Nancy Popp
Nancy Popp scales walls or climbs poles, cascading her body up, down and across architectural spaces. Her movement is recorded through video and photographs that are tied to the structures tracing the paths of her journey. More...
David Hockney
The iPad based Yorkshire landscapes of David Hockney distill a lifetime of experimentation that makes full use of the European art canon. More...
Rex Brandt
Rex Brandt specialized in watercolors and California light. This retrospective revives our appreciation for his obsessive interest in sea and sun, refreshing what we tend to take for granted. More...
Eric Fischl
Eric Fischl's impulsively provocative approach to figurative art can be seen in these watercolors and sculptures. What surprises is that to a great degree this turns out to be inadvertent. More...
Corinne Chaix
In "Submerged" surrealist Corinne Chaix draws your attention to a topsy-turvy world right around the corner. More...
Ed Moses and Larry Poons
Pairing Ed Moses and Larry Poons matters simply because it places side by side two of our best living painters who are linked by the language of paint. Both have spoken it eloquently for decades. More...
Yarn Bombing L.A.
Yarn Bombing of Los Angeles, since 2010 actively crafting installations, is full of bracing and rebellious optimism. More...
Rose Cabat
Pick up one of Rose Cabat's diminutive vases, what she calls "feelies." This still active centenerian's glazes have the feel of goatskin suede. More...
The Sarkisians
Paul and Peter Sarkisian, father and son, make art that is visually distinct, but connected by a tromp l'oeil element in both bodies of work. More...
Tim Ebner
Stuffed and embroidered, sumptuous and loopy, Tim Ebner's fish suspended or mounted atop metal rods call up lush Victorian-era curtains and funky low-brow pillows--with eyes that are slightly creepy and utterly hilarious. More...
Shepard Fairey
Shephard Fairey owns a 45 rpm cut in 1978 by Little Roger and the Goosebumps that became the basis for contemporary DJ-ing--not to mention for Fairey’s approach to appropriated art. More...
Eleanor Antin
Eleanor Antin makes incursions into modes of historical narrative art to both revive and critique the interpretation of stories we only thought we knew. More...
Roberto Gil de Montes
Longtime L.A. resident Roberto Gil de Montes invokes memories of early childhood in Mexico--Orozco murals, the symbolism of the Pre-Columbian presence--through a deployed arsenal of visual symbols. More...
Mike Kelley
There was almost nothing that the late Mike Kelley was afraid to try and subject himself or his viewer's to. This massive retrospective is consistently confrontational, suggestive, offensive as well as politically charged. Perhaps the leading artist of his generation. More...
Susan Sironi
Using scissors, scalpels and books, Susan Sironi performs artistic alchemy that transforms books into astonishing 3-D curiosities. More...
Ray Eames
Ray Eames is properly associated with her husband and collaborator Charles Eames, but she was more the artist. More...
Michael Madzo
There is an air of nostalgic calm to Michael Madzo’s surrealist collage paintings that is familiar yet mysterious, comforting yet unsettling. More...
Zimoun
The sound of one of Zimoun’s installations is the multitude of many identical noises such at raindrops or typewriters that is a musical sum of the everyday. More...