EdiBOL: Inventive Cuisine Lovingly Served in the Arts District

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EdiBOL will bowl you over. The creation of owner and chef Andrea Uyeda is one of those exceptional, possibly only-in-LA spots that combines great food with a healthy lifestyle, that offers a fusion of cuisines, and that reflects both the heritage and vitality of its owner in every aspect of the restaurant from it’s physical design to the food on the table.

EdiBOL is a beautiful, industrial chic spot in the heart of the arts district that with its bright, airy interior and a patio for al fresco dining, makes a fine brunch spot, a great place to dine before or after that gallery opening, or simply a spot to linger over delicious food that won’t expand the waistline and break the bank. Can you tell we love the place?

Owner/chef Uyeda is a Jill of all trades. “I’ve always loved cooking, baking, design, and architecture,” Uyeda says. “The inspiration for ediBOL stems from these passions, exploration, building true connections. and my very deep, true desire to create something special with others who also want to share and live their passions.”

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To that end she designed the restaurant, including hand-staining blue teak tables, and selecting and polishing lapis lazuli counter tops. She crafted its menu, and she’s the chef who hands-on prepares the restaurant’s delightful mix of dishes. She’s building on her past and making a bright future.

“Our location in the Arts District is just down the block from where my brother Jaret and I grew up practicing/performing the Taiko drums, around the corner from my grandmother’s church, where my dad’s side of the family went to grammar school, and where I used to volunteer at the Japanese American National Museum before the museum had been built, and where my brother spent many sleepless nights as a student across the street at SCI-Arc.”

Uyeda was drawn to cooking at an early age. “I loved baking pies and making sushi rolls with both of my grandmothers.” From there, by the age of 11, she was cooking family dinners every night.

She’s come a long way, but has held fast to the cooking traditions she began as a child. To Uyeda, serving food in a bowl  symbolize family, love, and comfort. Her dishes fit morning, brunch, lunch, and dinner options and are all served in bowls. That’s the theme and the quirk – but these meals would be perfect whether served in bowls or on plates, and can hold their own against whatever top celeb spot is trending on La Cienega. Yes, seriously. But enough hyperbole, let the food speak for itself.

The menu includes vegan, vegetarian, or organic pescatarian and carnivore options. The focus is on richly flavored, perfectly seasoned salads, rice, and noodle dishes as well as a plethora of tasty brunch options. The healthy secret is the sparing use of oil, with fresh herbs and spices taking the place of heavy sauces.

The restaurant has only been open eight months, and it’s already drawing a crowd eager to consume her Hot Bols, Cool Bols, little Bols – or sides, a Bol-wich sandwich, Morning Bols and Brunch Bols. And CrumBols baked goods, AddictaBol desserts, and DrinkaBols from fresh juices to house crafted cocktails made with shochu.

Dishes not to miss:

  • the VegiBOL, a hot dish combining  organic chick peas, with spinach basil pesto, tamari sake heirloom rice, sesame bean sprouts, kohlrabi, candied almonds and a crisp, breaded poached egg. So much flavor, so much zest.
  • the Miso Peanut Ramen, a CoolBOL dish featuring chewy ramen noodles in honey miso over greens, red pepper, edamame, pickled carrots, scallions, shiitake mushrooms, and roasted peanuts.

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  • the cheddar buttermilk biscuit. Order as a side or pair with the softly scrambled eggs on the brunch menu, but order it you must.

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  • the French toast custard, which can also be ordered as a delightfully sweet main course. It features delicate French toast topped with pure maple syrup, with a frozen custard center.

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  • the craft cocktails are varied, but one of the freshest and most renewing is the delectaBOL, a crisp blend of lemon shrub, thyme, ginger, and lemongrass with shochu. The energizaBOL features celery, lime, and mint and is a beautiful, refreshing balance of flavors.

