Garden Song
Group show in ART/SPACE 114
December 19, 2025 — January 17, 2026
Curated by Charlie Alston & DeLyna Hadgu
Curated by Charlie Alston and DeLyna Hadgu, Art/Space 114’s seasonal exhibition Garden Song gathers nine LA–based artists whose practices approach community as something built through attention, labor, and lived specificity rather than as an abstract idea or mere rhetoric. Across painting, sculpture, photography, video, and installation, stories recur as neighbors, musicians, workers, family members, solitary witnesses, and evidence of their psychic imprints are organized with a sense of proximity that collapses documentation and imagination.
Anchoring the exhibition, Charlie Alston’s painted greenhouse installation introduces a literal site of cultivation, with plants provided by Topanga Nursery. This is mirrored by a reading room with books donated by Reverie Bookstand that treats listening, reading, and quiet exchange as active forms of participation and modalities of care. Sound moves through vintage speakers provided by Rewind Audio as a parallel register—songs, voices, ambient recordings, and fractal melodies—extending the show’s quality of attention to the durational and slightly magical, encouraging us to stay present with one another a little longer.
Participating artists: Carlos Agredano, Charlie Alston, Galo Castro Santurio, Jory Drew, Douglas Hickman Jr. , Sarah Konté, Sissòn, Jabari Wimbley, Alyce Yang
Group show in ART/SPACE 114
December 19, 2025 — January 17, 2026
Curated by Charlie Alston & DeLyna Hadgu
Curated by Charlie Alston and DeLyna Hadgu, Art/Space 114’s seasonal exhibition Garden Song gathers nine LA–based artists whose practices approach community as something built through attention, labor, and lived specificity rather than as an abstract idea or mere rhetoric. Across painting, sculpture, photography, video, and installation, stories recur as neighbors, musicians, workers, family members, solitary witnesses, and evidence of their psychic imprints are organized with a sense of proximity that collapses documentation and imagination.
Anchoring the exhibition, Charlie Alston’s painted greenhouse installation introduces a literal site of cultivation, with plants provided by Topanga Nursery. This is mirrored by a reading room with books donated by Reverie Bookstand that treats listening, reading, and quiet exchange as active forms of participation and modalities of care. Sound moves through vintage speakers provided by Rewind Audio as a parallel register—songs, voices, ambient recordings, and fractal melodies—extending the show’s quality of attention to the durational and slightly magical, encouraging us to stay present with one another a little longer.
Participating artists: Carlos Agredano, Charlie Alston, Galo Castro Santurio, Jory Drew, Douglas Hickman Jr. , Sarah Konté, Sissòn, Jabari Wimbley, Alyce Yang
Sacred Spaces, A Healing Through Art
Group show in Cayenne Wellness Center Sanctuary Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
August 29, 2025 - December 21, 2025
Curated by Julian Prins
Participating Artists: Julia Raphaella Aguila Ross Edward Doyle, Stephan Reza Jahanshahi-Ghajar & Kevin Newton, Jackson Daughty, Annika Klein, Sonia Langouev, Austin Matzelle - Jonn Sherrill, Alyce Yang, Ariana Bailey, James McBride, Robert Prins, Hazel Many Eugenia Moreeva, Isabel Riedling, Jack Taylor, Jo Corbett, Andrew Osborn, Nick Eiser, Jacob Brethen, Elaine Kan, Esmeralda Sandoval,
Group show in Cayenne Wellness Center Sanctuary Gallery, Los Angeles, CA
August 29, 2025 - December 21, 2025
Curated by Julian Prins
Participating Artists: Julia Raphaella Aguila Ross Edward Doyle, Stephan Reza Jahanshahi-Ghajar & Kevin Newton, Jackson Daughty, Annika Klein, Sonia Langouev, Austin Matzelle - Jonn Sherrill, Alyce Yang, Ariana Bailey, James McBride, Robert Prins, Hazel Many Eugenia Moreeva, Isabel Riedling, Jack Taylor, Jo Corbett, Andrew Osborn, Nick Eiser, Jacob Brethen, Elaine Kan, Esmeralda Sandoval,

FELLED
Group show in 533 Studios, Los Angeles, CA
September 27, 2025
Curated by André Comtois
FELLED brings together 17 artists working across painting, drawing, sculpture, and photography to explore how nature, both real and fabricated, becomes a conduit for memory, experience, nostalgia and humor.
Group show in 533 Studios, Los Angeles, CA
September 27, 2025
Curated by André Comtois
FELLED brings together 17 artists working across painting, drawing, sculpture, and photography to explore how nature, both real and fabricated, becomes a conduit for memory, experience, nostalgia and humor.
Remnants of a Princess
group show in MenLo Gallery, Jingdezhen, China
June 16, 2024 - July 6, 2024
These are ceramic works created over the span of a month during a ceramic workshop at MenLo Studio and Gallery in Jingdezhen, China.
group show in MenLo Gallery, Jingdezhen, China
June 16, 2024 - July 6, 2024
These are ceramic works created over the span of a month during a ceramic workshop at MenLo Studio and Gallery in Jingdezhen, China.
don’t let me forget this feeling tomorrow
Duo show in Ruffin Gallery, Charlottesville, VA
April 30, 2023 - May 5, 2023
Through sculpture, photography, and analog film, don’t let me forget this feeling tomorrow addresses collective memory and the intangible/tangible materials that sway its development. By prioritizing the physicality of viewing—bending over to view a fictionalized archeological excavation or walking into the pixels of a larger-than-life video projection—Yang and Gualtieri invite the viewer to question their role in a shared experience.
Using her parents as main subjects, Yang examines their relationship to inherited objects against backdrops of imperialist theft and the proliferation of counterfeiting, photography, and online auctioning. By replicating her own family artifacts (a jade fish and warrior guardian figurine), staging copy work photoshoots, and listing the replicas on ecommerce sites, Yang explores the ambiguity of an object’s source, value, and influence on cultural identity amidst globalization and mass excavation
Duo show in Ruffin Gallery, Charlottesville, VA
April 30, 2023 - May 5, 2023
Through sculpture, photography, and analog film, don’t let me forget this feeling tomorrow addresses collective memory and the intangible/tangible materials that sway its development. By prioritizing the physicality of viewing—bending over to view a fictionalized archeological excavation or walking into the pixels of a larger-than-life video projection—Yang and Gualtieri invite the viewer to question their role in a shared experience.
Using her parents as main subjects, Yang examines their relationship to inherited objects against backdrops of imperialist theft and the proliferation of counterfeiting, photography, and online auctioning. By replicating her own family artifacts (a jade fish and warrior guardian figurine), staging copy work photoshoots, and listing the replicas on ecommerce sites, Yang explores the ambiguity of an object’s source, value, and influence on cultural identity amidst globalization and mass excavation