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Gustave Caillebotte: Painting Men | The Getty
Feb 25–May 25, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
French painter Gustave Caillebotte’s interest in male subjects sharply distinguishes him from his Impressionist peers. Overwhelmingly, he observed and depicted the men in his life—including his brothers, bachelor friends, fellow sportsmen, and the workers and bourgeois of his neighborhood—and did so in bracingly original paintings that often subverted artistic and gender norms. His distinctive vision of modern masculinity is considered here for the first time in a major international loan exhibition.
Mineo Mizuno: Homage to Nature | Huntington Library
May 25, 2024–May 25, 2029 (UTC-8)
San Marino
This site-specific work explores the fragility of the Earth’s ecosystem, as well as the destruction of the forest and its potential for regeneration. The sculpture celebrates the beauty of wood in its natural state and emphasizes its potential as a reusable and renewable resource.
Catalogue Secondary Art Market listings | Burbank
Apr 6, 2020–Jun 8, 2029 (UTC-8)
Burbank
New from the Art Dealer's Room and Columnist series of Contemporary Art & Mix media design featured catalogue Secondary Art Market listings works & Galleries Artworks currently showing online catalogue
www.Verisart.com/Andrepace
Indigenous Futures | Los Angeles
Sep 7, 2023–Jun 21, 2026 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
explores the rise of Futurism in contemporary Indigenous art as a means of enduring colonial trauma, creating alternative futures, and advocating for Indigenous technologies in a more inclusive present and sustainable future. Over fifty artworks are on display, some interspersed throughout the museum, creating unexpected encounters and dialogues between contemporary Indigenous creations and historic Autry works. Artists such as Andy Everson, Ryan Singer, and Neil Ambrose Smith wittily upend pop-culture icons by Indigenizing sci-fi characters and storylines; Wendy Red Star places Indigenous people in surreal spacescapes wearing fantastical regalia; Virgil Ortiz brings his own space odyssey,
to life in a new, site-specific installation. By intermingling science fiction, self-determination, and Indigenous technologies across a diverse array of Native cultures,
envisions sovereign futures while countering historical myths and the ongoing impact of colonization, including environmental degradation and toxic stereotypes.
A Traveler’s Guide to Mettlach: Villeroy and Boch | Pomona
Sep 9, 2023–Jun 30, 2025 (UTC-8)
Pomona
A Traveler’s Guide to Mettlach: Villeroy and Boch showcases everyday life in the 1800s Mettlach, Germany. Scenes of everyday life in Mettlach have been documented and celebrated by Villeroy and Boch, a ceramic production company founded in 1836 when Jean François Boch and Nicolas Villeroy merged their ceramic businesses into what is now known as Villeroy and Boch.
The workers of the Mettlach factory came from diverse backgrounds, including art studios, archives, and museums. The varied backgrounds of the factory workers contributed to the artistic achievements of the Villeroy and Boch company. The Mettlach collection reflects German cultural experiences, societal interpretations, and mythology.
This exhibition shows scenes of love and relationships as well as larger themes of fantasy, offering an all-encompassing snapshot of the myriad facets of human life within Mettlach. A Traveler’s Guide to Mettlach, on view in the Robert and Colette Wilson Gallery through June 2025, presents concepts of life, laughter, relationships, and the day-to-day existence of the German people.
Betye Saar: Drifting Toward Twilight | Huntington Library
Nov 11, 2023–Nov 30, 2027 (UTC-8)
San Marino
Nov. 11, 2023–Nov. 30, 2027 | Renowned American artist Betye Saar’s large-scale work “Drifting Toward Twilight”—commissioned by The Huntington—is a site-specific installation that features a 17-foot-long vintage wooden canoe and found objects, including birdcages, antlers, and natural materials harvested by Saar from The Huntington’s grounds.
Sculpted Portraits from Ancient Egypt | Los Angeles
Jan 24, 2024–Jan 25, 2027 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Egypt’s 26th Dynasty (664–526 BCE) was a period of revival and renewal. It marks the last great phase of native pharaonic rule in ancient Egypt and is notable for its exceptional artworks, particularly stone sculpture. The achievements of Egyptian artists of this period are vividly expressed in the sculpted portraits of officials associated with the court and priesthood, which were created to be displayed in tombs and temples.
The works in this exhibition are on special loan from the British Museum, London.
