American Artist: Shaper of God: Apple Valley Autonomy | J.J. Anderson: Sometimes I Feel Like I Am Almost Home
600 State Dr., Los Angeles, CA 90037
Wednesday, August 20 at 7:00 PM 8:00 AM
Ends Mar 22, 2026
In Shaper of God: Apple Valley Autonomy, American Artist celebrates the legacy of one of the most inventive science fiction writers in contemporary literature, Octavia E. Butler. This exhibition of sculpture and drawings is part of the artist’s multiyear effort of activations and reflects their complex engagement with the Butler archive at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California, which houses over 8,000 objects donated by Butler after her passing in 2006. American Artist, who was born and raised in Altadena, California, and legally changed their name in 2013, focused their research for this exhibition on Butler’s matrilineal heritage, with specific attention to her mother, Octavia M. Butler, who worked as a domestic in Pasadena in the mid-twentieth century; and Butler’s grandmother, Estella Butler, who owned a chicken ranch outside of Los Angeles in Apple Valley, California, in the early twentieth century. Despite modest means and intersecting oppressions, Butler’s mother and grandmother helped propel the young writer into a self-sustaining career as a renowned novelist. In the artworks on view, American Artist not only celebrates the prolific work that Butler produced from the 1960s to 2006, but also calls attention to these invisible familial supports that enabled her prolific practice. American Artist | Shaper of God: Apple Valley Autonomy is curated by Taylor Renee Aldridge, independent curator and Executive Director, Modern Ancient Brown Foundation. _____ Sometimes I Feel Like I Am Almost Home is a commissioned short film by Los Angeles–based filmmaker and visual storyteller J.J. Anderson. It explores a deeply personal concept that the artist has termed “return to self,” referring to the sometimes painful spiritual journey to reclaim the freedom, passion, and possibility of childhood as an adult. Anderson shot the film in Columbus County, North Carolina, where her grandmother was born and her extended family still lives today. Settled by British colonizers and named after Christopher Columbus, the area’s violent and racist history is compounded by Anderson’s own difficult familial past there. Nevertheless, it is the place where family has repeatedly gathered over the years to find moments of healing and joy. Sometimes I Feel Like I Am Almost Home unites new footage, archival imagery, and intergenerational interviews, presenting their alchemical combination as a quiet call to greater self-acceptance and a transmutation of generational curses into blessings. J.J. Anderson: Sometimes I Feel Like I Am Almost Home is curated by Cameron Shaw, Executive Director and Chief Curator. Image: J.J. Anderson
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