Past Exhibitions
2018
December 2018
November 2018
Wishlist 6
Gabba Gallery’s signature affordable art show returns for the sixth year in a row! Wishlist 6 opens November 17. More than 100 local and international artists. Prices start at $50 and never exceed $1000. And it’s cash & carry! That means that when you purchase art you get to take it home right away and the curators will hang something new in its place. The show keeps evolving and the atmosphere becomes electric! Don’t miss this once-a-year chance to find stunning art at unbeatable prices. Curated by Jason Ostro and Elena Jacobson.
October 2018
Gabba Gallery invites you to the opening of Tetralogy, four simultaneous solo exhibitions by four superstars of the contemporary poster art world: Jim Pollock, AJ Masthay, Jermaine Rogers, and Joey Feldman. Collectively these artists have created posters for many of America’s most iconic musical acts including Phish, The Grateful Dead, Black Sabbath, Neil Young, David Bowie, Queens of the Stoneage, Foo Fighters, The Cure, Nine Inch Nails, Tool, Pearl Jam, Primus, and The Pixies. Their work has been highly influential in the resurgence of the gigposter art form and their original art and limited-edition prints are highly sought after by collectors worldwide.
Pollock, Masthay, Rogers, and Feldman will convene at Gabba Gallery in Los Angeles, each showcasing his own individual collection. Expect to see original fine art, screen prints, test prints, gig posters, art toys, doodled and defaced prints, and other rare treasures from the artists’ personal archives. For Tetralogy each artist created a portrait of one of the other artists in the show. Curated by Jason Ostro and Elena Jacobson.
September 2018
MIKE HABS | OLGA PONOMARENKO | CANTSTOPGOODBOY | NICHOLAS BONAMY
Chicago-native Mike Habs diverges from his previous expressionist work with (gas)Lit, his latest solo exhibition. In this highly conceptual collection the artist uses small zip lock bags commonly used to sell drugs to create provocative mosaics. Habs calls attention to both positive and negative aspects of modern culture by focusing on themes of fantasy, luxury, and death.
Adorable animals abound in Olga Ponomarenko’s delightful new show Angelos. Each canvas features a woodland creature standing in front of a wall painted with graffiti angel wings. The collection was inspired by street artist Colette Miller’s Global Angel Wings Project and Renaissance painter Fra Angelico’s brightly colored angels. Ponomarenko’s angelic creatures convey a simple yet vital message, “You have a paradise here on earth you just need to stop wrecking it.”
CANTSTOPGOODBOY returns to Gabba Gallery with Eleven, his newest collection of mixed media pop art. David Bowie, John Lennon, Yoko Ono, and a Native American chief explode off the canvas thanks to the artist’s trademark combination of layered grayscale painting, vintage comic book collage, splattered backgrounds, and sparkling diamond dust. In a series of smaller works on paper, Snoopy irreverently flips the bird atop one color field after another.
In Gray, his latest collection of mixed-media cityscapes, Nicholas Bonamy continues to celebrate the quiet beauty of Los Angeles. He begins each piece with an image captured from the freeway or on walk through residential hills then treats it with his signature layering of paint and collage. Bonamy’s gauzy vistas ooze grace and elegance, reminding us that serenity can be found in unexpected places if one is willing look carefully enough.
August 2018
Remix 2018
Gabba Gallery and Adopt the Arts invite you to experience Remix: The Art of Music. This special exhibition features artwork by 70+ local and international visual artists who used music as their inspiration. Curated by Jason Ostro and Elena Jacobson, the show will be on view at Gabba Gallery August 4 – 25, 2018. A portion of all sales will benefit Adopt the Arts which helps fund arts programs in elementary schools.
One section of Remix focuses on artworks designed to look like album covers. As was the case with Gabba’s past exhibitions Cratedigger (2016) and Cratedigger vol. 2 (2017) all these pieces will be 12 inches square, the same size as classic record sleeve. Each artist created an album cover for a different band, some real and some imagined. Viewing them is like flipping through a wild and fantastic crate of records.
For the rest of Remix, artists were given no restrictions at all. Anything related to any kind of music was welcomed. The results are dazzlingly diverse and inspiring.
June 2018
Seattle-based artist Alex Achaval presents Altered Panorama, a collection of enchanting contemporary portraits. He brings a fresh approach to the classic art form by incorporating three dimensional objects like paintbrushes, sequins, or rhinestones into the pieces. The results are unexpected and delightful.
