Los Angeles art exhibitions: the best shows to see in September

Read our pick of the best Los Angeles art exhibitions to see this month, from Marin Majic at the new Megan Mulrooney Gallery to Richard Orlinski's sculptures on Rodeo Drive

Los Angeles art exhibitions Richard Orlinski Sculptures
(Image credit: Derek Hackett)

Returning this September for the latest edition, PST ART: Art & Science Collide, is a landmark regional event by Getty, exploring the intersections of art and science, both past and present. While there are more than 70 exhibitions and programs participating around the city, we are spotlighting a handful here.

You can also catch new shows around town from Tahnee Lonsdale, Mash Gallery, Breath(e) at the Hammer, and Lauren Bon is literally moving mountains, while Bergamot Station celebrates 30 years in Santa Monica with a rare photographic exhibit from the Schindler house.

Here are the best new and continuing shows to see in Los Angeles this September.

Los Angeles art exhibitions: what to see in September 2024

Life on Earth: Art & Ecofeminism

The Brick, Hollywood, until 21 December 2024

Thom MayneXCD_240610-192320_106216-BBD, 2024UV ink on aluminum, two panels

Thom Mayne , 2024 UV ink on aluminium, two panels

(Image credit: Thom Mayne)

The Brick (formerly known as LAXART) inaugural exhibition Life on Earth: Art & Ecofeminism is tied to  PST ART: Art & Science Collide. The show is curated by Deputy Director and Curator Catherine Taft and explores crucial links between gendered oppression and the exploitation of our planet's natural resources.

Originally a philosophical and political concept, ecofeminist art developed from anti-nuclear and feminist movements in the 1970s. Ecofeminist artists often created site-specific work that sought to address the connections between the domination of women, queer people, and the environment. Spotlighting the past five decades to present times, eighteen international artists and collective are representing this important history through installations, video work, photography, and sculptures. Some of the participating artists include Alliance of the Southern Triangle (A.S.T.), Alicia Barney Caldas, Francesca Gabbiani, Masumi Hayashi, Institute of Queer Ecology, Kite, Leslie Labowitz Starus, Otobong Nkanga, and A.L. Steiner.

Dawning

Megan Mulrooney Gallery, West Hollywood, until 26 October 2024

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(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist and gallery)

To inaugurate the new Megan Mulrooney Gallery, Frankfurt-born, Brooklyn-based painter Marin Majic will be included as one of the official auxiliary activations of the Getty's PST ART. His show will feature 12-15 new works that explore the subconscious space between reality and dreams blending colored pencil, marble dust, wax, and oil to capture evocative scenes of sunrise from ancient caves to nightclubs. Dawning is Inspired by the perpetual passage of time and the universal themes of human existence and our relationship with the cosmos. This will mark Marin’s first solo exhibition since his 2023 New York presentation, Nocturne.

Portable Wetland

Brackish Water, Los Angeles California State University, Dominguez Hills, until 14 December 2024

Installation view of Lauren Bon / Metabolic Studio Portable Wetland for Southern California(2024), a part of the Getty PST ART exhibition Brackish Water Los Angeles at The University Art Gallery at California State University, Dominguez Hills (CSUDH),courtesy Metabolic Studio

Installation view of Lauren Bon / Metabolic Studio Portable Wetland for Southern California(2024), a part of the Getty PST ART exhibition Brackish Water Los Angeles at The University Art Gallery at California State University, Dominguez Hills (CSUDH),courtesy Metabolic Studio

(Image credit: Installation view of Lauren Bon / Metabolic Studio Portable Wetland for Southern California)

Environmental artist Lauren Bon and her Metabolic Studio could not be busier this fall as she participates in multiple exhibition as part of PST ART: Art & Science Collide. Her work fuses art, architecture, social practice, environmental activism, and speculative ecology. As the holder of the LA River’s first private water right with the responsibility for the stewardship of water, Bon’s work in Portable Wetland demonstrates new ways to look at water conservation through an accessible and minimally invasive process to protect our health and well-being.

In addition, Bon is literally “Moving Mountains” by transporting truckloads of living soil from the Topanga Canyon land slide to the LA River to create areas of new forestation and a citizen’s utility, and continuing her “Bending The River” project which will deliver cleaned water that she has diverted from the LA river to the State Historic Parks next Spring. Bon is also included in several other Getty PST projects this fall, including a Concrete is fluid, a solo exhibition at Honor Fraser gallery opening 14 September until 14, December 2024.