Reframing Dioramas: The Art of Preserving Wilderness | Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
Sep 15, 2024–Sep 15, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
The Natural History Museum’s historic diorama halls are the largest exhibitions at the museum, showcasing over 75 incredibly detailed habitats ranging from arctic tundra to tropical rainforest. To celebrate the 100th anniversary of the dioramas, NHM is restoring and reopening a diorama hall that has been closed for decades. There, visitors will experience immersive new installations — by artists RFX1 (Jason Chang), Joel Fernando and Yesenia Prieto (working as a three-artist team), as well as Saul Becker and Lauren Schoth — that call attention to dioramas as a unique combination of art and science and explore biodiversity, ecology, conservation, colonialism, and changing museum display techniques. NHM maintains an active diorama program where staff continue to update and build dioramas, keeping this art form alive. Visitors can examine these illusions of wilderness through a series of displays, engaging programs, and a new book that sheds light on the previously untold history of NHM’s dioramas.
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We Live in Painting: The Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art | Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Sep 15, 2024–Sep 1, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Mesoamerican artists held a cosmic responsibility: as they adorned the surfaces of buildings, clay vessels, textiles, bark-paper pages, and sculptures with color, they (quite literally) made the world. The power of color emerged from the materiality of its pigments, the skilled hands that crafted it, and the communities whose knowledge imbued it with meaning. Color mapped the very order of the cosmos, of time and space. By engineering and deploying color, artists wielded the power of cosmic creation in their hands. We Live in Painting: The Nature of Color in Mesoamerican Art explores the science, art, and cosmology of color in Mesoamerica. Histories of colonialism and industrialization in the “color-averse” West have minimized the deep significance of color in the Indigenous Americas. This exhibition follows two interconnected lines of inquiry—technical and material analyses, and Indigenous conceptions of art and image—to reach the full richness of color at the core of Mesoamerican worldviews.
Cai Guo-Qiang: A Material Odyssey | USC Pacific Asia Museum
Sep 17, 2024–Jun 15, 2025 (UTC-8)
Pasadena
For several decades, artist Cai Guo-Qiang has used gunpowder and pyrotechnics to create drawings, paintings, and explosion events. The exhibitionCai Guo-Qiang:A Material Odysseywill fill the first floor galleries at the USC Pacific Asia Museum. Based on years of research by the Getty Conservation Institute and the Getty Research Institute,A Material Odysseywill explore the nature and properties of gunpowder and chronicle its use by the artist. This explosive material, invented in China over 1,100 years ago, has come to define Cai’s work. Its unpredictable nature dictates his artistic process and determines the outcome. Through gunpowder, the artist invites uncontrollable forces to participate in the creation of his work. With an abundance of artworks and scientific displays, the exhibition will narrate the lifelong love story of Cai Guo-Qiang with gunpowder.
Programs accompanyingA Material Odysseywill include videos illustrating the making of fireworks, the process of creating gunpowder paintings, interactive displays, and a variety of film screenings and conversations.
Wolves: Photography by Ronan Donovan | Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County
Sep 17, 2024–Jun 22, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Since 2014, Ronan Donovan, a National Geographic Explorer and photographer, has examined the relationship between wild wolves and humans in order to better understand the animals, our shared history, and what drives the persistent human-wolf conflict.
This moving exhibition features Ronan Donovan’s striking images and videos of wild wolves in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem and Ellesmere Island in the high Canadian Arctic. “Wolves: Photography by Ronan Donovan”, created by National Geographic Society and the National Museum of Wildlife Art, highlights the contrast between wolves that live in perceived competition with humans, in the Yellowstone area, and wolves that live without human intervention, in the Canadian Arctic. As wolves in North America are increasingly under threat due to recent extreme wolf-control laws, and humans continue to impinge on the land and food sources that these animals need to survive, Donovan’s compelling photographs inspire a better understanding of these often misunderstood animals.
This exhibition is presented in partnership with the National Geographic Society and the National Museum of Wildlife Art, and supported through the patronship of Jacques Marie Mage.
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Luther Vandross: Artistry and Elegance | GRAMMY Museum L.A. Live
Nov 20, 2024–Jun 15, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Luther Vandross: Artistry and Elegance celebrates the extraordinary life and legacy of Luther Vandross, an eight-time GRAMMY® winner, revered songwriter, arranger, producer, performer, and one of the most gifted vocalists in music history. The exhibit offers an intimate glimpse into Vandross’ creative process and showcases his ornate stage wardrobe, exclusive performance footage from his popular tours, and a never-before-heard recording of him in the studio.
