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Tianguis: Pacific Standard Time

By , September 14, 2011 5:33 pm

Tianguis Outdoor Art Market

Saturday, September 24, 6–10pm 

ARTIST BIOGRAPHY

Ana Guajardo’s Tianguis-the Nahuatl word for open air markets dating from the Mesoamerican period and still in existence today-is a project examining a contemporary community of vendor-artists in Los Angeles that participate in and innovate the urban, public market culture. It is a collaborative project utilizing the participation of a special community of artists and entrepreneurs that are relationally connected through Latino cultural events and venues in East Los Angeles. While this neighborhood has served as a hub to unite them annually at specific events, their work and residencies are by no means confined here.

The Tianguis Project aims to illuminate the complex network of art, commodity, politics and culture that are activated in the temporal and spatial constructs of these markets.

ARTIST BIOGRAPHY

Ana Guajardo is an independent curator, UCLA World Arts and Culture graduate student, and professional artisan and creator of Los Switcheros a  line of handmade home décor products.  Her line is sold in over two dozen stores nation wide as well as weekly events, festivals and conferences in the Los Angeles area and beyond. She has worked in a curatorial assistant capacity at the New Mexico Hispanic Cultural Center, the Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe, and has recently curated exhibitions in Los Angeles.  She’s Crafty was her first exhibit presented at Imix Books in Eagle Rock, which showcased the work of Los Angeles artesanas including clothing and jewelry designers, urban healers, altar makers, paper mache and other media. MaquiL.A., presented at SPARC similarly incorporated these artists and considered the interventions their works staged by creating alternative modes of production and consumption in a city with the most sweat shops in the US.  Guajardo organized a group of artisans as part of Suzanne Lacy’s performance project Stories of Work and Survival, presented as part of MOCA’s WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution.  Her commitment as a curator is to exhibit cultural histories in which art plays a vital role to incite dialogue and action.

BAM Fest 2011

By , July 25, 2011 12:23 pm
Get the Flash Player to see the wordTube Media Player.
BREWERIES |  ART |  MUSIC |  FOOD |  GALLERY
TICKETS AVAILABLE AT THE DOOR – $40
BAM Fest is Back for Seconds!
18th Street Arts Center is bringing its renowned Craft Beer Festival, BAM Fest (Beer, Art & Music Festival) to Santa Monica on October 9, 2011. BAM Fest is a celebration of locally produced art, music and California’s finest craft beers – 20 breweries, 4 bands, 3 galleries, open artist studios, an artist market, and gourmet food trucks make up this one-of-a-kind event. All proceeds benefit 18th Street Arts Center, a Santa Monica 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.

Cost: $40 at the door gets you a BAM Fest logo tasting glass and unlimited sampling, 5 hours of live music, exploration of artist studios and galleries and the joy of drinking some of the best beers around.
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BREWERIES

 

 
   
COMPLIMENTARY WINE SAMPLES BY E.&J. GALLO WINERY
ART
COLLABORATION LABS YARN BOMBING OPEN ARTIST STUDIOS

 

MUSIC

JT ROSS & SPEEDWAY

UPSTART

sb-mag

THE ORLANDO NAPIER BAND

THE DUSTBOWL REVIVAL

FOOD

GETTING HERE
BIKE VALET: Want to not worry about driving? Interested in preserving our beautiful planet? Then bike your way to the event. The City of Santa Monica will provide a FREE Bike Valet.
FREE PARKING AVAILABLE AT: Crossroads School (Norton Campus): 1715 Olympic Blvd, Santa Monica (Enter Parking on 17th Street, just North of Olympic Blvd.) Surrounding Street Parking
GALLERY
girllikesbearrepublicPhotos from BAM 2010
SUPPORT FROM

donate facebook Follow 18thStreetArts on Twitter
18th Street Arts Center 1639 18th St., Santa Monica, CA 90404 | Phone 310.453.3711 | Fax 310.453.4347 office@18thstreet.org

Art Opening for York Chang’s “second life”

