Three Artists To See in LA This Fall

We filter through countless artists and galleries daily to source compelling work that resonates with our clients individual interests. The LA scene has been a fantastic resource for discovery. Here are three artists we’ve been gravitating towards who create incredible work. They are all on view this fall at galleries around LA, and our full run down is below.

Tahnee Lonsdale

British-born, Los Angeles artist Tawnee Lonsdale is an artist whose oil paintings are ethereal and layered in soft veils of color and forms. Various figures populate her works, gathering in quiet, mostly female realms. Night Gallery will host a second solo show of the artist’s new body of work, which will also include ceramic pieces.

Nabilah Nordin

Singaporan-Australian artist Nabilah Nordin also calls LA home. The recent solo exhibition of her work at parrasch heijnen featured the artist’s freestanding sculptures that are a captivating mix of both positive and negative spaces. Various examples recall organic elements from the natural world, with textures that evoke timeless encrusted forms or living beings made up of materials as modern and everyday as rock, marble, and rubber.

Annie Lapin

Nazarian/Curcio is hosting the third solo show of the work of artist Annie Lapin. With a current body of work focusing on gardens, Lapin turns to famous ones and those from art history to create alternative, dazzling landscapes--part appropriation, trompe l’oeil, and painted abstracted forms all intermingling in a mesmerizing blend of color and texture.

Finally!
The Largest Regional Art Show We’ve All Been Anticipating is Back in Southern California:

PST Art (formerly Pacific Standard Time; various dates through summer of 2025) has begun and might even be more extensive in terms of its venues than the recent Olympics. This is the third PST supported by a multi-million grant from the Getty Foundation and will feature works by over 800 artists in 70 institutions, extending from San Diego to Santa Barbara. Every PST is years in the making, the last one taking place in 2017. This year’s theme is “Art & Science Collide” featuring art that explores nature, the environment, the cosmos, and AI, among other very topical subjects.

 

And it’s not just the museums participating, we’re looking forward to also seeing how our favorite galleries are part of PST (over forty). These include group and solo shows at such spaces as the William Turner Gallery, Craig Krull Gallery, Lisson Gallery, and Various Small Fires. It’s a lot of check out and may even inspire visits to unexpected art venues such as NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) or the Birch Aquarium at the Scripps Institute of Oceanography!

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