Your Concise Los Angeles Art Guide for September 2022

September is back-to-school time, and the that pedagogical impulse extends to the exhibitions listed below as well. Whether its Dan Levenson’s fictional modernist Swiss art school; shows that contextualize the work of Kaari Upson and Lawrence Weiner, who both passed away last year; or the Fulcrum Festival focused on the deepest reaches of space and the sea, there’s definitely lots to learn.

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Dan Levenson: Two Proposals for the Formation of a New Art School

Dan Levenson, “SKZ Chance Operations Classroom Maquette” (2022), painted plywood, acrylic on linen, color prints, mirrors, 12 x 20 x 20 inches (photo by Simon Cardoza, courtesy Praz-Delavallade)

When: through September 10
Where: Praz-Delavallade (6150 Wilshire Boulevard, Miracle Mile, Los Angeles)

The State Art Academy, Zürich (SKZ) is a fictional modernist art school akin to the Bauhaus, brought to life through painting, performance, and sculpture. This elaborate ruse is the work of LA-based contemporary artist Dan Levenson, who has created faux-aged geometric abstractions supposedly painted by the school’s students and weathered studio furniture, even going so far as to invent a class roster using an algorithm and a Swiss phone book. Two Proposals for the Formation of a New Art School features two miniature classrooms and associated works: one based on actual art classes for children which employed the imaginary SKZ curriculum devised by Levenson, and another in which the roll of a die is used to determine color choices, interjecting an element of play and chance into pedagogy.

Alphabet Soup 2

Chaz Bojorquez (photo by Jim McHugh)

When: through September 17
Where: Eastern Projects (900 North Broadway, #1090, Chinatown, Los Angeles)

Alphabet Soup 2 showcases the work of six acclaimed Los Angeles-based street artists who are each known for their distinctive letterforms or handstyle. Participants include Chaz Bojorquez, who popularized “Cholo-style” calligraphy beginning in the late 1960s; Retna, whose angular symbols grace building facades around LA; and Big Sleeps, who brings a refined precision to traditional LA street style; alongside Cryptik, Defer, and Prime. The exhibition comes almost a decade after the original Alphabet Soup show, offering a window on to these artists’ development.

Fulcrum Festival: Deep Ocean/Deep Space

Halina Kliem and Daniel Rothman, “The Ballona/Waachnga Project” (2022) (courtesy the artists)

When: September 15–25
Where: Venues around Greater Los Angeles

This year’s Fulcrum Festival, an annual series of talks, workshops, performances, and exhibitions exploring the intersection of art and science, is based around the theme of “Deep Ocean/Deep Space,” looking to both celestial and aquatic wonders. The event is organized by nonprofit Fulcrum Arts in partnership with more than a dozen organizations including the Carnegie Observatories, NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 18th Street Arts Center, and the LA Dance Project. Offerings include sound installations and star gazing organized by artist CM von Hausswolff at the Mount Wilson Observatory; a 24-hour durational audio/visual rumination on LA’s last extant wetlands, the Ballona Wetlands; and Victoria Vesna’s multimedia project that draws links between microscopic plankton and space dust.

The Portable Universe: Thought and Splendor of Indigenous Colombia

Breastplate (photo © Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Gift of Alfred C. Glassell, Jr.) and figurative ocarina (Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Muñoz Kramer Collection, gift of Jorge G. and Nelly de Muñoz and Camilla Chandler Frost) showing powerful individuals in centered positions, against a backdrop of the Caribbean coastline, Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia (photo © Jota Arango)

When: through October 2
Where: Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) (5905 Wilshire Boulevard, Miracle Mile, Los Angeles)

The Portable Universe brings together 400 objects that open a window onto Indigenous peoples and cultures in Colombia. Featuring several objects on loan from El Museo del Oro in Bogota, the exhibition is an attempt to move away from a Western-centric framework and is informed by a collaboration between curators and members of the Arhuaco of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta. The masks, sculptures, and tools included in the show are grouped by thematic sections shaped around the cosmology of the peoples who used them, and the exhibition labels lack dates, stressing the use of these objects in everyday life across generations.

Kaari Upson: never, never ever, never in my life, never in all my born days, never in all my life, never

Kaari Upson: never, never ever, never in my life, never in all my born days, never in all my life, never, Installation view, Sprüth Magers, Los Angeles, August 4– October 8, 2022 (artwork © The Art Trust created under Kaari Upson Trust; photo by Robert Wedemeyer, courtesy Sprüth Magers)

When: through October 8
Where: Sprüth Magers (5900 Wilshire Boulevard, Miracle Mile, Los Angeles)

Before her death last August at the age of 51, Kaari Upson had emerged as one of the most dynamic and innovative artists in Los Angeles, whose heterogeneous body of work was defined by material curiosity and psychological intensity. Through a practice that spanned sculpture, performance, video, painting, and drawing, Upson mined the dark corners of domesticity and family with a mixture of disquiet and humor. never, never ever…, her first LA solo show in over 10 years, reflects this breadth, featuring new bodies of work such as colorful abstract paintings that reference both the modernist grid and gingham: formalism and familiar fashion. It also marks the US debut of “Kris’s Dollhouse” (2017–19), an uncanny human-sized version of a dollhouse made from resin, urethane, wood, and aluminum: part haunted house, part rumination on childhood, gender, and friendship.

