, and in this context, the sexiness of the curve alone wins Moss’s argument for him. For more information, please visit: http://www.sciarc.edu

UCLA HAMMER MUSEUM Larry Johnson THRU SEPTEMBER 6

FALLEN STAR 1/5, 2008-9 DO HO SUH APPROX. 131 x 145 x 300 INCHES COURTESY OF THE ARTIST AND LEHMANN MAUPIN GALLERY, NEW YORK. © DO HO SUH. ON EXHIBIT AT LACMA THRU SEPTEMBER 20

SCI-ARC L.A. in Wien/Wien in L.A., Eric Owen Moss Architects: If Not Now, When? THRU SEPTEMBER 13

The two exhibitions at Sci-Arc’s sprawling downtown-east building together make the same powerful case that the school itself does for Los Angeles as a one of the international capitals of architecture. The library exhibition “L.A. Web fabrikmagazine.com

A confluence of elaborately reasoned visual and verbal puns, quotations from recent popular culture sources, slick pictorial methods, and references to the gay demimonde drives Larry Johnson’s oeuvre. Its silly, superficial appearance deliberately belies (and to the initiated, slyly heralds) a keen critique of modern American culture, seen through the eyes of a Los Angeles native who grew up working-class on television and the consumer culture but whose “difference” – as artist, as intellectual, as homosexual – allowed him a critical distance from the world around him. The glamorous alternatives available in so many parts of town have understandably fascinated Johnson, but the Cal Arts graduate is ultimately no kinder to the art scene or the cruising scene than he is to the Wal-Mart scene or the TV screen. In fact, Johnson treats the entire spectrum of his experience with an arch tolerance, buying into none of it but indulging it all with a certain fondness. In his appropriation of cartoon imagery (although not of any specific cartoons), movie-star glamour shots, Russian constructivist caricatures, the simplified renditions found in local newspaper ads, and other wildly disparate sources, Johnson conjures a kind of neo-Pop art whose apparent naiveté is so emphatic that it winks at you and invites you into a game of interpretation. This kind of hipster-ironic iconography goes back to the 1980s – when Larry Johnson, among others, invented it. And he’s one of the few in whose hands it doesn’t collapse under its own snark. For more information, please visit: http://hammer.ucla.edu Twitter twitter.com/fabrikmag

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS 1301PE GALLERY 6150 Wilshire Blvd., #8 Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 938-5822 http://www.1301pe.com

ACUNA-HANSEN GALLERY 427 Bernard St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 441-1624 http://www.ahgallery.com Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm

18TH STREET ARTS CENTER 1651 18th St. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-3711 http://www.18thStreet.org Mon.-Fri., 10am-5pm; Saturday, 1-5pm 57 UNDERGROUND 300 C. So. Thomas St. Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 397-0218 http://www.57underground.com Thurs. by appointment, Fri.-Sun., 12pm-4pm A SHENERE VELT GALLERY 1525 S. Robertson Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90035 (310) 552-2007 http://www.circlesocal.org A STUDIO GALLERY 4260 Lankershim Blvd. Studio City, CA 91602 (818) 980-9100 http://www.astudiogallery.com Mon.-Thurs., 9am-4pm; Fri., 9am-12noon; & by app't. A+D ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN MUSEUM 5900 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90036 http://www.aplusd.org ABACOT GALLERY 970 N. Broadway, Suite 201 (Mandarin Plaza) Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 626-1599 http://www.abacotgallery.com ACE GALLERY BEVERLY HILLS INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART 9430 Wilshire Blvd. Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 858-9090 http://www.acegallery.net Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm ACE GALLERY LOS ANGELES INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART 5514 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 935-4411 http://www.acegallery.net Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm

ADAMSON-DUVANNES GALLERIES 484 S. San Vicente Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 653-1015 http://www.justpaintings.net Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm & by app't. ALTERED SPACE GALLERY 1221 Abbot Kinney Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 452-8121 http://www.alteredspacela@aol.com AMBROGI | CASTANIER GALLERY 300-302 N. Robertson Blvd West Hollywood, CA 90048 (310) 652-5511 http://www.ambrogicastaniergallery.com Mon.-Sat., 10:30am-6:30pm AMERICAN MUSEUM OF CERAMIC ART 340 S. Garey Ave Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 865-3146 http://www.ceramicmuseum.org Weds.-Sat., 12-5pm It is the mission of the American Museum of Ceramic Art, a non-profit organization, to educate by presenting, collecting and preserving significant ceramic achievements of the world's cultures from ancient times to the present and through aesthetic and technical study to develop a deeper understanding of cultural values and traditions. ANDLAB 600 Moulton Ave., #303 Los Angeles, CA 90031 (323) 222-2225 http://www.ANDLAB.com/art Tues.-Sat., 11am-5pm ANDREWSHIRE GALLERY 3850 Wilshire Blvd., #107 Los Angeles, CA 90010 (213) 389-2601 http://www.andrewshiregallery.com ANGELS GATE CULTURAL CENTER 3601 S. Gaffey St San Pedro, CA 90731 (310) 519-0936 http://angelsgateart.org Tues.-Sun., 11am-4pm

ACME 6150 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 857-5942 http://www.acmelosangeles.com 84

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ANGLES GALLERY 22222 & 2230 Main St Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 396-5019 http://www.anglesgallery.com ANGSTROM GALLERY 2622 S La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 204-3334 http://www.angstromgallery.com ANNA HELWING GALLERY 2766 S. La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 202-2213 http://www.annahelwing.com ANOTHER YEAR IN LA 2121 N. San Fernando Rd., #13 Los Angeles, CA 90065 (323) 223-4000 http://www.anotheryearinla.com APPLEGATE GALLERY 3101-A Main St. Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 396-7600 http://www.applegallery.com ARC 2529 W. Magnolia, Burbank, CA 91505 (818) 848-9998 http://www.czappa.com Tues.-Fri., 9am-5:30pm; Sat., 9am-3pm ARMORY CENTER FOR THE ARTS 145 N. Raymond Ave Pasadena, CA 91103 (626) 792-5101 http://www.armoryarts.org ARMSTRONG'S 150 E. Thrid St Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 623-6464 http://www.armstronggallery.net Tues.-Sat. 9am-4:30pm, Second Saturday of month 9am-9pm ART CENTER COLLEGE OF DESIGN 1700 Lida St. Pasadena, CA 91103 (626) 396-2446 http://www.artcenter.edu/williamson Tues-Sun., 12-5pm; Fri., 12-9pm ART MURMUR 129 E. 6th St. Los Angeles, CA 90014 (213) 623-2332 http://www.artmurmur.com Weds.-Fri., 12-7pm; Sat., 12-5pm ART PIC 6826 Troost Ave. No. Hollywood, CA 91605 (818) 503-5999 http://www.artpic2000.com Mon.-Fri., 9am-5pm

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS ARTPEACE GALLERY 2317 W. Magnolia Blvd. Burbank, CA 91506 (818) 846-8688 http://www.artpeacegallery.com Thurs.-Sat., 12-5pm

BARNSDALL ART PARK EXHIBITIONS 4800 Hollywood Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90027 (323) 644-6275 Thurs.-Sun., 12-5pm; first Fridays, 12-9pm

ASIAN SPIRIT 8797 Beverly Blvd West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 652-3888 http://www.asianspiritgallery.com Asian Spirit is a most unusual gallery. We specialize in museum quality antiques from China, Cambodia, Viet Nam, Burma, Thailand, Indonesia, and Laos. No where else can you find a more intimate environment to view such priceless pieces. Your clients will be incredibly impressed. Call me for a private showing, Brett Richman, 818 970 2261. ASTO GALLERY 923 E. 3rd St., #107 Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 972-0995 http://www.astomoa.org AUTRY NATIONAL CENTER:MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN WEST 4700 Western Heritage Way (in Griffith Park adjacent to L.A. Zoo) Los Angeles, CA 90027 (323) 667-2000 http://www.autrynationalcenter.org AUTRY NATIONAL CENTER: SOUTHWEST MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN Corner of Marmion Way and Museum Dr Los Angeles, CA 90065 (323) 221-2164 http://www.southwestmuseum.org