Beatriz da Costa: (un)disciplinary tactics

LACE at the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, East Hollywood, until 5 January 2025

Caption: Clockwise: Cina Hazegh, Kevin Ponto, Beatriz da Costa, and Bob Matusyama hold four pigeons wearing air pollution monitor backpacks as part of PigeonBlog (2006–08). Courtesy of the Beatriz da Costa Estate.

Clockwise: Cina Hazegh, Kevin Ponto, Beatriz da Costa, and Bob Matusyama hold four pigeons wearing air pollution monitor backpacks as part of PigeonBlog (2006–08)

(Image credit: Courtesy of the Beatriz da Costa Estate.)

As part of PST ART: Art & Science Collide, this exhibition revisits the collaborative artistic practice of the late Beatriz da Costa (1974–2012) as an investigation into technoscientific experimentation, politics, activism, and art-making, contextualized for our contemporary moment.

Curated by LACE’s former Chief Curator/Director of Programs Daniela Lieja Quintanar with Ana Briz, the project weaves together an exhibition, public programming, performances, educational workshops, and study groups as an evocation of da Costa’s approach to the intersections of ancient and non-academic forms of knowledge.

Mona Kuhn - The Schindler House, A Love Affair

Galerie XII, Bergamot Station in Santa Monica, until 12 October 2024

Schindler06

(Image credit: Courtasy of Mona Kuhn)

Part of the Bergamot Station 30th year anniversary celebration on 7 September, and PST ART, Kuhn's solarized pictures is a fictional, ethereal figure inspired by a letter from the architect R.M. Schindler to a mysterious lover. Shot in the 1920s modernist house designed and built by the architect on Kings Road in West Hollywood, Kuhn's impressionistic photos capture the physical presence of this mysterious woman even as it seems to be dematerializing, resulting in fleeting images that question the very nature of lyrical fiction and photography as a record.

The furniture pieces featured were made in the Marmol Radziner Furniture Fabrication Shop from Rudolph Schindler’s revolutionary redwood designs from the 1920s including the R.M. Schindler Sling Chair and the R.M. Schindler Low Stool, both from the Kings Road Group collection reproduced by Marmol Radziner. 

Breath(e)

HAMMER MUSEUM, Westwood, until 5 January 2025

Ryoji Ikeda, point of no return, 2018. DLP projector, computer, speakers, paint, HMI lamp. Dimensions variable. Concept/Composition: Ryoji Ikeda. Programming: Tomonaga Tokuyama.

Ryoji Ikeda, point of no return, 2018. DLP projector, computer, speakers, paint, HMI lamp. Dimensions variable. Concept/Composition: Ryoji Ikeda. Programming: Tomonaga Tokuyama.

(Image credit: Photo: Takeshi Asano; © Ryoji Ikeda; courtesy of Hirosaki Museum of Contemporary Art)

Presented in partnership with Conservation International, this show is comprised architectural, décor, new tech, recycling materials, living organisms - all intertwined and connected to climate and social justice. Curated by artist Glenn Kaino and guest curator Mika Yoshitake and features more than 100 artworks by 25 international artists. The sprawling exhibition will fill the majority of the Hammer’s galleries and outdoor spaces, and includes specially commissioned works by Mel Chin, Ron Finley, Cannupa Hanska Luger, Garnett Puett, and Lan Tuazon.

Magdalena Suarez Frimkess: The Finest Disregard

LACMA, mid-Wilshire, until 5 Jan 2025

Magdalena Suarez Frimkess, XXL Minnie Mouse, 2009, collection of Karin Gulbran, © Magdalena Suarez Frimkess,

(Image credit: Museum Associates/LACMA)

This is the first-ever museum survey of the Venezuelan-born, L.A.-based artist’s prolific career. Spanning over five decades, the exhibition explores ceramics, paintings, and drawings, including an important selection of works made collaboratively with her husband, Michael Frimkess, and numerous works never-before shown in public. With insights into the artist's fascination with illustrations from art books, popular media, animation, autobiography, and the comedy of everyday life, celebrating the inventiveness of Suarez Frimkess’s practice, securing her position in the recognized, longstanding tradition of artists working with ceramics in California.

Grove of Enchantment

Mash Gallery, Beverly Grove, until 26 October 2024

Blue Moon72 x 72”, Mixed Media, 2024

(Image credit: Mash Gallery)

To coincide with the 6th anniversary of MASH Gallery, owner and  expressionist painter Haleh Mashian is putting on an exhibition called "Grove of Enchantment," which is a fantasy inspired and imaginative take on the re-interpretation of Mashian’s renowned Tree series. Mashian invites viewers to explore the forest of their dreams in this immersive series, highlighting the spiritual and emotional impact trees have on our lives, underscoring their role in mental health, and in soothing the human spirit.

