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Tag: contemporary art
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Ryan Preciado
at Palm Springs Art MuseumPalm Springs’ annual Modernism Week dominates the city in February, but I caught this quiet, elegant exhibit at the museum’s satellite space. It’s a revelatory history and homage to Frank Lloyd Wright craftsman Manuel Sandoval, a twentieth-century Nicaraguan American immigrant carpenter. Sandoval, a member of the Taliesin Fellowship, was brought into contact with key figures of modern American architecture, including Wright, R.M. Schindler, and Alvin Lustig —but he was an ambivalent collaborator. Contemporary artist Ryan Preciado—inspired by Sandoval’s works, such as an ornate drop-front desk from 1938—set out to create an inimitable body of furniture, in latter-day deference to Sandoval. His goal: to reveal and rescue what is often discounted in design and architecture history canons. His beautifully crafted 138 chair, stools, and light fixtures dot the gallery. Including archival vitrines reveals the contentious relationships between Sandoval and the master architects. That ephemeral material is critical to understanding this little-known corner of design history and the fraught circumstances of Brown artists operating in what was then restricted territory. It’s a subtle but powerful revelation.
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KELLY AKASHI
at Lisson GalleryTime is a common theme in Kelly Akashi’s work. Doilies inherited from her grandmother represent the past. The artist’s hands, cast in bronze, serve as timestamps for the present— lines and wrinkles marking specific moments. Cast bronze seed pods represent the future, though against the backdrop of the Los Angeles fires, we’re reminded that some pinecones don’t express seeds unless exposed to heat.
Having lost her studio in the January fires, Akashi cast artifacts found in the wreckage, incorporating them into a series of new mixed-media sculptures. The weathering steel desk in Monument (2025), resembles the grain of dark wood office furniture from a distance, but suggests scorched earth upon closer inspection. Waterjet cut patterns in the metal mirror those of the doilies scattered throughout the show – a play of binaries: hard and soft, masculine and feminine, permanent and ephemeral.
The cast-bronze pinecones in the Monument series leave the viewer with a sense of hope and renewal, giving the “Phoenix Rising From the Ashes” vibe that Los Angeles needs right now.
Kelly Akashi
Lisson Gallery
1037 N. Sycamore Ave.,
Los Angeles, CA 90038
On view through March 29, 2025 -
Ramekon O’Arwisters
at Craft ContemporaryTextile art has not always been one of my favorite mediums, but Ramekon O’Arwisters’ exhibit altered my thinking. At a time where being Black and Queer, and any semblance of DEI seems fraught – the artist has come out swinging. The thoughtfully curated show is simultaneously prickly and assuaging—with small sculptures composed of black zip-ties, leather, clamps, and BDSM erotic accouterments. But the expansive wall fabric installations are the arresting showstoppers here—a full-on exhortation of materiality, beauty, and reconciliation. More please.
Ramekon O’Arwisters: HOUSE OF
Craft Contemporary
5814 Wilshrie Blvd.,
Los Angeles, CA 90036
On view through May 8, 2025 -
LESS THAN ZERO
On Risk and Art in Los AngelesI’m at a bar in Palmdale and it’s nearly empty. From where I am sitting, I can see two men playing chess. Or, rather, they’re not really playing—they’re afraid to make a move. It’s Pawn to E4, followed by the all-too-familiar analysis paralysis: finger steadies the piece, eyes tighten, neck cranes and turtles to check for danger, and then…Pawn back to E2. Let’s start again. Every move never happens, just like this.
It’s a riskless game, and stagnant, and it reminds me of the state of the arts in Los Angeles.
Since forever, LA has been about risk. We tell big stories on big screens about success against all odds. Our stars come from nowhere, move here on hayseed budgets with bindles full of aspiration and little else. Our freeways host the most spine-shearing car chases in the world; our sports are considered extreme, our politics radical, our drugs potent; and, recently, we’ve been reminded that we all essentially live in one big pile of kindling that’s oh by the way right along the San Andreas Fault.
Chris Burden, Shoot, 1971, at F Space in Los Angeles. LA’s art is no different, at least historically. In the ’70s—amid Nixon, Vietnam, assassinations, moon landings and riots—Chris Burden had himself shot and crucified (Shoot, 1971; Trans-Fixed, 1974), Barbara T. Smith had sex with three men in one performance (Feed Me, 1973), Pippa Garner flipped a Chevy’s chassis and drove it backwards across the Golden Gate Bridge (Backwards Car, 1974), and Paul McCarthy fucked a bunch of raw hamburger meat with a hotdog up his ass, and videotaped it for everyone to see (Sailor’s Meat (Sailor’s Delight), 1975). At the same time, CalArts, as we know it, opened, and counted among its faculty one artist who burned all his paintings (John Baldessari), one who called twenty minutes of blank film a finished film (Nam June Paik), and another who believed that artists should stop making art altogether (Allan Kaprow). The history of LA art, of course, is far more complex and diverse, but this is the genesis of its popular spirit, one that plumbs the depths of taboo and skewers convention.
That spirit, however, has faded. LA art is staid now. Maybe all art is. And it sort of makes sense, too. Up until very recently the art market has been healthy, even booming. But memories of 2008’s Great Recession linger in the rearview, so despite the upswing, a tendency toward stability, toward the sure thing, is understandable. It’s also unfortunate because the sure thing is categorically anti-risk. It calcifies convention: Institutions get comfortable, galleries follow, and artists end up having to choose between satisfying a mandate to exhibit or not exhibiting at all. To rock the boat is to threaten the art world’s prized equilibrium, so little-by-little all movements of any kind are discouraged, until the boat stops moving altogether and things become inert.
Take Jeffrey Deitch’s recent “Post Human” show, for example, a reprise of his 1992 show of the same name. One look around and it’s clear that the most challenging, insurgent works in the gallery—let alone the city—were made yearsby artists currently in their 80s, or who are now even dead. I’m thinking of McCarthy’s Garden (1991–2), of course, Charles Ray’s Family Romance (1993), and Cady Noland’s Rotten Cop (1988), but there are others. Even some of the more striking contemporary work—like Josh Kline’s Aspirational Foreclosure (Matthew / Mortgage Loan Officer) (2016) and Ivana Bašić’s I will lull and rock my ailing light in my marble arms #2 (2017)—“shocks” in the same way that American Psycho or Marilyn Manson shocks, which is to say, only to viewers still living in the 1990s, who haven’t discovered the internet yet. In other words, the best new works here are old hat… pastiche, even.