In his debut solo show, Just Deserts, Los Angeles photographer Jim Donnelly exhibits stunning shots of deserts across the western United States. These haunting landscapes are uninhabited but feature artifacts of human presence: an abandoned truck, a crumbling shack, a graffiti-covered boulder, a tattered couch. The poignant photographs feel almost portrait-like, prompting the viewer to wonder about these objects’ past and the people who deserted them.
In her latest solo exhibition, Manipulating the Masters, figurative realist painter Christina Ramos showcases her love of art history, her remarkable technical ability, and her keen sense of humor. In one series of paintings she skillfully recreates works by Hans Holbein, the renowned 16th century portraitist, but injected with her own 21st century comedic twists (think selfie sticks, tattoos, fast food). In another series, she paints impressive portraits of Master painters in front of their famous work.
In describing his most recent show Nervous Lines, artist Septerhed states, “Life is an endless vibration of love, hate, death, and life. My work is a tribute to this frequency.” His black and white illustrations as well as his brightly colored paintings on canvas and panel radiate this energetic vibration through his signature street art style.
April 2018
BORDERLESS: LATIN AMERICA
Six of Latin America’s premier street artists converge in Los Angeles for Borderless: Latin America, an eye-popping exhibition at Gabba Gallery. Four Colombians, DjLu, Erre, Toxicoómano Callejero, and Lesivo, will show alongside Binho Ribeiro from Brazil and Iskar from Mexico. This exciting international collection, curated by Jason Ostro and Elena Jacobson, opens April 21.
The six artists’ distinct styles evolved on the streets of metropolises like Bogotá, São Paulo, and Mexico City. Now they channel the energy and complexity of life in those bustling urban centers onto the gallery walls of LA. Vibrant color, bold stencil-work, and fearless political commentary abound in this stunning celebration of Latin American street art.
March 2018
Essi Zimm returns to Gabba Gallery with another stunning mixed-media exhibition. Entomophily, an insect-themed collection, features large works on panel as well as smaller works on paper. Zimm’s signature layering technique combines oil painting and paper collage. Her dynamic shapes, vibrant colors, and rich textures seem to swarm then coalesce. The results are splendid, teeming with movement and vitality.
Bioworkz presents Ornation, a collection of incredibly intricate drawings of animals. The artist masterfully adorns each creature with ornate patterns using pen & ink, ballpoint pen, fine liners, India ink, and colored pencils on cold press illustration board or watercolor paper.
Amy Smith’s latest exhibition, Power. vol 1, is an exuberant celebration of female empowerment. Inspired by the #MeToo and #TimesUp movements, this bold series of mixed media portraits explores what it means to be a woman in our current society. Smith utilizes women’s fashion magazines that represent her love of fashion but contempt for consumerism. The strong women she portrays remind us that now more than ever we must teach our girls and self-identifying women to love themselves and be proud of who they are.
RLFKE · Donna Bates · Corban Lundborg · Em Wafer
The notoriously elusive Toronto native RLFKE plants his flag on the LA art scene with his fearless debut US solo show, Scoop. The anonymous contemporary artist challenges the narratives of both tradition and modernity with bold, colorful pieces oozing with his signature street style.
Native Californian Donna Bates delivers a stunning collection of oil paintings in her new exhibition, Courageous Beauty. The self-taught artist specializes in capturing the essence of strong, independent, sexy, powerful, women, or Bad-ass Chicks as she prefers to call them. Her most recent series, “War Paint and Curlers” speaks to women’s rights, struggles and part in the human condition.
Living between two contrasting worlds has become routine for Corban Lundborg. The artist has a creative career flourishing in Hollywood while maintaining a demanding role in a military combat camera squadron in Charleston, South Carolina. Inspired by this experience, the paintings in his latest show, Half & Half, focus on bestriding cultures.
New Zealand painter Em Wafer returns to Gabba Gallery with a new collection of work titled Reality Shift. Her dreamy canvases transport the viewer to soothing and delicious alternate realities where simple delights like palm trees, bubbles, and sunsets dominate.
January 2018
Dytch66
Evolution
Robert “Dytch66” Gomez emerged in Los Angeles the 1980’s when graffiti became a lifestyle. Dytch66 brings us his first solo show of 2018: Evolution. He uses motifs and subject matter such as water and animals to exemplify the evolution of his style while maintaining his roots in the LA graffiti scene.