Through this exhibition, Mashian aims to portray the beauty and importance of trees in our ecosystem, highlighting their role in combating climate change and preserving the ozone layer. “As a painter devoted to capturing the essence of trees, I find myself endlessly inspired by their graceful presence, the interplay of light and shadow, the texture of their bark and their vibrant hues of foliage. I seek to capture the resilience and strength that emanate from their silent presence, the whispers of their ancient secrets, reminding viewers of the inherent power within us all.”

Part of proceeds from the sales of her art are directed towards Tree People, ensuring that her work contributes directly to initiatives that address and mitigate these pressing environmental challenges.

Aaron Garber-Maikovska's and Eddie Martinez: Homework

BLUM, mid-city, until 19 October 2024

Courtesy of the artist and BLUM Los Angeles, Tokyo, New York

(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist and BLUM Los Angeles, Tokyo, New York)

Garber-Maikovska's most recent temporal, movement-based works are documented and conveyed through the paintings that he presents here. This exhibition, his third solo at the gallery, coincides with the release of the artist's first comprehensive monograph Cushion of Air. The book will feature new essays on his abstract painting practice as well as his somatic performances within the Southern Californian consumerist suburban landscape.

Paintings on cardboard in a compact and intimate scale, comprise Martinez’ visual journal entries from recent years. Beginning to work in this fashion in 2017, the artist started creating these diaristic vignettes as an alternative to his renowned large-scale canvases. As this portable fusion of drawing and painting grew into a regular practice, Martinez found that the format was one he could turn to in moments of transition—whether at home with his family (and an abundance of shipping boxes during the pandemic in 2020) or, more recently, amid work-related travel.

Tahnee Lonsdale

Night Gallery, downtown LA, until 19 October 2024

Courtesy of the artist and Night Gallery

(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist and Night Gallery)

L.A-based artist Tahnee Lonsdale’s solo exhibition feature oil paintings and also two ceramic vessels that she created in conjunction with Exhibition A at a ceramic residency in Mexico earlier in 2024.

Originally from Sussex, England, Tahnee brings a sense of metaphysical prowess to her work through a cast of family-like celestial figures, all of which make their way onto the canvas via layers of oil paint that seemingly exude a meditative effect prompting the viewer to either question the ways of the world when it comes to connecting with source, or alternatively catapulting the mind into cinematic flashback mode via Cocoon (1985) or The Abyss (1989). London-based designer Roksanda Illincic is a longtime fan of Tahnee’s work and famed U.K Creative Director Alex Eagle has been collecting her paintings for over a decade.

Shirazeh Houshiary: The Sound of One Hand

Lisson Galley, Hollywood, until 2 November 2024

Lisson Galley,

(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist and Lisson Gallery)

For her first solo show in Los Angeles for over a decade, the British artist Shirazeh Houshiary presents new and recent works, exploring the origins of life and the mysteries of the cosmos, from a microscopic cellular level, to the stratospheric phenomenon of the aurora borealis. The show’s title relates to a Zen Buddhist teaching that instructs the student to listen to the sound of one hand clapping, in order to open their mind to such a possibility and transcend the constraints of the physical body. Despite not being a Zen practitioner, Houshiary realised that her work revolves around the insistent sound made by one of her hands, making tiny, looping, scratched marks in pencil onto large aluminum surfaces, building up worlds through the silence of her inscribed words.

Richard Orlinski Sculptures

Rodeo Drive, Beverly Hills, until November 2024

Los Angeles art exhibitions Richard Orlinski Sculptures

(Image credit: Derek Hackett)

The is a new reason to stroll Rodeo Drive in Beverly Hills apart from all the high-end retail shops. The first public pieces from renowned French contemporary artist Richard Orlinski have been unveiled along this iconic palm-tree lined street.

As part of the Second Annual Rodeo Drive Celebrates Fashion kick-off, Orlinski’s colorful animal sculptures crafted from resin range from a cherry red alligator to a pink panther and yellow lion, have been strategically placed starting from The Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel.

'I'm very proud to be here,' said Orlinski at the hotel’s rose garden opening ceremony. 'Paris is where I'm from and I've done these many places in the world. But here on Rodeo in Beverly Hills, it's something special, just like magic and making history.'

Face The Music: The Legacy of Music Photography

Fahey/Klein Gallery, Hancock Park, until 7 September 2024

Amy Winehouse shot by Bruce Webber

(Image credit: Bruce Weber)

Take an intimate, historical look at iconic music figures from Cher to Dylan, Amy Winehouse, Harry Styles, and a young Mick Jagger, from artists such as Herb Ritts, Bruce Webber, Norman Seeff, and David Bailey among others. This exhibit is a rock, rap, pop, and punk tour de force for any music lover.

