Sunday, January 25, 2026

Marianela de la Hoz, Vicki Walsh and Juanita Perez-Adelman at PHES Gallery in Carlsbad

 by Patricia Frischer


Marianela de la Hoz - explaining to her grandchildren what a
real rose is and how the petals can fall and the thorns can prick.
Not everything is an image on a device.  

Three artists come together with common attributes. All their work is intimate but universal at the same time. The techniques used are highly skilled and refined, honed over years of practice. This new PHES Gallery exhibition Fluid Visions is now open in Carlsbad. It features Marianela de la Hoz, Vicki Walsh, and Juanita  Perez-Adelman and runs until March 21st. 

“My painting is intended as observation without judgement or accusation, I aim to uncover situations that must be seen.” Marianela de la Hoz

Following Marianela de la Hoz's career in the arts has been a fascinating journey. Her process of using the yolk of an egg to mix dry pigment, when each individual stroke of the brush is completely transparent, is painstaking.  It take two layers to begin to see color, so it slowly builds up creating the finest possible details. This is a medium favored by 15th-century European painters. De la Hoz uses it to make her small highly detailed compositions. She has a taste for surreal imagery and a sensibility that is wholly contemporary and quite often humorous. The works chosen for this show seem to be lighter in nature, even when they are highly political. The last two years are full of exhibitions for her. The following two are on view or coming up and there is another show curated by Marisol Rendón at Southwestern College later this year.

SD Art Prize recipient in 2014, Marianela de la Hoz with soundscapes by Grammy Award-winning producer Marc Urselli are collaborating on Marianela de la Hoz and Marc Urselli: Palpitations The Cadence of Heartbeats at the San Diego Museum of Art on view until Feb 22, 2026.

Politics of Portrayal: Three Generations of Chicana Portraiture in Los Angeles In Conversation with San Diego Artists exhibit on view Feb 9 – March 5, 2026 at Mesa College Gallery. Reception: Wed, Feb. 11, 4 – 7 pm. Artist Panel and Reception: Sat, Feb. 28, 4 – 7 pm.

Vicki Walsh presents four works that explore the hidden world of the woods. She treats this subject just as she has treated her deeply psychological portraits of people. The one exception is the work in the back of the gallery.  While watching a murder mystery on TV, an amputated limb was covered with a sheet and bang, Walsh was back in her medical illustration mode from her early career. It was a short jump to a seahorse spilled out of a glass of water. Fantasy and reality, innocence and irony, light and dark, all inform these narratives. Walsh’s own studio has blossomed into a vibrant center for creativity, fostering not only technical skills but a deep sense of camaraderie and commitment to the arts within the local community. To read more about Vicki Walsh and Sip art Space see the North County Arts Network profile.

Juanita  Perez-Adelman was born in Bogotá Columbia but considers her home in two other places where she has homes and studios; Mexico where she has had a home since 1987 and Carlsbad, not too far from PHES Gallery. These very colorful works not only have layers of patterns and images, but the substrate of some of them is very special. Amate is pre-Hispanic, handmade Mexican paper using fig, nettle, or mulberry bark. Raw bark is washed, boiled, woven and beaten until the fibers fuse. Perez-Adelman, in the past, made this paper for her works. She now employs a talented craftswomen to create it for her, or works on canvas.  As you explore what at first looks very abstract, you start to notice all sorts of symbols that are repeat; doors and windows, waterfalls, ladders, volcanos. These created visual forms, which together with the influence of worldwide textiles textures, make a rich language.

Marianela de la Hoz - even the dangerous coyote needs help in
difficult time. We need to share our bounty and help each other. 

Marianela de la Hoz - St. Francis helps the fortune telling birds
spread their messages with the aid of angel doves. 

Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz - Her oldest daughter feeling her sun was swallowed
 when her younger brother was born. 

Marianela de la Hoz

Marianela de la Hoz


Marianela de la Hoz - our education, our rights, our books being destroyed

Vicki Walsh

Vicki Walsh

Vicki Walsh

Vicki Walsh

Juanita  Perez-Adelman

Juanita  Perez-Adelman

Juanita  Perez-Adelman

Juanita  Perez-Adelman

Juanita  Perez-Adelman

 

Fluid Visions
PHES Gallery
Jan 25 to March 21st. 2026
2633 State Street, Carlsbad, 92008
Gallery hours Thursday through Saturday 2-7pm and by appointment.
info@PHESGallery.com 

Thursday, January 22, 2026

San Diego Gallery News: Space 4 Art @ Art Produce

By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt.

