I just got back from the opening of Phantom Sightings: Art after the Chicano Movement. I have other reviews on various burners (and I’m too goddamn busy to polish any of them - grrr), but I was really, really impressed by how LA the show is - That’s LA in crossed letter Dodger font. It’s anything but a “Chicano show”, and the first ones to (smartly) admit that are the curators. Two things greet the visitor upon immediate entry to the gallery, a short and well written curatorial statement that smoothly steps away from the racial orientation of the show, admitting that the post-Chicano subtitle to the exhibition is really just a starting off point, and the work of the artists group ASCO (active 1971-87), which really make me wish that Patassi Valdez would re-visit her fierce, early ’80s wardrobe, if only for the sake of performance, but which more importantly function as diving board for the potential viewer.

More than anything this show feels like a legitimization of much of what has been going on on LA galleries over the past decade or so. There are superstars in it like RubĂ©n Ortiz-Torres, and up and comers like Shizu Saldamando (I really wish that some of her ballpoint drawings on fabric were included in the exhibition - I think they’re her most meaningful work, and there are examples of them in the catalog). There are a few artists in the show that who’s work I don’t think is particularly strong or relevant, but in a show with this many artists, that may be more a matter of taste than of talent. As the exhibition itself is crowded with work, seeing it in a crowd at an opening certainly isn’t the ideal viewing environment - it’s difficult to make connections between works.

Phantom Sightings is essential reading, and in its ordinariness (for gallery crawling Angelenos) a solid sit down meal of comfort food at an institution that seems to often have very little connection to the ground floor of the creative works that it celebrates.

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