Cyrus Howlett
Give and Take
In his second solo show Cyrus Howlett explores the expressive power of hands. He captures the essential role they play in the ebb and flow of creation and destruction; their ability to give and take. Vibrant energetic brushstrokes of red, yellow, and teal pop against fields of raw plywood. The results are fresh, evocative, and unmistakably modern.
Spacegoth
The Void
Spacegoth has a niche in knowing how to make darkness feel inviting and accessible. The paintings in her latest exhibition depict hilarious grim reapers, endearing devils, and enchanting white-eyed woodland animals. Spacegoth’s new show will invite you to step into the void, and maybe even embrace it.
Kate Kelton
ARTSTAR
Using acrylics on various found and assembled woods, Kelton adorns the faces of some favorite artists in the headdresses her great grandfather sculpted onto a train station in Prague. Exploring the theme that art is immortal, Kelton swaps granite for graphite, plaster for paint, and use natural tones to replace ancient, godlike beings, with the fresh blood of the art world; apotheosis through reclaimed, reapplied art nouveau--because "ArtStars are forever."
December 2017
November 2017
Wishlist 5
Voted LA’s “Best Art Gallery” in LA Weekly’s Best of 2017, Gabba Gallery is hosting the second opening of Wishlist 5! The show opened in November and has gone through a series of curatorial evolutions since. Come see what we’ve saved for last! Everything is under $1000, and you get to take it home right off our gallery wall! How’s that for instant gratification this holiday season? Then see what we bring out of the Gabba upstairs collection to fill the new empty space. The second opening is December 16th, 2017 from 7-11pm. DJ Jonathan Williams spinning fresh beats, and amazing tacos served outside. Parking at 3125 Beverly (enter off Dillon) or street parking or Uber/Lyft.
October 2017
Hero brings his bold street art style to the gallery with Shadows of Hope, a new exhibition of stenciled paintings. Each colorful piece conveys a clear and direct message to the viewer, sometimes political, often playful, but always powerful and compelling.
Growing Up is a nostalgic journey through Lucas Raynaud’s childhood by way of paintings and sculpture. The artist highlights cultural influences from his youth with his whimsically oversized renditions of beloved 80s touchstones like cassette tapes and floppy disks.
Expressive, soulful eyes abound in Outer, Collin Salazar’s new collection of watercolor paintings. Rendered in ethereal jewel tones on white backgrounds, his faces captivate the viewer with their dreamy intensity.
In Fiction City 2, New Zealand native Dcypher focuses on the architectural beauty of urban life. His mostly monochromatic streetscapes are all uninhabited, but still full of life. The artist masterfully plays with perspective to breathe movement and energy into stationary structures such as utility poles, street signs, and buildings.
September 2017
Nicholas Bonamy’s stunning cityscapes in Preapocolyptic Daydreams portray Los Angeles as a serene wonderland where vast polka dotted skies hover above candy colored buildings. The city’s hills, bridges, warehouses, train yards and more are enchantingly rendered on delicious mixed-media panels.
The City of Angels is also Patrick Haemmerlein’s muse in his latest exhibition, Living Image. His evocative mixed-media pieces capture LA’s beaches, mountains, and urban vistas using the artist’s trademark blend of photography, painting, book pages, and sheet music.
Morley is a Los Angeles-based street artist that specializes in bold, typographic posters which he wheatpastes within the urban landscape. The text-based pieces in his latest gallery show, A Beginner’s Guide to Mending, also blend humor, hope and the artist’s unique perspective on life, while allowing the viewer’s personal experiences to inform each message's connotation.
In his second solo exhibition at Gabba Gallery, mixed-media artist Toshee delivers vibrant streetscapes of Los Angeles and its inhabitants. The show explores cultural intersections that occur throughout LA, particularly in neighborhoods with strong immigrant traditions. The show’s title, LAyered, refers to this urban layering as well as the artist’s signature technique.
August 2017
CRATEDIGGER 2
In the digital age of the music industry, fewer are the days spent at the record store, thumbing through dusty crates filled with vinyl records. But the memory is not lost on many of us, as it is still undeniably entrancing to flip through visually striking covers that speak to the music they hold within.
As a record collector, artist, and gallery owner, it was a natural fit for Jason Ostro to curate an art show with this theme in mind. Gabba Gallery hosted its first Cratedigger show in 2016 with over 80 artists submitting work from all over the world. The success and enthusiasm from the artists and viewers has resulted in Cratedigger Vol. 2 opening August 12, 2017.
