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Greater LA

May 15June 10, 2011

Greater LA, 483 Broadway, Second Floor, New York, NY

This image illustrates a link to the exhibition titled Greater LA

Images

Edgar Arceneaux, Blind Pig #8, 2011, Charcoal graphite on paper, 90

Edgar Arceneaux
Blind Pig #8, 2011

Edgar Arceneaux, Blind Pig #8, 2011, Charcoal graphite on paper, 90

Edgar Arceneaux
Blind Pig #8, 2011

Edgar Arceneaux, Blind Pig #8, 2011, Charcoal graphite on paper, 90

Edgar Arceneaux
"Blind Pig #8," 2011

Olga Koumoundouros, Trickle Down, 2009, Cast 100 yr old cedar gutter made from: toilet paper, starch, metal stud, 7-Eleven double gulp cup, 22' long x 4" wide and 6" high

Olga Koumoundouros
Trickle Down, 2009

Andrea Bowers, Chair # 1 - 14, 2010, Metal folding chair and spray paint, each 30 3/4" x 18 1/2"  x 22"

Andrea Bowers
Chair # 1 - 14, 2010

Press Release

Greater LA is the first ever survey to take place in New York of art being made in Los Angeles right now, and its massive but sometimes under-acknowledged impact on the global stage. Filling a large industrial loft space in the heart of SoHo, Greater LA gathers the work of over 50 Los Angeles based artists who are setting the agenda for conversations about contemporary cultural production around the world. Far from being a comprehensive view, Greater LA aims to be a selection of work as varied and idiosyncratic as the landscape from which it emerges. Greater LA makes an argument for the vitality and urgency of art made in and influenced by the largest city on the Western coast of North America.

Organized by Eleanor Cayre, Benjamin Godsill, and Joel Mesler (a collector, a curator, and a gallerist respectively), Greater LA is the first large-scale exhibition highlighting art being made in Los Angeles right now as a subject worthy of examination. While many of the artists included have exhibited in gallery and museum settings in New York, theyve never been contextualized as a group that shares, however subtly, an identity based upon their geography. Greater LA aims to be this contextualization, giving physical form to the oft-heard suggestion that the work made today in Los Angeles is some of the best in the World. Works include sculpture, painting, photography, drawing, installation, video and performance; none seen previously and many newly conceived for this exhibition.

Source: http://greater-la.com/blog/about/