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  • whatever special Uyeda is dishing up. I visited for the second time on Valentine’s Day, and she had a real sweetheart of a dish: New Zealand green mussels, shrimp, wild mahi mahi, coconut milk, lime, ginger, lemon grass, roasted almond rice, and cilantro. Please, make this again, soon.

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“I want every bite to be a surprise,” Uyeda says, and it is – so much flavor, so unexpectedly bold but without any overwhelming over-spicing or any one dominant element.

“I’ve eaten out of bowls all my life,” Uyeda explains. “The love and comfort that reprsents is something I want to share.”

And deliciousness. She’s sharing that too.

Experience it seven days a week at 300 S. Santa Fe Avenue. Or, in a rush? You can order ahead online and through EdiBOL’s new app, and make yourself the envy of that next gallery opening you wander into noshing.

  • Genie Davis; Photos by Jack Burke

Start-Up Art Fair: Starting Something Cool

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The Start-Up Art Fair was one of a quartet of art shows dancing across the Los Angeles art scene two weeks ago. There was the mammoth LA Art Fair at the Convention Center, the less mammoth but still large and established Art Contemporary at Santa Monica’s Barker Hangar, the small but interestingly scrappy Fabrik art fair. And there was the Start-Up. Which started up a whole new way of envisioning an art fair.

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First of all, it was held at the Highland Garlands Hotel on Franklin in Hollywood, with each room or suite serving as a de facto gallery – plus weekend accommodation – for artists. 45 artists exhibited solo in rooms or as pairs in a carefully curated show that brought together some terrific, original art in a relaxed setting.

Artists offered the glass of wine here, the home-baked cookie there, and the intimate ability to have an actual conversation about art in a relaxing setting.

We arrived in the evening, and the experience felt magical. Illuminated swimming pool, glowing room lights, open doors, laughter – and the ability to visit each mini-gallery/guest at our leisure. Here are some highlights – and some artists to watch for at future fairs and galleries.

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Heidi Cody is an Andy Warhol for today’s American consumerism. Altering brand names, colors, and illuminations, her sculptures, signs, and graphic paintings critique our consumptive culture with humor and style. Plus, who wouldn’t want a foamy Hostess Cupcake.

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Below, Stephen Whisler takes on government subterfuge, the surveillance/power/warfare dynamic, and the preponderance of military posturing in today’s world. Large scale drawings done in vermillion red and silver weapons “sleeping” in hotel room beds, compelled viewer involvement. Let sleeping missiles lie? Is Dr. Strangelove hiding in the bathroom?F23C8382

Below, Kimberly Rowe’s Happiness Calls for a Party.F23C8385

 

Bombard, Acrylic on Canvas, by Jennifer Turnage, Rowe’s suite-mate, below.

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Kimberly Rowe is a vibrant artist who describes her work as having a rhythm or musicality. She means for her materials to speak for themselves rather than in the service of a concrete and explicit depiction. The colors sing, the mixed media beg to be absorbed, touched, defined as if one could cull the meaning of a person’s heart from stroking skin.  Her work is all about perception: the perception here is of an intense and compelling artist whose medium truly is the message.

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Rowe and her suite mate, Jennifer Turnage, had soft black “eight balls” as a fun handout. F23C8389

Turnage created a group of 65 Circles, small paintings numbered to show their relationship, each circle influenced by the next.

These pieces are as vibrant, elemental, and eternal as the atom, or a single biological cell, reproducing and mutating.

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Diane Rosenblum, below, uses a spare, linear exploration in her Snap Chalk Drawings which connote forms of measurement ranging from music notes to mathematics, from computer coding to spiritual definition. It’s about harmony and infinity.F23C8403

Aline Mare’s ethereal mixed media work, below, is a study of the spiritual environment. Each piece combines scanned and altered images into a layered, poetic exploration of what could be the universe or an exploding dandelion re-imagined.

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The artist says she’s searching for a new language and “for metaphors of roots and seeds and the systems of conveyance that link plants, bodies and cities.”

