Los Angeles February 15, 2023 SPRING/BREAK Art Show returns to Los Angeles with over 60 immersive exhibitions featuring painting, sculpture, installation, video work, and more. Get 50% off tickets with code HYPERHALF50! Yes, you'll have to cross the 405 after 3 pm, but we promise it'll be worth it. | Renée Reizman Welcome to Los Angeles Art Week, the most jam-packed stretch of the year in our city’s art world. February has long been associated with the LA Art Show, but when Frieze landed here five years ago, it heralded the explosion of back-to-back fairs, exhibitions, performances, and pop-ups. This year, five fairs take place simultaneously, and if that’s not enough art for you, other institutions have strategically timed their openings and public programs to coincide with them. (And if you’re not a Frieze VIP, snagging a free drink at one of these events will certainly make you feel like one.) In our guide to LA Art Week, we’re bringing you all you need to know about the big fairs as well as all the art you can find in historic homes, at an airport, planted in a garden, spinning on a carousel, and even at a gravesite. Become a member today to help keep our reporting and criticism free and accessible to all. Become a Member THROUGH A NEW LENSE Five Southern California Views taps into the mythology of the West as an expanse for the imagination, only to decenter the human presence. | Natalie Haddad Five Southern California Views Feb. 9–Apr. 8, 2023 Gallery Luisotti, 432 South Alameda Street, Arts District (galleryluisotti.com) LA-based artists Julie Weitz and Jill Spector are reimagining the traditional Jewish garment to include a wide spectrum of identities. | Matt Stromberg CLOSING SOON Victor Estrada: Purple Mexican Oct. 6–Feb. 25, 2023 ArtCenter, Peter and Merle Mullin Gallery, 1111 South Arroyo Parkway (artcenter.edu) Purple Mexican, named for a hybrid strain of marijuana, is a 30-year survey of Victor Estrada's drawings, paintings, and sculptures showcasing his broad spectrum of influences from gritty punk aesthetics, to Chicano graphics and cartoon fantasy. Brad Phillips: I Know What I did Last Summer Jan. 7–Feb. 25, 2023 de boer, 3311 East Pico Boulevard, Boyle Heights (deboergallery.com) Canadian artist and writer Brad Phillips’s oeuvre is characterized by contradiction. His work jumps between autobiographical, photo-realistic paintings and deadpan text-based one-liners that transform familiar phrases into darkly humorous slogans. He continues to chart a course through the poles of sincerity and irony with his second solo show at de boer, I Know What I Did Last Summer, which features intimate portraits of artist Christine Brache, alongside cheeky fictional scenes from the home of director Brian De Palma, himself a genre-hopping auteur. |