Coagula - Est. 1992 (original) (raw)
As I prepare to step down as President of Inglewood Open Studios at the end of this year, I find myself reflecting on this remarkable and difficult journey that began almost two decades ago. Inglewood was finding its rhythm when I arrived, poor yet armed with a shiny new degree from nearby Otis College of … Read more
Leigh Salgado’s solo show PISSED ‘N BLISSED opens Saturday, October 19 with a reception 5-8 PM at LAUNCH LA Gallery, 170 S. LaBrea Ave. in Los Angeles. The show runs thru November 9. I had exclusive access to the art studio of Leigh Salgado because I am her husband and it is our garage. She … Read more
In 1994, legendary Los Angeles art collector Frederick R. Weisman died, leaving the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation under the direction of his wife and former Getty Museum conservator Billie Milam. Today the Foundation’s main Holmby Hills house, annex pavilion, and surrounding gardens are accessible to the public (by appointment only) on guided tours. The foundation also … Read more
Rochelle Botello’s recent work continues her quest to be an uncompromising formalist who takes the stuffiness and rigidity out of the “art for art’s sake” approach. Her superpower is a talent to render whimsy and make it no less serious than any other grand philosophical foray into the meaning of things. Refreshingly free of theoretical … Read more
Over the last decades, value shifted from art to artist. We still travel to see singular works of art: da Vinci’s Mona Lisa, Caravaggio’s Medusa, Klimt’s The Kiss, Picasso’s Guernica, The Rothko Chapel, The Lightening Field by Walter De Maria. Yet it is no longer enough for an artwork to be authentic. The audience wants to see beyond the art, to know … Read more
I’ve seen hundreds of museum shows around the world. This exhibit is the worst. Its only standout feature is that it is clearly the worst, that no other show comes to mind to even compete with it.
Two giants of art, two great Modernists, Richard Serra and Frank Stella passed within a few weeks of each other in the Spring of 2024. There were many parallels in their careers but in this most hectic, political year, these passings give pause. Can art, considering the current climate, ever be apolitical again? Triumphantly apolitical? … Read more
The press release for Songs in the Key of Mard – the solo show of Nathaniel Mellors at The Box in Downtown L.A.’s Arts District – was a musical track, accessible through a QR code. Nathaniel Mellors plays with the words “press release,” repurposing the term into a call to action. The creative license taken … Read more
Some artists leave without a trace. Some artists meticulously trace their source material. Some cultures vanish without a trace. Some people trace their past to preserve it. Perhaps they trace the path they made last night to find something they lost or maybe they trace their roots or look back for a trace of some … Read more
Julia Rooney takes lyrical modernist painting into the 21st century with a meditation on pictorial depth in her BLUEPRINT solo show at Band of Vices.