By , June 18, 2011 5:17 pm
Legacy Home Richard Newton Vincent Ramos Jerri Allyn York Chang

YORK CHANG, second life (Project Room)

June 18 – August 28

Artist Reception, Saturday, June 18, 2011, 6-10pm

Artist Statement

This project explores Los Angeles’ legacy as a site of artistic transformation and second chances,  through the poetic investigation and fictional re-construction of the Artist Actualization Services, a short-lived and obscure performance art group active in Los Angeles from 1979-1980. The underground group loosely combined the tenets of self-help movements with a strident rejection of fixed artistic identity and normative histories. In a short period of time, the Artist Actualization Services developed a small, near-fanatical following by exhorting its members to take part in a controversial cultural production strategy called “Posing,” where member artists actively thwarted the process of canonization by  wholly appropriating the identities of more well-known contemporaries in order to create attention for new work. With the help of silent collaborators on the editorial board of Southern California’s seminal performance art magazine High Performance, the Artist Actualization Services created multiple reports of their fictional actions, successfully attributed to other artists. These reports, undetected by art historians until recently, quietly subvert vested notions of authorship, and ultimately call into question the entire project of art history.

Viewers are invited to critically explore the recently-uncovered history of this enigmatic organization through a range of works and media, including photography, video, performance, and archival documents, which pose questions about the close relationship between artistic identity and art history. A new issue of High Performance magazine will be published in conjunction with the exhibition, to correct the apparent errors generated in the magazine by the Artist Actualization Services between 1979-1980.


BAM Fest Press Release-August

By , June 8, 2011 3:10 pm
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
VENUE ADDRESS: 1639 18th Street, Santa Monica, CA 90404
CONTACT: Nicole Gordillo
PHONE: 310-453-3711 ext. 106
CONTACT EMAIL: ngordillo@18thstreet.org
WEBSITE: WWW.18THSTREET.ORG
CHARGE: $35
HANDICAPPED ACCESSIBLE: Yes
CALENDAR / ART

Beer Art & Music Festival hits Santa Monica for a Good Cause!

Santa Monica, CA- On Sunday, October 9, 2011 from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m., 18th Street Arts Center, is bringing its renowned BAM Fest (Beer, Art and Music Festival) to the Westside of L.A. Held in the heart of Santa Monica, BAM Fest is a celebration of locally produced art, music and the finest craft beers around. With 20-plus breweries, 4 bands, 3 galleries, open artist studios, an artist marketplace, gourmet organic food provided by the Green Truck, bold and flavorful authentic Mexican dishes by the Border Grill Truck and sublime banh mi and Vietnamese tacos from the Nom Nom Truck, BAM Fest 2011 is poised to draw a fun crowd in its second year as Santa Monica’s ‘hoppiest’ annual event.

As the only Craft Beer Festival in Santa Monica, this year’s attendance is anticipated at close to 1,300. And the event is a steal, with tickets priced at just $35. A ticket provides you 5 hours of live music, exploration of artist studios and galleries, a live artist market with art for purchase, and unlimited tastings of some of the greatest beers around. And since all proceeds from the event directly support 18th Street Arts Center’s programs and artists, attendees can feel good about contributing to a great cause. Following 2010’s BAM Fest, Santa Monica Daily Press’ Editor in Chief, Kevin Herrera declared, “18th Street Arts Center’s first annual BAM Festival was a blast. The beer selection was excellent, with many quality SoCal microbrewers represented, and the art was appealing and the music entertaining. There’s nothing like getting tipsy for charity!”