And that’s the good stuff! Most art shows in LA are about as avant-garde as a corporate happy hour, except without the funny business from Kyle in accounting. Our schools, too, are factories of modest work—CalArts and UCLA, yes, you—training artists to avoid risk, or at least render it invisible, by using concepts like opacity, camouflage and misdirection. At one point, these approaches were an effective counter to the art world’s commodification of difference. The many social justice movements of the 2010s spawned a market that valued marginality so long as it was legible in the work. That is, artists were encouraged to prove it—their identity, their culture, their trauma—and to be explicit enough about it for it to sell, which quickened a roundabout march toward reduction and stereotype. An opaque approach then, in theory, protected the artist’s subjectivity from the capital forces seeking to exploit it. However, it has evolved. More recently, opacity has been used as a tool to avoid rocking the proverbial boat, regardless of identity: Say what you want to say, but make it illegible, and position it juuuuust right. At least, artists can then maintain some degree of integrity without sacrificing career advancement. However useful, these strategies aren’t pioneering or revolutionary: David Hammons, for one, made an entire career out of them, starting in the ‘70s.
“Ha Ha Place” at Leroy’s, 2024, exhibition view. Photo: Evan Walsh. Courtesy of Leroy’s. Nevertheless, François Ghebaly gave us “Scupper” this September. If there were ever a group show that captured the preferred mood and approach of LA’s MFA high command, this would be it. Apart from some notable names, many of the artists were recent grads, and almost everything was so opaque that the gallery had to provide a paragraph-long explanation for each work in the exhibition packet. For the uninitiated, this is extremely rare, even for conceptual art. A good rule of thumb is more precision, less text, and here we had ten pages. It proved necessary, though, as the artists gave us very little agency as viewers, scant clues with which to decode the work. A slab of grain here, some discarded concrete there, a few street bollards in the corner—that was pretty much it.
The problem wasn’t merely that the art lacked an aesthetic punch or a clever turn of material, and it wasn’t that it required texts to complete its meaning. (This is the name of the game in conceptual art, for better or worse, and has been for some time.) No, the problem in “Scupper” was a new one, one born out of a careerist climate specific to now, and out of the tepid approach to artmaking it engenders. Here, the issue was that the texts themselves were the opaque artwork, totally separate from the work in the gallery. These texts were carefully crafted and chock-full of criticality, sure, but really amounted to little more than fail-proof language games that traded in an erudite brand of nihilistic doomcore, so masterfully idle that they too should’ve had supplemental texts.
Ask around and you’ll get all sorts of excuses: Things are precarious, many will say, No one wants to lose an opportunity. They’ll point out that audiences want to be soothed, that “challenge” is a thing of the past. Some will blame a culture of fear around voicing dissent, driven by the pettish mores of galleries and the people that run them. Others will point out that risk-taking is rare—after all, it’s risky—so we can’t expect much of it, and still others will argue that risks are being taken, that for some artists even existing is a risk (seriously, this has been said!). Professionalism, millennials and the algorithm are reasonable scapegoats, too, and of course it wouldn’t be the art world if the granddaddy of them all—capitalism—weren’t subject to some blame, ditto with the patriarchy and white supremacy.
It all boils down to anxious artists overtrained to overthink. Timely, relevant moves simply do not happen. As a result, an art world that was once ahead of culture and leading it, now lags far, far behind.
… And yet there’s hope!
Recently, small pockets of experimentation have taken root in LA. Many of them, it’s worth noting, are alternative spaces with much lower overhead than their commercial counterparts (but not all). For example, Public Notice, a gallery no larger than a few closets, beneath a house in Silver Lake, mounted a spate of anti-precious shows last year that added some attitude to a very buttoned up scene; Leroy’s (in addition to being somewhat of an architectural risk) continues to throw shows at the wall to see what sticks, and a lot of them do; Tiffany’s and Quarters, two similarly small spaces operating more sporadically, often eschew the over-considered in favor of unbridled instinct and pathos. Sometimes, it’s enough to simply let art happen as SALA did this past summer in a rundown house at the top of a hill in Mount Washington, or as Emily Lucid did in her anarchically curated “EDEN” show at LAST Projects in December, or as Nora Berman does almost daily on her SparklyMiracleZONE Twitch stream. Even revivals of work by artists like Ron Athey at Murmurs and the many at Deitch’s “Post Human” serve to spark the notion of risk’s possibility.
“EDEN” at LAST Projects, 2024, exhibition view. Courtesy of LAST Projects. In every case mentioned above, the approach to exhibition-making more closely resembles a game of tennis than it does a chess match. In a system like this, things are faster and looser, and more uncontained. You set your feet as best you can, you take a swing, you play with pace. The ball might not go where you want—it might not even make it over the net—but good news: It’s coming right back at you, right now, so get ready. There’s slippage, mistakes are made, nothing is perfect, yet things keep moving. Momentum takes hold. And that’s the point.
Now, the tennis approach isn’t risky in itself. But, if we’re to recognize reputational and capital concerns as two fundamental deterrents of risk-taking, then working smaller and with more frequency necessarily dissolves the gravity of each individual exhibit. Then, artists can test the waters, update ideas at low cost, and, frankly, be unprofessional. The perception of things matters less, so there’s no need to hide, no need to over-frame, no need to be precious.
It’ll all sing with energy when you care just a little bit less, when you’re forced to go off-script and react, when you do it yourself, and fast. That’s when ideas will rally and come alive, and when we’ll get the unexpected.
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PAUL THEK
at Hannah HoffmanI ring the buzzer three, maybe four times at 725 N. Western. No one answers. While I debate whether to abandon my mission, a man with a ladder leaves a side gate open and I slip in. Wandering through a courtyard, I find Hannah Hoffman tucked in the back. This is the gallery’s inaugural exhibition at its new space, an addition to the Melrose Hill pile-on. Upon entering, I am greeted by an intimate room; sisal carpeting and dim light from two orbs create a cocooned, if sparse, domestic space. A single humble Paul Thek painting awaits me.
“Untitled (rooftops), 1987” is both the name of the show and its sole painting. Less a performatively empty space than a meditation on one painting, the show is understated but direct. I am immediately somatically at ease. Hung nice and low, and perpetually in shadow, this intimately scaled painting depicts the view of the East Village skyline from Thek’s apartment window. Energetically washy and loose, a moody sky in pepto bismol and blue sits atop a golden-hour cityscape, buildings tightening into short flick-of-the-wrist strokes. Despite, or rather in contrast to, the acrylic with which it’s painted, there’s a distinctly old-world European quality to the painting. This East Village could be Paris or Rome.
