Artwork > Site-Specific Installation

Cardboard Revival:  Slauson Avenue, Los Angeles (view of right and back walls)
Cardboard Revival: Slauson Avenue, Los Angeles (view of right and back walls)
Site-specific installation with house paint, acrylics and cardboard
Variable dimensions
2019

Cardboard Revival is an ongoing project that first appeared at the former 2A Gallery located near Skid Row in Downtown Los Angeles. The original piece has been reworked for exhibitions at Barnsdall Art Park in East Hollywood and the South Bay Galleria in Redondo Beach. In each work, decorative motifs referencing the architectural style of the building housing the exhibition space, historical cues and socio-cultural associations of each site, are conflated with the hard demographics of homelessness. Each site has been located in close proximity to local homeless populations, although not intentionally; thus, underscoring the enormity of the problem and desperate situation of street people in Southern California.

Cardboard Revival: Slauson Avenue, Los Angeles at SoLA is the fourth iteration of this ongoing project. I drew from the building's Mid-Century Modern design, the post WW2 industrial boom along Slauson Avenue (one of the longest streets in the area) and more recent gang activity in the area, the homeless demographic of the community, and African Ndebele painted houses. I want to explore the Modernist, middle class fantasy of the prefab home that helped shape suburban life after the war and how that was incongruous with the realities facing many black people at the time. This exploration plays out against the present-day fetishization of the Mid-Century Modern aesthetic, an obsession with tiny house living, the crisis of homelessness that continues to spiral out of control, and the brazen attacks on people of color, women, immigrants and the poor that have accelerated in the current political climate.