Raphael Navot: Reverberations

Friedman Benda, Hollywood, until 25 September 2024

Raphael Navot: Reverberations

(Image credit: Raphael Navot: Reverberations)

The location for the largest solo show (and first in Los Angeles) by Paris-based Israeli designer Raphael Navot could not be more fitting than at Friedman Benda located at a modern home in the hills behind the iconic Chateau Marmont hotel. With the West Coast debut of Navot’s acclaimed Acrostic seating, each piece is conceived in response to the human need for connection with one’s body, using materials such as fine upholstery, wood, eco-resin, and concrete in surprising new contexts.

Betye Saar: Drifting Toward Twilight

The Huntington, Pasadena, until Nov. 30, 2025

Betye Saar: Drifting Towards Twilight Los Angeles exhibition

(Image credit: Drifting Towards Twilight)

Also, at The Huntington in The Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art building, where you can also find several Warhol works including “Brillo Box,” renowned American artist Betye Saar’s large-scale work of a 17-foot-long vintage wooden canoe, “Drifting Toward Twilight.” takes up an entire room. This site-specific installation was commissioned by The Huntington and adorned with found objects, including birdcages, antlers, and natural materials harvested by the artist from The Huntington’s grounds. This work explores themes of racial oppression and ‘caged freedom.’

A small side room shows a short documentary film on Saar’s six-decade career as a pioneer of assemblage art, an important artistic voice during the feminist and Civil Rights movements, and as part of the foundational generation of Black artists in Los Angeles.

A convenient nearby glass door leads to the historic rose garden and tea room, which was refurbished and reopened earlier this year. Beyond that lies the Shakespeare Garden and the Japanese botanical gardens dotted with artifacts and sculptures.

Intuit Dome

Inglewood, permanent

Patrick Martinez's Same Boat on display in Los Angeles

(Image credit: Ivan Baan)

One of the most exciting art collections to hit Los Angeles can be found at the new home for the LA Clippers in Inglewood. The cutting-edge sports venue recently unveiled the monumental, site-specific, outdoor artworks commissioned for the Intuit Dome which opens to the public this August. The $11 million public art collection features a collection of globally recognised artists, selected by Ruth Berson, former deputy director of curatorial affairs at SFMOMA, who have deep ties to Los Angeles and intertwine their artistic talents with sports.

Glenn Kaino’s massive sculpture Sails, made of painted steel and wood looms in the form of the clipper ships that connected the world via the ocean’s trade routes. In this ship, basketball is the cultural wind that can connect us all.

Michael Massenburg’s mural of printed porcelain enamel on steel panel features figures of basketball, tennis, and soccer players, singers, musicians, and dancers, titled Cultural Playground expresses the artist’s belief that 'the two most profound things that unite people are the arts and sports.'

Jennifer Steinkamp’s digital artwork Swoosh, uses the entire surface of the Intuit Dome, designed by the architectural firm AECOM, with five animations will transform the surface of the dome and light up the sky with geometric panels.

Patrick Martinez’s sculpture Same Boat uses a neon sign to create an image that reproduces a statement by the late Civil Rights leader Whitney M. Young: “We may have all come on different ships but we’re in the same boat now.”

On a wall adjacent to Same Boat, you will find Kyungmi Shin’s stained-glass mosaic with stainless steel tracery, Spring to Life. For this work, Shin drew inspiration from Centinela Springs, the now-vanished water source in South Los Angeles that once supported the Tongva people and the land they cultivated. (If you would like to see more of Shin’s work, the artist has a solo exhibition at Craft Contemporary until 8, September 2024.)

The Dome opening features an exhibition of photographs by Catherine Opie (on loan from MOCA) evoking the experience of community. “We designed Intuit Dome to be a place that brings people together,” said Gillian Zucker, CEO of Halo Sports & Entertainment. “When it came to our public art, we wanted to deliver a collection that is as compelling to people well versed in art as it is to a novice viewer. We are eager to make these unique works, from these amazing artists, available to everyone.”

Andrew Cranston

Karma, West Hollywood, until 14, September

Andrew Cranston painting

(Image credit: Andrew Cranston)

Scottish-born and based artist Andrew Cranston taps into emotional resonance of place and memory in his paintings with oils, distemper, and collage. Expect beautiful expressions with still lifes, landscapes, portraits, and interiors suspended between the realms of imagination and the everyday. Of his approach to art-making, Cranston explains: “Painting is an act of remembering and forgetting, covering and uncovering, tracing and retracing, getting lost and finding a way.”