Paul Thek was a true flaneur, wandering around Europe in the ’60s and ’70s, consorting with the likes of Tennessee Williams and Susan Sontag, picking up odd jobs. Thek was also notably a lapsed Catholic, although perhaps aspirationally devout, in a uniquely tormented gay Catholic way. His work reveals a reverence for and a deep knowledge of spiritual questions in Catholicism, and of its vast well of ephemera, symbology and architecture. In this light, I experience “Untitled (rooftops), 1987” religiously, as if entering a chapel, a devotional effect created by the low lighting and the single painting. There’s a preciousness to the painting because of its isolation; it functions as a sort of shrine. This is not unique to this painting: Thek’s seminal series Technological Reliquaries features beeswax body parts and meat encased in Plexiglas. While he was in Italy, Thek became interested in folk relics and saints’ festivals, which shaped many of his late 1960s sculptures and installations. Thek’s work is by nature eclectic and free, but he always returns to the spiritual.
As a first show, Hannah Hoffman’s Thek exhibition bravely asserts an understated stillness. I can’t imagine this show will bring in crowds—even if they could find their way past buzzer and iron gates. A show with one painting is gutsy. I can’t blame Hannah Hoffman for showing only this one as the other cityscapes Thek made around the time aren’t, for the most part, very good. He is by no means a great painter. His paintings are hit or miss. Counterintuitively, that is part of the appeal. Thek takes big swings, unconcerned by questions of reception, taste or consistency. Untitled (rooftops) is great precisely because of its casual tastelessness. The colors are delightfully garish. There’s something amateurish or vernacular to both the mode of painting and the subject matter. Unlike much of Thek’s late-career paintings that embrace naivete, going so far as to be hung at the eye level of a child, this painting has a maturity, but one that is painted rather haphazardly and is underhandedly traditional in scope.
Paul Thek, Untitled (rooftops), 1987. Courtesy of Hannah Hoffman. It’s all in the color competition between the yellow and purple. The dynamic between these complementary colors (according to the traditional RYB color model), perfectly split down the middle, creates a tension of taste. The shadows are also in complementary colors of indigo and sharp cheddar-cheese orange. While theoretically scientifically pleasing, Thek’s formulation has a too-muchness to it.
Untitled (rooftops) was made while Thek was dying of AIDS in his East Village apartment. His subject matter is thus limited to his immediate surroundings. A problem arises around how much we allow context to seep into our reading of the work. I have competing desires about whether or not to romanticize this painting’s timing. The image of Thek on the eve of his deathbed, staring out of his West Village apartment, makes for a sentimental and melodramatic reading of this painting as reflective of the agony and ecstasy of a life’s sunset. I don’t see this impulse as disrespectful, but rather perhaps too easy and teleological. Would this be a good painting under different conditions? Perhaps this is an unaskable question: off-limits.
In 1981, in response to his sculpture The Tomb, Thek said, “Imagine having to bury yourself over and over.” Does Thek deserve to be buried once more? Beyond the formal appeal of this painting’s tastelessness, its transcendent quality exists in the interplay of presence and absence. There’s a saintly quality—a martyrdom—to Thek, or to any artist who dies of AIDS. The act of conflating the biography with the actual work becomes a guilty pleasure. This type of analysis—fetishization of an artist’s death to AIDS—flatters both artist and reviewer. In this case, Thek’s biography packages the chaos that is his oeuvre. The single painting becomes a stand-in for both his body and a window much like Thek’s own.
We’ll allow the biographical to the extent that it is also formal: Untitled (rooftops) has a Rear Window quality of escape from confinement by binocular focus on the window’s contents. In direct opposition to the voyeurism of Hitchcock, Thek exhibits a sense of awe and optimism about the world. Instead of the dark underbelly of New York that Hitchcock examines, Thek exposes the light, and instead of human drama, Thek looks at the sublime drama of the skyline. Because death is coming from within, the beyond is allowed to be beautiful.
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ANGELYNE
at Melrose Botanical GardenAs I fought through crosstown traffic, the messages came in fast and furious.
Hurry up!… Where are you?!… She’s about to arrive!… You’re gonna miss her corvette pull up!
When I finally parked and made it to Melrose Botanical Garden, the crowd was spilling onto the street. Traffic slowed down. Paparazzi snapped pics. Everyone wanted a glimpse of Angelyne, the artist, provocateur and legend who had shot back into public life not with a publicity stunt or a billboard, but with a complicated body of new artwork titled “ICANDY.” Inside the gallery hung portraits of celebrities that Angelyne composed from food scraps, then photographed and finished off with a glittery autograph. Though crafted from leftover beans, noodles, lettuce and olives, these surreal apparitions of bygone stars seem to celebrate as much as skewer our obsession with self-mythology.
Angelyne at the reception of “ICANDY” at Melrose Botanical Garden. Inside the gallery, a coquettish Audrey Hepburn emerges from the leftovers of a juicy red cabbage salad, while coffee grounds sketch Cher’s bouffant of black hair and charcoaled eyes, rendering the pop singer even more darkly enigmatic. Baby corns crown the Statue of Liberty and a roasted red pepper curves into her coy pout. “ICANDY” immortalizes many icons, from Elizabeth Taylor and George Burns to Roseanne Barr, Michael Jackson, and a dozen others. The works are often irreverent and silly, but like Los Angeles itself, they trade in fantasy—their playfulness masking sadness and melancholy. People may come to L.A. to chase their dreams, but many stay to avoid growing up.
Viewing the works during the opening, I could almost hear my mother shouting at me to “not play with your food.” There’s something deliciously punk in the way Angelyne disobeys all our proverbial parents, transforming her L.A. dinners into the stars she dreamed of emulating. Few artists possess a better biography to examine the phenomenon of stardom—its ups and downs—than Angelyne, who for all her charisma and talent, never quite broke into the upper echelons of showbiz. Long before Paris Hilton or Kim Kardashian, Angelyne pioneered the art of celebrity-as-medium. She burst into the popular imagination in the mid-1980s when she plastered photos of herself—Marilyn-esque, with echoes of 1950s studio starlets and the flesh of 1980s centerfold bunnies—onto billboards across Los Angeles.