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Going up? Even the stairwells at the hotel complex were art-ified.F23C8411

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Annie Seaton’s  Clean series refers to the surfing term for good water conditions, and smooth wave energy. Her surfing themes feature cut outs of surfer images, ghost-like against the shore line – utterly clean. The wave Seaton has caught soars with the vivid details of surfing culture and the already fading imprint of man on the mighty sea – rather like footprints in the sand.

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Above, Catherine Ruane’s series Look Until You See features stunningly detailed depictions of plants, so tenderly and exquisitely rendered as to create a metaphor for human life. Working on paper, she exposes her drawings to the natural environment as if the plants depicted were themselves living and breathing. So real do they seem, the viewer’s breath quickens.

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Whimsical and bright, a patchwork quilt of art, Dana Zed’s acrylic paintings were inspired by a 500 mile solo bike trip across the country.

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Nancy Willis, above, investigates images of daily life in soft, fuzzy-edged renderings that make the mundane into a visual fairy tale.

Below, Lindsey Evans Montgomery creates color prisms that reflect geometric forms, glowing rainbows, and voluptuous auras.

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Below, Gillian Keller creates glowing, quintessentially SoCal images of “Enlightenment Barbie” as a name for herself and her work. Ken better hurry and get his own ashram on. F23C8429

Mitra Fabian and Kathy Aoki create immersive sculptural pieces that take over the viewer and transport to a different time and place. Fabian, below, has created delicate, shroud-like mixed media.

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Aoki leads us into the world of a faux history museum, where “found” sarcophagi lead us into an alternate universe. F23C8434 F23C8436 F23C8435

Color, light, form, meaning, metaphor, wonder – the closest summary we can make to the StART Up Art Fair experience. Book yourself a stay next year. And take a splash in the pool of private gallery space that grows richer with every room visit.

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Above, If I Fell, Acrylic on Panel, by Kimberly Rowe, a piece absolutely juicy with color and life.

Below Kimberly Rowe and Jennifer Turnage make their room’s walk-in shower into a bouncy ball pop-up art exhibit. Their shared suite number was Room 222. F23C8394

 

  • Genie Davis; all photos by Jack Burke, photo of Aline Mare by Gary Brewer

Linda Sue Price: Neon Queen

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Neon artist Linda Sue Price mixes form and light with texture –  in pieces that are fluid, glowing, and exuberant. Price’s work is about the idea of change as the eternal constant as well as being the process of all communication.  Seen at Santa Monica’s TAG Gallery in December, Price’s work was as beautiful as it was evocative. She’ll return to the gallery with a new exhibition coming up in April 2016.


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“I was inspired by phrases that resonated with me. I got them from observing human activity, things people say and do. It seems that sometimes in the process of living, we make it harder on ourselves than it has to be,” Price says.

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“What inspired me visually was the fact that people don’t see the backside of neon signs. All the bending, the entire creative process,” Price explains.

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“I wanted to show that process, to showcase the tube itself, and the way that it can be bent, and to make that the focus.”

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As for the words Price chooses to work with, she does not capture them in neon glow. “I intentionally chose not to make them out of neon.”

The words are the background. The neon seems like a living thing the words attempt to capture.

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Price has been a neon-admirer since her childhood. She notes that a visit to Las Vegas was always special for her, because of all the neon she could see there.

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No past or future in the now…Price’s “Words” series uses some of her own favorite words.

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Price’s next show will be held at the TAG Gallery in Santa Monica from April 19 – May 14.

Go, see, glow — some of my favorite words.

  • Genie Davis; All Photos by Jack Burke

Yes, Curate This 2, Too

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Always a treat, the group shows at The Gabba Gallery seem to pulse with more excitement every time. Curate This Part Deaux is no exception, with art -works created by some of Los Angeles’ top curators. Featuring something for virtually every artistic taste, the show takes viewers through a panopoly of vibrant, quintessentially LA art. There was a look and feel to the show that could absolutely only happen in SoCal, and only at Gabba, and only if including the work of artists whose taste aesthetics have been sharply honed as curators.