Luther Vandross first captured the spotlight in the 1970s as a sought-after backup singer, collaborating with luminaries such as David Bowie, Roberta Flack, Quincy Jones, Chaka Khan, Bette Midler, and Carly Simon. As a solo artist, he became renowned for his relatable lyrics about love and mesmerizing live performances, characterized by dynamic bands, elaborate stage designs, and striking custom costumes worn by his background singers. Vandross achieved remarkable success, charting a Top 10 R&B hit every year from 1981 to 1994 and releasing 11 consecutive platinum records, with over 40 million albums sold worldwide.
Digital Witness: Revolutions in Design, Photography, and Film | Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Nov 24, 2024–Jul 13, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Over the last four decades, image-editing software has radically transformed our visual world. The ease with which images and text can be digitally generated and altered has enabled new forms of creative experimentation, while also sparking philosophical debates about the very nature of representation. Digital Witness: Revolutions in Design, Photography, and Film examines the impact of digital manipulation tools from the 1980s to the present, for the first time assessing simultaneous developments and debates in the fields of photography, graphic design, and visual effects. Featuring over 150 works, the exhibition traces the emergence of distinctive digital aesthetic strategies, relationships to realism, and storytelling modes. The nearly 200 artists, designers, and makers in Digital Witness illuminate today's visual culture where digital editing tools are easier to access than ever before.
Mineo Mizuno: Homage to Nature | San Marino
May 25, 2024–May 25, 2029 (UTC-8)
San Marino
This site-specific work explores the fragility of the Earth’s ecosystem, as well as the destruction of the forest and its potential for regeneration. The sculpture celebrates the beauty of wood in its natural state and emphasizes its potential as a reusable and renewable resource.
California-based Japanese American artist Mineo Mizuno’s site-specific sculpture, titled Homage to Nature, is crafted from fallen timber gathered in the forests of the Sierra Nevada, where the artist lives and works. Views of the San Gabriel Mountains in the background will frame the work.
The sculpture explores the fragility of the Earth’s ecosystem, as well as the destruction of the forest and its potential for regeneration. Homage to Nature celebrates the beauty of wood in its natural state and emphasizes its potential as a reusable and renewable resource. Using yakisugi (shou sugi), a traditional Japanese method of wood preservation known in the West as burnt timber cladding, the charred surfaces of the reclaimed timber in the sculpture speak not only to fire’s destructive power but also to its ability to reinvigorate the land. As a companion and response to the sculpture, a “fire landscape” will be planted near the sculpture to mimic new growth that occurs naturally after a fire.
This new sculpture marks the culmination of a series of installations by the artist designed to reflect on The Huntington’s collections and link the gardens and art galleries. Homage to Nature will be unveiled on May 25, 2024, and will remain on view for five years.
Charles Ross: Spectrum 14 | The Getty
Sep 10, 2024–Sep 13, 2026 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Spectrum 14 is a calibrated array of prisms that cast a dazzling display of luminous color across the Museum’s rotunda. Bands of spectral light traverse the space in relation to the sun, which follow a slightly different arc through the sky every day. Over time, Ross’s work changes in response to Earth’s rotational orbit, connecting us to the premodern experience of astronomical observation and calculation that defined cycles of days, seasons, and rituals.
This project was commissioned for PST ART as part of the exhibition Lumen: The Art and Science of Light. This is the second “Rotunda Commission,” a series of art installations inspired by the Getty Museum’s collection, architecture, and site.
Olafur Eliasson: Open | Los Angeles
Sep 15, 2024–Jul 6, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
In September 2024, Icelandic-Danish artist Olafur Eliasson (b. 1967, Copenhagen; lives and works in Berlin) presents a new site-specific installation made for The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. In line with Eliasson’s career-long exploration of light and color, geometry, and environmental awareness, the installation playfully engages with material and immaterial qualities of the museum’s architecture. A series of large-scale optical devices designed specifically for MOCA Geffen will respond to the building itself, as well as to the everchanging atmosphere of Los Angeles. Visitors will encounter a dazzling range of sensory experiences that harness the laws of geometric optics to address feelings and concepts of embodiment, perception, and participation.
