Los Angeles Times

This shop dispenses cannabis ... and art

At L.A.’s ShowGrow, buds and pipes share space with paintings, photos, other works.

- By Carolina A. Miranda carolina.miranda @latimes.com Twitter: @cmonstah

Art galleries pop up in all sorts of curious locations around Los Angeles. In Los Feliz, there is a gallery in a stairwell; in Culver City, one in a box. Countless garage galleries are in backyards all over the city. And now, Los Angeles is home to a gallery in a cannabis dispensary.

Amid bags of cannabis corn chips and grow rooms with budding Snozzberry OG, the roughly year-old dispensary ShowGrow has transforme­d its downtown Los Angeles store into a showplace for art.

Decorating the lobby, open to the public, and the dispensary itself (license required), is a rotating exhibition of paintings, photograph­s and other works — including a portrait of Snoop Dogg by photograph­er Sasha Young and figure studies by French filmmaker Arghaël — all available for sale.

“One of the things that we have talked about is creating a space that is open and friendly,” says Matt Smiley, ShowGrow’s events manager and curator — and a painter himself. “We do an almost monthly show.

“People think of wine and art. I feel that this falls into that category. There is an element of luxury.”

Certainly, many dispensari­es are shedding their stoner college-dorm aesthetic in favor of something more sophistica­ted. The cannabis boom has resulted in a boom in shop design too. In the case of ShowGrow, that includes bright, woodpanele­d interiors and uncluttere­d, cleanly designed display cabinets featuring buds and pipes.

And, of course, there’s the art — which includes a stencil by Zachary Cole Fernandez, the artist known as Jesus Hands, who claimed responsibi­lity for altering the Hollywood sign to read “Hollyweed” on New Year’s Day.

“It’s just fun,” says ShowGrow Chief Executive David Barakett. “The cannabis industry — often you walk into a place and the facilities are often not agreeable to everyone. There’s the required Tupac poster . . . . We didn’t want [ShowGrow] to be just another weed store.”

Since the art program was quietly launched last spring, the dispensary has sold roughly half a dozen works — without ever advertisin­g itself as a gallery, Smiley says.

The downtown shop, one of the dispensary’s four locations (there are also stores in Santa Ana, Ramona and Las Vegas), draws 150 to 200 customers per day, Smiley says. And the best part for artists: “ShowGrow doesn’t take a commission.”

On view in the lobby space is a mix of celebrity portraits, including one of Lindsay Lohan dressed up as Elizabeth Taylor for the Lifetime flick “Liz & Dick.” Among the paintings is a trio of abstract canvases in the lobby by Elle Michalka, an animator who is also a painter. There’s also a photograph by Max Barsness, who frequently shoots landscape images of Los Angeles.

Inside the dispensary are a mural and a ceiling installati­on by the street artist known as Punk Me Tender. One wall bears a watercolor by singer Marilyn Manson, who is also a painter — a work titled “Green Whore of Love.”

Smiley says that he has known Manson for years and that the two would often have paint nights together. “There is such a beautiful mystery to what he does,” he says.

ShowGrow is at work on adding even more space devoted to art at its L.A. shop. Customers generally exit through a small room that deposits them back in the lobby. That room is now being converted into an art installati­on space.

“I’m heavily invested in the art world,” says Smiley. “And this a nice place to show.”

ShowGrow’s rotating exhibition of works from its Turnt Art collection is on display through May 1. A new exhibit, “Get Lifted,” opens May 13.

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 ?? Photograph­s by Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times ?? AT SHOWGROW, “Tohi Adedi” (freedom in Cherokee) by artist Punk Me Tender adorns the ceiling, top, while Marilyn Manson’s “Green Whore of Love” is on display near some medical marijuana plants, above.
Photograph­s by Rick Loomis Los Angeles Times AT SHOWGROW, “Tohi Adedi” (freedom in Cherokee) by artist Punk Me Tender adorns the ceiling, top, while Marilyn Manson’s “Green Whore of Love” is on display near some medical marijuana plants, above.

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