Angelyne, Audrey Hepburn. Courtesy of Melrose Botanical Garden. In much the same way that almost everybody today cultivates social media followers, Angelyne encouraged the public to project their own fantasies onto her images. “ICANDY” immortalizes not just the figures she pays homage to, but with her glittery signature, these works write Angelyne—still hustling after all these years—back into that mythos. In short, it’s a very L.A. show: It vibrates with glitz and glamour, but also with a deep longing.
Yet that longing shouldn’t be confused with “ICANDY’s” critique of our collective mania for fame. In a moment when our worship of celebrity grows ever more dizzying—of politicians, actors, influencers, and artists—Angelyne’s portraits remind us that stardom, like the food they’re made from, is perishable.
Back outside, Angelyne charged fans for photographs taken beside her iconic hot pink corvette. In a tight pink dress, pink full-length gloves, a pink veil hiding her face, and her trademark fountain of platinum hair, the artist orchestrated her own spectacle. And who could blame her? Angelyne knows better than almost anyone that in today’s fame-hungry world, the art as much as the artist is the
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PIPPA GARNER
at STARSThe artist died during the run of her exhibition, just a few days before the new year. It is fitting given that Pippa Garner used her body as a sort of extended art project, something she worked on for years—altering it with surgeries, tattoos and piercings. The greatest work of the show may be that which was not on the checklist: She attended her own opening just a few weeks before her death and laid down on a cot dressed as a stuffed animal. Supine in the gallery, her body’s presence in the show is perhaps just as great as its absence from the world.
A quote from last year’s press release references her death, “I just want to make sure my body ends up where it belongs when I die: in the junkyard with the appliances I’ve made fun of throughout my career.” Garner has always had an irreverence towards the body, viewing it as part machine, part product: just another appliance.
In “Misc Pippa” at STARS in Hollywood, the artist’s final exhibition, the body is always present but always on the verge of becoming something else. When entering the gallery one is faced with Kar-mann (1969/2024) Garner’s sculpture whose front is a gold hot rod and back is two human legs: one on the ground, one kicked out to the side, looking as if it will sprint out of the gallery. The two parts seamlessly blend as one, rendered in sleek fiberglass and painted with automotive paint; human balls hang off the back of the car between the legs. It’s something you might see on the road—it’s not uncommon to see plastic gonads dangling from the tailgate of a truck. Garner pushes the anthropomorphizing of machines that already exists in the world even further.
Pippa Garner. Courtesy of Matthew Brown. Another work, Un(tit)led (Clitoris Ashtray), features a photograph of an ashtray sculpture where the indentation for an in-progress cigarette is made yonic by a small pink clitoris. An old car headlight adorns the other side of the ashtray, pointing to the smoker. With this strange object—part fetish part utilitarian—Garner pulls out the suggestive innuendo of the everyday. These quotidian objects become unexpectedly sexual through her touch. A couple of lamps in the show feature the same gesture: the chubby bottom half of a kewpie doll is merged with a plastic dildo, a candelabra bulb meant to look like a candle dripping with wax. And in Agitator Lamp, a washing machine agitator is used as the base of a lamp, its wavy lines suggestive of female anatomy. In much of the artist’s work, the body is divided into parts, merging with other objects, never completely whole.
Garner left us with hundreds of plans for sculptures. A series of sketches show designs for works, many left unrealized but detailed so that they might still be produced. Some appear in the gallery, like the Cunnilingus Chair (2024), emerging from its sketched idea: the seat of a chair with eyes and a tongue sticking upwards in order to pleasure the sitter. Many of the works in the show span time periods, and their dates on the checklist are sometimes 50 years apart — from plan to fully realized object. The artist’s imagination lingers in the works yet to be produced.
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RUBY ZARSKY
at CeradonGoddesses once etched into stone tablets and later deified in oil paintings now live another immortal existence: nude or scantily clad, wet and voluptuous, digitally rendered and plastered across Reddit or X, they resemble magical beasts or aliens. Some have had their hip and breast size transformed to impossible proportions while others have otherworldly skin and hair colors. In some cases, these goddesses possess multiple sets of genitals or pairs of dimorphic sexual organs—a gesture that humans have been exploring since an unknown sculptor created the Sleeping Hermaphrodite in Imperial Rome. The glow of the screen is new but the subject matter is not—portraits like these have been with us since the dawn of culture. I bring this up because with the current political hysteria about transgender rights flooding public discourse, it’s helpful to remember that humans have been horny freaks since time immemorial. To me, this suggests that our horniness and desire to emulate and even pleasure ourselves to the bodies we imagine is both healthy and natural.
“RULE 34,” the debut solo exhibition of New York artist and former member of Sateen Ruby Zarsky at Ceradon Gallery, is a meditation on the serene pleasures such images can grant their viewers. The more than 30 works included in the show are replete with images of nude, possibly hermaphroditic women. Obscene by design and inflected with homages to popular anime and video-game characters, “RULE 34” abounds with girthy uncut penises and voluptuous breasts on unblemished, athletic goddesses.
In Cosmic Consciousness (2024), a be-dicked woman resembling Chun-Li Xiang, a character from the 1991 video game Street Fighter II, holds herself up from a seated position, spreading her legs to display a penis that is larger and longer than her foot. While it may be tempting to dismiss the painting as pornographic or fetishistic, such thinking ignores Zarsky’s subtle choices—especially the choice to use Chun-Li, the first playable female character in the Street Fighter series, as a subject—to produce the image.
Ruby Zarsky, “Fierce Diva,” 2024. Courtesy of the artist and Ceradon Gallery. Among the other works, Fierce Diva (2024) and Glorious Queen (2024), a pair of paintings that feature scan-like renderings of early transvestigations that feature transsexual women fooling johns and making careers as athletes and celebrities, stand out as illustrative examples of Zarsky’s historical eye. Meanwhile, the impeccably titled To Kill a Chimera You Must Use Lead From Above (2024) seems to be the skeleton key that unlocks the entire exhibition, with the hung, latex-wearing dominatrix at its center fingering another t-girl and placing her hands around the circular, schematized grid that erupts from her ass.
Tucked within these references to recent digital and trans history is an implicit send-up of the places where queer people, and transwomen in particular, sourced their identities while seeking refuge from the imprisoning mythologies of cisgender heterosexuality. Artists like Zarsky, who embrace and honor the obscene, are able to accomplish a form of radical honesty and trust in their desires that many will never experience. In the most liberating sense possible, “RULE 34” lacks cowardice. The show is as political as it is pleasurable.