This year 18th Street is teaming up with LA craft beer industry veterans Thomas Kelly (Library Alehouse) and Martin Svab (Naja’s Place) to help facilitate the beer side of the festival. Participating craft breweries range from big to small, including the popular and larger New Belgium and Stone Brewing to the smaller but equally great Ladyface, Bootlegger’s and Strand Brewing. From cool-fermented lagers to warm-fermented ales, the craft beer offerings at 18th Street’s Beer, Art and Music Festival offer a range of styles for tasting enjoyment. For the beer connoisseur, this year BAM Fest is showcasing unique Belgian-style beers on tap, including Duvel-Moortgat, Brasserie d’Achouffe and Ommegang. Duvel Marketing Manager, Stuart Knight says, “Last year’s event was one of the very best beer festivals I attended, with an impressive list of great breweries and beers. I am really looking forward to this year’s event.” Just as any artist painstakingly toils over each detail of a masterpiece, today’s craft brewer goes to great lengths to produce unique, award-winning works of art. With the marriage of beer, art and music, BAM Fest has brewed a one-of-a-kind fundraising event.

The music lined up for BAM Fest is just as diverse as the beer samples. From the blazing Blues infused sound of JT Ross and his rock-and-roll band Speedway, to the hard-driving funk and soulful ballads of The Orlando Napier Band, the featured music at 18th Street’s festival is sure to make attendees groove. The Santa Monica-based group Upstart is rooted in soul and R&B traditions, but maintains a restless sense of discovery playing catchy, well-crafted songs while The Dustbowl Revival mix a spicy roots cocktail with their dance-inducing live sets that merge old school bluegrass, swamp-gospel, jug-band, jump blues and the hot swing of the 1930’s.

BAM Fest attendees also get the special opportunity to explore 18th Street’s contribution to the Getty’s initiative, Pacific Standard Time: Art in L.A. 1945 – 1980, which brings more than 60 cultural institutions together for the first time to celebrate the birth of L.A.’s art scene. 18th Street’s exhibition entitled Collaboration Labs: Southern California Artists and the Artist Space Movement investigates five artists and artists groups that have been central to the alternative artist’s space movement in Southern California since the early 1970s. These makers and collectives – Rachel Rosenthal, Barbara T. Smith, Suzanne Lacy/Leslie Labowitz-Starus, Kit Galloway/Sherrie Rabinowitz, and EZTV – have all been involved in collaboration within their own work, as well as with the founding of key artist-run spaces in the Los Angeles region. Video, photography, documentation, performance and installations demonstrate how diverse art practices were in dialogue with and influential to many of the social and political movements of the last few decades. In addition, artworks are available for purchase at an artist marketplace organized by past 18th Street Artist Fellow, Anna Guajardo and the resident artists who live, work and create daily at 18th Street open their studios for attendees to experience works in progress.

Tickets are on sale at: http://18thstreet.org/even​ts/bam-fest-2011 and in person at the Library Alehouse, 2911 Main Street, Santa Monica, CA. 90405. For more information about BAM Fest 2011 and 18th Street Arts Center visit http://www.18thstreet.org.                                               #END#

18th Street Arts Center is a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization whose mission is to provoke public dialogue through contemporary art making. 18th Street is a community which values art making as an essential component of a vibrant, just and healthy society.

Art Opening for “Debating Through the Arts”

By , June 1, 2011 2:02 pm
Legacy Home Richard Newton Vincent Ramos Jerri Allyn York Chang

JERRI ALLYN and Inez S. Bush, Debating Through the Arts: Exhibition & Performance 3(18th Street Gallery)

June 18 – August 28

Artist Reception, Saturday, June 18, 2011, 6-10pm

EVENTS


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From June 3 through August, 28 in the main gallery, Artists Jerri Allyn and Inez S. Bush, with collaborating artists Juna Amano, Micol Hebron, Michele Jaquis, Carol McDowell, Marissa Mercado, Rosalyn Myles,Shana Nys Dambrot, Juliana Ostrovsky, Beth Peterson, Karl Jean Petion, Erika Reynoso, Trinidad Ruiz, Marjan Vayghan, and Erich Wise will present Debating Through the Arts:  Exhibition & Performance 3, during the summer based on a model United Nations. The accompanying Exhibition features some of the creative proposals that have emerged from Debates 1 and 2. Discreet installations include sculpture, photography, video projections, interactive stations and conceptual artwork, some of which will change during the residency.

CLICK HERE for more information on the Debating Through the Arts: Exhibition & Performance 3 project

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