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MONTE VISTA PROJECTS

5442 Monte Vista St
Los Angeles, CA, 90042

MONTE VISTA PROJECTS

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40 Days and 40 Nights - Chris Rivas

October 20, 2020 Roberta Gentry
Chris+Rivas+PillowThings.jpg

40 Days and 40 Nights
Chris Rivas
September 5th - October 18th

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce 40 Days and 40 Nights, a solo exhibition of works from artist Chris Rivas. The exhibition will be held from Sept 5 - October 18th and will be available by appointment.

The title 40 Days and 40 Nights is a phrase used by many groups to refer to a long amount of time. In this case it signifies the covid-19 pandemic and the quarantine that seems to have no end. As such, the exhibition examines the home as a space used to contemplate current social political issues and reflect on our constant desire to preserve dissipating cultures. As globalism and technology accelerate art consumption across our world’s borders, cultures are forced to adapt or die.

Influenced by the history of painting and cultural diaspora, Rivas explores what it means to feel connected to others across cultural aesthetics, physical space, and time. The works in the show collectively present remnants of a domestic space. Derived from multiple cultures, the works in the show explore the connection between exoticized objects and personal narrative. In the past what seemed voyeuristic has become the new norm. What stories will emerge from the covid-19 era, and who will have the privilege to tell them?

Chris Rivas is a Los Angeles born artist who received his BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute and his MFA from Montclair State University. His work revolves around an investigation of cultural diaspora, emotional reactivity, and hybridity. He uses various materials to investigate ambiguity and dualities while continuing to depict the intersectionality experienced in his everyday life. 


Click to read a conversation between Chris Rivas and Monte Vista’s Emily Blythe Jones about the show


In 2020

Isabel Theselius - Baby on Board

August 14, 2020 Roberta Gentry
Isabel Theselius.jpg

Baby on Board
Isabel Theselius

March 14th - April 19th, 2020

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce Baby on Board, a solo exhibition by Isabel Theselius. Theselius is a Swedish artist, currently based in the U.S. Her work takes many forms but continually investigates mortality, desire, memory, and more recently, superstition. By drawing from her own experiences, memories and family relationships, Theselius’s work is equally poetic and empathetic, relatable and enigmatic.

In the series, Baby on Board, Theselius uses humor and superstition as a tool to process her own fears of being a parent. In a series of rectangular gouache paintings, Theselius has given her son supernatural powers. Sometimes he is traveling through various landscapes surrounded by different creatures, sometimes riding on two cats or floating on a flying carpet. Some of the scenes derive from actual landscapes, like a trip Theselius made with her toddler son to the small Moroccan city of Tiznit as part of an exchange between Moroccan and Swedish artists. Other scenes are inspired by Theselius’s family’s brief relocation to Jersey City, NJ, or a friend’s home in the countryside of Upstate New York. Also depicted are the woods in Theselius’s native Sweden as well as landscapes from her previous long-term home of Los Angeles, which is also where her son was born. 

In several paintings, the text, “Baby on Board,” is a center motif, referring to the stickers on the back of cars which signal to other drivers that they should be extra cautious around this vehicle on the road. Only here, the text is at times barely legible, taking on a psychedelic style and creating a mantra that loses its meaning as it is repeated in the paintings, similar to seeing the text constantly in the American automotive landscape. In a way, the illegibility of the “Baby on Board” text mocks the real versions of these stickers which to Theselius seem like an act of superstition, as if a magical sticker is going to protect the vehicle from harm’s way. At the same time, however, Theselius believes in these types of superstitious acts. The comparison between superstition and the text “Baby on Board” is made more clear as there is always a version of the “nazar” lurking in the background of the paintings. This was a common motif and amulet Theselius repeatedly saw on her trip to Tiznit, which is meant to protect from the evil eye. While driving around the city she was faced with a dilemma which inspired this body of work. Theselius had brought a car seat for her son but it was rendered useless as most of the vehicles they traveled in did not have any seat belts to secure the car seat in. This repeated occurrence is typical of the loss of control one feel as a parent. You try and do the correct thing but the reality is you cannot always protect your child. This is a fact no parent wants to accept and even though Theselius is aware that it might be a flawed course of action she imagines that she can prevent her fears of her son being harmed in real life if she processes them through her art. 

Originally from Lund, Sweden, Isabel Theselius earned an MFA in Studio Art from the University of California Irvine and a BFA in Fine Arts from Valand School of Fine Arts in Gothenburg, Sweden. She recently participated in a 3 month residency at Crosstown Arts in Memphis, Tennessee. 2018, she received a year-long work grant from the Swedish Arts Grants Committee and participated in an artist exchange project in Tiznit, Morocco. Recent solo shows include Detroit Gallery in Stockholm, Sweden, and the OK Corral in Copenhagen, Denmark. Theselius has upcoming solo shows during 2020 at Gallery Slätten in Malmö, Sweden, and Elephant Art Space in Los Angeles. 

In 2020

T A I L G A T E - 2020 Open Call

March 6, 2020 Roberta Gentry
Futernick_Marisa_J_Tailgate - Marisa Futernick.jpg

T A I L G A T E


The 2nd Annual Monte Vista Projects Curated Open Call
February 8 to March 1, 2020

There is a commonly held belief among truck enthusiasts that removing the tailgate will significantly increase a vehicle’s mpg. Each craft has its own variation of this, and it comes down to the same thing: the desire to engage in a way that allows you to get the most out of what you are doing. For Monte Vista Projects’ open call, Tailgate, this is the very sentiment that we held in mind when selecting the works for this exhibition. This show is about artists in their pursuit of fullness, and supporting them as they strive to get to where they are going.

This year’s show consists of a group of work representing a variety of approaches and visions. The nature of an open call precludes a single overarching theme, and instead is the result of openness to surprise and discovery. We feel that the selected works present compelling bodily engagements both to distinct places and spatial contexts, the presentation of self, and the connection to everyday objects that surround us. The exhibiting artists are Ricky Amadour, Jisoo Chung, Luna Esparza, Sasha Fishman, Erin Fussell, Marisa Futernick, Scott Grover, Alina Hayes, Alexander Hill, Yoory Jung, R Kauff, Tiana Marsh, Ken Min, Josh Vasquez, Magdalena Wittig, Adrian Kay Wong.   

As a collective, we are committed to providing an artist-run venue that is not beholden to any market forces in order to show work we support and believe in. We have much appreciation for the many applicants, all of whom we hope will continue to be part of our growing network.

In 2020

Billy Frolov - Everyone and Their Mother

January 27, 2020 Roberta Gentry
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Everyone and Their Mother
Billy Frolov

January 4th - January 26th, 2020

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce Everyone and Their Mother, a solo exhibition by Los Angeles artist Billy Frolov. The work in the exhibition addresses Frolov’s loving interest of domestic objects that have connections to her family and the mothers she grew up with. Everyone and Their Mother is an homage to ordinary but very personal things, and includes joyful, idealized recreations of kettles, quilts, and welcome signs. Unapologetically sentimental, Frolov’s work commemorates objects relied on for comfort and support, and serves as a reminder of the fragility and transient nature of objects in relation to our memories.


Billy Frolov was born in Buffalo New York, raised in Woodbridge Virginia, and now lives and works in Los Angeles. She earned her BFA from ArtCenter College of Design in 2018. Group exhibitions include Weekend Gallery, Superchief Gallery, and Arena 1 Gallery. This is her first solo show in Los Angeles. 

In 2020
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