Los Angeles March 15, 2023 In their exhibition at the Hollyhock House, Louise Bonnet and Adam Silverman engage with the building’s peculiarities — and its origin story. | Matt Stromberg SPONSORED Over 140 game-changing artists will showcase thousands of original works at Saatchi Art’s The Other Art Fair this March 30–April 2 in LA. Catch special Guest Artist ANGELYNE, live DJ sets, exciting installations, food trucks and drinks, and more. Discover art less ordinary — book your tickets today. Use code HYPER20 for 20% off LATEST REVIEWS Forti started as a painter so it’s only natural that she would transform other artists and cultural workers into dancers. | Renée Reizman Choreography can be passed from one teacher to another, like an heirloom. Even as Parkinson’s steals Forti’s mobility, her groundbreaking performances will live on with her students, and beyond. Every gesture is an imprint of her relationship with her community. Simone Forti Jan. 15–Apr. 2, 2023 MOCA, 250 South Grand Avenue, Downtown (moca.org) SPONSORED William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows will stay with you long after you have left the museum galleries and you don’t want to miss it, but time is running out! It closes on Sunday, April 9. This immersive and wide-ranging 30-year retrospective includes drawings, sculpture, theater, opera, and installation. Get Tickets ON OUR RADAR Kathleen Ryan: Beachcomber Through March 25 François Ghebaly, 2245 East Washington Boulevard, Downtown (ghebaly.com) Kathleen Ryan is known for her glittering sculptures of decaying fruit, constructed from hundreds of small crystals, stones, marbles, and bits of glass. With her current solo show, she applies this mixture of fascination and revulsion to that quintessential site of California cool, freedom, and leisure: the beach. A rotten orange slice and cherry are skewered by a larger-than-life cocktail umbrella, alluding to the sickly sweet hangover that remains once the party is over. In contrast to her signature maximalism, she has crafted oversized clam shells from scrap car parts, their elegant industrial curves tinged with a melancholic sense of abandonment. Gaetano Pesce: Dear Future Through March 31 Future Perfect, 1800 Camino Palermo Street, Hollywood Hills (thefutureperfect.com) Architect and designer Gaetano Pesce’s work is characterized by bold colors, organic forms, experimental materials, and a whimsy that offers a vision of Modernism quite different from the understated, rectilinear uniformity of the International Style. He uses techniques like pouring colored urethane to thwart industrial standardization, giving near-identical objects their own personalities. Dear Future brings together over fifty years of furniture and sculpture from the mercurial master, including an updated version of his iconic 1969 curvacious “UP5_6” recliner chair, made this time from recycled corks. Korakrit Arunanondchai: Painting, Prayer, Text Through April 15 Clearing, 530 North Western Avenue, East Hollywood (c-l-e-a-r-i-n-g.com) Korakrit Arunanondchai’s latest show includes paintings and sculptures shaped by processes of destruction and creation, reflecting a conflicted relationship with home. The exhibition features spirit houses which began as doll houses built by the artist’s mother, which were then burned and remade with elements from traditional Thai spirit houses. Large history paintings are made through a similarly destructive process during which Arunanondchai collages onto denim canvases, then sets them aflame, mixing the ashes and performance photography with unburned denim to create works that depict their own demise. Become a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a Member |