AZTEC/NIGHT OWL ART GALLERIES 311 and 305 W. Foothill Blvd. Monrovia, CA 91016 (626) 574-0503 Weds-Sun., 1:30-5:30pm; Night Owl hours, 11am-1am

BANK 125 W. 4th St., Suite 103. Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 621-4055 http://www.bank-art.com

BILLY SHIRE FINE ARTS 5790 Washington Blvd Culver City, CA 90232 (323) 297-0600 http://www.billyshirefinearts.com BLACK MARIA GALLERY 3137 Glendale Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90039 (323) 660-9393 http://blackmariagallery.com Tues.-Sat., 12-6pm BLK/MRKT GALLERY 6009 Washington Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 837-1989 http://www.blkmrktgallery.com Tues.-Fri., 11am-6pm; Sat., 12-6pm BLUEBIRD ART HOUSE 6747 Bright Ave Whittier, CA 90601 (562) 696-9493 http://www.bluebirdarthouse.com BLUM & POE GALLERY 2754 S. La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 836-2062 http://www.blumandpoe.com

AVENUE 50 STUDIO 131 N. Avenue 50 Los Angeles, CA 90042 (323) 258-1435 http://www.avenue50studio.com

BANDINI ART 2635 S. Fairfax Ave. Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 837-6230 http://bandiniart.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-5pm; & by app't.

BILL LOWE GALLERY 2034 Broadway Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 449-0184 http://www.lowegallery.com Tues.-Fri., 10am-5:30pm; Sat., 11am-5:30pm; & by app't.

BOBBIE GREENFIELD GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building B-6 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 264-0640 http://www.bobbiegreenfieldgallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm BONELLI GALLERY 936 Mei Ling Way Los Angeles, CA 90012 BOWERS MUSEUM 2002 N. Main St Santa Ana, CA 92706 (714) 567-3643 http://www.bowers.org Tues.-Sun., 10am-4pm; fourth Thursday of each month, 10am-8pm

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BRAND LIBRARY ART GALLERY 1601 West Mountain St. Glendale, CA 91201 (818) 548-2051 http://www.brandlibrary.org Tues. & Thurs., 12-9pm; Weds., 10am-6pm; Fri., Sat., 10am-5pm BUSCHLEN MOWATT GALLERIES 45-188 Portola Ave Palm Desert, CA 92260 (760) 837-9668 http://www.buschlenmowatt.com Mon.-Sat., 10am-6pm; Sun., 11am-5pm; & by app't. CAL POLY POMONA DOWNTOWN CENTER 300 W. Second St Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 469-0080 http://www.class.csupomona.edu/downtowncenter Tues.-Sat., 11am-8pm; 2nd Sats., 1-9pm CAL POLY POMONA KEITH & JANET KELLOGG 3801 W. Temple Ave Pomona, CA 91768 (909) 869-4302 http://www.csupomona.edu/~kellogg_gallery Tues.-Fri., 11am-4pm; Sat., 12-4pm CAL STATE L.A.--LUCKMAN GALLERY 5151 State University Dr Los Angeles, CA 90032 (323) 343-6604 http://www.luckmanfineartscomplex.org Mon.-Thurs., Sat., 12-5pm CALIFORNIA HERITAGE MUSEUM 2612 Main St. Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 392-8537 http://www.californiaheritagemuseum.org Weds.-Sun., 11am-4pm CANVAS BOUTIQUE AND GALLERY 23410 Civic Center Way Malibu, CA 90265 (310) 317-9895 http://www.canvassneakersandgallery.com Sun.-Thurs., 11am-6pm; Fri., Sat., 11am-7pm CARL BERG GALLERY 6018 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 931-6060 http://www.carlberggallery.com CARMICHAEL GALLERY OF CONTEMPORARY ART 1257 N. La Brea Ave West Hollywood, CA 90038 (323) 969-0600 http://www.carmichaelgallery.com Weds.-Sun., 2-7pm

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS CENTER FOR THE ARTS, EAGLE ROCK 2225 Colorado Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90041 (323) 226-0949 http://www.centerartseaglerock.org CHARLIE JAMES GALLERY 975 Chung King Road Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 687-0844 http://www.cjamesgallery.com CHERRY AND MARTIN 12611 Venice Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90066 (310) 398-7404 http://www.cherryandmartin.com CHINA ART OBJECTS GALLERIES 933 Chung King Rd. (in Chinatown) Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 613-0384 http://www.chinaartobjects.com CHINESE AMERICAN MUSEUM 125 Paseo de la Plaza Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 626-5240 CHRISTOPHER GRIMES GALLERY 916 Colorado Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90401 (310) 587-3373 http://www.cgrimes.com CHUNG KING PROJECT 936 Chung King Rd. (in Chinatown) Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 625-1802 http://www.chungkingproject.com CIRCUS GALLERY 7065 Lexington Ave Los Angeles, CA 90038 (323) 962-8506 http://www.circus-gallery.com

CITY OF BREA GALLERY #1 Civic Center Circle Brea, CA 92821 (714) 990-7730 http://www.breagallery.com Weds., Thurs., Sun., 12-5pm, Fri., Sat., 12-8pm

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CREATIVE ARTS CENTER GALLERY 1100 W. Clark Ave Burbank, CA 91506 (818) 238-5397 Mon.-Thurs., 9am-8pm; Fri., 9am-4pm; Sat., hours vary

CLASSIC ARTFORMS 9009 Beverly Blvd West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 273-6306

CREATIVE GALLERIES 3210 Helms Ave Culver City, CA 90034 (310) 837-4531 Mon.-Fri., 10am-7pm; Sat., Sun., 10am-6pm

COLLEGE OF THE CANYONS ART GALLERY 26455 Rockwell Canyon Rd Santa Clarita, CA 91355 (661) 362-3612 http://www.canyons.edu/offices/artgallery Tues.-Thurs., 11am-3pm; Sat., 10am-2pm

CROSSROADS SCHOOL FOR ARTS AND SCIENCES 1714 21st St. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 829-7391 Mon.-Fri., 1-3pm; & by app't.

COMMISSARY ARTS 68 N. Venice Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 990-9914 http://www.commissaryarts.com Thursday & Friday 12-5pm; Saturday 12-6pm; and by appointment Commissary Arts is a new gallery space in Venice providing a platform for emerging and mid-career artists based in Southern California to present new works in all media through and active program of group and solo exhibitions. Commissary Arts encourages collaborative art projects and new creative voices by inviting curators and artists to assemble intimate exhibitions addressing contemporary issues and emerging trends in artistic discourse. COPRO/NASON GALLERY 2525 Michingan Ave., T-5 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 398-2643 http://www.copronason.com COREY HELFORD GALLERY 8522 Washington Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 287-2340 http://www.coreyhelfordgallery.com Tues.-Sat., 12-6pm

CIRRUS GALLERY 542 S. Alameda Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 680-3473 http://www.cirrusgallery.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-5pm

CLAREMONT GRADUATE 251 E. 10th St. Claremont, CA 91711 (909) 621-8071

CLAREMONT MUSEUM OF ART The Packing House, 536 W. First St. Claremont, CA 91711 (909) 621-3200 http://www.claremontmuseum.org Tues.-Sun., 11am-7pm

CRAIG GALLERY 5723 Venice Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90019 (323) 939-0351 http://www.craiggallery.com Fri., Sat., 12-6pm; & by app't. CRAIG KRULL GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building B-3 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 828-6410 http:// www.artnet.com/ckrull.html Tues.-Fri., 10am-5:30pm; Sat., 11am-5:30pm