Eyes on the Road: Art of the Automotive Landscape | Petersen Automotive Museum
Sep 24, 2024–Nov 30, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
In the early decades of the 20th century, automobile ownership saw tremendous growth in the United States—with one motor vehicle per every five Americans by 1929—and a new motoring landscape evolved to accommodate the increase in car travel. For over a century, civil engineers, automotive designers, architects, and graphic artists have worked, often without credit, to create highway systems and the vehicles that traverse them, along with standardized signage and roadside amenities that have become so commonplace that they are largely taken for granted.
Modern and contemporary artists, however, have long noticed and been inspired by the world in which the automobile operates and have responded to it in their work. Eyes on the Road brings the often-overlooked “art” of the highway together with artistic representations of this visual culture, highlighting the role of the car in shaping the country’s built environment and drawing new attention to the world around us.
RetroBlakesberg: The Music Never Stopped | GRAMMY Museum L.A. Live
Nov 8, 2024–Jun 15, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Explore 30 years of music history, from blues, folk, and rock ‘n’ roll to hip-hop and alternative music, through the lens of photographer Jay Blakesberg.
Featuring more than 150 photographs shot on film between 1978 and 2008, RetroBlakesberg captures three decades of pivotal moments in music history. The dynamic exhibit showcases multiple genres and iconic musicians, ranging from Snoop Dogg, B-40, and Bob Dylan to PJ Harvey, Pearl Jam, and the Grateful Dead. Renowned photographer Jay Blakesberg was originally inspired by the Grateful Dead, whom he followed around the country as a teenager, capturing their live shows with his camera.
Inspired by his experience, he moved from New Jersey to San Francisco to become part of the city’s vibrant music scene, which he’s photographed for more than 30 years. RetroBlakesberg reflects his remarkable body of work, from live performances to portraits to album and magazine covers.
Imagining the Black Diaspora: Art and Poetics in the 21st Century | Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Dec 15, 2024–Jul 27, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
The exhibition explores the aesthetic connections between nearly 60 artists from Africa, Europe and America. The 70 paintings, sculptures, photographs and works on paper are divided into several different themes, including speech and silence, movement and transformation, imagination and expression.
Retrospect: 50 Years at the Norton Simon Museum | Norton Simon Museum
Feb 14, 2025–Jan 12, 2026 (UTC-8)
Pasadena
In 2025, the Norton Simon Museum marks the 50th anniversary of its founding in 1975. The exhibition Retrospect: 50 Years at the Norton Simon Museum, on view in the main-level Focus Gallery from February 14, 2025, to January 12, 2026, celebrates five decades of art, education, research and community. Coinciding with the Exterior Improvement Project, which will transform the Museum’s gardens and grounds, Retrospect offers not only a reflective view of the past but also one of the horizon for decades to come.
L.A. Louver Celebrates 50 Years | L.A. Louver
Feb 15–Jun 14, 2025 (UTC-8)
Venice
L.A. Louver celebrates the 50th anniversary of the formation of the gallery with an exhibition surveying the gallery’s history from 1975 to now. One of the longest-established contemporary art galleries on the West Coast, L.A. Louver has presented over 660 exhibitions over the course of what has been the most significant period of creative growth in Southern Californian history. L.A. Louver commemorates this achievement in 2025 with a presentation filling all gallery spaces.
David Hammons:Concerto in Black and Blues | Hauser & Wirth
Feb 18–Jun 1, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
David Hammons has been exploring the complexity of American identity from the perspective of a black artist living in New York since the 1960s, including its history, manifestations, and possibilities.
Hammons's awareness of equal rights was awakened when he was studying at Otis Art Institute, and he was influenced by internationally renowned African American artists such as Charles White, Bruce Nauman, and John Baldessari. After settling in New York in the 1970s, he turned to minimalist and post-minimalist art, and many of his works reflect his implementation of the spirit of the civil rights movement and the black human rights movement.
Hammons' iconic work "Black and Blue Concerto" is exhibited at Hauser & Wirth Gallery's Los Angeles space. This is the second appearance of this work since its first exhibition in 2002. Just like the scene at Ace Gallery 20 years ago, the audience is invited to enter a dark space with only a tiny blue flashlight. That exhibition is also the artist's first exhibition in New York in more than a decade.
A Brush with Nature: Romantic Landscape Drawings | The Getty
Feb 18–May 25, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
Artists in the Romantic period found endless inspiration in the beauty and power of nature. This exhibition highlights how these artists depicted the landscape, from detailed botanical studies to vast vistas. Important Romantic motifs are explored, including the melancholic appeal of ruins and the threat of destructive natural forces. Drawing upon the strengths of the Getty collection, the exhibition features works by important figures in the movement including Caspar David Friedrich, J.M.W Turner, and Théodore Géricault.
