Two young New York artists swagger out West to show us what we already know--and darn little of that since each is represented by a skimpy half-dozen works.
Tony Berlant is the art world's preeminent tin man.
Like most of the post-war generation of German painters, Bernd Koberling employs a gestural, "expressionistic" style as both a distancing device for more conceptual concerns and a means of exploring the language of painting itself.
There are lots of double tracking and fancy footwork in paintings by Colin Lee.
For decades, modern artists belittled traditional academic skill.
In the early '80s, Tom Wudl abandoned his geometric abstractions on perforated paper in favor of figurative imagery on canvas.
Jeff Joyce taps into the Romantic tradition of painting at the gray-green end of the spectrum.
Ed Moses, one of the originals of L.A. art, promised to go ape in his current two-gallery exhibition and he did so, at least after his fashion.
Wesley Kimler, a 34-year-old painter from Chicago, is billed as a young academic artist working in the tradition of Willem De Kooning, David Park and Jackson Pollock.
Honorable obscurity shrouded the sincere, awkward figurative painting of Charles Garabedian until he was "discovered" as a precursor by the Neo-Expressionist generation.
The Venice Town Council and the Coalition of Concerned Communities, a South Bay homeowners group
The CLARE Foundation has dedicated two new cooperative-living centers in Venice.
A small step backward, a big step forward.
The ever-prolific and spirited David Hockney has almost wallpapered the gallery with his "Home-Made Prints."
President Reagan on Tuesday declared the week of May 12 National Transportation week.
In a column by Bruce Nestande, chairman of the state Transportation Commission ("Unraveling the
If Dan Griset is voted off the Orange County Transportation Commission and the Orange County
The Lawndale City Council last week approved establishment of a nine-member Transportation Issues Committee.
An article by Robert Fairbanks (Editorial Pages, May 19) criticized Gov.
"The Time of the Cuckoo," by Arthur Laurents, asks us to believe in the mutual attraction between a single, middle-aged American tourist (Marion Ross) and a suave, unhappily married Italian shopkeeper (Cesare Danova).