first impressions
Hello! My name is Keila and I am the Getty Multicultural Undergraduate Intern at Able Arts Work for the summer of 2018. In the fall I will enter my junior year of college at CSULB where I major in art history. My love for art history and my interest in working in the arts started in the fall of my senior year of high school. I had signed up for AP Art History and within months I was hooked; so hooked in fact that the following March I applied for a curatorial internship at the Museum of Latin American Art. They were test driving a program that involved bringing in five high school students to curate an exhibition in their museum. We were handed a theme and the rest was up to us. We sent out the call to artists. We vetted the submissions. We did studio visits [FUN FACT: one of the studios we visited was here at the ART Center! We hosted the work of a few Able Arts Work artists!]. We dragged the big heavy pieces from one end of the gallery to the other as we figured out the layout of the room. It was all us. It is genuinely some of my proudest work and I am eternally grateful for the opportunity given to us by the museum. That was in 2016. It's 2018 now and I am a curatorial intern at an organization I worked with during my first art internship. This was a full circle I was very happy to complete.
The focus of my internship here has to do with assisting in the organization of the annual CORE show. That has been a whirlwind all on its own. Over the years the CORE exhibition has grown larger and has almost become an art festival of sorts. You can image what multiple events happening in multiple places within a short span of time can entail when it comes to planning it all. Within that, my own individual project has been to curate a print show at our shop space at CRAFTED at the Port of Los Angeles. This show will feature work from artists both within the organization and outside of it. I have visited all the facilities and taken a look at any work our students have been working on that fall in line with the themes of the show. I have also contacted several artists from outside of the organization whose work I admire, and think is a good fit for the show. I want the show to be a celebration of DIY/working-from-scratch culture. This is something that I believe is at the very core of what Able Arts artists do. Our students are always creating so much from whatever we have in the classroom. A similar theme followed my own work as I did most of the work for this show from my laptop. I'm going to be honest, I have sent more emails during this internship than I believe I have ever sent in my life. The amount of times I have typed the same introductory paragraph describing Able Arts Work as an organization is so out of this world it has become my inner monologue. Now I am going to be even more honest; I have thoroughly enjoyed every bit of it. I believe myself to be an artist and I have created enough work on my own to be able to defend that, but I was truly built for administrative work. Emails don't bore me. Meetings are endlessly thrilling. I love taking notes. I love organizing. Before I even started my internship, I was already beyond excited to get my hands on the archive room. These are in fact a few of my favorite things.
I think of all the work I did this summer, I learned the most from the studio visits. My supervisor (Exhibitions Coordinator: Jason) and I frequented all the different facilities and at each one we visited with a handful of artists who had been working on something that they felt was ready to be shown in an upcoming exhibition. The studio visits were a chance to understand what this artist was creating, why they were creating it, and what they envisioned for it in a gallery space. Some of our clients use non-verbal communication a majority of the time so it was all the more an educating experience to see how to navigate that kind of situation. Learning to get your ideas across and understand others, with or without words, is a valuable skill to have. I recognized the dedication the artists at Able Arts had to representing themselves and making their opinions known to the curator, and it taught me how I might want to express and assert myself in future studio visits of my own. It is clear to me that there is more than one way to be assertive.
above: Cowboys by Andrew Echols. I love cowboys and I love how simple this piece is.
above: today is a circle all the days are by Dennis Lauterwasser. This is my favorite piece out of the entire collection. I loved it when I saw it while I was working at MOLAA and I love it now.
All in all, having an office job for the summer was a wonderful experience and I'm going to miss being surrounded by creative minds and their encouragement to be confident in my ideas. I am very grateful to the Getty Foundation and Able Arts Work for the experience. I have learned things I will remember for the rest of my art career.
first impressions: we are what we make is supported in part by the Getty Foundation through its Multicultural Undergraduate Internship program, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors through the Los Angeles County Arts Commission, The National Endowment for the Arts, The Department of Developmental Services and Harbor Regional Center. - opening October 4, 2018!