George Rouy The Bleed, Part II | Hauser & Wirth
Feb 18–Jun 1, 2025 (UTC-8)
Los Angeles
This February, Hauser & Wirth Downtown Los Angeles hosts ‘The Bleed, Part II,’ British artist George Rouy’s first US solo exhibition with the gallery. Following upon Rouy’s recent London presentation, this ‘second chapter’ will feature all new works extending his exploration of human mass, multiplicity and movement. In works characterized by a distinctive dynamism, Rouy captures essential experiences of contemporary life—desire and vexation, the urge to connect frustrated by alienation—to address emotional extremities in a globalized, technologically-driven age.
Phantom Planet 2025 (Los Angeles) | The Regent Theater
Feb 1, 2025 (UTC-8)ENDED
Los Angeles
Experience the alternative rock sound of Phantom Planet at The Regent Theater in Los Angeles on February 1, 2025. The venue is located at 448 S. Main St., Los Angeles, CA, 90013. Don't miss this opportunity to witness a memorable performance by this renowned band in the heart of the city. Mark your calendars and secure your tickets for a night filled with electrifying music and unforgettable moments.
José Zanine Caldas: I Learned Wood has Two Lives | West Hollywood
Feb 18–May 24, 2025 (UTC-8)ENDED
West Hollywood
Carpenters Workshop Gallery Los Angeles presents an exhibition celebrating the prolific career of the late architect, sculptor and designer José Zanine Caldas, whose sculptural style and commitment to ecological awareness made him a leading figure in Brazilian modernism. Raw and sensual in character, the works combine modern elegance with an environmental consciousness that was avant-garde for this radical creator’s time.
Hunter Benson and Friends Saturday Daytime Show | The Lighthouse Cafe
Feb 22, 2025 (UTC-8)ENDED
Hermosa Beach
Hunter Benson and Friends Saturday Daytime Show Come join us at The Lighthouse Cafe for a fantastic daytime show featuring Hunter Benson and his talented friends. Get ready for a lively performance filled with great music and good vibes. This event is a perfect way to spend your Saturday afternoon, so grab your friends and head on over for a fun time. Don't miss out on this opportunity to enjoy some live music in a cozy and welcoming atmosphere. See you there!
Information Source: The Lighthouse Cafe | eventbrite
Night at the Library | Los Angeles Central Library
Feb 1–Feb 2, 2025 (UTC-8)ENDED
Los Angeles
Night at the Library: Building Stories Saturday, February 1, 2025, 8 p.m. - 12 a.m. Richard J. Riordan Central Library 630 W. 5th Street Los Angeles, CA 90071 $15 General admission tickets, $75 VIP tickets Presented by the Library Foundation of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Public Library, LAist, and the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. In association with LA Phil Insight The library is closed, but you’re invited to step into an immersive after-hours world of stories, with interactive art pop-ups, surprising performances, conversations with diverse storytellers and artists, live music and DJs, drinks, and bites throughout the historic Richard J. Riordan Central Library in Downtown Los Angeles. The night will include performances by BodyTraffic, Carolyn Pennypacker Riggs' Distance Duet presented by LA Phil Insight, dublab, Bob Baker Marionette Theater, Yesika Salgado, and Urban Voices Project, among others. Get creative with drawing classes offered by Heavy Manners Library, a photo booth with the Black Image Center, and screen printing with Color Compton. And yes, you can get a library card at the event! Celebrate the art and magic of storytelling at this first-ever, late-night party presented by Los Angeles institutions invested in the power of storytelling: the Library Foundation of Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Public Library,LAist, and the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. This event is open to ages 21 and up. Other participating artists and organizations: Angel City Press Braille Institute Library City of West Hollywood Drag Laureate, Pickle Joey Terrill in conversation with LAist reporter Cato Hernández Mister and Mischief Narsiso Martinez in conversation with LAist host Brian De Los Santos RENT Poet, Brian Sonia-Wallace Sims Library of Poetry With more to be added!