The centerpiece of the new show at Art Produce in North Park:
Urban Totem by Brennan Hubbell.
The artist also led a free Cardboard Art Workshop
in the gallery’s garden January 25
th.

There’s a small but interesting exhibit at Art Produce Gallery now with the somewhat daunting title Non-Objective Lessons.  It’s a display of mostly small pieces by 14 San Diego artists unrestrained from expressing reality in a gallery that has been an experimental art-space for over 25 years and is now going into a new phase of existence.

For decades, Space for Art in East Village and Art Produce in North Park have been known for creating and encouraging community-based art. This exhibit is the first in a yearlong Space 4 Art @ Art Produce residency and includes a piece by the gallery’s founding director, Lynn Susholtz.  It’s also an introduction to the gallery’s new interim director, Katie Ruiz, an artist/curator from Space 4 Art who curated the current show.

Katie Ruiz with several of the artworks on view.

Maurice and I were lucky enough to be able to chat with both Lynn and Katie just before the show opened, so we got the full scoop.
 

To begin with: The Space 4 Art @ project is funded by a major grant from the Prebys Foundation, which enables Space 4 Art collaborations with varied arts organizations to produce workshops, performances, and all sorts of cultural programs. The inaugural connection with Art Produce comes at a perfect time, just when Lynn Susholts was ready to step back from all the administrative obligations of running a gallery and concentrate on doing her own artwork. But she won’t actually be leaving for good.

“My studio is on the other side of this wall,” she said, tapping on the gallery’s back wall. “So I get to show up at receptions and have a cocktail, but I don’t have to manage everything anymore.”  

 

Lynn Susholtz with her own artwork Anyforce

The current show will be on view through February 12th.

Art Produce Gallery
3139 University Ave., San Diego.
Gallery Hours: Fridays and Saturdays, 12-6 p.m., 
Or by appointment by contacting Katie Ruiz

There will also be more art workshops in the garden.
Next up: A Community Knitting Circle January 31st 

That’s it for now. Keep in touch with Katie for more news about Space 4 Art projects at Art Produce and other locations in the coming year.

Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Adorno at Oolong Gallery in Rancho Santa Fe

by Patricia Frischer



Adam Braly Janes

Theodor Adorno (1903–1969) was an art critic who believed that mass culture was dumbing down our society. He admired art that was difficult. In this exhibition Adorno has a contradictory meaning as adornment in art recognized that truth without beauty can be pretty unbearable. The artists in this exhibition at Oolong Gallery embrace both philosophies.  

This is the third North County location for Oolong Gallery run by Eric Laine. It is a smaller space, but the work was nicely spaced to give you a chance to see each one and close attention was paid to the interaction between the works. Laine takes full advantage of the venues in the Ranch to gather collectors from Los Angeles and Orange County. We would to see young Rancho Santa Fe residents make this one of their gathering places. After a long run of solo exhibitions, Laine has returned to his love of group displays.

Adam Braly Janes surprises in the most subtle way. His color palate pays tribute to Phillip Guston, but the diminutive ladder attached to the wall at an angle, with its red side facing the wall and the white side blending into the way is a master class in understatement.

Victoria Fu (a San Diego Art Prize recipient) combines photographs, paintings, glass sculptures, video into an array of color and shape and it was the glimpses of human figure that was the most intriguing. The glorious glass with the video shing through was luscious and provocative.

Ricardo Galvan’s  Superman and Zorro are playful at first glance, but a rapid dog or wolf chasing down the man of steel?  And Zorro coupled with the bat mobile is confusing with words that could be an expression of angst or fear.  Or is AIE…The Academy of Interactive Entertainment (a 3D animation/game design educator) or Artificial Intelligence Engineer (a certification/role), or could it refer to the Army's Accessions Information Environment. Probably none of the above, so just enjoy the brush work. 

Amy Adler presents selfie portraits with rich texture of oil pastels on rough canvas. Paintings of photographs is not new, but portraits of portraits look fresh and appealing.

When is a cinderblock, not a cinderblock? When it is enlarged and becomes a metal bench. And do we need to stand up and salute flag poles with no flags and bent into a spaghetti of lines and bulbs. Josh Callaghan poses these questions and challenges us to wonder.   

Christian Olid-Ramirez  long horizontal composition really fools the eye. It looks flat and colorful, but walk up close and you see your original perception is wrong. Paper Mâché carton shapes create the hills and valleys and reflect lots of his Mexican heritage.