Every piece must be 12x12 inches however, the band can be real or imagined, and the album can be real or imagined. This creative freedom allows for a vast array of submissions, from pieces that closely resemble well-recognized albums covers to completely imagined album artwork for non-existent bands. With over 90 artists submitting one or more album covers, you might get a whiff of nostalgia similar to the experience of digging through crates at a record store, complete with the opportunity to take something home if it speaks to you.
July 2017
Val Kilmer
Icon Go On, I'll Go On
Kilmer, best known as an actor, uses painting to investigate the nature of Icons and to explore issues of celebrity, identity, reproduction, and American mythic archetypes.
June 2017
In Real American Fantasy, M. Christy delivers some of his most accessible and fun paintings to date. The artist’s signature strangeness and electric color palettes remain but his narrative choices are simpler and more poetic than much of his deliberately complex past work. The show is appropriate for audiences of all ages.
The title of Keith Dugas’ show, Would It Kill You to Smile?, perfectly captures the artist’s sardonic world view. Often inspired by music, his work can be cynical, dark, ironic, political, serious, humorous, sarcastic, or playful but it is always intelligent, provocative, and exquisitely executed.
Los Angeles wunderkind CANTSTOPGOODBOY continues to delight viewers with his playful pop concoctions. His latest exhibition RealFake: Wannabe features brightly colored mixed media pieces of Captain America, Marilyn Monroe, and others using spray paint, acrylic, and his trademark strips of vintage comics.
Rene Gagnon’s lively paintings explode with bold street art style. His clever vignettes are simply but powerfully rendered using spray paint, stencils, acrylic, and brightly colored frames. The show, aptly titled WiFi is A Girl’s Best Friend, explores the extreme nature of today's top obsession.
April 2017
Leba, a Los Angeles based artist with roots in street art, presents his most recent gallery exhibition Lunaire. Inspired by the relationship between woman and the moon, this collection of evocative paintings transports the viewer on a mystical journey.
New Zealand painter Em Wafer delivers canvases of stunning dreamscapes. The delights of earth, land, and sea converge in a powerful palette of black, magenta, yellow and aquamarine. Life Stories is Wafer’s US solo debut.
Bits & Pieces brings together a selection of Joey Feldman’s finest work of the past three years. Pop culture icons, music posters, and fantastical characters explode on paper in his signature ink-splattered style.
Max Neutra presents Power Up, a vibrant collection of new paintings. The pieces radiate positivity, coaxing viewers not only to think about Camaraderie, Wisdom, Poise, Vision, and Ascension but to actually feel these emotions. The artist’s lovable cutout bunnies appear alongside an endearing menagerie of other creatures including a charming fox, a serene giraffe, and a knowing owl.
March 2017
February 2017
In his latest exhibition, photographer Jeffrey Sklan continues with his signature botanical series. Each stunning shot captures an individual flower in splendid detail. The photographs read like portraits with each bloom simply and elegantly presented as a unique amalgamation of texture, color, shape, beauty, and even imperfection.
In his desert studio near Palm Springs, sculptor Christopher James breathes new life into discarded steel. He takes dense metal destined for the junkyard and transforms it into lively, often whimsical works of art. His latest exhibition features exciting new sculptures certain to inspire smiles and wonder.
Los Angeles artist Spacegoth presents delightful new paintings in her debut solo exhibition. Some pieces feature loveable grim reapers in darkly humorous situations. Other canvases portray white-eyed animals with paint dripping from their bodies, that simultaneously seem both haunting and sweet.
In his debut solo exhibition, artist 8333 showcases new work in his signature minimalist pop style. The show explores themes of connection and isolation through pictograms rendered with precision, sophistication, and understatement.
January 2017
Jason Woodside / Kate Kelton / L. Croskey / Carly Ealey
New York-based Jason Woodside applies his signature happy, geometric style to his latest work. The abstract canvases radiate joy and energy with their intersecting fields of dots and stripes in vibrant color palettes.
In her debut solo exhibition, Joe’s Train Station, Kate Kelton delivers romantic monochromatic paintings depicting classical architecture, natural, and sculptural elements. Her work radiates an art-nouveau vibe with a cool, modern edge.