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REFRAMING DIORAMAS
Natural History Museum of Los AngelesThis beautiful show grapples with the history and purpose of habitat dioramas—those eerily lifelike tableaus found in darkened museum halls—and, by extension, questions the past and present life of natural history museums. What is the role of a natural history museum in 2025, and what do 20th-century dioramas mean in a 21st-century context? Because the exhibition involves institutional self-critique, a few contradictions crop up within its extended inquiry. However, these inconsistencies spur rather than dissuade viewers to think even more fully about “reframing” the mission of natural history museums for our complicated era.
Viewers without a natural history background or an experience of elementary school field trips might wonder what a habitat diorama is, exactly? A display text lists their three key features: 1. “a realistic background painted on a curved surface,” 2. “a foreground made with real or modeled plants and rocks,” and 3. “taxidermized animals.” But that bare-bones description doesn’t capture the haunting qualities of classic dioramas in any natural history museum.
Dioramas first rose to popularity in the 1920s. They were seen as a more dynamic alternative to the traditional glass cases crammed full of very dead-looking specimens or their skeletons. Dioramas were also an attempt to capture the support of the public for saving living animals and their environments in a time of unregulated hunting and habitat destruction during the early 20th century, when many species (including passenger pigeons, great hawks, grizzly bears, bison and mule deer, among others) were hunted to near or total extinction. In Los Angeles’ version of a diorama hall, as you approach each glass-fronted diorama, it floats into visibility out of semi-darkness. It’s hard not to be transfixed by the unblinking stares of taxidermied jackals, armadillos and monkeys.
Installation views of “Reframing Dioramas: The Art of Preserving Wilderness.” Courtesy of NHMLAC. Photo: Elon Schoenholz. At first, quickly surveying the room, you’d be hard-pressed to find much that’s different in this exhibit from a hundred years ago when the first diorama hall opened at LA’s Natural History Museum. This indicates how well-integrated newer elements (film, text, projections, still photography, audio, and digital interventions) added for this show are within the context of the historical dioramas. These contemporary additions include three new dioramas commissioned for this show with film, projection and other new media elements. The most arresting of these is an eye-popping piece by artists Yesenia Prieto, Joel Fernando, and Jason Chang (RFX1) which looks a bit like a still from some neon-tinted anime film, populated by alebrije, brightly colored, sometimes hybrid, sometimes mythical creatures, cast here as protectors of and advocates for the natural world in all its dazzling splendor.
These new media additions help dissect the history, ethics and initial aims of specimen collection and exhibition. Bilingual text panels (English/Spanish) discuss former hunting practices that the museum no longer relies on to obtain specimens, as well as the many uncredited (and possibly unpaid) people who contributed to the dioramas’ making, also pointing out the part colonialism played in specimen acquisition.
A few contradictions leak in via the text panels. One panel tells us, “Before dioramas, museums traditionally displayed specimens in taxonomic order… Birds, mammals, insects and plants would all be packed into rows in separate cases. Dioramas gave these specimens life by putting them back together into their natural habitats.” (Italics mine).
Now, don’t get me wrong. I’ve adored natural history museums since I was a kid. I love this museum and show. But am I the only one whose fur feels rubbed the wrong way when dead, stuffed animals are described as being given life by any mode of displaying them? Also, a tad strange are the quotes asserting that dioramas are meant to show animals in “their natural habitat.” How does a glass case with an idealized painted background housing taxidermied animals and dead or fake plants constitute “a natural habitat?” A later text panel says something far more accurate, though, again, a bit at odds with previous display texts, declaring, “The static presentation of nature is the most artificial.” Still another panel states, “Dioramas are not exact copies of nature… creators selected and changed natural features to balance composition and interest,” again belying the notion that they are “natural habitats.”
Despite these small quibbles about semantics or textual discrepancies, this is a thoughtful, laudable show. In our era of climate change and ecological threat, natural history museums could potentially be an illuminating positive influence. This show, as well as being a piece of science history, represents a good faith effort to begin thinking about what those new roles for such museums could look like.
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Sawako Goda
at Nonaka-HillThis exhibition features paintings, sketches, and ephemera from the estate of Sawako Goda (1940-2016). Goda’s oil paintings immerse the viewer into a strange urban sea in which the body merges with gems the size of appendages. Goda’s “story of the eye” shifted when she encountered the Eye of the Horus, an Egyptian symbol in which the eye is made of six parts, each corresponding to the anatomic location of a particular human sensorium. Moving between New York City, Tokyo, and Cairo, Goda refigured the Hollywood femme fatale and “vamp” as new creatures under or alongside glass: these women appear to be blissfully alone and entranced, completely unaware of the viewer. Rodney Nonaka-Hill first discovered Goda through her poster art from the 60s and 70s; this show beautifully showcases both the ephemeral and the monumental aspects of Goda’s corpus.
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Valerie Keane
at Gaylord Fine ArtsValerie Keane’s works on paper are constructed with devotion, resulting in miniature worlds that reflect the viewer back unto herself. These are “flat” images in comparison to Keane’s other work, and yet a close look into the frame reveals parts that appear as though they could move, or are moving, as light rolls across beautiful strips of metalized film and tiny hand-cut strands of metal bend themselves toward the rice paper base. Resistant to photographic capture, endlessly demanding of the eye, each piece requires attention to details that differ by the minute. Imagine the medieval astrolabe, the spherical navigational device described in Geoffrey Chaucer’s Treatise on the Astrolabe, alongside the tiny zipper-like ladders and beautifully subdivided spheres of Keane’s translucent sculptures framed in aluminum: she compresses time, light, and space on the Gaylord’s fourteenth floor.
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Jaxon Demme and Paz de la Huerta
at Spy ProjectsThe damsel in distress; the innocent vindicated. These are relatively common motifs when it comes to trauma and recovery, yet Paz de la Huerta’s beautifully bizarre paintings make them feel new. Women and girls embrace while crowded by angelic creatures and wild animals, with nary an inch of negative space. Any cutesiness is countered by the artist’s penchant for frenzied maximalism—a princess’s pillows, for example, blend into a woman shielding her face and a small white dog. When the same tableaus recur, they do so as slightly warped versions of themselves: memories of memories. A smile appears slightly more serene or sinister; new limbs emerge from the ether. Jaxon Demme’s sculptures of big-headed, beady-eyed little girls are the perfect complement. Arranged in an arc, they serve as a strange tribunal—angels keeping watch or passing judgment, depending on your perspective. Altogether, the exhibition seems designed to rouse your inner child from a nightmare, walk with her to fetch a glass of water, and tuck her back into bed, still shaking but safe and sound.