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CSU CHANNEL ISLANDS ART GALLERY 92 Palm Dr. Camarillo, CA 93010 (805) 437-8863 http://art.csuci.edu/gallery Mon.-Fri., 10am-4pm CSU FULLERTON ART GALLERY 800 N. State College Blvd. Fullerton, CA 92634 (714) 278-3262 http://www.arts.fullerton.edu/events Tues.-Fri., 12-4pm; Sat., 12-2pm CSU LONG BEACH UNIVERSITY ART MUSEUM 1250 Bellflower Blvd. Long Beach, CA 90840 (562) 985-5761 http://www.csulb.edu/uam Tues.-Sun., 12-5pm, Thurs., 12-8pm CSU NORTHRIDGE UNIVERSITY ART GALLERY 18111 Nordhoff St. Northridge, CA 91330 (818) 677-2156 http://www.csun.edu/artgalleries/ Mon.-Sat., 12-4pm; Thurs., 12-8pm D & D GALLERY 311 W. Seventh St. San Pedro, CA 90731 (310) 831-2940 http://www.dandgallery.com Daily, noon-6pm D.E.N. CONTEMPORARY ART 6023 Washington Blvd Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 559-3023 http://www.dencontemporaryart.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-5:30pm DA CENTER FOR THE ARTS 252 D S. Main St Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 397-9716 http://www.dacenter.org

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS DANGEROUS CURVE 1020 E. Fourth Pl. Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 617-8483 http://www.dangerouscurve.org DANIEL CLAYTON GALLERY 513 N Robertson Blvd West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 652-5310 DANIEL HUG GALLERY 510 Bernard St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 221-0016 http://www.danielhug.com DANIEL SAXON GALLERY 552 Norwich Dr West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 657-6033 DANIEL WEINBERG GALLERY 6150 Wilshire Blvd., #8 Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 954-8425 http://www.danielweinberggallery.com DAVID KORDANSKY GALLERY 510 Bernard St Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 222-1482 http://www.davidkordanskygallery.com DAVID PATTON LOS ANGELES 5006 1/2 York Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90042 (323) 478-1966 http://www.davidpattonlosangeles.com DAVID SALOW GALLERY 977 N. Hill St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 620-0240 http://www.davidsalowgallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm DAWSON COLE FINE ART 313 N. Beverly Dr Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 275-6060 http://www.dawsoncolefineart.com DBA256 GALLERY 256 S. Main St Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 623-7600 http://www.dba256.com Mon.-Thurs., 8am-10pm; Fri., Sat., 10am-midnight DCA FINE ART 3107 Pico Blvd Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 396-8565 http://www.dcafineart.com

DE SOTO GALLERY 2635 Fairfax Avenue Culver City, CA 90232 (323) 253-2255 http://www.desotogallery.com Wed.-Sat., 12-6pm & by app't DEBORAH PAGE GALLERY 1028 Montana Avenue Santa Monica, CA 90403 (310) 458-4400 http://www.deborahpagegallery.com Tues.-Sun., 11am-6pm DEL MANO GALLERY 11981 San Vicente Blvd West Los Angeles, CA 90049 (310) 476-8508 http://www.delmano.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm; Sun., 12-5pm DENENBERG FINE ARTS 417 North San Vicente Blvd West Hollywood, CA 90048 (310) 360-9360 http://www.denenbergfinearts.com Denenberg Fine Arts, established 1965, is a "smart source" for designers. The gallery has successfully placed works with top designers' clients for thirty years, and is careful to honor the client-designer relationship, providing informed expertise ranging from old masters to contemporary art acquisitions. Two blocks from the PDC on San Vicente! DF2 GALLERY 314 N. Crescent Heights Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 782-9404 http://www.df2gallery.com Mon.-Fri., 10am-5:30pm; Sat., 11am-5:30pm DNJ GALLERY 154 1/2 N. La Brea Ave Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 931-1311 http://dnjgallery.net Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm DOWNEY MUSEUM OF ART 10419 So. Rives Ave Downey, CA 90241 (562) 861-0419 http://www.thedmoa.org Weds., 3-7pm; Thurs.Fri., 1-5pm; DOWNTOWN ART GALLERY 1611 So. Hope St. Los Angeles, CA 90015 (213) 255-2067 http://www.downtownag.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-7pm

DRKRM. 2121 San Fernando Rd., #3 Los Angeles, CA 90065 (323) 223-6867 http://www.drkrm.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-5pm Sun., 1pm-4pm and by appointment drkrm. gallery is an exhibition space dedicated to fine art and documentary photography, cutting edge and alternative photographic processes and the display and survey of popular cultural images. drkrm. is also a full service b/w photographic lab specializing in traditional, silver-gelatin printing and film processing. DUNCAN MILLER GALLERY 10959 Venice Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 838-2440 http://www.duncanmillergallery.com EARL MCGRATH GALLERY 454 N. Robertson Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90048 (310) 657-4257 http://www.earlmcgrathgallery.com EDGEMAR CENTER FOR THE ARTS 2437 Main St Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 399-3666 http://www.edgemarcenter.org Mon.-Fri., 11am-5:30pm EDWARD CELLA ART+ARCHITECTURE 6018 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 525-0053 http://www.edwardcella.com Tues.-Sun, 11am-5pm Edward Cella Art+Architecture (ECAA) represents significant emerging and mid-careers artists; acquires and places quality post WWII and contemporary painting and drawings; and, with a unique focus, presents drawings and projects by established West Coast architects and designers. In addition, ECAA assists and advises individuals and corporations to develop and focus their art collections through the personalized and confidential services of an independent art advisor. EL CAMINO COLLEGE ART GALLERY 16007 Crenshaw Blvd Torrance, CA 90506 (310) 660-3010 http://www.elcamino.edu/commadv/artgallery Mon., Tues., 10am-3pm; Weds., Thurs., 10am-8pm; Fri., 10am-2pm ERNIE WOLFE GALLERY 1653 Sawtelle Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90025 (310) 473-1645 EXPOSITION PARK MUSEUMS 900 Exposition Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90007 (213) 763-3515 http://www.nhm.org

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS FAHEY/KLEIN GALLERY 148 N. La Brea Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 934-2250 http://www.faheykleingallery.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm

FROGTOWN GALLERY 1625 Blake Ave Los Angeles, CA 90031 (323) 226-0356 http://www.romerostudio.net Mon.-Fri., 11am-5pm; & by app't.

FARMLAB 1745 N. Spring St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 226-1158 http://www.farmlab.org Tues.-Sat., 10am-5pm

FULLERTON COLLEGE ART GALLERY 321 E. Chapman Ave., Building 1000 Fullerton, CA 92832 (714) 992-7434 http://art.fullcoll.edu Mon.-Thurs., Sat., 10am-2pm; Weds, 5-7pm

FIG 2525 Michigan Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 829-0345 http://www.figgallery.com Weds.-Sat., 11am-5pm

FULLERTON MUSEUM CENTER 301 N. Pomona Ave Fullerton, CA 92832 (714) 738-6545 http://www.cityoffullerton.com/depts/museum Tues.-Sun., 12-4; Thurs., 12-8pm

FINE ART FACTORY 474 S. Raymond Ave., Suite 110 Pasadena, CA 91105 (818) 356-0474

GAGOSIAN GALLERY 456 N. Camden Dr Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 271-9400 http://www.gagosian.com

FOUND GALLERY 1903 Hyperion Ave Los Angeles, CA 90027 FOWLER MUSEUM AT UCLA 405 Hilgard Ave Los Angeles, CA 90024 (310) 825-4361 http://www.fowler.ucla.edu Weds.-Sun., 12-5pm; Thurs. 12-8pm FRANK LLOYD GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., B5b Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 264-3866 http://www.franklloyd.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm FRANK PICTURES GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building A-5 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 828-0211 http://www.frankpicturesgallery.com FREDERICK R. WEISMAN MUSEUM AT PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY 24255 Pacific Coast Highway Malibu, CA 90265 (310) 506-4851 http://arts.pepperdine.edu/museum FRESH PAINT 9355 Culver Blvd., Suite B Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 558-9355 http://www.freshpaintart.com Mon.-Thurs., 9am-6pm; Fri., 8am-12 noon; & by app't FRINGE EXHIBITIONS 504 Chung King Ct. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 613-0160 http://www.fringeexhibitions.com 88

