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This Week's Must-See Art
August 24 - August 30

Teresa Baker From Joy To Joy To Joy | Dominic Musa Talebearer at De Boer Gallery (Aug 26, 6-9pm) Baker uses artificial turf as a ground for works that reference abstract expressionist, cubist, and postminimalist movements. Musa’s paintings are layered in color, exacting yet loose.
Director Dialogues: Cole Sternberg and The Free Republic of California at Honor Fraser (Aug 26, 2-3pm) Sternberg will introduce and expand upon his conceptual political project, The Free Republic of California as well as his painting and image-based art practice.
Nigel Howlett Means of Opposites at Anat Ebgi (Aug 26, 2-5pm) Howlett's  monochromatic drawings and paintings focus on anonymous, futuristic characters. His minimal and recognizable style draws on elements of the surreal and uncanny to explore complexities and nuances of human experience.
Ellen Siebers dream son at parrasch heijnen (Aug 26, 6-8:30pm) Using poetic washes of abstraction, Siebers memorializes the immediacy of beauty in vignettes of daily life. She gives breath to the temporal phenomena of her subjects with fluid compositions on panel.
William Bradley Giant Country | Madison Brooks Cone Age at Lowell Ryan Projects (Aug 26, 4-7pm) Bradley's exhibition consists of large-scale colorful abstract paintings and a series of intimately-scaled collages made with construction paper. Brooks' exhibition features ancient traffic cones that populated the garden in the back of the gallery.
Autumn Breon Essentials at Crenshaw Dairy Mart (Aug 26, 5-9pm) The exhibition is a group of sculpture and video works that invites the audience to interact with relics from Esoterica. An extraterrestrial location, Esoterica is the next destination for ancestors when they leave Earth.
Rudik Ovsepyan Magaxat at Reisig and Taylor Contemporary  (Aug 26, 5-10pm) Ranging from the bucolic landscape sceneries that formalized his (former) career as a Soviet artist to his current, material-focused works in abstraction, the exhibition recovers autobiographical traces of Ovsepyan’s practice across multiple decades.
Solidarity: The Black Panther Party Discusses the History and Future of Coalition Building at JANM (Aug 26, 2-3:30pm)  A panel with former Black Panther Party members to learn about the historical context of the Party’s work with Japanese Americans, and what a future roadmap for continued and expanded solidarity with all marginalized communities looks like.
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