Exhibition Page Exhibition Photos
Lidia Hasenauer
Jaded Justice
First Place
Rob Gonsalves
Muybridge Derby
Second Place
Tom Lasley
The Wolf At The Door
Third Place
Exhibiting Artists
Matthew Aceves | Barry Beach | Michele Benzamin-Miki | Raymond Bonavida | Gregory Bryant | Bonny Butler | John Calabrese | Andrée Carter | Michael Chesler | Ashoke Chhabra | David DAndrade | Carolina Danu | Pam Douglas | Diane Holland | Barry Goldstein | Rob Gonsalves | Carlos Grasso | Leonard Greco | Maureen Haldeman | Emanuela Harris-Sintamarian | Lidia Hasenauer | Susan Hensel | Sol Hill | Karen Hochman Brown | Ann Ino | Michael James | Kathy Jonokuchi | Joan Karp | Debbie Korbel | Faina Kumpan | Elana Kundell | Zara Kuredjian | Tom Lasley | Julie Lipa | Erin Mahoney | Lauren Mendelsohn Bass | Janet Milhomme | Michael Miner | Jennifer Nerio | David Orr | Mariana Peirano Royuela | John Ralston | Marita Redondo | Frederika Roeder | Steve Seagren | Jerry Shevick | Dawn Smith | Caryl St. Ama | Linda Stelling | Lorien Suarez | Stephanie Sydney | Cody TheCreative | Christa Toole | Scott Trimble | Jenni W | Silvia Wagensberg | Marion Wood | Jan Wurm | Liang Zhang | Jim Zver
Mental Carnival
Honorable Mention
“The Sailor” is one of 12 Witnesses in the Bearing Witness series honoring refugees.
This one testifies to all who braved the seas in search of asylum, whether the Rio Grande, the Mediterranean or anywhere else throughout time.
The figure holds a rope that is still tied to a fragment from a capsized raft.
His eyes made of mirrors cue the visitor to be a witness themselves, to be a participant attesting to history.
To see all 12: http://pamdouglasart.com/portfolio/witnesses/
still from Muybridge Derby
Second Place
Jaded Justice
First Place
Forsaken
Honorable Mention
The Wolf At The Door
Third Place
Leo Tolstoy’s Pants
Honorable Mention
Family Dinner at Taix
Honorable Mention
Family Dinner at Taix, 2021, Marita Redondo
Taix French Restaurant in Los Angeles opened in 1927 and has been a favorite meeting spot for my father’s family and friends for generations. In Family Dinner at Taix, I depict dinner after the funeral of my Uncle Emile – this had been a favorite spot of his. The messy table of my family members parallels the messiness of our relationships within the family. Things are askew and there is much movement at the dinner, yet my father, the man with the beard, is no longer at the head of the table. Seated near me in the middle, he has fallen into early dementia and is confused by the commotion. The meal is the main focus for him but it is over. I painted this as a memory for myself. Family members are deceased, divorced, estranged or just busy. Life has moved on but this was mine at one time.