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Postmodern Vaudeville
Amy Gerstler on Dynasty Handbag’s Frenzied Satire Titanic Depression at MOCAEven though the term ‘performance art’ has become a catch-all phrase, it still feels too narrow to convey the onstage antics of Dynasty Handbag, the performance persona of writer, visual artist and actor Jibz Cameron. When Titanic Depression debuted in New York in 2023, its sensibility was described by the New York Times as “queer vaudevillian.” That’s a more intriguing, and perhaps more accurate label. In November 2024, MOCA hosted three nights of Titanic Depression, Cameron’s multi-media live show, starring her alter ego Ms. Handbag. This show, lightly updated since its premiere, is a blockbuster solo performance: a zany, affecting dreamscape, hybridizing theatre, animation, cabaret, video, political critique and clowning.
Cameron’s work as Dynasty Handbag is sui generis with a vengeance. This is true of her stand-up comedy performances like The Bored Identity (now available on vinyl!) and of Dynasty’s turns as the trash-clad, gyrating curator/MC of her long-running underground variety show “Weirdo Night.” Cameron, a long time Angeleno, is a Guggenheim fellow, and her visual work was included in the Hammer Museum’s Biennial exhibition “Made in LA” in 2023.
In Titanic Depression Dynasty Handbag embarks on a classic heroine’s journey. She confronts climate disaster, battles family repression, and has a sexual dalliance with an octopus, complete with an exhaustive, hand-penned, pre-coital consent form. She stumbles into a roomful of male cigar-puffing, planet-wrecking billionaire capitalist bastards from various eras, which provides a quick history lesson for the audience. And she suffers a searing bout of existential panic which she tries, for the most part unsuccessfully, to escape with the aid of meditation apps. The iceberg threatening to destroy her luxury cruise ship melts (thank you, global warming) but is replaced by an aggressive island of ocean trash, which may pose a greater threat. One of the loose through-lines in this wacky tale is the narrative’s ingestion and subsequent subversion of a few plot points from James Cameron’s 1997 film Titanic. (About the shared Cameron surname: The fact-checkers at Artillery are pretty sure Jibz and James aren’t related, but anyone with information otherwise is welcome to contact us… )
Dynasty Handbag, “Titanic Depression.” Performance documentation from The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. Image by Elon Schoenholz courtesy of MOCA. Performer: Jibz Cameron. Cameron is a natural actor, mistress of a smorgasbord of cartoon voices that would make Mel Blanc proud. She’s got the manic, rubbery physical comedy thing down cold. She’s a skilled enough dancer that when she chooses to flail and dance ‘badly,’ you remain mesmerized. Her signature makeup for the Dynasty character brings to mind a demented mime, Charlie Chaplin’s Little Tramp and/or Faye Dunaway’s Mommy Dearest visage mid-facial. Thus constructed, Dynasty’s face harkens back slightly to silent films. Topped by a spiky black wig, that face is as elastic as bread dough and gymnastically expressive. Her costumes feature garbage bags and thrift store regalia. Her pantyhose, webbed with runs, often serve as stand-alone ragged pants (ooh la la!) worn beneath a short jacket. At one point she sports a flesh-colored unitard with cartoon breasts and squiggly pubic hair felt-penned over the appropriate zones. The overall effect of her costumes, which tend to slip or fall off, is a mix of little kid dress-up, madwoman, and lesbian burlesque. She has a way of sending up tropes of conventional sexiness and exploding them.
In terms of props, repurposed trash litters the stage by the end of the performance. Items from what might be a recycling bin or treasure chest, jumbled up with junk from grandma’s attic get pulled out on cue when Dynasty is frantically searching for something to push the narrative forward or to get out of a jam. An overripe banana, her only live co-star, doubles as cellphone and as microphone for a crooned musical number or two. There’s a moment when Cameron sings a song she wrote to the tune of “When a Man Loves a Woman.” Her take-off on that song, “When a Man has an Idea,” is a comic lament about mansplaining and its dominating damage, inescapably wreaked on, well, everyone.
The backdrop for Titanic Depression is Dynasty’s most important co-star. The video by collaborator Mariah Garnett plays on a screen that spans the stage’s entire back wall. Animated video runs before the show even begins and continues throughout the performance. The video provides various settings, some aboard ship, some underwater, plus doctored clips from an array of films about the Titanic, as well as other archival material. Wonderfully misspelled text exchanges between Dynasty and her never-seen therapist appear, typed out in real-time, courtesy of the video. Additional characters, fully animated or topped by Cameron’s actual videoed head gabbing away on caricatured bodies appear onscreen and interact with the live Dynasty. This means, for example, that while Cameron plays Dynasty onstage, on the video backdrop she’s playing Dynasty’s screechy, smothering mother, leading to a series of altercations with herself. The video backdrop is funny, eye-popping, and an essential, unifying contribution to Titanic Depression’s pace and look.
Dynasty Handbag, “Titanic Depression.” Performance documentation from The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. Image by Elon Schoenholz courtesy of MOCA. Performer: Jibz Cameron. How is it that although this performance brandishes its seams, that only makes the work more intimate and effective? By “brandishes its seams,” I mean that Cameron regularly breaks character and addresses the audience using what one could call her “normal voice” and persona. There are glitches in the performance (usually trouble changing a costume, or a forgotten line) that seem intentionally inserted or at least expected, and embraced when they occur. These scattered moments provide Cameron a chance to stand outside the piece and make observations that a character conventionally enmeshed in the action could not. Rather than this feeling like a mistake, it worked for this viewer as a form of layering and another kind of through-line. We get both Cameron’s and Dynasty’s perspectives overlaid intermittently, situated inside and outside the plot, via this device. Sometimes we’re even privy to tidbits about the construction and genesis of the piece. In other words, this is not a work of art intent on maintaining airtight illusions or preserving the so-called theatrical “third wall.” Instead, Cameron seems determined to periodically puncture the fiction she’s been constructing, so she can rebuild it again and again.
Cameron is great at creating a sense of the eternal now. Watching her work, one has the feeling that what she’s doing and saying on stage is being born in that instant, exploding from her mind as you’re seeing it, fresh and current, though it’s simultaneously clear that Titanic Depression is NOT mostly extemporized, but developed and rehearsed, complete with its audio, lighting, elaborate video interface, etc. When Titanic Depression makes a point to lean into its DIY improv aesthetic, appearing to embrace the spontaneous rather than having been rehearsed into rigidity, a creative, playful relationship to chaos emerges. We’re sucked into the vortex of Cameron’s rampant, humane imagination and indignation. We get the message that if we’re going to survive the coming decades, we had better be ready to pivot at a moment’s notice. We had better get incredibly flexible and learn to be light on our feet. We’d better stay nimble and open.