L. Croskey’s collages are inspired by vintage pin-up art, advertising and design. In his latest show, Cut That Shit Out!, he playfully combines images of voluptuous women, animals, fantasy landscapes, and bold patterns.
In her latest exhibition, Here and Thereafter, Carly Earley delights us with hypnotic painted panels of seductive women. She invites us to wonder at these mysterious sirens with piercing eyes and sensuous, flowing hair.
2016
December 2016
November 2016
WISHLIST 4
Gabba Gallery brings affordable art to Los Angeles with Wishlist, their fourth annual signature show. With nothing costing more than $1000, this is a great show for new collectors or those looking to buy original holiday gifts. Artwork by over 75 local and international artists will be sold in a “cash and carry” format. When something is sold, new artwork will be hung in its place creating a constantly evolving exhibition.
September 2016
Max Neutra, best known for his cutout street art bunnies and his "Bunny Explosion" mural on Abbot Kinney, presents No Man's Land, a vibrant collection of new paintings. The pieces tackle themes of alienation, fear, and personal evolution. His signature bunnies feature prominently.
Liseth Amaya has roots in Los Angeles, Central America and, most recently, the UK. These diverse cultures converge to inspire her latest paintings. Her confident brushstrokes, expressive figures, floral flourishes, and dreamy settings captivate and transport the viewer.
Peter Greco's text-based paintings transform traditional calligraphy and typography typically associated with historic manuscripts into sleek and modern works of art. Greco is an instructor of expressive typography at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena where he also teaches a calligraphy workshop.
What would it look like if Spongebob Squarepants exploded? Or if Spiderman's face melted off? In Matt Gondek's upcoming solo exhibition, Glow in the Dark, the Los Angeles based pop artist deconstructs these pop culture icons and others. Stylistically the paintings are as crisp and colorful as the original cartoons which creates a striking tonal contrast with their content: depictions of utter destruction.
August 2016
CRATEDIGGER
CRATEDIGGER: The Lost Art of Album Cover Art celebrates one of the twentieth century’s most influential art forms, the record sleeve cover. Curated by Jason Ostro, the exhibition showcases the work of 85 local and international artists. Each artist has imagined a cover design for a real or fictional album. Just like classic record covers, every piece in the show is 12” x 12”.
May 2016
CONNECT
Venice-based street artist Jules Muck unveils her latest work in Available. Her bright, whimsical paintings are at times humorous, at times irreverent, but always radiate energy and confidence.
World-renowned entertainment photographer, Jeff Kravitz, has spent decades capturing indelible images of iconic stars and pop culture moments. His first gallery show, Photography for the Soul, will showcase his vibrant photographs of celebrities and civilians.
Noah Emhurt’s paintings in The Doheny Challenge feature simple figurative line drawings juxtaposed with bold, raw brushstrokes. His work captivates the viewer by teetering on the line between order and chaos.
Acclaimed Australian artist Stormie Mills presents A Fish Tale, his first solo exhibition in the US. The pieces use his signature monochromatic palette and poignant characters to tell the extraordinary story of man’s friendship with a fish.
April 2016
ROYAL CURATION
Four Shows Curated by
G. James Daichendt - Word
Mat Gleason - Blood on the Track Lights
Isabel Rojas-Williams - I Am More
Cindy Schwarzstein - /Brit-fluence(d)/
Royal Curation at the Gabba Gallery features simultaneous exhibitions curated by four of LA’s most respected art experts: G. James Daichendt, Mat Gleason, Isabel Rojas-Williams, and Cindy Schwarzstein.
G. James Daichendt is Dean of Arts and Humanities and Professor of Art History at Point Loma Nazarene University. His show, Word, spotlights text-based art by Robbie Conal, Desire Obtain Cherish, Macha Suzuki, John Van Hamersveld, and Feodor Voronov.
Mat Gleason, founder of Coagula Art Journal, showcases paintings by Alex S. Arizpe and Vanessa Contreras in Blood on the Track Lights. His exhibition explores the passion and intensity of life’s most extreme moments.
Former executive director of Mural Conservancy Los Angeles, Isabel Rojas-Williams, highlights female artists in I Am More. The show includes works by Lydia Emily Archibald, June Edmonds, Rosalind McGary, Colette Miller, Mei Xian Qiu, Christina Ramos, Sandy Rodriguez. Ester Petschar, a madonnara, will create a chalk pastel on the gallery floor.
