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Dallas Art Fair

Booth C-1

Fashion Industry Gallery

April 10 - 13, 2025

Robert Kushner Dahlia Garden - Quiet Afternoon, 2024

Robert Kushner
Dahlia Garden - Quiet Afternoon, 2024
Oil, acrylic, conte crayon and gold leaf on canvas
48 x 36 in (121.9 x 91.4 cm)

Robert Kushner Santa Ana Wind, 2024

Robert Kushner
Santa Ana Wind, 2024
Oil, acrylic, conte crayon and gold leaf on canvas
36 x 48 in (91.4 x 121.9 cm)

Maggie Michael Root Chords, Birth Light (Birthing Light), 2024

Maggie Michael
Root Chords, Birth Light (Birthing Light), 2024
Acrylic, oil, spray paint on canvas
60 x 112 in (152.4 x 284.5 cm)

Maggie Michael Unicorn Seed Bed: Spring of Cranial Bumps, 2023

Maggie Michael
Unicorn Seed Bed: Spring of Cranial Bumps, 2023
Ink, acrylic, spray paint, pine needles on canvas
60 x 72 in (152.4 x 182.9 cm)

For the Best

June Edmonds
For the Best, 2024
Acrylic on linen
74 x 50 in  (188 x 127 cm)

Lia Halloran: Magnetic Fields, 2024 Oil on panel  48 x 48 in (121.9 x 121.9 cm)

Lia Halloran
Magnetic Fields, 2024
Oil on panel 
48 x 48 in (121.9 x 121.9 cm)

Evita Tezeno Always and Forever, 2025

Evita Tezeno
Always and Forever, 2025
Acrylic, mixed media collage, and vintage buttons on canvas
48 x 36 x 1.5 in (121.9 x 91.4 x 3.8 cm)
49.5 x 37.5 x 1.5 in (125.7 x 95.3 x 3.8 cm) Framed

Evita Tezeno Silence is the Best When Secrets are Shared, 2025

Evita Tezeno
Silence is the Best When Secrets are Shared, 2025
Acrylic, mixed media collage, and vintage buttons on canvas
36 x 48 x 1.5 in (91.4 x 121.9 x 3.8 cm)
37.5 x 49.5 x 1.5 in (95.3 x 125.7 x 3.8 cm) Framed

Griselda Rosas Premonición, 2024

Griselda Rosas
Premonición, 2024
Embroidery and acrylic on faux ostrich skin 
39.5 x 29.5 in (100.3 x 74.9 cm)

Melissa Huddleston Genetic Drift, 2024

Melissa Huddleston
Genetic Drift, 2024
Acrylic on paper
48 x 40 in  (121.9 x 101.6 cm)

Melissa Huddleston In the Fizz, 2024

Melissa Huddleston
In the Fizz, 2024
Acrylic on paper
38 x 28 in  (96.5 x 71.1 cm)

Tristram Lansdowne Orderly, 2024

Tristram Lansdowne
Orderly, 2024
Watercolor on paper
29 x 17.25 in  (73.7 x 43.8 cm)
33 x 21.25 x 2 in (83.8 x 54 x 5.1 cm) Framed

Press Release

Luis De Jesus Los Angeles Dallas
Art Fair: Booth C-1
April 10 – 13, 2025

For this year’s Dallas Art Fair at the Fashion Industry Gallery, Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is pleased to highlight East Coast painters, Robert Kushner and Maggie Michael; California artists June Edmonds, Melissa Huddleston, and Griselda Rosas; and Dallas artist Evita Tezeno. Our presentation is located upstairs in Booth C-1.

New York painter Robert Kushner is known as one of the founders of the 1970’s Pattern and Decoration movement, and he continues to address controversial issues involving decoration. His work combines organic representational elements with abstract geometric forms in a harmonious manner that is both decorative and modernist, drawing from a unique range of influences including Islamic, European, and Asian textiles, Henri Matisse, Georgia O’Keeffe, Charles Demuth, Pierre Bonnard, Tawaraya Sotatsu, Ito Jakuchu, Qi Baishi, and Wu Changshuo.

Considered one of Washington, D.C.’s leading painters, Maggie Michael's lyrical works are a powerful reminder of abstraction’s transformative potential. Michael's paintings incorporate gestural brushwork and a nuanced range of media including ink, latex, acrylic, oil, and spray paint encompassing harmonious blends of color. Found objects such as pine needles, feathers, shells, leaves, rain water, and minerals appear on her canvases as she wields an arsenal of abstraction to craft textured works that stir visceral connections.

Los Angeles painter June Edmonds is known for memorializing significant moments in Black history, imbuing cultural memory through strategies of abstraction and meditation. Edmonds’ “Riverleaf” series incorporates an ancient West African quatrefoil symbol found on Benin bronzes. Her painting “For the Best” focuses on the intersection of two circles. This sacred geometry, also known as the visicus piscus, is associated with fertility and represents a transitional space between the physical and spiritual worlds.

Arkansas-born artist Melissa Hudleston’s experimental practice is inspired by the wetlands and verdant landscapes of the American South. Her “Primordial Spring” series immerses the viewer in a luminous, prehistoric swamp populated with single-celled organisms, imaginary archaic life forms, and humanoid amphibian figures. Paint is not applied, but transfered through marbling water baths to achieve layered organix shapes, swooshes, and swirls of opalescent color floating with mysterious levity – evoking mutation, decay, sex, growth, and the messiness of life.

Griselda Rosas lives and works in San Diego, California. Inspired by her life between the US/Mexico border, she intersects themes of cultural hybridity and identity through her multidisciplinary practice which spans textiles, collage, painting, drawing, sculpture, and pedagogy. Rosas’ work critically examines the complexities of modern Mexican identity by studying and deconstructing symbols from Mesoamerican and colonial histories, and their contemporary effects.

Dallas artist Evita Tezeno's celebrated collage paintings employ richly patterned hand-painted papers and sentimental objects. Her work often focuses on characters in harmonious everyday settings inspired by her memories of South Texas in the 1960s and 70s and moments from her adult life. Scenes of joy animate her vision of a Black America filled with humanity.

About Luis De Jesus Los Angeles

Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is dedicated to presenting and supporting a highly diverse roster of artists whose work engages with regional and global art discourse, exploring a wide range of personal, social, cultural, and aesthetic concerns. Representation within the roster is split nearly equal between male and female artists, with 50% of the artists being of Latinx, Asian, or Brown/Black diasporas. The gallery's program has garnered wide recognition, with artists receiving prestigious awards, participating in international biennials and art fairs, and having their work acquired by major museums, institutions and collectors.

Partners Luis De Jesus and Jay Wingate opened their first gallery, Luis De Jesus Seminal Projects, in San Diego in 2007. In 2010, they relocated to Santa Monica and rebranded as Luis De Jesus Los Angeles. In 2011, the gallery moved to the Culver City Arts District where it operated for ten years. In the spring of 2021, the gallery opened its current home, an expansive space downtown on the edge of the Los Angeles Arts District. Prior to the west coast, De Jesus lived in New York City for two decades, working in a number of galleries and museums.

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