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GALERIE MICHAEL 430 N. Rodeo Dr Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 273-3377 GALERIE MOURLOT 8763 Rosewood Ave. West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 855-9581 http://www.galeriemourlot.com GALLERY 13: IRISH FINE ART 8302 Melrose Ave., Unit A West Hollywood, CA 90069 (323) 951-0303 http://www.gallery13.net Wed.-Sat 11am-6pm or call for an app’t. Gallery 13 shows contemporary art by new and acclaimed Irish artists. Featuring an ongoing exhibition of elegant bronzes by Linda Brunker which challenge the traditions of bronze figurative sculpture. Brunker’s trademark ‘filigree’ style has a strong ecological and spiritual quality. GALLERY 33 EAST 3202 E. Broadway Long Beach, CA 90803 (562) 433-1496 http://gallery33east.com Weds.-Sun., 12-6pm

GALLERY FILE 102 W. 5th St Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 624-6212 Tues.-Sat., 12-6pm; 2nd Thurs., 12pm-9pm. GALLERY LUISOTTI 2525 Michigan Ave., Building A-2 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-0043 GALLERY NUCLEUS 30 West Main St Alhambra, CA 91801 (626) 458-7482 http://www.gallerynucleus.com GALLERY REVISITED 3204 Sunset Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90026 (626) 253-5266 http://www.galleryrevisited.com GEMINI G.E.L. 8365 Melrose Ave Los Angeles, CA 90069 (323) 651-0513 http://www.geminigel.com Mon.-Fri., 9am-5:30pm; Sat. by app't. GEORGE BILLIS GALLERY L.A. 2716 S. La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 838-3685 http://www.georgebillis.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm; & by app't. GEORGE J. DOIZAKI GALLERY 244 S. San Pedro St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 628-2725 http://www.jaccc.org Tues.-Fri., 12-5pm; Sat. & Sun., 11am-4pm GEORGE STERN FINE ARTS 8920 Melrose Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90069 (800) 501-6885 http://www.sternfinearts.com Tues.-Fri., 10am-6pm; Sat., 11am-6pm GIDEON GALLERY LTD. 8748 Melrose Ave West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 657-4194

GALLERY 727 727 S. Spring St Los Angeles, CA 90014 (213) 627-9563

GLU GALLERY 7424 Beverly Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 857-0510 http://www.glugallery.com Fri., 12-5pm: Sat., 11am-5pm; Sun., 12-5pm

GALLERY AT REDCAT 631 W. Second St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 237-2800 http://www.redcat.org

GLASS GARAGE FINE ART 414 N. Robertson Blvd. West Hollywood, CA 90048 (310) 659-5228 http://www.glassgaragegallery.com

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS GLENDALE COLLEGE GALLERY 1500 Verdugo Rd Glendale, CA 91208 (818) 240-1000 http://www.glendale.edu/artgallery

HELFEN FINE ARTS 9200 W. Olympic Blvd., Suite 200 Beverly Hills, CA 90212 (310) 273-8838 http://www.helfenfinearts.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm; & by appt. We specialize in well-researched, historically significant and stunning Modernist works of art from the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s, with a focus on California Modernism. Our paintings feature strong images with great color and composition, and our sculptures each are selected for dramatic impact and historical importance.

GR2 2062 Sawtelle Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90025 (310) 445-9276 http://www.gr2.net GREENFIELD SACKS 2525 Michigan Ave., #B6 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 264-0640 http://www.greenfieldsacks.com

HENKEN GALLERY 120 S. Los Angeles St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 626-2505 http://www.thehenkengallery.com Mon.-Fri., 10am-10pm; Sun. by app't.

GREY MCGEAR GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 315-0925

HERITAGE GALLERY 1300 Chautauqua Blvd Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 (310) 230-4340 http://www.heritagegallery.com

GRIER MUSSER MUSEUM 403 So. Bonnie Brae Los Angeles, CA 90057 (213) 413-1814

HIGH ENERGY CONSTRUCTS – SOLWAY JONES 990 N. Hill St., #180 Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 227-7920 http://www.highenergyconstructs.com

GRIFFIN 2902 Nebraska Ave Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 586-6886 http://www.griffinla.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm; & by app't.

HONOR FRASER 2622 S. La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 401-0191 http://www.honorfraser.com

HAMILTON GALLERIES 1431 Ocean Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90401 (310) 451-9983 http://www.hamiltongalleries.com Tues.-Sun., 12-7pm

HOWELL GREEN FINE ART GALLERY 120 N. Topanga Canyon Blvd., Suite 107 Topanga, CA 90290 (310) 455-3991 http://www.howellgreen.com Tues.-Sat., 12-6; & by app't.

HAMILTON-SELWAY FINE ART 8678 Melrose Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310) 657-1711 http://www.hamiltonselway.com HANGAR 1018 1018 S. Santa Fe St. Los Angeles, CA 90021 (213) 239-9060 http://www.hangar1018.com Mon.-Weds., Fri., 12-4pm; Thurs., 6-9:30pm HAPPY LION GALLERY 963 Chung King Rd. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 625-1360 http://www.thehappylion.com HARVEST GALLERY 938 N. Brand Blvd. Glendale, CA 91206 (818) 546-1000

HUNTINGTON BEACH ART CENTER 538 Main Street Huntington Beach, CA 92647 (714) 374-1650 http://www.surfcity-hb.org/Visitors/art_center Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm; Thurs., 12-8pm; Sun., 12-4pm HUNTINGTON LIBRARY 1151 Oxford Rd San Marino, CA 91108 (626) 405-2100 http://www.huntington.org I-5 GALLERY AT THE BREWERY ART COLONY 2100 N. Main St., #A-9 Los Angeles, CA 90031 (323) 342-0717 http://www.breweryartwalk.com Fri.-Sat., 12-4pm; & by app't.

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IKON LIMITED FINE ARTS 2525 Michigan Ave., G-4 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 828-6629 http://www.ikonltd.com INFUSION GALLERY 719 S. Spring St. Los Angeles, CA 90014 (213) 683-8827 http://www.infusiongallery.com ITALIAN CULTURAL INSTITUTE — SPAZIO ITALIA 1023 Hilgard Ave Los Angeles, CA 90024 (310) 443-3250 http://www.iiclosangeles.esteri.it/IIC_Losangeles Mon.-Fri., 9:30am-5pm ITURRALDE GALLERY 116 S. La Brea Ave Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 937-4267 http://artscenecal.com/Iturralde.html Tues.-Fri., 11am-5pm; Sat. by app't. JACK HANLEY GALLERY 9945 Sun Mun Way Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 626-0403 http://www.jackhanley.com JACK RUTBERG FINE ARTS 357 N. La Brea Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 938-5222 http://www.jackrutbergfinearts.com Tues.-Fri., 10am-6pm; Sat., 10am-5pm JAIL 965 N. Vignes St., 5A Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 621-9567 http://www.thejailgallery.com Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm JAMES GRAY GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., D-4 (Bergamot Station) Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 315-9502 http://www.jamesgraygallery.com JAN KESNER GALLERY 164 N. La Brea Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 938-6834 http: //www.jankesnergallery.com JANCAR GALLERY 3875 Wilshire Blvd. #1308 Los Angeles, CA 90010 (213) 384-8077 http://www.jancargallery.com Thu.-Sat 12noon-5pm and by app't.