Josh Kline: Climate Change

MOCA, downtown Los Angeles, until 5 January 2025

Josh Kline Climate Change exhibition Los Angeles

(Image credit: Joerg Lohse)

Josh Kline’s dystopian science fiction installations took five years to fully produce but they could not be more on target with the current political and environmental climate concerns in America. This exhibition transforms the galleries at MOCA Grand Avenue with photography, moving image work, and ephemeral materials.

Also at Grand Ave., NTS Radio is in residency, in the museum’s newly opened cultureLAB space offers a summer-long collaboration of live broadcasts and music programming located on the Sculpture Plaza at MOCA, or tune in at nts.live

Mineo Mizuno: Homage to Nature

The Huntington, Pasadena, until 25 May 2029

Mineo Mizuno: Homage to Nature

(Image credit: The Huntingdon)

The Huntington holds a library with British medieval manuscripts, including the 15th-century Ellesmere tome of Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales; 16 themed gardens with more than 83,000 living plants; an art museum and more.

In the main garden area on the vast grounds, Mineo Mizuno’s sculpture celebrates the beauty of wood in its natural state and emphasises its potential as a reusable and renewable resource. This site-specific work explores the fragility of the Earth’s ecosystem, as well as the destruction of the forest and its potential for regeneration.

'All About Love'

The Broad, downtown LA, until 29 September 2024

Mickalene Thomas Afro Goddess artwork

Mickalene Thomas, Afro Goddess Looking Forward, 2015

(Image credit: Mickalene Thomas)

It seems that all eyes in the artworld are currently fixed on this dynamic Black creative voice and she wants you to think about love in new and profound ways. ‘Mickalene Thomas: All About Love’ is the artists’ first major international tour and is focused on celebrating Black feminist creative practices and critical perspectives, while offering frameworks for communal care. Spanning two decades, over 80 works from the New York-based artist, including her trademark use of rhinestones, mixed-media painting, collage, installation and photography, are on view now until 29 September 2024.

Co-organised by the Hayward Gallery, London, and in partnership with the Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia, the exhibition shares its title and several of its themes with the vital text by feminist author bell hooks, in which love is an active process rooted in healing, carving a path away from domination and towards collective liberation.

In conjunction – and including live music, such as by popular rapper Flo Milli, therapeutic workshops, comedy, concerts, and a night of films by LGBTQIA+ directors – The Broad will showcase women, Black, and queer creative voices within the context of Mickalene Thomas’ international exhibition. The best part, admission is free on Thursday evenings.

thebroad.org

‘ED RUSCHA / NOW THEN’

LACMA, mid-city, until 6 Oct 2024

ED RUSCHA / NOW THEN at LACMA

Ed Ruscha

(Image credit: Courtesy of the artist and LACMA)

Continuing through the fall, ‘ED RUSCHA / NOW THEN’ is the first comprehensive, cross-media retrospective of the artist in over 20 years. The exhibit traces the iconic artists’ methods and familiar subjects throughout his career. In 1956, Ruscha left Oklahoma City to study commercial art in Los Angeles, where he drew inspiration from the city’s architectural landscape including parking lots, urban streets, and apartment buildings. The artist holds a mirror to American society by transforming some of its defining attributes, including consumer culture and entertainment to the ever-changing urban landscape.

lacma.org

‘Yves Saint Laurent: Line and Expression’

Orange County Museum of Art, 3 July – 27 October 2024

mannequins in YSL

Installation view: ‘Yves Saint Laurent: Line and Expression’, 2023, Musée Yves Saint Laurent Marrakech, Morocco. The show is now travelling to Orange County Museum of Art

(Image credit: Courtesy of Musée Yves Saint Laurent Marrakech, Morocco. Photo: Marco Cappelletti. © Yves Saint Laurent)

Fashion buffs will want to travel 30 miles south from Los Angeles, for ‘Yves Saint Laurent: Line and Expression’, which recently launched at OCMA. Travelling from the Musée Yves Saint Laurent Marrakech and Musée Yves Saint Laurent Paris, on loan from the collection of the Fondation Pierre Bergé-Yves Saint Laurent in Paris, ‘Line and Expression’ marks the first presentation in Southern California of Yves Saint Laurent’s stunning and legendary practice.

ocma.art

Carole Dixon is a prolific lifestyle writer-editor currently based in Los Angeles. As a Wallpaper* contributor since 2004, she covers travel, architecture, art, fashion, food, design, beauty, and culture for the magazine and online, and was formerly the LA City editor for the Wallpaper* City Guides to Los Angeles.