The Art of Community
Lauren Halsey in conversation with Alice Grandoit-Šutka & Isabel FlowerPortrait by TEXAS ISAIAH
“Lauren Halsey,“ David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, January 25-March 14, 2020. Installation view, Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles. Photography by Jeff McLane.
After high school, I went to an amazing community college in LA called El Camino. I took architecture because it was recommended to me by Dominique Moody, an incredible artist who was close friends with my aunt. We were having a conversation and I was like,“I don’t know what to do with my life. Basketball isn’t going to happen.” She asked me, “What inspires you?” I said something along the lines of “space,” because, as I said earlier, experiencing life through the lens of Funkadelic and the ethos of being a Funkateer meant constantly remixing space in my head in the pursuit of pure and total freedom. I took an architecture class and it was really empowering. In the program, we spent several years proposing and drawing up spaces and then actually building them with our peers in collaborative design/build courses with students in the construction department. That was huge for me.
“Lauren Halsey,“ David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, January 25-March 14, 2020. Installation view, Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles. Photography by Jeff McLane.
Then, one day, during my second or third year at El Camino, I was walking with my friend Jesus through campus to the parking lot and we passed an art class happening in the print-making room. I decided to enroll in the class because of the wild color palettes I could see through the window. There was so much freedom because, well, it’s art! My teacher, Paul Gellman, allowed me to take the blueprints I was doing on the other side of campus in my architecture program and bring them to the print-making processes to sort of funkify them and loosen them up. That became my cheat code. I was remixing geography fantastically. I was combining National Geographic magazines that I inherited from my grandmother with these maximalist, syrupy geographies Parliament proposed in their funk operas, album covers, songs, etc. That was the beginning of my palette. It was about density, maximalism, and futurism—collapsing all of these compositionally, as well as the Los Angeles aesthetic that I’m part of, and others that I’ve inherited from my father, such as idiosyncratic nods to ancient Egyptian mythology.
From there, I transferred to architecture school at California College of the Arts. I was there for a year or two, but my coursework quickly went from being about the practical services of architecture to proposing far out forms that didn’t tie back to any context around reality, as far as demographics, class, race, or even budget. I soon realized that architecture in the traditional sense wasn’t for me. I went back to El Camino and started thinking about how I could appropriate architectural processes to create sculptures and installations. But one of my goals for the next five years is actually to produce an architecture—not one animated by an art context—an actual architecture on a city block. Maybe one day I’ll go back to school for it, if I can get in.
I have no intention of leaving. Because of that, I feel that it’s not responsible, or even enough, for me just to reference South Central’s past, present, and future in the work. If the work is going to exist outside of my home, my studio, my garage, whatever, then there has to be some sort of proposal or activation for community building in a way that offers and distributes resources 24/7/365 in real time and at no cost. The work can’t just be representational, and it can’t just be performative. The result, the cause and effect, has to be something tangible. This starts at the base level with who I work with—who I hire for the community center, who I hire as assistants, who I hire as subcontractors. At the minimum, I must recycle dollars back into the neighborhood, into family businesses, into people. My long term goal is one day to use those dollars to redistribute land, housing, community centers, and grocery stores back to the hood via community land trust models I’ve been studying.
That includes the dream of one day building the architecture for what I am describing. This will mean tapping back into the LA Black Worker Center and a ton of folks and frameworks that I have deep relationships with, and then hiring on a large scale for real construction projects. In the meantime, I’m doing what I can with Summaeverythang community center to empower who’s here already and, hopefully, beyond just employment, to give folks tangible resources, mutual aid, opportunities for learning, and beautiful experiences that feed energy back into the people and contexts that deeply inspire me. I know all of these gestures aren’t going to solve gentrification, but I’m trying my best. That’s all I can do, you know?
“The work can’t just be representational, and it can’t just be performative.”
Produce box at Summaeverythang. Image courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery. Photography by Allen Chen.
The community center is two doors down from my studio. Pre-COVID, I had been keeping it insular. I was working on bringing people from the neighborhood in to run it, to coordinate, to help facilitate. I was saving money, writing grant and award proposals, building hype. Outside of form, my sculpture practice is about trying to create as many funding opportunities for the community center as possible. I had originally planned for it to open in the late summer/early fall of 2020. Out of the gate, and inspired by my little cousins, the first few programs were going to revolve around helping kids with their homework through one-on-one tutoring, studying, and group learning—essentially an after-school program.
Then I talked to my close friend Six Sev, a tight rapper and activist who is based in Leimert Park but originally from Crenshaw. As there are a few office spaces within the community center, the new goal became creating a high-level music studio and yearlong residencies for musicians, vocalists, poets, and performers in the neighborhood to make projects using the equipment and space free of charge.
The ethos of promoting food security is a big part of the community center. I’m looking forward to building a community garden in the parking lot in the upcoming months. We might not be able to do 600 boxes a week, that requires acres of land, but we’ll be able to harvest whatever we can. At the minimum, we can do fifty boxes per week for the rest of the community center’s life, and hopefully for the rest of my life. I’m learning as I’m going. I’m learning with my friends. We’re freestyling it and it feels really beautiful.
Left to right: Summer Humes, Cheyenne Williams, Michelle Beyder, Louis Taylor, Darion Abbott, Louis Strandberg, and Dayon Paulino, Anthony Creeden, Marcus Daniels, Gabriela Castillo, and Korina Matyas. Image courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery. Photography by Allen Chen.
“It’s amazing to be able to finally merge contexts every single day. I can make my art and be in the neighborhood, be immersed in the streets the way I love being in the streets, be with my friends. It’s the most soulful way of being.”
The most gratifying part is that I get to do the work that I’ve been fantasizing about since 2010, when I first got to art school. My subject is South Central. But, when I was in school, I was only describing the work. The work was in conversation and being critiqued in the studio and in class, far outside its context in Valencia. I knew that I couldn’t maintain that separation. It’s amazing to be able to finally merge contexts every single day. I can make my art and be in the neighborhood, be immersed in the streets the way I love being in the streets, be with my friends. It’s the most soulful way of being.
Top row, left to right: Juan Alcala, Lesley Thornton, Josie Macias, Marcus Daniels, Breonte Davis, Rodrick Jonson, Allison Garcia, Monique McWilliams, Catrina Mendoza, Andreina Giron, Angel Xotlanihua, Anthony Creeden, Muna El Futuri, Michelle Beyder, Vetho Cato, Summer Humes, Cheyenne Williams, Louis Strandberg, Gabriela Castillo, Matias Duplantier, and Krysta Grasso. Bottom Row, left to right: Lauren Halsey, Emmanuel Carter, Nika Kolodziej, and Korina Matyas. Image courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery. Photography by Allen Chen.
Lauren Halsey by Texas Isaiah.
LAUREN HALSEY is a Los Angeles-native artist and organizer rethinking the possibilities for art‚ architecture‚ and community engagement.
Community Design, Placemaking, Architecture