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS JAPANESE AMERICAN NATIONAL MUSEUM 369 E. 1st St Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 625-0414 http://www.janm.org JFERRARI GALLERY 3015 Glendale Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90039 (323) 877-5542 http://www.jferrarigallery.com Tues.-Sun., 12-5pm

KINKEAD CONTEMPORARY 6029 Washington Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 838-7400 http://www.kinkeadcontemporary.com

LA CONTEMPORARY 2634 S. La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 559-6200 http://www.lacontemporary.com

KLAPPER GALLERY 8759 Beverly Blvd. West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 652-6552 http://www.klappergallery.com

L.A. COUNTY ARBORETUM 301 N. Baldwin Ave Arcadia, CA 91007 (626) 821-3232 http://www.arboretum.org

KONTAINER GALLERY 6130 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 933-4746 http://www.kontainergallery.com

JK GALLERY 2632 S. La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 837-3330 http://www.jkgallery.net Wed.-Sat., 11am-6pm JONATHAN KENT GALLERY 474 N Robertson Blvd West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 657-5727 http://www.artkent.com JUDSON GALLERY 200 S. Avenue 66 Los Angeles, CA 90042 (323) 255-0131 http://www. judsonstudios.com Mon.-Fri., 10am-3pm JUNC 4017 Sunset Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90026 (213) 814-2640 http://www.juncgallery.com Fri., 1-6pm; Sat. & Sun., 12-7pm; & by app't. KANTOR ART 205 S. Beverly Dr. Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 274-6499 http://www.kantorart.com

KOPEIKIN GALLERY 8810 Melrose Avenue West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 385-5894 http://www.kopeikingallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm; & by app't KOPLIN DEL RIO GALLERY 6031 Washington Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 836-9055 http://www.koplindelrio.com Tues.-Fri., 10am-5:30pm; Sat., 11am-5:30pm KRISTI ENGLE GALLERY 5002 York Ave Los Angeles, CA 90042 (213) 629-2358 http://www.kristienglegallery.com L.A. ARTCORE/ARTCORE BREWERY ANNEX 120 N. Judge John Aiso St. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 617-3274 http://www.laartcore.org Weds.-Sun., 12-5pm

KAREN LYNNE GALLERY 216 N. Canon Dr Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 858-8202 http://www.karenlynnegallery.com Karen Lynne Gallery provides fine art and consulting services from its new Beverly Hills location, an expansion of the 2 original locations in Boca Raton, FL. Specializing in largescale original oil on canvas works, it is Karen Lynne Gallery's mission to convey the importance of art in one's home as the central focal point of design and ongoing enjoyment.

LA ART HOUSE 8825 Beverly Blvd., West Hollywood, CA 90048 (310) 205-0480 http://www.laarthouse.net Mon.-Fri., 10am-6pm; Sat.-Sun. by app't

KARYN LOVEGROVE GALLERY 6150 Wilshire Blvd.#8 Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 525-1755 http://www.karynlovegrovegallery.com

L.A. CITY COLLEGE DA VINCI ART GALLERY 855 N. Vermont Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90029 (323) 953-4220

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L.A. ARTS OF ASIA & TRIBAL ARTS SHOW 1855 Main St. Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 455-2886 http://www.caskeylees.com

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L.A. GAY & LESBIAN CENTER THE ADVOCATE GALLERY 1125 N. McCadden Pl. Los Angeles, CA 90038 (323) 860-7337 L.A. LOUVER GALLERY 45 N. Venice Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 822-4955 http://www.lalouver.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm L.A. MODERNISM SHOW 1855 Main St. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (818) 244-1126 http://www.lamodernism.com L2 KONTEMPORARY 990 N. Hill St., #205 Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 225-1288 http://www.L2kontemporary.com Thurs.-Sun., 1-6pm; & by app't. LA LUZ DE JESUS 4633 Hollywood Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90027 (323) 666-7667 http://www.laluzdejesus.com LA SIERRA UNIVERSITY BRAND STATER GALLERY 4700 Pierce St Riverside, CA 92515 (951) 785-2959 http://www.lasierra.edu/art Mon.-Thurs., 9am-4pm; Sun., 2-5pm LACE 6522 Hollywood Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90028 (323) 957-1777 http://www.welcometolace.org Weds.-Sun., 12-6pm; Fri., 12-9pm LACMA 5905 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 857-6111 http://www.lacma.org/ Mon., Tues., Thurs., 12-8pm; Fri., 12-9pm; Sat., Sun., 11am-8pm

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS LARRY SMITH FINE ART 8642 Melrose Ave West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 360-9135

LIZABETH OLIVERIA GALLERY 2712 S. La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 837-1073 http://www.lizabetholiveria.com

M+B 612 N. Almont Dr. West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 550-0050 http://www.mbfala.com

LATIN AMERICAN MASTERS 264 N. Beverly Dr Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 271-4847 http://www.latinamericanmasters.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm

LMAN GALLERY 949 Chung King Rd. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 628-3883 http://www.lmangallery.com

MACHINE PROJECT 1200 D N. Alvarado Los Angeles, CA 90026 (213) 483-8761 http://www.machineproject.com

LATINO ART MUSEUM 281 S. Thomas St., Suite 105 Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 620-6009 http://www.lamoa.net

LONG BEACH CITY COLLEGE ART GALLERY 4901 E. Carson St. Long Beach, CA 90808 (562) 938-4817

LAWRENCE ASHER GALLERY 5820 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 935-9100 http://www.lawrenceasher.com Tues.-Thurs., 11am-6pm; Fri., 11am-7pm; Sat., 12-5pm; & by app't

LONG BEACH MUSEUM OF ART 2300 E. Ocean Blvd. Long Beach, CA 90803 (562) 439-2119 http://www.lbma.org Tues.-Sun., 11am-5pm

MAK CENTER FOR ART AND ARCHITECTURE L.A. 835 N. Kings Rd. Los Angeles, CA 90069 (323) 651-1510 http://www.makcenter.org Weds.-Sun., 11am-6pm

LAXART 2640 S. La Cienega Culver City, CA 90232 (323) 868-5893 http://www.laxart.org LEFT COAST GALLERIES 12324 Ventura Blvd Studio City, CA 91604 (818) 760-7010 http://www.leftcoastgalleries.com Mon.-Sat., 11am-6pm; Sun., 12-6pm; & by appointment LESLIE SACKS FINE ART 11640 San Vicente Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90049 (310) 820-9448 http://www.lesliesacks.com Mon.-Sat., 10am-6pm LIGHTBOX 2656 S. La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 559-1111 http://www.lightbox.tv LIONESS GALLERY 3032 Sunset Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90026 (818) 252-7168 http://www.lionessartgallery.com Sat., 12-5pm; and by app't. LITTLE BIRD GALLERY 3195 Glendale Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90039 (323) 662-1092 http://www.littlebirdgallery.com

LORA SCHLESINGER GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building T-3 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 828-1133 http://www.loraschlesinger.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-5:30pm LOS ANGELES CENTER FOR DIGITAL ART (LACDA) 107 W. Fifth St. Los Angeles, CA 90013 (323) 646-9427 http://www.lacda.com Weds.-Sat., 12-5pm LOUIS STERN FINE ARTS 9002 Melrose Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310) 276-0147 http://www.louissternfinearts.com Tues.-Fri., 10am-6pm; Sat., 11am-5pm

MANDARIN GALLERY 970 N. Broadway Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 687-4107 http://www.mandaringallery.com MANNY SILVERMAN GALLERY 619 Almont Dr West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 659-8256 MARC FOXX GALLERY 6150 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 857-5571 http://www.marcfoxx.com MARC SELWYN FINE ART 6222 Wilshire Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 933-9911 http://www.marcselwynfineart.com MARGO LEAVIN GALLERY 812 N. Robertson Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310) 273-0603

LOUWE GALLERY 306 Hawthorne St. So. Pasadena, CA 91030 (626) 799-5551 http://www.louwegallery.com

MARY GOLDMAN GALLERY 932 Chung King Rd Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 617-8217 http://www.marygoldman.com

M. HANKS GALLERY 3008 Main St. Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 392-8820 http://mhanksgallery.com Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm; & by app't.

MC 6088 Comey Ave Los Angeles, CA 90034 (323) 939-3777 http://www.mckunst.com

M.J. HIGGINS GALLERY 400 S. Main St., #103 Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 617-1700 http://www.mjhiggins.com Tues.-Sat., 12-6pm

MEDEA GALLERY 445 W. 7th St., San Pedro, CA 90731 (310) 833-3831 http://www.medeagallery.com Mon.-Fri.: 9am-5pm and by appt. Featuring fine contemporary art, we offer art lovers a rich variety of affordable paintings

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS and limited edition prints by a creative group of artisans from around the world. Join us each month for the First Thursday ArtWalk in historic San Pedro, CA. METRO GALLERY 1835 Hyperion Ave Los Angeles, CA 90027 (323) 663-2787 http://www.metrogallery.org MICHAEL DAWSON GALLERY 535 N. Larchmont Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90004 (323) 469-2186 http://www.michaeldawsongallery.com Weds.-Sat., 9am-5pm MICHAEL HITTLEMAN GALLERY 8797 Beverly Blvd., #302 Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 655-5364 http://www.michaelhittlemangallery.com Mon.-Fri., 11am-5pm; Sunday, 1-5pm MICHAEL KOHN GALLERY 8071 Beverly Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 658-8088 http://www.kohngallery.com

MIXOGRAFIA 1419 E. Adams Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90011 (323) 232-1158 http://www.mixografia.com Mon.-Fri., 11am- 5pm; & by app't. Mixografia prints and publishes limited editions by contemporary artists. The prints are pulled from a cast copper printing plate using handmade paper giving the printed surface a uniquely deep relief not found in etchings, lithographs or silk-screens. MLA GALLERY 2020 N. Main St., #239 Los Angeles, CA 90031 (323) 222-3400 http://www.mlagallery.com MOCA 250 S. Grand Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 62-MOCA-2 http://www.moca.org/ Mon., Fri., 11am-5pm; Thursday, 11am-8pm; Sat., Sun., 11am-6pm; Closed Tues.-Wed.