In /Brit-fluence(d)/, Cartwheel Art founder Cindy Schwarzstein presents art influenced by British cuture. The mix of LA and UK based artists includes Jonny Arnold, Will Blanchard aka Wildcat Will, Nicholas Bonamy, Brandon Boyd, Inkie, Fanakapan, Robert “Sticky” Shaw, Joey Feldman, Teale Hatheway, Himbad, Plastic Jesus, Jay Kantor, Dr. Paul Koudounaris, Captain Kris, Stone Larkin, MEAR ONE, Xany Rudoff, Otto Schade, and Cherie Strong.
March 2016
Gabba Gallery proudly presents Layers, four simultaneous solo exhibitions featuring artists Essi Zimm, Tōshee, Nicholas Bonamy, and Joey Feldman. The four distinct shows, curated by Jason Ostro, will be on view from March 12 to April 2.
Essi Zimm’s artwork delves into fairy tales and indigenous legends with mixed-media layers of paper, pencil, ink, paint and more. The characters and meanings of these colorful stories are evoked through guttural marks as the viewer explores Zimm’s visual translations.
Influenced by his graphic design background, Tōshee employs bold, vibrant elements to arrest the viewer’s gaze. His technique incorporates both additive and subtractive processes with paint, pencil, ink, epoxy, and stencils that come together to produce images reminiscent of Eastern art.
The work of Nicholas Bonamy reflects the many layers of contemporary life happening all at once. Actions, thoughts, and dreams are revealed differently from every distance as the viewer’s focus drifts from one perspective to another in an experience akin to daydreaming while driving.
Fun is what you feel when viewing the characters exposed in the exuberant artworks of Joey Feldman. His colorful use of mixed media and gestural marks, lines, and layers ultimately add up to an energetic portrait of the eccentricities revealed in a character.
February 2016
CURATE THIS: PART DEUX
Curate This: Part Deux is the second annual exhibition highlighting the artwork of well-respected Los Angeles Artist/Curators presented by The Gabba Gallery from February 6 to February 26, 2016. The 2000 sq. ft. Gabba Gallery will be filled with the work of contemporary Los Angeles tastemakers who both create and curate art.
“These talented artists are also the curators whose influence is being felt in many galleries in Los Angeles today. Having the work of these minds together under one roof annually is a great record of L.A.’s place in the landscape of the art world.” - Jason Ostro
The energy of transformation is predominant in this showing of artwork, with explosions of color and explorations of form. The viewer is compelled forward from room to room, and reflective of Los Angeles itself, the diversity of the work generates both jarring juxtapositions and, ultimately, improbably harmony. Artists such as critic, writer, and curator Shana Nys Dambrot, artist/curator Mitchelito Orguiola and Agapito Doronio of Collective Aesthetics are among those included in this survey.
The artists included in Curate This 2 are contemporary Los Angeles-based curator/artists selected by Gabba Gallery curators Jason Ostro and Phil Santos as a testament to their vision for the Los Angeles art scene. Artists include: A.S. Ashley, Agapito Doronio, Britt Harrison, Dani Dodge, Daniel Rolnik, David Brady, David Cedeño, Huss Hardan, Jason Ostro, Juri Koll, Kat Monroe, Daniella Batsheva , Kristine Schomaker, Lisa Derrick, Mark Farina, Mark Satterlee, Mark Waldman, Mitchelito Orquiola, Nathan Cartwright, Osceola Refetoff, Peter Goode, Phil Santos, Radhika Hersey, Dicapria, Shana Nys Dambrot, Skye Amber Sweet, and Ted Meyer.
January 2016
METRO DREAMS
Collectively entitled Metro Dreams, The Gabba Gallery presents another installment of its signature show style of four separate mini exhibitions, curated by Jason Ostro and Phil Santos. Moncho1929, Vakseen, Amy Smith, and Hero are the four artists showing their diverse yet loosely connected works.
Much loved Moncho1929 will be exhibiting another brilliant twist on his signature style with a salute to our winged friends. An antidote to the usual definition of beauty is found in Vakseen’s unique, well executed painting style of colliding color with cubism combined with realism for the love of women’s complicated legacy in today’s culture. Amy Smith will show her collage style using paint and collage to make use of negative space in portraiture, akin to traditional stenciling. Entitled Inheritance, in his exhibition, HERO addresses contemporary social issues and what flows through and is handed down to the next generation. He creates his works via multimedia with a contemporary virtuosity in aerosol.