Stars Don’t Stand Still in the Sky: A Tribute to Lawrence Weiner

Catherine Opie, “Lawrence” (2012), pigment print 33 x 25 inches (© the artist, courtesy Regen Projects)

When: September 15–October 22
Where: Regen Projects (6750 Santa Monica Boulevard, Hollywood, Los Angeles)

Lawrence Weiner, who died last December, was a seminal figure in the development of Conceptual Art. His 1968 dictum that declared “THE WORK NEED NOT BE BUILT” was a key tenet of the dematerialization of the art object. He is best known for his language-based artworks, enigmatic phrases rendered in paint or vinyl letters on gallery and museum walls. His simple and poetic statements, almost always set in the typeface he developed, Margaret Seaworthy Gothic, extend to viewers an invitation for further inquiry to generate meaning. Stars Don’t Stand Still in the Sky is testament to his wide-reaching influence, featuring work by over fifty artists, from his contemporaries such as Sol LeWitt, Mel Bochner, and Lee Lozano, to younger generations represented by Glenn Ligon, Sue Williams, Wolfgang Tillmans, and others. The exhibition will also feature a collaboration with the late fashion designer Virgil Abloh, as well a selection of roughly 150 posters and publications designed and produced by Weiner.

Ray Anthony Barrett: …of frontiers and phantoms

Ray Anthony Barrett, “Wild Mustard Portrait” (2021), C-type print, 16 x 20 inches (courtesy the artist and Wilding Cran Gallery)

When: September 10–October 29
Where: Wilding Cran (1700 South Santa Fe Avenue, Unit 460, Downtown, Los Angeles)

Visual artist and chef Ray Anthony Barrett investigates the histories and mythologies of the American West. This has taken the form of his pop-up restaurant Cinqué, which traces the roots of Soul Food from California to the American South to West Africa, as well Go Tell It On The Mountain, an experimental film dealing with food justice amidst climate crisis. …of frontiers and phantoms features quilts made from calico, cotton, and denim, sculptures made from railroad ties and shell beads, photographs, and drawing that depict the Western US as a site of breathtaking natural beauty but also crushing exploitation — of people and natural resources — in the service of capital.

Justen Leroy: Lay Me Down in Praise

Still from Justen LeRoy, “Lay Me Down in Praise” (2022) (courtesy the artist)

When: September 17–January 21, 2023
Where: Art + Practice (3401 West 43rd Place, Leimert Park, Los Angeles)

Justen LeRoy’s three-channel film installation “Lay Me Down in Praise” links the struggle for Black empowerment with the environmental movement. LeRoy juxtaposes footage of Black performers with scenes of volcanic eruptions and other geological events, drawing a connection between expressive vocal craft with terrestrial tumult. Curated by Essence Harden of the California African American Museum (CAAM), the exhibition marks the beginning of a five-year museum residency through which CAAM will organize shows to be presented at Art + Practice in Leimert Park.

Tala Madani: Biscuits

Tala Madani, “Shit Mother I” (2019), oil on linen, 80 x 80 inches (collection of Wendi Murdoch, New York; photo by Jeff McLane, courtesy David Kordansky Gallery)

When: September 10–February 19, 2023
Where: Geffen Contemporary at MOCA (152 North Central Avenue, Downtown, Los Angeles)

Tala Madani’s cast of anonymous, average White men act like babies. They smear their feces, vomit on each other, and run around in the nude. More than simply cheekily transgressive celebrations of the abject, Madani’s painting confront cultural taboos and entrenched power structures, embedding feminist critique within painterly delights. Biscuits is the Iran-born, LA-based artist’s first North American survey exhibition.

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Narsiso Martinez: Rethinking Essential

Installation view fo Narsiso Martinez, Rethinking Essential (photo by Solimar Salas, courtesy MOLAA)

When: ongoing
Where: Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA) (628 Alamitos Avenue, Long Beach, California)

Narsiso Martinez draws and paints portraits of farm workers directly onto produce boxes, making visible the often unseen labor that brings food from the fields into our homes. The Oaxacan-born artist has first-hand knowledge of his subject matter, having worked in the orchards of Eastern Washington for nine summers to pay for his education. His installation Rethinking Essential at MOLAA depicts these essential laborers, their eyes looking out from behind masks and hats, with dignity and respect, heir to an art historical lineage that weaves through the Mexican muralists and Millet’s “The Gleaners.”

Source: Hyperallergic.com

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