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MOCA PACIFIC DESIGN CENTER 8687 Melrose Ave. West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 289-5223 http://www.moca.org MORONO KIANG GALLERY 218 W. 3rd St. Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 628-8208 http://www.moronokiang.com Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm MORYORK GALLERY 4959 York Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90042 http://www.claregraham.com/MorYork.html MOSS 8444 Melrose Ave Los Angeles, CA 90069 (323) 866-5260 http://www.mossonline.com Tuesday-Saturday 11am-7pm

MILO GALLERY 6130 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 935-3662 http://www.milogallery.net Tues.-Sat., 11am-5pm

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MOCA – THE GEFFEN CONTEMPORARY 152 North Central Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 621-1745 http://www.moca.org/ Mon., Fri., 11am-5pm; Thurs., 11am-8pm; Sat., Sun., 11am-6pm; Closed Tues.-Wed.

MUSEUM OF TOLERANCE 9786 W. Pico Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90035 (310) 553-8403 http://www.museumoftolerance.com NEW STONE AGE 8407 W. 3rd St Los Angeles, CA 90048 (213) 658-5969 Mon.-Sat., 11am-6pm, Sun., 12-5pm NICHE.LA 453 S. Spring St., #443 Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 247-0002 http://www.niche.la NOHO GALLERY LA 5108 Landershim Blvd North Hollywood, CA 91601 (818) 761-7784 http://www.nohogalleryla.com Thurs.-Sat., 2-8pm; Sun., 1-6pm NORTON SIMON MUSEUM 411 W. Colorado Blvd. Pasadena, CA 91105 (626) 449-6840 http://www.nortonsimon.org Weds.-Mon., 12-6pm; Fri., 12-9pm

MOUNT ST. MARY'S COLLEGE JOSE DRUDIS-BIADA GALLERY 12001 Chalon Rd. Los Angeles, CA 90049 (310) 954-4360 http://www.msmc.la.edu/pages/1897.asp Tues.-Sat., 12-5pm

OCMA, ORANGE LOUNGE AT SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 Bear St., South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa, CA 92626 (714) 662-3366 Mon.-Fri., 10am-9pm; Sat., 10am-7pm; Sun., 11:30am-6:30pm

MUCKENTHALER CULTURAL CENTER 1201 W. Malvern Ave Fullerton, CA 92633 (714) 738-6595 http://www.muckenthaler.org

OFF-ROSE, THE SECRET 841 Flower Ave. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 664-8977 Sat., 1-5pm; & by appt.

MUSEUM OF JURASSIC TECHNOLOGY 9341 Venice Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 836-6131 http://www.mjt.org/

OPUS GALLERY 2824 Sepulveda Blvd Torrance, CA 90505 (310) 891-2000 http://www.opusgallery.com

MUSEUM OF LATIN AMERICAN ART 628 Alamitos Ave Long Beach, CA 90802 (562) 437-1689 http://www.molaa.com Tues.-Sat., 11:30am-7:30pm; Sun., 12-6pm

ORANGE COUNTY CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ART 117 N. Sycamore Santa Ana, CA 92701 (714) 667-1517 http://www.occca.org Thurs.-Sun., 12-5pm; Fri., Sat., 12-9pm

MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHIC ARTS 1649 El Prado San Diego, CA 92101 (619) 238-7559 http://www.mopa.org Tues.-Sun., 10am-5pm; Thurs. 10am-9pm

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ORLANDO GALLERY 18376 Ventura Blvd. Tarzana, CA 91356 (818) 705-5368 http://artscenecal.com/Orlando.html Tues.-Sat., 9:30am-3pm

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS OTIS COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN BEN MALTZ GALLERY 9045 Lincoln Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90045 (310) 665-6905 http://www.otis.edu Tues.-Sat., 10am-5pm; Thurs., 10am-7pm

PASADENA CITY COLLEGE ART GALLERY 1570 E. Colorado Blvd Pasadena, CA 91106 (626) 585-3285 http://www.pasadena.edu/artgallery Mon.-Thurs., 12-8pm; Fri., Sat., 12-4pm

OVERDUIN AND KITE 6693 Sunset Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90020 (323) 464-3600 http://www.overduinandkite.com

PASADENA MUSEUM OF CALIFORNIA ART 490 E. Union St. Pasadena, CA 91101 (626) 568-3665 http://www.pmcaonline.org

OVERTONES GALLERY 12703 Venice Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90066 (310) 915-0346 http://www.overtonesgallery.com Wed.-Sat., 12-6pm and by appointment OVERTONES is a contemporary Los Angeles art gallery whose focus is supporting emerging artists, as well as showcasing work of established artists to infuse and inspire the coming generations. We believe in beauty and social action and think the two are inextricably connected and necessary in life. OVERTONES gallery is committed to searching outside the confines of established art structures and presenting work that has the potential to engage a wide range of audiences. PACIFIC ASIA MUSEUM 46 N. Los Robles Ave Pasadena, CA 91101 (626) 449-2742 http://www.pacificasiamuseum.org Weds.-Sun., 10am-6pm

PERES PROJECTS 2766 La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 559-6100 http://www.peresprojects.com

PHARMAKA 101 W. Fifth St. Los Angeles, CA 90013 (323) 954-8499 http://www.pharmaka-art.org

PALOMAR COLLEGE, BOEHM GALLERY 1140 West Mission Rd. San Marcos, CA 92069 (760) 744-1150 Tues., 10am-4pm; Weds., Thurs., 10am-7pm; Fri., Sat., 10am-2pm

PAPILLON GALLERY 462 N. Robertson Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90048 (310) 289-1887 http://www.papillongallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm; & by app't.

PATRICK PAINTER, INC. 2525 Michigan Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 264-5988 http://www.patrickpainter.com

PETER FETTERMAN PHOTOGRAPHIC WORKS OF ART 2525 Michigan Ave., Building A-7 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-6463 http://www.peterfetterman.com

PALM SPRINGS ART MUSEUM 101 Museum Dr Palm Springs, CA 92262 (619) 325-7186 http://www.psmuseum.org Tues.-Sun., 10am-5pm; Fri., 10am-8pm

PALOS VERDES ART CENTER 5504 W. Crestridge Rd. Rancho Palos Verdes, CA 90275 (310) 541-2479 http://www.pvartcenter.org Mon.-Sat., 10am-4pm; Sun., 1-4pm

PATRICIA CORREIA GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building E-2 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 264-1760 http://www.correiagallery.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm; & by app't.