I don’t know who Cameron considers her artistic influences to be, but it’s fun to speculate. There are bits of Lily Tomlin in what she does as monologist and repository of a panoply of characters. I wondered if Edward Albee’s sense of absurdity might have tinted her vibe. The barbed
comedy of Richard Pryor came to mind as I watched Titanic Depression, as well as Jonathan Winters’ prodigious wizardry with simple props. (For example, there’s a moment late in the show when Dynasty picks up the drinking straw from a Starbucks cup and uses it as a flute).Given the scary political drift of late, the Statue of Liberty might need a friend right about now. Perhaps Lady Liberty could use a second “…mighty woman with a torch…” to stand by her side for moral support, reinforcing her battered message. If anyone’s taking nominations, I’ll cast my vote for a 22-story, harbor-presiding likeness of Dynasty Handbag. Her blazing torch of gonzo comedy and razor-sharp satire casts a galvanizing light.
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Olivia Mole
at GattopardoThe shower scene in Psycho. You know it, everyone’s seen it. Go to the end. We follow a trail of blood and water through the tub, then push in as it swirls down the drain. In this moment, always, I beg Hitchcock to follow the zoom, to continue completely down the drain… to enter the void entirely! Instead, the shot dissolves to another of a lifeless eye, and we telescope back out. We never enter the drain.
This is the feeling that overwhelms Olivia Mole’s “Nocturne,” one of almost reaching exactly what it is that you’re after, only to have it soften into something else entirely. If you’ve felt this feeling before, it was likely in a dream, or possibly as a word slipped from the tip of your tongue, though it may have also been in a moment of love. Fine art rarely captures this feeling—at least not what we’ve been seeing lately. Even at its most oblique, today’s gallery-bound art tends toward the definitive, the unencumbered, the essentialized. Nocturne does not, and that is good.
Technically, the show is one work, Dopesheet Batman Ep VI, made up of seven “islands” of material, each grounded on a patch of industrial-grade, purple carpet. At times, objects are in motion—two inflatable projection screens tangle as they bloat alongside each other, filling with air; an oscillating fan periodically blows an opaque acrylic sheet over the mirror behind it; a mound of stuffed figures and camping chairs rotates on a turntable. There is noise and music and light, and three projections run at varying intervals—two lo-fi animations of the Charmin Bear and one text-based video with a corresponding spoken-word audio track. At the center of it all, practically hidden by the ostentation, sits a quiet bouquet of wilting tulips. The entire show cycles through every twenty minutes.
Olivia Mole, “Nocturne,” 2024, installation view. Photo: Chris Hanke. Courtesy of the artist. It’s all catch-as-catch-can, especially when it’s all moving. So much information, so much material. So much syncopation, too. A series of startling and then’s. You’re watching the silent video of Batman bear, and then the shrill spoken-word piece rings out, and then you catch your distorted reflection in mirrored acrylic, and then the moon bounce-like projection screens start to inflate, and then that fan turns on again, and then you finally make it over to read whatever it is that Mole has left Xeroxed on that table —evidence, perhaps?—and then the whole funhouse powers down altogether. Lights go off, things deflate, silence.
…yet, still, those tulips wilt. It’s the only part of the show that doesn’t stop, a punch unpulled. If we’re talking Psycho shower, the tulips—should we notice them—release us to the drain completely.
Considering the cyclical pomp and wreckage, one could easily interpret the show on purely systemic terms. A poetic indictment of the machine of so-called progress. Mole makes sure we don’t miss it, though. Her exhibition text consists of a single quote, uncredited, from the 19th century philosopher G.W.F. Hegel (“The owl of Minerva spreads its wings only with the falling of the dusk”), a sort of lamentation for man’s inability to understand history except in hindsight. Further, she summarizes her
materials list—which includes “Stars and Stripes Forever” by John Philip Sousa (the American military march composer, recorded in Independence, CA) and USA flag carry-bags—with the phrase, “A spell for the end of empire.” Seen through this lens, the show is one of many in recent memory that takes on the spectacle of late-stage capitalism in the United States, documenting the twilight of a system built for the system’s sake, rather than for the people in it.Olivia Mole, “Nocturne,” 2024, installation view. Photo: Chris Hanke. Courtesy of the artist. The explicit reference to empire, though—while formally incidental—becomes somewhat limiting when it serves as the only given frame for the show. It preprograms an otherwise labyrinthine installation toward a singular, simplified read; it gives us the right answer. And that dampens what is otherwise one of the exhibit’s greatest strengths: the agential wrinkle. Nocturne’s design requires that we situate ourselves in the rubble, that we move and decide rather than merely observe. As intentionally distracting as the show might be, almost every piece reflects back an image of the viewer to themselves—sometimes obstructed or distorted, often fleeting—via mirrors, acrylic sheets, or glass. This is deliberate, no doubt: we, as individuals, are implicated in our collective fate, and it’s up to us to notice precisely when and how.
If nothing else, “Nocturne” is a site of play or, as the Diane di Prima scanned text on one table makes mention, “a kind of detour” that breaks away from a more linear understanding of the world. The show pushes us to associate and connect. We sharpen our ears to hear through the dissonance, we meander about on a hunch, we turn just in time to see the mirror before the lights go off. Mole creates a playground that perpetually rebuilds and deconstructs, through which we can observe ourselves and perhaps even our conceits. In a demanding, yet dynamic way, “Nocturne” reminds us to be alive in time, and to notice it.
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Jingze Du
at Steve TurnerJingze Du’s exhibition “True Colors” features the most well-executed oils in recent memory and all of them are of cute animals. The animals are mostly uninflected white, and their cuteness is eerie and synthetic. The painting itself is restricted to points of defining darkness like ink drops in fields of snow—typically two eyes (or one when the animal is in profile) and the dark vertices of a mammalian muzzle are rendered with paint pushed deep into the canvas and then teased across until no brush marks remain visible. Only the tracks of the black paint’s footprint across the underlying canvas are left to provide a silkily photorealist gradient into the surrounding plenitude of raw white, extending outwards until a simple outline against a flat dark background shapes the whole into a creature.
