Dominic Dispirito: Pearly Party || Gabby Rosenberg: Night Pockets || Victoria Dailey: Pavement Nymphs and Roadside Flowers: Prostitutes in Paris After the Revolution
6830 Santa Monica Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90038
Saturday, March 30 at 6:00 PM 8:00 PM
Ends May 4, 2019
Steve Turner is pleased to present Pearly Party, a solo exhibition by London-based Dominic Dispirito that celebrates the British working class and his upbringing in the heart of Cockney London. He will present paintings that depict “Pearly Queens,” Cockney characters who originated in Victorian London, who evolved from the Coster Kings and Queens, the elected leaders of London’s street hawkers. Benevolent societies developed to aid the less fortunate, and parades were staged in which the “Pearlies” dressed in elaborate clothing that they adorned with rows and rows of mother-of-pearl buttons. ******* Steve Turner is pleased to present Night Pockets, a solo exhibition by Los Angeles-based Gabby Rosenberg consisting of paintings that combine figuration and abstraction. The gender-ambiguous figures are part self and part monster and are comprised of lushly layered bold colors juxtaposed against solid backgrounds of white or black. Many of Rosenberg’s subjects have fragmented body parts that are stacked in concentric circles. These blobby characters are often depicted with exposed joints or innards, a suggestion of vulnerability. *** Steve Turner is pleased to present Pavement Nymphs and Roadside Flowers: Prostitutes in Paris After the Revolution, an exhibition of 18th and 19th century prints, photographs and books curated by Victoria Dailey. The exhibition is a sequel to Tea and Morphine, the exhibition Dailey co-curated at the Hammer Museum in 2014 on women in Paris in the late 19th century. In Pavement Nymphs, Dailey delves further back in time, to the period after the fall of the Bastille to the rise of the Eiffel Tower, to show how gratifying male sexual desire became a central issue in Parisian society. Over 50 images of prostitutes, their clients, their haunts and their private moments will be presented. The exhibition accompanies a broadside produced by Dailey which lists 400 French synonyms for prostitute along with her essay of the same title co-published by The Los Angeles Review of Books and The Book Collector (London). Victoria Dailey is a writer, curator and antiquarian bookseller. Her areas of specialty are Paris in the 19th century; the cultural history of Southern California; and the history of the book. Her articles and books may be found at victoriadailey.com.
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