PITZER CAMPUS GALLERIES 1050 North Mills Ave. Claremont, CA 91711 (909) 607-3143 http://www.pitzer.edu/artgalleries PLATT GALLERY 15600 Mulholland Dr. Los Angeles, CA 90077 (310) 476-9777 Sun.-Thurs., 10am-4pm; Fri., 10am-2pm PLAZA DE LA RAZA 3540 N. Mission Rd. Los Angeles, CA 90031 (323) 223-2475 POMONA COLLEGE MUSEUM OF ART 330 N. College Ave. Claremont, CA 91711 (909) 621-8283 http://www.pomona.edu/museum Tues.-Fri., 12-5pm; Sat., Sun., 1-5pm

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POUNDER-KONE ART SPACE 3407 Glendale Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90039 (323) 913-2247 http://www.cchpkas.com Thurs.-Sun. 1-7pm PROJECT: GALLERY LA 8545 W. Washington Blvd. Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 558-0200 http://www.projectgalleryla.com Weds.-Sat., 11am-6pm RAID PROJECTS GALLERY 602 Moulton St. Los Angeles, CA 90031 (323) 441-9593 http://www.raidprojects.com Sat., Sun., 12-5pm; & by app't. RED DOT GALLERY 500 S. Spring St. Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 817-6002 http://www.weeneez.com REGEN PROJECTS 633 N. Almont Dr Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310) 276-5424 http://www.regenprojects.com REGEN PROJECTS II 9016 Santa Monica Blvd (at Almont Drive) Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310) 276-5424 http://www.regenprojects.com RICHARD HELLER GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building B-5 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-9191 http://www.richardhellergallery.com RICHARD TELLES FINE ART 7380 Beverly Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 965-5578 http://www.tellesfineart.com RIO HONDO COLLEGE ART GALLERY 3600 Workman Mill Rd., B-13 Whittier, CA 90601 (562) 908-3471 Mon.-Thurs., 9am-3pm; Mon.-Weds., 6-9pm RIVERSIDE ART MUSEUM 3425 Mission Inn Ave. Riverside, CA 92501 (951) 684-7111 http://www.riversideartmuseum.org Mon.-Sat., 10am-4pm; Thurs., 10am-9pm RIVERSIDE COMMUNITY COLLEGE, 4800 Magnolia Ave Riverside, CA 92506 (951) 222-8358

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS ROBERT BERMAN GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., D-5, & C-2 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 315-1937 http://www.robertbermangallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm ROBERTS & TILTON GALLERY 6150 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90048 (323) 549-0223 http://www.robertsandtilton.com ROSAMUND FELSEN GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 828-8488 http://www.rosamundfelsen.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-5:30pm

SANDRONI REY GALLERY 2762 S. La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 280-0111 http://www.sandronirey.com SANTA FE ART COLONY 2401 S. Santa Fe Ave Los Angeles, CA 90058 (213) 587-6381 SANTA MONICA ART STUDIOS AND ARENA 1 GALLERY 3026 Airport Ave Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 397-7449 http://www.santamonicaartstudios.com Tues.-Sat., 12-6pm

ROSE GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building G-5 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 264-8440 http://www.rosegallery.net

SANTA MONICA COLLEGE – PETE AND SUSAN BARRETT ART GALLERY 1310 11th St. Santa Monica, CA 90401 (310) 434-3434 http://events.smc.edu/art_gallery.html

RUTH BACHOFNER GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave. (Bergamot Station), G-2 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 829-3300 http://www.ruthbachofnergallery.com Tues.-Sat., 10am-6pm

SANTA MONICA MUSEUM OF ART 2525 Michigan Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90403 (310) 586-6488 http://www.smmoa.org Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm

S B LONDON 3740 W. Sunset Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90026 (323) 668-0734 http://www.sblondon.com S B LONDON is a showroom of industrial art, showcasing works which inform, inspire, and relieve. TECHNOcraft Objects are works which are made with industrial materials and/or methods. These works make a practice of finding the commonalities between seemingly disparate elements, thereby revealing delicate narratives. Subtly stirring, the fragile balance between opposites and the relationships that exist between them, us, and each other is questioned and illustrated.

SCA PROJECT GALLERY 281 So. Thomas St., Unit 104 Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 620-5481 http://www.scagallery.com Thurs.-Sat., 12-4pm

SAM FRANCIS GALLERY 1714 21st St Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 829-7391 Mon.-Fri., 1-3pm; & by app't.

SAMUEL FREEMAN GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building B-7 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 449-1479 http://www.samuelfreeman.com FA B R I K

SCHOMBURG GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-5757 http://www.schomburggallery.com SCI-ARC GALLERY 960 E. Third St Los Angeles, CA 90013 (213) 473-8432

SAM LEE GALLERY 990 N. Hill St., #190 Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 227-0275 http://www.samleegallery.com Tues.-Sat., 12-6pm

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SCALO/GUYE GALLERY 302 N. Robertson Blvd. West Hollywood, CA 90048 (310) 358-9396 http://www.scaloguye.com Mon.-Sat., 11am-7pm

SEE LINE GALLERY 1812 Berkeley St. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 829-1727 http://www.seelinegallery.com Weds.-Sat., 11am-6pm; & by app't. SELF-HELP GRAPHICS & ART INC. GALERIA OTRA VEZ 3802 Avenida Cesar Chavez Los Angeles, CA 90063 (323) 881-6444 http://www.selfhelpgraphics.com Tues.-Sat., 9am-5pm SEYHOUN GALLERY 9007 Melrose Ave. West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 858-5984 http://www.seyhoungallery.com SHERRY FRUMKIN GALLERY 3026 Airport Ave., Suite 21 Santa Monica, CA 90405 (310) 397-7493 http://www.frumkingallery.com Weds.-Sat., 12-6pm SHOSHANA WAYNE GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building B-1 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-7535 http://www.shoshanawayne.com SHOTGUN 2121 N. San Fernando Rd., #11 Los Angeles, CA 90065 http://www.shotgunspace.com SIDE STREET PROJECTS 145 N. Raymond Ave Pasadena, CA 91103 (626) 577-7774 http://www.sidestreet.org SILK ROADS DESIGN GALLERY 145 N. La Brea Ave Los Angeles, CA 90036 (310) 857-5588, http://www.silkroadsgallery.com Mon.-Sun., 11am-5pm SISTER 437 Gin Ling Way. Los Angeles, CA 90012 (213) 628-7000 http://www.sisterla.com

SCRIBBLE THEORY 210 N. Bush St. Santa Ana, CA 92701 (714) 542-5928 http://www.scribbletheory.com

SIXSPACE 5803 W. Washigton Blvd. Culver City, CA 90230 (323) 932-6200 http://www.sixspace.com

SEA AND SPACE EXPLORATIONS 4755 York Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90042 (323) 445-4015 http://www.seaandspace.org

SIXTEEN:ONE 2116-B Pico Blvd. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 450-4394 http://www.16to1.com

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS SKIRBALL CULTURAL CENTER 2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90049 (310) 440-4500 http://www.skirball.org Tues.-Fri., 12-5pm; Thurs., 12-9pm; Sat., Sun., 10am-5pm SKYLARK FINE ART GALLERY 8576-A Melrose Avenue West Hollywood, CA 90069 (310) 657-0324 http://www.skylarkfineartgallery.com SOHO GALLERY 300 A. So. Thomas St Pomona, CA 91766 (909) 469-1599 Thurs.-Sun., 11am-4pm; second Sats., 11am-10pm SOLWAY JONES 990 N. Hill Street Los Angeles, CA 90012 (323) 223-0224 http://www.solwayjonesgallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm SPARC ART GALLERY 685 Venice Blvd. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 822-9560 http://www.sparcmurals.org Mon.-Fri., 10am-6pm (closed at noon-1pm SPONTO GALLERY 7 Dudley Ave. Venice, CA 90291 (310) 399-2078 STEPHEN COHEN GALLERY 7358 Beverly Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 937-5525 http://www.stephencohengallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-5pm STG (STEVE TURNER CONTEMPORARY) 6026 Wilshire Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90036 (310) 271-3721 http://www.steveturnergallery.com SULKIN/SECANT GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building T-6 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-8411 http://www.sulkinsecantgallery.com SUSANNE VIELMETTER LOS ANGELES PROJECTS 5795 W. Washington Blvd Culver City, CA 90232 (323) 933-2117 http://www.vielmetter.com

