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LA
Times E 15
August 25, 2005
By Kevin Bronson, Times Staff Writer
Maybe the heart of Hollywood was beating last Saturday night, and the Sunset
Strip was probably jumping. But how about that traffic on Santa Fe Avenue?
Yes, in the bowels of the downtown warehouse district, there were crowds
and music and dancing and all manner of art. "It's hard to raise a community
in Los Angeles," said Lance Sanders, 30, founder of the art club Hangar
1018, "but it's down here."
Indeed, Hangar 1018, a converted industrial space cater-cornered from a strip
club, is one of several downtown venues catering to what hipsters call "the
underground art scene." Closed by police late last year for code violations,
Hangar 1018 reopened this spring, more than $100,000 in renovations later.
Its space is rented two or three times monthly for events such as last weekend's
3 Shots, a music-art gathering that featured a performance by the rising L.A.
band Gram Rabbit, even if the exhibited art was decidedly modest in ambition.
The crowd was diverse, the lemonade was spiked and the kitsch was thick
you could even get a Skooby's hot dog out back.
"These things have a certain vibe," Sanders said. "It's supposed
to feel like a party at somebody's house."
Across the street, Dim Mak Records was throwing a party; not far away, one
sign pointed passersby to an "Art Show," another to an "Art
Party."
(Our Monument to Each Pressing Memory by Nathan
Spoor - click for enlarged view)
The scene figures to be the same this weekend, when Hangar 1018 will be the
setting for the fifth anniversary show of Cannibal Flower, one of the city's
most established roving art franchises. That show includes work by painter
Nathan Spoor (and dozens of others) and music by DJ Shepard Fairey
not to mention artist Rygar's body-painting fashion show featuring 25 nude
models.
It's the kind of off-kilter coalescence that lends itself to venues like Hangar
1018.
"I was hoping it would become the spot for the underground art scene,"
said Cannibal Flower founder Leonard Croskey. "It's great that it got
legal."
Cannibal Flower fifth anniversary, Hangar 1018, 1018 Santa Fe Ave., L.A. 9:30
p.m. Saturday. $5 to $7. www.cannibalflower.com
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