Information Source: LFLA, LAPL, LAist, & Lucas Museum of Narrative Art | eventbrite
Celebrate the New Year with Joy 2025 Zhao Benshan and Liaoning Folk Art Troupe World Tour | Los Angeles
Feb 8, 2025 (UTC-8)ENDED
Los Angeles
Celebrate the New Year with Joy
2025 Zhao Benshan and Liaoning Folk Art Troupe World Tour
I. Project Introduction:
Er ren zhuan, historically known as Xiaoyangge, Shuangwanyi, Bengbeng, etc. It is a unique folk art form with a history of more than 300 years and a long-standing Chinese primitive cultural heritage. It has a far-reaching influence on the Chinese people. In northern China, there is a custom of "rather give up a meal than give up Errenzhuan".
During the Spring Festival of 2025, Mr. Zhao Benshan, the founder of "Green Errenzhuan" who has been away from the stage for more than ten years, will personally lead a group of famous artists of Liaoning Folk Art Troupe to New York, San Jose, Los Angeles in the United States and Singapore, Bangkok, Thailand in Asia. At that time, "Uncle Benshan" and a group of stars will gather with the vast number of overseas Chinese friends to retell the Spring Festival Gala, sing the music of their hometown, and spend a joyful Chinese New Year together!!!
2. Artist introduction:
Zhao Benshan, a Chinese actor, director, screenwriter, supervisor, producer, producer, entrepreneur, singer, and Errenzhuan national intangible cultural heritage
Inheritor, professor of Northeast Errenzhuan, national first-class actor...; The "Green Errenzhuan" initiated by Zhao Benshan has brought new life and vitality to the Errenzhuan industry. The "Liu Laogen Grand Stage" he founded, which mainly performs "Green Errenzhuan", has become a well-known and influential brand in the Chinese performing arts industry. He first appeared on the stage of the CCTV Spring Festival Gala in 1990. By 2011, Zhao Benshan had performed on the CCTV Spring Festival Gala stage 21 times (absent in 1994), performing 21 sketches including "Xiao Jiu Lao Le", "Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow", "Selling Crutch", "Not Short of Money", etc., and won the CCTV Spring Festival Gala "My Favorite Spring Festival Gala Program" sketch award 15 times. It can be said that the programs performed by Zhao Benshan in those years have become the soul programs that hundreds of millions of Chinese must watch. "Uncle Benshan's image is deeply rooted in the hearts of the people."
Song Xiaobao, formerly known as Song Baoli, was born on January 5, 1981 in Guangming Village, Loujie Korean Township, Huinan County, Tonghua City, Jilin Province, China. He is a mainland Chinese actor, Errenzhuan actor, sketch actor, and disciple of Zhao Benshan.
On the screen, Song Xiaobao always brings joy to the audience. His classic lines such as "Haiyan, you have to be more careful" and "I have been favored by the emperor since I entered the palace" are widely circulated. Song Xiaobao, who has a face that blurs his age, has become an irreplaceable star in the comedy world, not in terms of appearance but in terms of strength.
Representative works:
《Blind Date》《Blind Date 2》《Cherry》 etc.
Yan Xuejing is a Chinese actress, Errenzhuan performing artist, and a national first-class actress. She became well-known to the audience in 2002 for her successful performance as "Shan Xing" in the TV series "Liu Laogen". From the countryside to the city, in addition to Errenzhuan, the most important thing in her heart is her family. Behind her shining halo is an ordinary heart, grateful to those who have helped her. With her pursuit of Errenzhuan art and her yearning for a better life, Yan Xuejing has carried two happy families on her shoulders. She enjoys the reputation of "Errenzhuan Queen" among many fans.
Representative works:
《Liu Laogen》《Xiaoxiao Teahouse》《Women in Power》
Cheng Ye is a Chinese mainland actor and a crosstalk actor. Cheng Ye is the most arrogant rural talent. In 2001, he became a disciple of Zhao Benshan. His acting style seems to be different from that of others, and it forms an extreme contrast with other people's values, making the plot full of contradictions from the beginning. The plot is full of twists and turns, and it is full of highlights. He is an actor with comedy talent. Because of his unique humor and funny stage performance, he has been well received by TV viewers.
Representative works:
《Crazy Fan Club》《Happy Comedian Season 4》《One Fool and Two Thieves》...
Song Xiaofeng is a Chinese actor, pop singer, and national second-level actor. In 2008, he starred in his first TV series "The Great Master of Guandong", and officially entered the entertainment industry. The following year, he was accepted as the 38th disciple by Zhao Benshan. His singing ability should not be underestimated. Sometimes he is simple and honest, sometimes he is magnetic and charming, pure and unpretentious, which makes his voice very infectious; with his down-to-earth performance style, he can bring a lot of jokes and burdens to every comedy role he plays, winning the audience's laughter.
