Innovative and Exciting Exhibitions at the Bendix

While each of these splendid shows now at the Bendix in DTLA’s fashion district are worthy of their own review, time, and an imminent last weekend September 6th, waits for no one. So let’s take a look at the exuberant exhibitions currently at the Bendix, and mark your calendars for a viewing this coming weekend.

On view 12-5 p.m. at Durden and Ray is the winner of the gallery’s SPOTLIGHT24, the Durden and Ray member committee reviewed  solo exhibition proposals for the gallery. Winning artist Shannon Freshwater was born into a Las Vegas environment few visitors have seen, a mix of Mormon and Souther Baptist religion and hippie artists. Viewers will experience a witty yet ominous living room scene in the front gallery, while mirrored images dance with the viewers own in the second. It’s a garden of strange, surreal, slightly spooky delights using textiles, paintings, and unusual surfaces to render a world gone deliciously mad.

Persons Unknown is presenting another solo show that’s dusted with the whimsical and determinedly wild, in both texture and territory. The Museum of Human Touch imagines a future — that frankly doesn’t seem too distant — where our intimacy with screens has replaced physical experience. Only in this world, sculptures shaped from digital waste ranging from packing materials to discarded gadgets and ephemera are the unique visualization of reshaped human identity. , reshaping our bodies and identities. Featuring sculptures crafted from recycled digital waste such as obsolete gadgets, medical tubing, and packaging materials, the exhibition explores the seductive pleasure and hidden violence of our device-driven lives, challenging us to reconsider the fluidity, fragility, and possibility of the human body in a tech-saturated world. The boldly textural and delightfully weird are conjoined in a series of devastatingly and wonderfully weird works from Agustin Rosa.

At Tiger Strikes Astroid, and also closing this weekend is El Portal, a rich and wonderfully mind-opening exhibit organized by Ricardo Harris-Fuentes and Lauren Armstrong. Comprised of the workd of six visual and five performance artists, the theme is transformation and transcendent reality as assisted by the visionary experience of ayahuasca ceremony as its inspiration point. We had the pleasure of viewing a roof-top live performance by artist Sean Noyce involving a gorgeous metallic shield on exhibit in the gallery along with a consciousness pyramid sculpture, which Armstrong used in another galvanizing rooftop performance.  The group show is inspirational and aspirational.

Down the hall at 515, books are the mind blowers… in this large group exhibition, you can indeed judge a book by its artisically created cover, as artists shape visionary book favorites with covers that more than live up to the words on the pages between.  Artists were asked to pick their favorite books and create a cover to fit their vision, and wow, were these visions extraordinary. Just a fun and brilliant show, it will make you want to pick up a book and read it — and imagine your own cover to hold it. Fabulous use of sculptural materials and engaging visions of the meaning writ within the books. Special Collections II will be holding a closing reception from 7 to 9 p.m on the 6th. Take a look at the online library linked above and view its wide ranging artists, and go visit. These books will never be banned.

And last but not least, in Monte Vista Projects, a debut solo of bronze and porcelain sculptures, Invitation, by Renée Pepion is a feast of things floral, feminine, and unconventionally lovely, or as the artist describes the work “my way of processing what it means to be alive in a body.” Inspired by images of the Last Supper, this is a splendid exhibition of twists and turns both terrifying and terrific.

Get thee to the Bendix this weekend for these grand finales.

  • Genie Davis, images by Genie Davis

 

 

 

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