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Los AngelesAugust 3, 2022 • View in browserYour Concise Los Angeles Art Guide for August 2022Your list of must-see, fun, insightful, and very Los Angeles art events this month, including Rae Klein, Blake Daniels, Margaret Garcia, Andrea Bowers, and more. | Matt Stromberg This month's exhibitions offer vibrant and challenging explorations of place, identity, and history. Some dig deep into the geographic and cultural fabric of the city, while others introduce artists from across the country and the world, whose work compliments the buzzing energy of summer in the city. LOOKING AHEAD Steve Keene in action from his Brooklyn Studio “Cage” (2021) (photo by and courtesy Daniel Efram) Steve Keene Art Show The Steve Keene Art Show is a career retrospective featuring hand-painted multiples, a site-specific mural, and rarely-seen early work from this “Johnny Appleseed of art,” as Elsa Longhauser, founder of the ICA LA, dubbed him. Rae Klein: LOW VOICE OUT LOUD Rae Klein’s haunting, dreamlike paintings feature familiar objects — a horse, a candelabra, a pair of eyes — but the juxtapositions offer little in the way of explanation. Her spare, surreal compositions invite viewers to construct their own narratives. PHILTH HAUS: LYLEX 1.0 Curated by Mandy Harris Williams, the exhibition features PHILTH HAUS’s injection of the blood of a person undergoing hormonal and dietary modulation therapies into oyster mushrooms and investigating its implications. Support Hyperallergic's independent journalismBecome a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a MemberLATEST REVIEWS Leonora Carrington’s Little-Known Explorations of Jewish MysticismIn her designs for S. Ansky’s play The Dybbuk, the artist blends various visual and mythological strands of her European background with those of her adopted home of Mexico. | Matt Stromberg Shirley Tse’s Ecology of the EverydayIn her art, Tse confronts the hypocrisies of our larger environmental reality, in which the time to search for sustainable models is running out. | Vanessa Holyoak Mika Rottenberg Mines the Banality and Allure of SpectacleDespite themes of alienation, fragmentation, and “global domination,” there are indeed elements of lightness, wonder, and curiosity in Rottenberg’s work. | Matt Stromberg CLOSING SOON Matthew Thomas: Enlightenment at the California African American Museum (all photos by Elon Schoenholz, all images courtesy the California African American Museum) Laggardism Beatriz Cortez: One Eye Yes, One Eye No Matthew Thomas: Enlightenment
Blake Daniels: Triumph of the Southern Suburbs ON VIEW IN MUSEUMS & GALLERIES Adam Parker Smith: Crush Deborah Roberts: I’m Regeneration: Black Cinema 1898–1971 Ozzie Juarez: Por Debajo All Opposing Players Clifford Prince King: Raspberry Blow Score for Here: Jimena Sarno
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