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Ellsworth Artist Residency Alumni Gallery
May 11 - July 27
About
Ellsworth Artist Residency Alumni Gallery
On view May 11 – July 27, 2024
The Ellsworth Artist Residency aims to empower artists at different stages of their careers to connect, learn, and evolve together. Art Share L.A. values our ongoing connection with alumni of the program, recognizing their experience and expertise as valuable assets to the artistic community. Artists who have completed one rotation of residency are invited back to share their insights and artistic journeys with current residents and participate in critiques that foster collaboration and knowledge-sharing.
The newly dedicated Ellsworth Artist Residency Alumni Gallery is a space for continued engagement, where former residents can showcase their artistic development and contribute to the vibrant artistic dialogue within the Art Share L.A. residency network and the broader community.
Featuring: Lorenzo Baker, Marissa Brown, Jesse Fregozo, Kyong Boon Oh, Steven Rahbany, Jacqueline Valenzuela
About the Artists
Kyong Boon Oh
Kyong Boon Oh
Korean-born Kyong Boon Oh received her BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and her BS in Mathematics from Korea University. She was a painter before but her choice of metal wire, a childhood toy that she tried during 13 years of health problems, gave rise to her current art practice of hand-weaving wire. Now she has expanded her mediums to sculpting. She is a founding member of SSGOC (Stone Sculptors Guild of Orange County).
Transcendent end is hidden in our own depths, waiting for the chance to occupy a conscious moment. Kyong Boon Oh tries to discover the moment and reveal it through her art practice. Oh’s art practice has two objectives, one focus on identity, the other defocus from it. The tension from the two makes her walk a line between emotion and meditation. As a Korean-born living abroad with a cultural barrier, she desires to project a possible identity by adopting from both historical and imaginative imagery with a nomadic perspective. But at the same time, she enters into a meditative state, viewing a single thread of wire or a single linear form of stone as my stream of consciousness, pursuing intimacy with the medium with the labor-intensity, and considering the negative space that is left behind as “a place of reconciliation.” That interiority alludes to transcendence of the self.
Lorenzo Baker
Lorenzo Baker
Lorenzo Baker is an accomplished artist and alumnus of Dillard University (’14) and Otis College of Art and Design (’18). His artwork has garnered critical acclaim and recognition, including a feature in Umber Magazine Issue #4, and an invitation to speak as a guest artist in the Museum of African Diaspora (MOAD) In The Artist Studio program. Most recently, Lorenzo completed a year-long project and collaboration with The Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts and in April of 2022 Lorenzo’s artwork was showcased on the popular television show Bel-Air.
Lorenzo Baker is a multi-disciplinary artist utilizing parafiction and perifacts to complicate ideas of collective memory. Fluctuating between the indexical and the symbolic, Lorenzo’s art practice takes shape as digital collages, ready made sculptures, site specific multimedia installations and sometimes unsanctioned public activations.
Marissa Brown
Marissa Brown
Marissa Brown is a biracial, Black and Portuguese, Multidisciplinary artist. Her primary language comes from movement of the body and translates into works of live performance, film, installation, photography, and publication. She has her BFA in Performance and Choreography from University of California Irvine and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. Her work has been shown extensively in San Francisco, New York, and Los Angeles. Under the name Lone King Projects, she creates and shares intimate moments of expression.
Steven Rahbany
Steven Rahbany
Steven Rahbany is an American artist who lives and works in Los Angeles, California. His work explores queer and cultural identity, mainly through memory representation. His work has been exhibited in group and solo shows around the country, at galleries such as The Houston Contemporary Art Museum, TAG Gallery, Other Art Fair, and Art Share LA.
Exhibition: Inner Links
Jesse Fregozo
Jesse Fregozo
Jesse Fregozo is a native Angeleno who primarily works as a painter. He vocalizes the struggles of marginalized communities through the representation of identity and culture as a primary focus. Fregozo uses locations around his community as symbols of identity and a cultural lifestyle that has been carried down generation after generation. Fregozo straddles the line between design and pop culture in the development of his work. His intense works on canvas, paper, photography, and design are mediums for the development of his artwork.
Exhibitions: Street Schooled, Ellsworth Artist Residency Program, SOMOS
Jacqueline Valenzuela
Jacqueline Valenzuela
Jacqueline Valenzuela (b. East Los Angeles, CA) received a BFA in Drawing and Painting from California States University Long Beach (2019). Her work has been exhibited throughout the greater Los Angeles area, including the South Gate Museum (South Gate), Brea Gallery (Brea), South Pasadena City Hall Gallery (Pasadena), The Mexican Center for Culture and Cinematic Arts of the Mexican Consulate (Los Angeles), ArtShare L.A. (Los Angeles), and most recently at Flatline Gallery (Long Beach) for, “Sitting on Chrome” an exhibition curated around the theme of exploring the different artists who have interconnected their art practices with their passion for lowriding.
Valenzuela is a multi-media artist whose practice is centered around her experiences as a woman within the Chicano world of lowriding. Her art practice reflects the deep roots she has planted in the lowrider community by bridging the gap between fine art and this underrepresented community
Exhibition: Street Schooled
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