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“Yoshitomo Nara”
A three-decade survey of works by the Japanese artist, on view through July 5. | TIMES REVIEW
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 5905 Wilshire Blvd., L.A. Closed Wednesdays. $10-$25; ages 12 and younger are free; advance timed-entry tickets required. (323) 857-6010. lacma.org
Also on view: “Not I: Throwing Voices (1500 BCE–2020 CE),” exploring ventriloquism in art (through July 25); “Cauleen Smith: Give It or Leave It,” multimedia works by the L.A.-based artist (through Oct. 31); “Bill Viola: Slowly Turning Narrative,” room-sized video installation (through June 27); “Vera Lutter: Museum in the Camera,” images of the LACMA campus (through Sept. 12); “Fiji: Art & Life in the Pacific” (through May 12); “Do Ho Suh: 348 West 22nd Street,” installation re-creating the artist’s New York apartment in sheets of translucent polyester (through May 16).
Sundays From 6:00 AM to 10:00 AM
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Gió Marconi opens Matthew Brannon s third solo show with the gallery
Matthew Brannon, 2021 (detail). Silkscreen with hand painted elements on paper, 52 x 45.5 inches. Photo: Kevin Frances.
MILAN
.-Gió Marconi opened Cold Shoulders / Foreign Affairs / Seafood Dinners / Power Vacuums / and The Last Gate at the End of a Very Long Terminal, Matthew Brannons third solo show with the gallery.
I made this exhibition during the surreal year that was 2020. I imagined a plane hovering in mid-air above a city sometime during the last century. Light as a feather, heavy as a whale. Each artwork shows the seat of an unseen passenger. Its the set of a theatre production after the show is over and the cameras are off. Its the moment upon waking before you remember all you have to do. Its the center of a book I wrote long ago. Its a space for you to enter. The floating world. Matthew Brannon, New York City, March 2021