Adam Braly Janes

Adam Braly Janes


 
Victoria Fu

Victoria Fu

Victoria Fu


Ricardo Galvan

Ricardo Galvan

Amy Adler

Josh Callaghan

Josh Callaghan


Christian Olid-Ramirez


Christian Olid-Ramirez

Christian Olid-Ramirez

Christian Olid-Ramirez


Adorno
Oolong Gallery  
Jan10 – Feb. 14, 2026
Amy Adler, Josh Callaghan, Victoria Fu, Ricardo Galvan, Adam Braly Janes, and Christian Olid-Ramirez .
6030 La Flecha, Rancho Santa Fe, CA
Wed – Sat 10 to 5, Tuesday by appointment. Closed Sunday and Monday.
1 858 229 2788            info@oolongallery.com



Saturday, November 22, 2025

Nick Cave: A Conversation on Art and Identity presented by the San Diego Museum of Art

by Patricia Frischer



This summary is from the conversation between the artist Nick Cave and the interviewer Deidre Guevara held at the San Diego Museum of Art. 

Nick Cave is a charming speaker, authentic and one of my personal heroes. He is one of 7 boys born a year apart from each and very early on, he was no trouble because he was always drawing and occupying himself. His parents were very supportive. He went to the Kansas City Art Institute which was liberating. But at one point his mother was concerned about his pink hair. He grew out of that phase and has certainly made his family proud.

During his time at school, he learned he was able to gather people and collaborate. But after school he needed to focus. First working at Macy’s as a visual coordinator doing window displays,  then on to Hallmark which was not a good match. So, he went to Cranbrook and was near Detroit. He was committed and pushed and was immediately hired at the teaching school of the Chicago Art Institute in 1991.

The Rodney King beating happened in 1992. Harm to black bodies was not unusual, but  this  was the first incident that was seen on video…so vulgar and so violent. It was devastating and brought to his attention the need to communicate to the white world of his colleagues. The riots in LA were galvanizing and a real awakening for him. He needed to speak louder and the Sound Suits were born out of that need. He gathered twigs thinking they would be a sculpture, but then as he assembled them, he realized he could wear the sculpture and when he put it on it made sound.  He was not ready to reveal this work publicly and put a dozen of them into a closet for about a decade. He needed time to understand what he was making and why .

In these works, the wearer is covered and protected, but the shape determined what the suits became. A friend showed his work to the Jack Shainman Gallery in New York. After he checked them out, he agreed to a meeting in Chicago. When ask what he wanted, he had to be honest with himself and he replied, “I want to be famous.” The gallery came to Chicago and sold out his show, but this was shocking to him. It took him awhile to ask for help, because they wanted more art. When they launched, his life changed. Success was sudden and dizzying. To take these Sound Suits out of the closet and lose the protection that his work provided, took courage. 

Discarded materials, excess, re-use, re-purpose all floated in his mind. He was really continuing his material studies. Cave was a weaver  and constructing a cloth and moving it from 2-D to 3-D  was comfortable for him. The concept of beauty from the thrown away, for him, is almost a rebellion. But a rebellion that is optimistic, hopeful and filled with forgiveness.

Most of the work is used color and pattern  His influences are self-declared Baroque as well as haute culture and decadence. Gaudy, excessive turned into fabulous are his words to describe the style of the work.


Nick Cave, Rescue, 2013. Mixed media including ceramic French bulldog,
ceramic birds, metal flowers, and barrel chair.
© Nick Cave. Courtesy of the artist and Jack Shainman Gallery, New York.
Museum purchase with funds from the bequest of Dr. Janet Brody Esser, 2022.18



Rescue is his piece owned by SDMA.  This series was the first time he starting building out the idea while shopping for supplies. The Doberman was the first one he found and he knew if should be sitting on a settee. Dogs have loyalty. Pure bred dogs denote status in society. He felts he needed to create a den for the dogs, a safe space.

He obviously does not need to teach but he is interested in the next generation and wanting to make sure that those who need him are involved. He removed his own art from his teaching life which focuses on getting the students to trust themselves. His community work involves exhibitions spaces that are curated but are also flexible to the moment. He calls these call and response spaces.  He wants to empower the community not to wait for an institution to approve, but to do a project that they believe in immediately.

Nick Cave is interested in how AI is influencing the making of things and utilizes it as a tool. He makes art without limits or boundaries. That invites us to dive into the work in the same way. 


Nick Cave, live at the San Diego Museum of Art