Sandow Birk: Snafu
Sandow Birk: Snafu
May 16 - Jul 11
6:00 pm - 9:00 pm

Track 16 | East Hollywood
706 Heliotrope Dr, Los Angeles CA 90029


Entering the world of Sandow Birk is to step into a tragic fairy tale—one inverted, where the “kingdom” is not distant but familiar, shaped by the realities of democracy, urbanism, and contemporary life. Presented in interrelated segments at Track 16 in East Hollywood, Snafu unfolds as an allegorical landscape where each body of work is a chapter in a larger civic fable.

In Imaginary Monuments, speculative architectures rise like ruins from both past and future, recasting the American empire, governance, and historical narrative. Anchoring the exhibition is White Out: A Monumental Arch to American History, an eight-and-a-half-foot-tall etching printed with 24 copper plates. As the arch continues its long history as a component of propaganda (i.e. “Arc de Trump”), Birk employs it to counter entrenched power. Inspired by Albrecht Dürer’s 13-foot-high Triumphal Arch (1515), it stands as a reimagined gateway—one that asks viewers to pass through and reconsider a shared U.S. “foundational” history as something built, formed, and shaped by people of color, long present yet often obscured. 

Beyond the monuments, the story splits. Two opposing paintings unfold side by side—one sustained by balance and collective care, the other fractured by neglect and an excess police state. Modeled on Ambrogio Lorenzetti’s trio of 14th-century frescos, The Allegory of Good and Bad Government, they function as a living allegory of governance. Like in today’s America, the viewer is poised between two possibilities and their contemporary ramifications.

The narrative continues into our own city. In Birk’s reimagining of The House at Pooh Corner, an elderly, unhoused Christopher Robin wanders Los Angeles, the “100 Acre Wood” transformed into an urban terrain where memory and present reality collapse into one another. Additionally, a new series of small paintings of common urban birds perch among power lines and street signs, examining the quiet witnesses to a landscape shaped as much by human intervention as by nature.

Across Snafu, these narratives accumulate into a question: in a world we continue to build, revise, and inhabit, how can we escape the treachery of inhuman intervention and the frightening outcomes we must live with?


706 Heliotrope Dr, Los Angeles CA 90029

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