- Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions
Located in
Hollywood , Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE) is a nonprofit exhibition space and archive of thevisual arts for the city ofLos Angeles . Currently under the leadership ofCarol Stakenas , LACE contributes to the enrichment of Los Angeles’ urban landscape by engaging with timely political, social and cultural issues that shape local and global life. LACE events, including exhibitions, performances, screenings, dialogs and other public forums, strive to inspire imagination and to expand the interactions between art and audience in Los Angeles. Since1978 , LACE has presented the work of over 5,000 artists in nearly 3,000 exhibitions, screenings, performances, and works of public art, and played a key role in establishing Los Angeles as an international center for the arts.History
In the mid-1970s, artists began living in large, inexpensive lofts built into the empty warehouses of
Downtown Los Angeles . LACE was initially located in the same area on Broadway, later moving to an industrial neighborhood near the Los Angeles River, and finally to Hollywood.cite news
last = Johnson
first = Reed
title = They were here first
work =
pages =
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publisher = Los Angeles Times
date = 2003-10-16
url = http://www.latimes.com/features/home/la-hm-arts16oct16211419,1,6883564.story
accessdate = 2007-06-19 ]Founded in 1978 by a group of thirteen artists and based upon principles of grassroots community organizing and social change, LACE committed from the start to presenting experimental works of art in all media, including the then-experimental media of
performance art and video. LACE provided an early venue for artists likeLaurie Anderson ,Nancy Buchanan ,Chris Burden ,Gronk ,Ishmael Houston-Jones , Mike Kelley,Martin Kersels ,Linda Nishio ,Paper Tiger TV ,Adrian Piper ,Johanna Went ,David Wojnarowicz , andBruce and Norman Yonemoto . The presence of performance art and video in major museums suggest that these experimental media are now part of the artistic canon and testifies to the success of LACE to promote these media to a wider audience.Originally located in Downtown Los Angeles, LACE moved to Hollywood in
1994 . The Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) recognized the contribution LACE would make to the economic and cultural redevelopment of Hollywood. The CRA was an instrumental partner in locating a facility and making the move. LACE has since put down deep roots in Hollywood, providing free and low-cost programming for the neighborhood and establishing partnerships with local businesses and organizations, including theYMCA , theLos Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center ,My Friend's Place , andWoodbury University . LACE also partners with other organizations to bring audiences to Hollywood, including the Getty Museum, theFellows of Contemporary Art , theCalifornia Institute of the Arts , theCalifornia College of the Arts in Oakland,Washington University in St. Louis ,Kent State University ,Atlanta College of Art , andContemporary Art Gallery in Vancouver, British Columbia.In 1998 LACE inaugurated Contemporary Editions LA, a fine-art publishing venture featuring Los Angeles-based artists, with editions in its first year by
Paul McCarthy ,Martin Kersels , andSharon Lockhart . The following year, LACE published three new editions by artistsKevin Appel ,Evan Holloway , andJames Welling . In 2002, LACE published Contemporary Editions byJohn Baldessari ,Laura Owens , andRaymond Pettibon .LACE was invited to participate in the prestigious national Warhol Initiative of the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts in 2003, including a major award for new equipment, marketing, and a cash reserve. That same year, LACE published editions with artists
Chris Burden andJim Isermann . LACE also received a vital grant from theNational Endowment for the Arts to preserve and improve access to its archives, a rich history of contemporary art-making in Los Angeles since 1978.LACE inaugurated a new education and outreach initiative in 2004, formalizing existing offerings and adding a new program specifically for homeless youth in Hollywood, ArtWorks, which provides artist-led, hands-on artmaking workshops in partnership with social services organizations.
In 2005 LACE published new editions with artists
Amy Adler ,Jeff Burton , and the 2006Whitney Biennial artist,Monica Majoli .LACE began Civic Matters in 2006, an international residency and exchange program, bringing together curatorial teams with artists and collectives from Sweden, Finland and Los Angeles to explore the complex roles of art, craft, design, architecture, and community in contemporary society.
Exhibitions
1999 - The exhibition
Amy Adler CuratesJoni Mitchell draws popular audience response and critical acclaim.2000 - Renowned artist
Matt Mullican presents new work at LACE, his first exhibition in Los Angeles in over 10 years.2001 - LACE presents a major exhibition by artist
Michael Brewster and publishes a catalogue with funding from the Fellows of Contemporary Art.2002 - LACE presents "Democracy When? Activist Strategizing in Los Angeles", a project by Danish curator Tone O. Nielsen that brings together artists, activists, and community organizations from all over the city to explore challenges to activism, through displayed artworks and projects, weekly talks, and actions.
2003 - International artist
Chris Burden , in collaboration with TK Architects, mounted the Small Skyscraper exhibition in LACE’s newly-renovated Rear Gallery to critical acclaim.2004 - LACE mounts a retrospective exhibition of artist
Yvonne Rainer and her 30-year career and engages in multiple cross-programming partnerships with The Getty, MoCA, and RedCat.2005 - LACE partners with Nike to present the US premiere of "White Dunk," a touring exhibition featuring 26 renowned Japanese artists. 3000 visitors pass through LACE's galleries in just three weeks. LACE also exhibits the critically acclaimed "Marking Time," presented in collaboration with the Getty, that examines different ways artists have depicted time and its passage internationally from the 1960s to the present. Later LACE hosted the reunion of the seminal Los Angeles performance art collective, Shrimps, for three sold-out performances, their first time together in ten years.
References
External links
* [http://www.artleak.org/ Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions home page]
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