Danny First
The Cabin LA “per square foot, the most influential gallery in Los Angeles" ArtNewspaper, The Bunker & The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.

London-based British artist Morag Caister paints Actor, artist & musician Booboo Stewart. Opening this Sunday in The Cabin 3-6 pm. @moragcaister @booboostewart.art #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency #britishartist

London-based British artist Morag Caister paints Actor, artist & musician Booboo Stewart. Opening this Sunday in The Cabin 3-6 pm. @moragcaister @booboostewart.art #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency #britishartist
London-based British artist Morag Caister paints Actor, artist & musician Booboo Stewart. Opening this Sunday in The Cabin 3-6 pm. @moragcaister @booboostewart.art #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency #britishartist

London-based British artist Morag Caisterc continues working on her one month stunt at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA. Opening in The Cabin LA. May 31st 3-6 pm. Please DM for any info. @moragcaister #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency #labreastudio #britishartist
London- based British artist Morag Caister at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Morag’s latest figurative oil paintings will go on display in The Cabin LA. Opening on May 31st. @moragcaister#figurativepainter #labreastudioresidency #thecabinla

Morag inThe House!
London-based British artist Morag Caister has started her one month Stint at The La Brea Studio artist residency in LA. Morag is painting her subjects from live. Please contact for any further information.
@moragcaister #britishartist #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings are on view at The Cabin LA through May. Please DM for any further info. @georgiasemple #georgiasemple #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency #xolodog

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Bunker LA Presents: New small works (25x20inch oil on canvas) by LA-based artist Ronnie Robinson. Opening Today Saturday May 2nd from 3-6 pm. #ronnierobinson @ronnierrobstudio #thebunkerla

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
Georgia Semple: Give Or Take
Since the beginning of April, London-based British artist Georgia Semple has been in residence at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in Los Angeles for a one-month stint.
Semple’s newest oil paintings will be on view at The Cabin LA, opening on Saturday, May 2nd, from 3–6 PM.
Please feel free to contact me for any additional information.
@georgiasemple #londonbasedartist #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency

London-based British artist Georgia Semple continues working on her one-month stint at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA. Opening in The Cabin LA on Saturday, May 2nd from 3-6 pm.@georgiasemple #thecabinla #labreastudioresidency #britishartist #thecabinla
London-based British artist Georgia Semple at The La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
@georgiasemple #britishartist #labreastudioresidency #thecabinla

Georgia is in The House!
Since the begining of April London-based artist Georgia Semple has started her one month stint at the La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Georgia Semple (b. 1995, UK) is a London-based artist exploring identity, faith, addiction, and connection through richly layered paintings. Rooted in her Guyanese heritage, she constructs imagined scenes of Black communities that blend family archives with broader cultural narratives. Her practice encompasses painting and ceramics, incorporating forms inspired by ancient rock carvings through blends of collaging, embroidery, acrylic, and oil to create intricate yet distorted visual narratives that reflect the fluidity of self-perception.@georgiasemple #georgiasemple #labreastudioresidency #britishartist #xolodog #thecabinla

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Bunker LA Presents the latest paintings by LA-based artist Edward Cushenberry. Opening Sunday March 29th 3-6 pm.
In The Beach + Basketball, I showcase two bodies of work: my ongoing series about the fictional city of Dachshund Beach and my favorite moments from NBA history.
Dachshund Beach is an imagined city where the majority of the denizens are minorities — a place free of oppression and subscribed conformity. Each painting contains references to the hardcore punk and metal bands that caused so much derision in my adolescence as well as to the many novels and movies that played a huge role in my upbringing. This series is loosely based on my childhood as a black kid in the predominately white city of Huntington Beach. While I was ridiculed by my extended family members for not being “black enough,” one of the few things that bonded me with my cousins and uncles was loving the NBA. When my cousins would sleep over at my parents’ house we would watch NBA games and stay up late watching highlights on ESPN. I spent my allowance on basketball cards and traded those cards with my cousins. I even jumped on the bandwagon and became a Bulls fan. As I grew older my love for the NBA faded, but I was always intrigued with stories from the NBA: the Phoenix Suns’ heartbreaking one-point loss to the Chicago Bulls in Game 6 of the 1993 NBA finals, the Showtime Lakers, and of course the infamous “Malice at the Palace.”
I depict these NBA stories and tales from Dachsund Beach in this show through paintings that resemble oversized Polaroid photos. The Polaroid is an object that’s both kitsch and avant-garde, and Polaroid pictures have played an important role in my childhood and my art career. My work will always be about the narratives I create and this show gives me the ability to depict a world where characters, no matter thei race, are seen as comple human beings containing multitudes.@edwardcushenberry@loslakers #lakers #chicagobulls #basketball @chicagobulls #thebunkerLA

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency

The Cabin LA Presents:
“Pls don't watch me dancing”
The latest oil painting by Seoul-based Korean artist Yeonsu Ju, which she created over the past month at Tge La Brea Studio Artist Residency in LA.
Opening this Sunday from 3-6 pm. We will have Pizza, drinks & live music. @yeonsuju @hdm_gallery #koreanartist #xolodog #thecabinla #labreastudioartistsresidency
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