Welcome to LACE

Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions

  • Programs
    • Projects
    • Emerging Curator Program
    • Apprenticeship
    • Lightning Fund
    • Se habla español
  • Archive
    • Archive
    • Publications
  • About
    • Visit
    • History
    • Ethos
    • Board of Directors
    • Team
  • Support
    • Benefit Art Auction
    • Give Now
    • Membership
    • Supporters
    • Special Editions
  • Shop
    • Online Shop
You are here: Home / Archives for music

The Platform

February 6-7, 1993 Thought provoking and politically charged, The Platform combined art, music and performance to create a volatile social cabaret. ... [Read More]

Filed Under: 1990-1994, Exhibition, LACE, Performance Tagged With: 1993, Exhibition, music, performance, The Platform

The Antenna Repairmen/Ghatam

January 22, 1993 The Antenna Repairmen (Arthur Jarvinen, Robert Fernandez and M.B. Gordy) were founded in 1978 and incorporated contemporary music, text and theater, with special emphasis on ... [Read More]

Filed Under: 1990-1994, LACE, Performance Tagged With: 1993, Arthur Jarvinen, Ghatam, M.B. Gordy, music, performance, Robert Fernandez, The Antenna Repairmen, The Antenna Repairmen/Ghatam, theater

Carl Stone

January 23, 1993 L.A.'s own Carl Stone returned to LACE for an evening of electro-acoustic music. ... [Read More]

Filed Under: 1990-1994, LACE, Performance Tagged With: 1993, Carl Stone, concert, music, performance

An Unseemly Accident or Paint Me, Paint Me Peter Kurten

Unseemly performance documentation

June 26-27, 1992 A parlor play with music set in turn-of-the-century Dusseldorf exploring an unbalanced ballerina's self-destructive obsessions with a madman. Artists featured: John Jahnke, Marilyn ... [Read More]

Filed Under: 1990-1994, LACE, Performance Tagged With: 1992, An Unseemly Accident or Paint Me, Barry Morse, dance, Gary Stella, Ivette Soler, John Jahnke, Marilyn Welch, Mel Herst, music, Paint Me Peter Kurten, performance, Rachel Stratton, theatre

Joelle Leandre

April 24, 1992 Along with gasps, screams, belches, shouts and performances, Paris Conservatory prize winner Joelle Leandre drew from classical tradition, mainstream jazz and free jazz to perform new ... [Read More]

Filed Under: 1990-1994, LACE, Performance Tagged With: 1992, concert, Joelle Leandre, music, performance

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
  • 11
  • …
  • 31
  • Next Page »

Visit

TEMPORARY OFFICE LOCATION
6464 Sunset Blvd.
Ste. 1070
Los Angeles, CA, 90028

tel: 1(323)250-0940
info@welcometolace.org

LACE recognizes our presence on Tovaangar, the unceded ancestral lands of the Gabrielino-Tongva people who are its rightful caretakers.

Lace Logo

Follow

JOIN OUR MAILING LIST

GIVE NOW

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube

News

LACE FOREVER: Supporter Preview and Artist Celebration

LACE’s Lightning Fund Opens August 15, 2025!

PRESS RELEASE: Announcing LACE’s Next Emerging Curators

More News

LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions)

welcometolace

Free drink, you say? LACE is thrilled to partner w Free drink, you say? LACE is thrilled to partner with Chicas on the Rocks to bring you delicious cocktails (or mocktails) at the 𝗟𝗔𝗖𝗘 𝗙𝗢𝗥𝗘𝗩𝗘𝗥 Artist Celebration on September 25, 2025! All tickets come with one complimentary drink.

Chicas on the Rocks is a mujer owned and operated event bartending business located in east Los Angeles that’s praised for their delicious cocktails, and creative bar presentations. With over 20 years of industry experience, it’s their attentive service that sets them apart in the catering world. Chicas on the Rocks delights in creating a unique experience for their clients and their guests.

We are 2 weeks away! Get your ticket at the link in our bio.
LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions) is pro LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions) is proud to announce the forthcoming group exhibition “A Tender Excavation” curated by our Curator & Director of Programs Selene Preciado!

On view from November 1, 2025–February 21, 2026 at the Luckman Gallery at Cal State LA, “A Tender Excavation” approaches research-based artistic practices through propositions of alternative histories, bringing together a group of artists that work with historical and familial photographic archives as a point of departure to construct new narratives and elicit transformation. Artists featured in the exhibition include Zeynep Abes, Susu Attar, Jamil Baldwin, Mely Barragán, Artemisa Clark, Arleene Correa Valencia, Mercedes Dorame, Prima Jalichandra-Sakuntabhai, Leah King, Tarrah Krajnak, Heesoo Kwon, Ann Le, Arlene Mejorado, Star Montana, and Camille Wong.

Join us for the opening reception on Saturday, November 1, 2025 from 2–5 PM. Click the link in bio to RSVP and learn about additional public programs.

“A Tender Excavation” is made possible thanks to our friends at The Luckman Fine Arts Complex at Cal State LA. Support for this exhibition is provided by the Teiger Foundation.
Thank you to everyone who came out to see Carlo Ma Thank you to everyone who came out to see Carlo Maghirang’s “ANITO” get activated by Jobel Medina and Anna Luisa Petrisko!

This is the last weekend to see “ANITO” at LA State Historic Park. The sculptures will be on view at the River Station Roundhouse turntable until September 7.

Photos by Christopher Wormald.
Introducing 011668, performing at the 𝗟𝗔𝗖 Introducing 011668, performing at the 𝗟𝗔𝗖𝗘 𝗙𝗢𝗥𝗘𝗩𝗘𝗥 Artist Celebration on September 25, 2025. 011668 is an American interdisciplinary artist exploring spirituality, mythology, and cosmogony through the digital age. Acknowledging industrial forces as our modern pantheon, 011668 unravels a contemporary creation myth while fusing elements of butoh dance, tokusatsu, and film noir.

We are excited to have 011668 perform at Metabolic Studio (@metabolicstudio), alongside the LA River. Read below about the performance captured above:
On January 16, 1968, at 10:00 PM PST, LADWP workers breached the Los Angeles River, inadvertently unearthing an unknown lifeform from a fissure in the concrete. The creature’s body is an amalgamation of mutated forms: part human, part crustacean, and part trash. Its scaly skin is a sickly shade of iridescent gray, adorned with a hard plastic exoskeleton, protruding wires, and twisted appendages. This shocking hybridization is the result of countless lifeforms and pollutants trapped within the concrete hex. The intermingling toxic cocktail of petrochemicals and wastewater ferment beneath the channel, creating an unprecedented genetic potential for birthing a new abomination into existence. The creature has continuously evaded detainment and grown to monstrous proportions, tearing through the urban landscape, disturbing commercial space, and leaving a trail of destruction in its wake. Some have crudely categorized the figure as a demon from another world. Others see the creature as a poignant metaphor highlighting the ramifications of humanity’s reckless treatment of the environment. Regardless, the creature has forged a unique reputation in Los Angeles.

Get your tickets via the link in our bio!

Photo by Derek Holguin (@derekholguin)
Follow on Instagram

Copyright © 2025 Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions