If you’re interested in attending an event, check out Jesse Fleming’s “Jane the Baptist,” which uses footage of L.A.
If you’re planning on just wandering around, start with L.A.’s own Anat Egbi Gallery, featuring works by local artists. so Im finally doing it, with my gay sex-dramedy, Santa Frances. This year, with contributions from L.A.’s Ghebaly Gallery, David Kordansky Gallery, and Club Pro, the fair is poised to bring a great home game. Become a patron of Santa Frances today: Get access to exclusive content and experiences. “ALAC is a product of Los Angeles’ unique cultural community composed of an incredibly diverse array of artists, galleries, curators, institutions, collectors and enthusiasts.” “As the international art community looks towards Los Angeles as a new global epicenter, it is essential to have an event that draws upon a comprehensive notion of the city,” said Tim Fleming, founder and director of Art Los Angeles Contemporary, in a press release.
Think of it as the Sundance-style, beginning of the year reset button for the art world. The art fair is a chance for collectors to catch one-of-a-kind pieces early in the year, as well as for curators and all art-conscious individuals to get a sense of what kind of new work is circulating around. If not, this weekend is your chance to start re-thinking L.A.’s place in the art world as Art Los Angeles Contemporary, currently in its 9th year, rolls into town, by way of the Barker Hanger in Santa Monica. County Museum? Seen an experimental film at The Hammer? Taken the shuttle ride from the Getty parking lot to the palatial Getty Museum? Entdecken Sie Gay Art Zeichnung/ direkt vom Künstler/ Drawing/ Erotik Männerakt Sexy nackt in der großen Auswahl bei eBay. Help me produce gay fine art, including gay sketches, modern gay art, gay drawings, gay 3d. Despite the staggering number of small galleries and respected museums around town, the outdated, bizarre sense of L.A.-as-vapid-strip-mall still persists in the minds of outsiders and inhabitants alike. If you like to see same-sex art, then you are on the right path. If you happen to recall Bette Porter’s passionate defense of L.A.’s place in the art world on “The L Word,” you’re probably already of the opinion that Los Angeles, as far as fine art is concerned, tends to get a bad rap.