Entries from September 1, 2014 - September 30, 2014

Monday
Sep292014

ARTE: Kenturah's Artist Talk

Here is the live recorded video of Kenturah's art talk that took place during Leimert Park Artwalk on Sunday.  Shawanna Davis is the moderator.

Monday
Sep152014

ARTE: Kenturah in China 

This month you can view one of Kenturah's installation hand written drawings in China at the Ucity Art Museum in Guangzhou.  The group exhibition An American Water Margin is on view now until October 10.

"Language Games" pencil on paper

Friday
Sep122014

ARTE: Hala Matar x Fruits de Mer

Hala Matar's short film!

 

Thursday
Sep112014

ARTE: Kenturah's Radio Interview

Kenturah has a great interview on OFF RAMP with John Rabe.  Click the photo to read/listen!

Saturday
Sep062014

ARTE: Animated history of Architecture

LOVING THIS!

Monday
Sep012014

ARTE: WWD

Thank you Women's Wear Daily for profiling us! And for writing about the arts revolution we are hoping to spark in Leimert Park.  It has been an incredible 6 months being open in our new neighborhood and we couldn't be more happy to be adding to Leimert's rich legacy and creating new history.

On a recent August afternoon in Los Angeles, Michelle Joan Papillion was taking a break inside her sprawling, whitewashed gallery in Leimert Park. She was a few days away from finishing preparations for a new exhibit and was enjoying a rare moment of peace before an upcoming opening. 

Papillion, in a loose-fitting tank and skirt, hasn’t had many of those moments lately. 

Since she opened her first gallery four years ago, the 32-year-old has emerged as one of L.A.’s gallerists to watch, thanks to her hit shows and prominent supporters, like Jeffrey Deitch and Franklin Sirmans, chief curator at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. 

“I wanted to be stimulated by many different things and different types of people in one space,” she says casually by way of explaining her rise in the art world. “And I know how to do that through art.”

Papillion grew up in Oakland with a deep interest in the arts, though she wasn’t quite sure what form that interest would take. After high school, she pursued an art history degree at Howard University in Washington, D.C., but her real education came from the people she encountered socially on trips to gallery openings in Manhattan in the early Aughts.

Read the rest of the article online here