Below, book designer, collage and mixed-media artist David Brady pulls viewers into an astonishing visual quilt with his “Esperanza.”

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Highly detailed, frieze-like sculptural paintings by Nathan Cartwright tell detailed, fantastical stories. Cartwright is an LA-based mixed media artist and founder/curator of The Hive Gallery and Studios in DTLA. Feel the buzz.

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Dicapria’s glowing mixed media mandala’s are crafted from gummy bears and resin in a light box. Her back story: she travels the U.S. in a 1971 bus.

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Mitchelito Orquiola was born in the Philipines, and resides in LA. His self-taught works create a mosaic of color and line.F23C8702

So what could be more a part of the City of Angeles than Kristine Schomaker’s beautiful little convertible? The Ideal Sex (The Little Pink Corvette) drives us into the SoCal sunset on a road dotted with the sign posts of gender roles, power, and the healing community of art itself. Schomaker also runs Shoebox PR, promoting art and artists throughout the Southland.F23C8703

Baby, you can drive Schomaker’s other cool ride, too.

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Photographer Osceola Refetoff’s ethereal, sun-drenched desert and urban visions haunt and inspire. The artist takes viewers down a road not just less traveled, but one most people have never experienced before.

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Below, the delicate, precise images photographed by Shana Nys Dambrot reflect an intimate thoughtfulness. Dambrot recently curated the stellar Painting by Scott Trimble, Photography by Osceola Refetoff show at Chungking Studios in Chinatown.

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Ted Meyer’s beautiful acryllic “Woman Napping with Cat,” holds all the golden light, curves, and angles, of a Hollywood summer, kissed with expressionist flavor. Meyer is currently curating Scar Stories at Muzeumm.

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Performance and installation artist Dani Dodge creates compelling, often autobiographical and catharctic works. As a former journalist and war correspondent, she tells stories that vibrate with humanity. Collage, assemblage, and video are components of her works, below.

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Up close, these layered fragments of wallpaper compel viewers to look beneath the surface layers of life itself.

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Phil Santos co-curates Gabba Gallery with Jason Ostro. His beautifully detailed watercolor pencil rendering of Pasadena City Hall transports the image to something that could exist in Venice or Paris. Santos is currently at work on a triptych mural for Angel City Brewery. F23C8718

Gabba Gallery owner, director, and co-curator Jason Ostro contributed this brilliantly blue, intrinsically floral, and kaleidoscopic piece to the exhibition.

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Below, Juri Koll’s mixed media paper on board evoke water, light, and an unheard aural component in their patterns and colors. Koll is founder, director, and often curator at The Venice Institute of Contemporary Art, and the producer of the Fine Arts Film Festival.F23C8724

Venice artist Mark Satterlee is a self-taught traditional and digital artist working primarily in fiberglass and pigmented resin. His work below uses an assemblage of Poloroid portraits.F23C8725

Skye Amber Sweet’s pink fish float off the canvas. Love, kindness, and self-expression are the driving forces of her emotional and emotive art.

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Daniel Rolnik curated at the self-owned Daniel Rolnik Gallery, and recently hosted one of the most enjoyable booths at the LA Art Fair,  the “Kilduff’s Bakery” art installation.  Below, some of Rolnik’s cheerful, fun, and vibrant work. F23C8732

Even at the end of the night, Gabba drew appreciative viewers.

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Below, another piece by Gabba’s co-curator Phil Santos. His classic dog portraits are much sought after by collectors. F23C8742

Artist Radhika Hersey creates stunning art fantasies  based on meditation, dreams, and folklore. Her spiritually magical paintings are closely aligned with her curatorial works at Temple of Visions and the Do Art Foundation,among other venues.F23C8747

Ever versatile, Phil Santos dishes up a plate of mixed media zombie spaghetti.

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Curate This 2 runs until February 28th. The Gabba Gallery is located at 3126 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles.

F23C8751Genie Davis; all photos by Jack Burke