LAB ART Los Angeles

Coordinates: 34°4′13″N 118°20′39″W / 34.07028°N 118.34417°W / 34.07028; -118.34417
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LAB ART | LA Street Art Gallery is located on South La Brea Avenue, in Los Angeles, California. It is the largest art gallery dedicated to street art and graffiti in the United States, spanning 6,500 square feet of space. In June 2018 it was announced that UK based entrepreneur Darren Manley had purchased the gallery from founder Iskander Lemseffer.[1][2][3][4]

History[edit]

Grand opening exhibition[edit]

LAB ART | LA Street Art Gallery opened on May 13, 2011, with a grand opening reception exhibition bringing together approximately 300 works, by over 50 artists from the street art movement.[5][6] The opening line-up included: LEBA, Chad Muska, Alec Monopoly, Smear, ROYAL, Destroy All Design, Swift, Thank You X, Mar, Army of One/JC2, Dog Byte, Felix, Jay Shogo, CYRCLE, Philip Lumbang, Gregory Siff, SEPTERHED, LOUIS XXX, Rabi, Carl Paoli, DD'$, XVALA, Silver Buck, Common Cents, Jules Muck, Random Act, Desire Obtain Cherish, AJL, KH No. 7, Lydia Emily, Sarah'sINCOGNITO, CANTSTOPGOODBOY, Bon Bon Nielsen, Becca, LoudLabs, Stu Rad, Carly Wise, ADVNTRS, Snyder, E, Fragile, Miky Fabrega, and the house photographer—BIRDMAN.

Miss Danger on the Loose" exhibition[edit]

In July 2011 the gallery staged an exhibition, Miss Danger on the Loose, showcasing a group of emerging female street artists.[7] Of the exhibition, Ms Magazine said "Pin-up girls, flowers and unambiguous political commentary are a bit too prominent" though picked out the work of K H No.7 and crochet artist Olek as "genuinely compelling."[8]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "FOX 11 Los Angeles". 9 March 2022.
  2. ^ KTLA Allie Lab Art Gallery[dead link]
  3. ^ Lab Art Street Art[dead link]
  4. ^ "Popsugar".
  5. ^ Lab Art LA grand opening promises street art and more[dead link]
  6. ^ Nicole Larson (May 13, 2011). "LAB ART Los Angeles Previews The Largest Collection Of Street Art To Date". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2014-02-24.
  7. ^ "July 20 on FM: 'Miss Danger' street art, Room to Read + Feminist Teacher - Feminist Magazine".
  8. ^ Catherine Wagley (July 20, 2011). "Women Street Artists Break Into the Boy's Club of Graffiti Art". Ms. Magazine. Retrieved 2014-02-24.

External links[edit]

34°4′13″N 118°20′39″W / 34.07028°N 118.34417°W / 34.07028; -118.34417