Representative works:
《Rural Love》《The Mountain Cannon Goes to the City》《The Head and the Brain》
Wang Xiaoli is a mainland Chinese actor, a crosstalk actor, and a disciple of Zhao Benshan. He has performed in the Spring Festival Gala with Zhao Benshan for many times and has received rave reviews. In 2011, he won the Huading Award for Best Actor in the Rural Category for his performance in "Rural Love Symphony". Although he became famous overnight and his net worth doubled, Wang Xiaoli has always maintained a humble attitude, simple character, and down-to-earth style, and has always maintained the simplicity of a farmer.
Representative works:
《Donation》《My Deskmate》《Rural Love Story》
Li Lin is a Chinese actress and Errenzhuan actor. Born into a family of opera performers, Li Lin is an outstanding singer of Errenzhuan, with a pretty face and a hot temper, and is highly appreciated by Zhao Benshan. There are many couples among Errenzhuan actors, and Li Lin and Wang Xiaoli are no exception. They have become the enviable golden pair of Errenzhuan, and have created many popular works, which are deeply loved and welcomed by the audience.
Representative works:
《Country Love I and II》《Country Love Story》《Country Love Symphony》
Yan Guangming, a Chinese actor, associate professor at the School of Arts of Liaoning University, and the 12th disciple of Zhao Benshan. As the only professional actor among Zhao Benshan's disciples who has learned Errenzhuan since childhood, Yan Guangming not only has a good voice and martial arts, but also has a wide range of acting skills. He won the silver medal for performance in the "First Zhao Benshan Cup Errenzhuan Grand Prix". Born in an Errenzhuan family, Yan Guangming is very hardworking, and his achievements today also show that his efforts over the years have not been in vain.
Representative works:
《Rural Love Story》《The Great Master of Guandong》《Stalking》
Zhao Haiyan is a Chinese actress, a national second-level actress, a professor at Liaoning University, and a master's tutor. Zhao Haiyan and Zhao Benshan have performed many popular sketches such as "Blind Date" and "Blind Date 2" for the audience. At the 2007 National College Students Art Festival, she and her husband Yan Guangming won the first prize for their new Errenzhuan "Liang Shanbo and Zhu Yingtai". She is "Yongqiang's mother" in "Country Love" and "Ge's mother" in "Cherry". Although she is young, her mature appearance and many years of stage experience allow her to shape roles with ease and win the hearts of the people.
Representative works:
《Cherry》《Country Love Story》《Blind Date 1, 2》
Songwriting & Studio Sessions | Pirate Rehearsal & Recording Studio
Feb 15, 2025 (UTC-8)ENDED
West Hollywood
We're hosting some of the most impactful collaborative studio sessions for all LA musicians, producers, songwriters, engineers. You'll collaborate, network, and walk out of each session with a demo of your own. Here, we work on music and create meaningful connections to artists across genres and skillsets. We cannot accept those who come unannounced without a ticket unfortunately due to the space constraints. The cost per person for the session (8 Hours) will be $30 hosted @ Pirate Studios w/ max 3-5 per room. The actual demo portion of the session will only last from 9AM - 12PM but you are free to stay and work after the fact until the time runs out. The goal is to create a track at the end of the session. People are paired based on their musical interests and experience so no one is left out of the loop. Here's a general outline of how its going to go - 9:00-9:30 AM : Get in / Group Pairing (3-5 people max per Studio Room) / Intro 9:30 - 11:00 : Make your tracks 11:00 - 12:00 : Continue making your track / Showcase / Kick it 12:00 - 5:00 : STUDIO TIME COST OF THE EVENT WILL BE $30, if interested please join the discord and dm @samuelho or message me on instagram @audiospacehq I will be accepting cash app, zelle, or apple pay! What to bring: • Yourself and the vibes! • Computer/Instrument/Devices/Percs Since this is a studio session bring whatever you want! Feel free to bring whatever makes you feel comfortable when making music. If you'd like to book time @ Pirate Studios on your own please sign up using my promo code and we both get free studio credits! CODE :SAMUEL748881 🌐 Connect With Us: Discord Server : https://discord.gg/eFTE8fsDSx Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/audiospacehq/ Want to get more involved? We always need more help! You can help with or host an event, provide mentorship, or volunteer for other fun stuff.
Information Source: Audiospace | eventbrite