For what they are, these paintings are perfect. The only remaining question for a critic is whether they lack ambition. Ancient Asian standards of beauty seem relevant when discussing any artist who starkly isolates and spotlights their touch as a tool for rendering in black and white. When Tang-era scholar and calligrapher Chang Yen-Yüan wrote “…the thing must be complete in the mind even though the manner of the pictorial rendering does not seem to be complete, otherwise no work of art will result, ” he was articulating the central principle of a Chinese art-critical tradition that, for the next thousand years, would inveigh against over- rendering and simple formal completion in favor of capturing the essence of a subject.
Jingze Du, The Death of Marat, 2024. Courtesy of the artist and Steve Turner, Los Angeles. Du’s canvases capture not so much the essence of his subjects as the essence of our feelings about them—with their feckless vulnerability caged inside toy-like outer selves. The distortions of the figure bring digital filters to mind but the eyes still penetrate, unsettle, invite sympathy, and suggest a strange neonatal wisdom. What is remarkable is how few elements of oil painting are required to work this magic.
I hope the second room of the exhibition, further back, does not indicate a lack of confidence in the relevance of small, uncanny paintings of mutant pets. Here, Du provides much larger interpretations of famous European paintings in a drippier and more aggressive style that could be almost anyone’s. I don’t begrudge a rare talent the exercise of rendering five-foot tall sketchbook pages, but I didn’t need to see these to appreciate the seriousness of his intentions. After all, as early as the ninth century, Han-tzū addressed the question of the relative difficulty of subjects by saying “Dogs and horses are difficult, ghosts are easier; dogs and horses have been seen by everybody, but ghosts are quite effusive and strange.” Du’s paintings manage to merge each beast with its strange, effusive ghost.
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T.J. Dedeaux-Norris
at Walter Maciel GalleryT.J. Dedeaux-Norris had already segued from performance and music to painting and printmaking before completing her MFA at Yale, but she foregrounds the performative aspect of her approach in “Breach of Confidentiality,” her debut solo exhibition at Walter Maciel Gallery. Dedeaux-Norris developed the exhibited works around a kind of personal story, or as she might have it, a “narrative.” Upon entering the gallery, our first glimpses of that tale are willfully fractured; we see cut and collaged fragmented images, transformed into unique acetone transfer prints. These “reclaimed” images (as the exhibition text describes them) remap and recompose the artist’s identity over time and space; but the works are not merely about identity. The subject matter is an uncertain terrain, which the artist makes visually and materially manifest.
Throughout the exhibition, Dedeaux-Norris employs a variety of media and compositional strategies to self-reflexively tease out the generative implications of printmaking and explore the notion of what is actually ‘imprinted’. In Plaintiff’s Testimony: Visual Reclamation (United States) #1 (2024), Norris maps, plots, subdivides an image of her own face—the ‘plaintiff’s’ terrain, conceivably one and the same with her ‘testimony’. Eyes are freely sliced and spun off a facial ‘compass’, while a chin floats assertively in the lower quadrant. There’s a grisaille cast to the whole of the composition. Although flesh tones in certain fragments pop, others seem tamped down, almost greige. The fragments seem on the verge of floating to the periphery of the compositional field—a visually diasporic identity.
Two other iterations of Testimonies selectively repeat or reconfigure this bodily and facial ‘mapping’, variably reflecting presumed expressions of complaint (regret, sadness, anger, or consternation) and challenge the viewer’s instinct to construct or reconstruct the image into something easily recognizable. Dedeaux-Norris’s challenge —to our culture’s claim (or ‘imprint’) on personal identity—is expansive. As plaintiff, Dedeaux-Norris asserts a claim to everything she might be or wishes to become. Her Deposition series extends this challenge, positing herself as defendant, while fragmenting the field even more aggressively. Apparent concern or anger trouble eyes and facial fragments, although Deposition of Identity: Art As Witness, U.S. v. Dedeaux-Norris (#3), (2024) foregrounds fingers that might touch such troubled eyes.
Hanging weavings—of found or discarded fabrics woven through with yarns—extend and complicate Dedeaux-Norris’s inquiry into how identity is deposed and imprinted, highlighting the subjects’s inherent fluidity and uncertainty. Pale blue braided yarns or bits of vaguely plush animal-like garland snake through bits of scarves or sweatering, do-rags and discarded underthings in North Hollywood Hearsay (2024), while long, twisted braids or lanyards of fabric and errant threads drip from its lower edge as if seeping away from a dubious field of causality. In Reseda Remains (2024), a long wrinkled length of printed sheeting spirals to the floor beneath, suggesting flight from long ago catastrophe—which may be more than just notional: the artist’s pursuit of a hip-hop career between high school and university exposed her to an environment easily as sexually predatory as it was creative.
The process of ‘imprinting’ is one thing, Dedeaux-Norris seems to say; while what remains—what stands or falls—is quite another. Along a corridor leading to the rear gallery, a series of hanging works further test out this theme. The artist collages onto small (8×8 sq.in.) wood panels hand-cut, variously hand-tinted, or glittered dry-transfer Roman style letters over printed fragments of diary entries and various writings from her childhood, with occasionally superimposed silhouettes or colored pencil drawing and doodling, the whole epoxied over into a kind of glossy souvenir of an impossible-to-memorialize, much less recapture, past. Titled Evidence of Silence (Exhibits A through N (2024)), they are anything but. These works are resonant, almost meditative objects that simultaneously whisper and shout. Some of the letters appear to flake or separate from the surface, underscoring their instability, or simply the distance between plausibility and proof.
The last gallery is given over to a tour de force display of work that is both exuberantly performative and subsumed within what the artist has compressed into a not-merely-decorative backdrop. Against one wall is an almost banner-scale inkjet print of the artist all but spread-eagled in an expansive, wildly balletic leaping pose within a wispy, vaporous aura (Body of Evidence: Latent Print, 2024). Against the other (and filling it floor to ceiling) is what appears to be a block-printed wallpaper that, on closer inspection display repeating matrices of asterisks which are themselves composed of identical miniature prints of the artist in grand jeté leaps—like a six-pointed ‘Spirit (or snowflake) of Ecstasy’. Perched salon-style across the wall are small (9×12 sq.in.) transfer prints of the artist in variously balletic or yogic poses, with gestural watercolor and pencil markings. Also titled Body of Evidence (January through December, 2024), they collectively offered a kind of reification of the aspirational ‘reclamation’ staked out in her Plaintiff’s Testimony—not of identity, per se, but of a fully realized self.