Los Angeles

Superchief Gallery Los Angeles and Creepy Gals Land Delivers an Electrifying Exhibition!

Published 02/14/2024 | 8:15am PST

The night was Electrifying. Wait, that word is already in the title. The night was RIVETING!!! People from all walks came out to celebrate this beguiling exhibition. It was exhilaration and full of life! But, I will just let the photos speak for themselves!

Superchief Gallery Los Angeles
1965 Los Angeles St.
Los Angeles, CA
Wednesday - Saturaday 12:00p to 7pm

Gajin Fujita Explores the True Colors of Los Angeles

In his sixth solo show, artist Gajin Fujita exhibits striking and emotional paintings he created during the pandemic. Though artists are prone to isolation, the unprecedented confinement inspired art making that not only expanded his creative techniques but also criticized the problematic societal situation. A graffiti artist and Los Angeles native, Fujita began his investigation of society at street level and his insights and experiences are well honed in his latest exhibit, True Colors.

By Trina Calderón

Forget Me Not (Chitose Fujita)

Published 8:00 Am PST

“I think what sticks with me is when my dad immigrated from Japan to L.A., he thought it was such a beautiful city, a city unlike any other in the world. It’s very unique. We got a lot of nature surrounding us, the mountains, the ocean, the valleys, and the desert. Maybe like an hour drive out of L.A. you’re in nature and I’m just super proud to be a native Angeleno. I love this place and I want to represent it right because when I look good, L.A. is going to look good, and when L.A. looks good, the world is going to look good,” he related it to his emotional ties to the city. Throughout the show, his paintings represent a hometown story with conflict and connection.

In his monumental Game of Drones (GOD), a vulnerable samurai is confronted by a large white dragon drawn to him through a portal in the sky. Next to the aristocratic warrior is his surrendered drone controller, a gadget he has used far too much, a symbol of his desire for power. This painting is a warning, an image about humanity getting ahead of itself. Set against the backdrop of California’s Sierra Nevada mountains, painted in gold leaf to remind of the gold dug out for fortune, with corporate logos re-appropriated to show the impact of capitalism, and all covered with tags from many of Fujita’s close friends and fellow L.A. graffiti artists, it’s a story about twisted morality. The tags cross out the businesses, street symbols revolting against corporate greed in the community. In Japanese mythology, the dragon is summoned to answer one’s fate, here the creature scares the samurai, warning of his selfish behavior during a time the world needs empathy. “It can definitely be relative to what we had seen in our country during the pandemic, when our rulers weren’t doing their job, like they didn’t know what to do. The world turned upside down. Everybody was feeling it, but I think in our country we saw the true colors come out,” Fujita explained.

Game of Drones (GOD)

Home Field LA

In isolation, Fujita developed his ideas with new artistic techniques. Using transparent spray paint he added more depth to figures, and instead of using outlines as he had in the past, he let the effect add 3-dimensional qualities to edges. In Forget Me Not (Chitose Fujita), Fujita paints the silhouette of the city, with a checkered background and street view from his mother’s porch in Boyle Heights. Using silver leaf and platinum paint for the checkers, he deliberately reckons the risky, contrasting codes of his city. The sun sets on the next layer, with a perspective looking west, tagging again from his peers, and small Dumbo’s flying through. A portrait of Fujita’s mother is in the foreground, using shadows to give her figure depth. She’s wearing blue and holding a yellow-red hibiscus, a real-life moment Fujita captured in a photo when she was outside, visiting his studio. She wears a green ribbon on her shirt, for mental health awareness.

Fujita’s mother has Alzheimer’s and went missing in the summer of 2022, she had slipped out of her home unnoticed. While searching for her, Fujita sent the current photo of her to artist and close friend PRIME, who lives near her home and he drove around looking for her. Thankfully, she was found safe in less than an hour later, but the image now connects Fujita to the scary moment in time. Using symbols (Dumbo represents the only animal who never forgets) and new creative techniques, he brings his mother to life wandering out in the city, a bold story of memory told through his artistic language. 

True Colors is on view at LA Louver March 29th – May 6th, 2023.


Trina Calderón @trinaluz is a film & TV writer/producer and journalist from Los Angeles. She cut her teeth in reality/doc TV with Authentic Entertainment and Pie Town Productions. Her first feature film, Down For Life, premiered opening night at the The Los Angeles Latino International Film Festival in 2009. She's also known for G4tv's X-Play, BBCAmerica's The Nerdist TV show, the AWM Gracies Awards show, the Legend of the Cool "Disco" Dan documentary, the Wall Writers documentary, and co-writing a massive book about the history of the 9:30 Club.

Nadia Lee Cohen ' Hello My Name Is’ Jeffrey Deitch Gallery Los Angeles

Courtesy of Jeffrey Deitch
Photography Charles White

By Julian Lucas
Published June 17, 2022 11:37 PST

Los Angeles— British photographer Nadia Lee Cohen opened her first major solo exhibition Hello, My Name Is in the United States.The exhibition was held at none other than Jeffrey Deitch Gallery. Where else, who else would showcase such an exhibition? It's an overview of works from both her monograph, Women (sold out) and her latest book of the same name, displayed with images, sculpture, and film.

Hello My Name Is, immerses you in photographic imagery and never-before-seen footage of the insular world of Cohen’s human subjects - characters  created and played either by Nadia or in collaboration with models who assume different identities.  In the meantime, a conveyor belt brings  a succession of these characters’ personal effects that rotate in and out of the room.

Elsewhere, in a darkened, theater-like area, Cohen takes on each of the character’s parts.  As skewed as her photographs and accompanying films are, Cohen’s hyper-more-than-real art ultimately encourages the viewer to build relationships with the very real persons we see on a daily basis.

HELLO, My Name Is
Jeffrey Deitch Gallery / Los Angeles
Now through August 13 2022

Jeffrey Deitch
925 N Orange Dr,
Los Angeles, CA 90038


Julian Lucas, is a photographer, creative strategist, and writer in training, but mostly a photographer. Julian also works as a housing specialist which, includes linking unhoused veterans to housing.