Changing Perspectives: Frieze Los Angeles 2025 Programme
Art Production Fund’s Inside Out includes Lita Albuquerque, Madeline Hollander, Greg Ito and Ozzie Juarez
Art Production Fund’s Inside Out includes Lita Albuquerque, Madeline Hollander, Greg Ito and Ozzie Juarez
Frieze Projects will again be part of Frieze Los Angeles 2025, with a programme curated by Art Production Fund. Titled Inside Out, it will feature site-specific works by Lita Albuquerque, Jackie Amézquita, Claire Chambless, Joel Gaitan, Madeline Hollander, Greg Ito, Ozzie Juarez and Dominique Moody, in an exploration of perspective: how personal histories and experiences shape an understanding of Los Angeles, its culture and landscape.
Highlights
Santa Monica local Lita Albuquerque, a pioneer of the land art and light & space movements of the 1970s will unveil a new commission featuring her signature ultramarine blue pigment, a trademark of her 50-year career.
Themes of migration and adaptation define Jackie Amézquita’s large-scale interactive work sited on the football pitches at Santa Monica Airport. Using traditional petates (woven mats), Amézquita has interpreted migration data graphs, and visitors will be able symbolically to walk on pathways within the piece.
Amézquita’s commission for Frieze Los Angeles is proudly supported by Maestro Dobel Tequila, the official tequila of Frieze’s North American fairs, reflecting the brand’s enduring passion for heritage and its commitment to supporting Latinx communities.
Claire Chambless is bringing an interactive sculpture hunt to Frieze. The artist will hide golden eggs containing miniature sculptures across the fair in a challenge to traditional models of art acquisition, and as a playful fostering of communal exploration.
Inspired by his Nicaraguan and Miami heritage, Joel Gaitan will transform the fair’s central pathway with a welcoming façade inflected with a hybrid of vernacular architecture and personal memories, with a terracotta roof and plant-filled balcony as a space for reflection.
Artist and choreographer Madeline Hollander is not so earthbound. Her work at Frieze, Day Flight, offers ‘choreographed’ flights for individual fairgoers. Inspired by her childhood flying lessons, which influenced her approach to dance, the work features state-of-the-art light electric planes and be accompanied by an audio-visual installation on the ground with live feeds of the flights overhead.
Greg Ito’s large-scale inflatable sculpture Burn and Blossom will be positioned at the fair’s entrance that it weaves together themes of renewal, resilience and growth.
Ozzie Juarez, a first-generation Mexican-American multidisciplinary artist and founder of Tlaloc Studios in South Central Los Angeles, will recreate murals, architecture and performances from his neighborhood, infused with the spirit of swap meets and tianguis (open-air markets). His project explores how cultural identity is often overlooked amid rapid urban change.
Finally, LA-based artist Dominique Moody will restage her installation The Nomad, recently shown at the Hammer Museum. This mobile dwelling constructed from found objects and salvaged materials, functions as a live-in artist residency, a personal portrait of the artist and a nomadic vessel addressing themes of housing insecurity and displacement. The Nomad Frieze Los Angeles installation will be presented in partnership with Destination Crenshaw.
Further Information
Frieze Los Angeles returns for its sixth edition from 20 – 23 February 2025 at Santa Monica Airport. Early-bird tickets now available.
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Frieze Los Angeles is supported by global lead partner Deutsche Bank, continuing its legacy of celebrating artistic excellence on an international scale.
Main image: Lita Albuquerque. Photo: Jim McHugh/HiTes