SYLVIA WHITE GALLERY 1783 East Main Street Ventura, CA 93001 (310) 452-4000 http://www.artadvice.com TAG, THE ARTISTS' GALLERY 2903 Santa Monica Blvd. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 829-9556 http://www.TAGtheArtistsGallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-5pm TASENDE GALLERY 8808 Melrose Ave Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310) 276-8686 http://www.artnet.com Tues.-Fri., 10am-6pm; Sat., 11am-5pm; Closed for Holidays Dec.21-Jan. 1. TAYLOR DE CORDOBA 2660 S. La Cienega Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90034 (310) 559-9156 http://www.taylordecordoba.com TERRENCE ROGERS FINE ART 1231 Fifth St. Santa Monica, CA 90401 (310) 394-4999 http://www.trogart.com Thurs-Sat., 12-5; & by app't. THE ACORN GALLERY 135 N. Avenue 50 Los Angeles, CA 90042 (323) 850-8655 THE BALMORAL 1522 Abbot Kinney Venice, CA 90291 (310) 392-3635 http://www.gallerybalmoral.com THE BREWERY 2100 N. Main St. at Avenue 21 Los Angeles, CA 90031 http://www.breweryart.com THE CLAYHOUSE 2909 Santa Monica Blvd. (near Yale St.) Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 828-7071 THE CONFERENCE ROOM 325 S. Robertson Blvd. Beverly Hills, CA 90211 (310) 598-6367 http://www.theconfroom.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-7pm

THE FOLK TREE 217 S. Fair Oaks Ave Pasadena, CA 91105 (626) 795-8733 http://www.folktree.com Mon.-Weds., 11am-6pm; Thurs.-Sat., 10am-6pm; Sun., 12-5pm THE GETTY CENTER 1200 Getty Center Dr Los Angeles, CA 90049 (310) 440-7300 http://www.getty.edu Tues.-Thurs., Sun., 10am-6pm; Fri., Sat., 10am-9pm THE GETTY VILLA 17985 Pacific Coast Highway Pacific Palisades, CA 90272 (310) 440-7300 http://www.getty.edu Thurs.-Mon., 10am-5pm; closed Tues. Weds. and major holidays THE HIVE GALLERY 729 S. Sping St. Los Angeles, CA 90014 (213) 955-9051 THE LOFT 401 S. Mesa, San Pedro, CA 90731 (310) 831-5757 http://www.the-loft.net First Thursday Artwalk, 6-9pm; and by app't. THE PERFECT EXPOSURE GALLERY 3513 6th St., Los Angeles, CA 90020 (213) 381-1137 http://theperfectexposure.com THE WHOLE 9 GALLERY 6101 Washington Blvd Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 836-4600 http://www.thewhole9.com THINKSPACE GALLERY 4210 Santa Monica Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90029 (323) 913-3375 http://www.thinkspacegallery.com Thurs.-Sun., 1-6pm TINLARK GALLERY 6671 Sunset Blvd., #1512 Hollywood, CA 90028 (323) 463-0039 http://www.tinlark.com

THE DRAWING CLUB 3235 San Fernando Rd., #2C Los Angeles, CA 90065 (626) 303-2556 http://www.thedrawingclub.com Thurs. 7-10pm; & by app't. Web fabrikmagazine.com

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ART GALLERIES & MUSEUMS TOBEY C. MOSS GALLERY 7321 Beverly Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90036 (323) 933-5523 http://www.tobeycmossgallery.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-5pm, For the discriminating Private or Corporate Collector: Unique and Fine Original Prints, Drawings, Watercolors, Paintings; Focus on 1930s-2000 California art and artists. Jpegs are available to illustrate or make an appointment for a Viewing, with or without the Client.

TROPICO DE NOPAL GALLERY 1665 Beverly Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90026 (213) 481-8112 http://www.tropicodenopal.com

TOPANGA CANYON GALLERY 120 N. Topanga Canyon Blvd., Suite 109 Topanga, CA 90290 (310) 455-7909 http://www.topangacanyongallery.com Tues.-Sun., 10am-6pm

USC FISHER GALLERY 823 Exposition Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90089 (213) 740-4561 http://fishergallery.org Tues.-Sat. 12-5pm

TORRANCE ART MUSEUM 3320 Civic Center Dr Torrance, CA 90503 (310) 618-6340 http://www.torranceartmuseum.com Tues.-Sat., 12-6pm

VINCENT PRICE ART MUSEUM EAST LOS ANGELES COLLEGE 1301 Avenida Cesar Chavez Monterey Park, CA 91754 (323) 265-8841 http://elac.edu/collegeservices/vincentprice/ Mon.-Weds., Sat., 12-4pm; Thurs., 12-7pm

TRACK 16 GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave., Building C-1 Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 264-4678 http://www.track16.com Tues.-Sat., 11am-6pm

VIVA (VALLEY INSTITUTE OF VISUAL ART) 13261 Moorpark St., Sherman Oaks, CA 91423 (818) 385-0080 Weds.-Fri., 11am-4pm; Satu., 12-4pm

TRACY PARK GALLERY 1431 Ocean Ave Santa Monica, CA 90401 (310) 260-9954 http://www.tracyparkgallery.com

WATTS TOWERS ART CENTER NOAH SYLVESTER PURIFOY GALLERY 1727 E. 107th St Los Angeles, CA 90002 (213) 847-4646 Weds.-Sun., 10am-4pm

TRIGG ISON FINE ART 511 N. Robertson Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90069 (310) 274-8047 http://www.triggison.com

WESTERN PROJECT 3830 Main St., Culver City, CA 90232 (310) 838-0609 http://western-project.com

UCR/CALIFORNIA MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY 3824 Main St Riverside, CA 92501 (951) 784-FOTO http://www.cmp.ucr.edu Tues.-Sat., 12-5pm

WHITTIER MUSEUM 6755 Newlin Ave Whittier, CA 90601 (310) 945-3871 WILLIAM A. KARGES FINE ART 427 Canon Dr., Suite 101 Beverly Hills, CA 90210 (310) 276-8551 http://www.kargesfineart.com Mon.-Sat., 10am-5pm WILLIAM GRANT STILL COMMUNITY ARTS CENTER 2520 West View St Los Angeles, CA 90016 (213) 734-1164 Daily 12-5pm WILLIAM TURNER GALLERY 2525 Michigan Ave. Santa Monica, CA 90404 (310) 453-0909 http://www.williamturnergallery.com Mon.-Sat.,11am-6pm XIEM CLAY CENTER AND GALLERY 1563 N. Lake Ave. Pasadena, CA 91104 (626) 794-5833 http://www.xiemclaycenter.com XIT GALLERY AT AIU LA 12655 W. Jefferson Blvd Los Angeles, CA 90066 (310) 302-2613 Mon.-Fri., 11am-5pm YOUNG ART GALLERY 747 N. Avenue 50 Los Angeles, CA 90042 (323) 344-1322 http://www.youngartgallery.com

GOT NEWS? WANT LISTING? If you would like to be listed in Fabrik’s Los Angeles Art & Design Directory, please email us your gallery info to directory@fabrikmagazine.com. If you have exhibits and events at your gallery and would like to be considered for editorial or be included in our email newsletter, please email that info to events@fabrikmagazine.com.

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L

ARTIST SHOWCASE

L.A.’s Newest Boutique Printing Lab

Digital Work Stations Available for Rent

Digital Printing on a Variety of Media High Resolution, Color Corrected Scanning Duplication of Artwork •

6442 Santa Monica Boulevard, Suite 201 Hollywood, CA 90038 • (323) 461.7221

Art Gallery available for exhibition openings and art shows

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w w w. l a l i g h t r o o m . co m

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ARTIST SHOWCASE

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ARTIST SHOWCASE

JAYE ALISON MOSCARIELLO Jaye Alison Moscariello's new body of work, "Chase, The Monkey" invokes the primal idea of love and fun within the spirit. She employs expressive color and sinuous line to evoke the powerful connections between/among human beings and nature. Her palette suggests the tropics without being garish, and her self-assured contour drawing reminds some viewers of Matisse, communicating a lot with just a little. Her figures chase the élan of human interaction in their colorful environs. The figures become the masters of their domain, man stripped down to his animal. They are everyone and anyone, existing in a locale where identity lies not as deeply as the desire for freedom and joy.

www.chasethemonkey.org www.jalison.com 310.581.1578 studio 310.804.5308 cell artisall@earthlink.net

Don’t Let Go

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22” x 30”

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Gouache, acrylic, pen and ink

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ARTIST SHOWCASE

“Masque”

LESTER WIESE 100

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(760) 346-8549 • lwiese917@mac.com

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