Los Angeles Times

Rememberin­g the Plush Pony

The Plush Pony is gone, but in photos its vibrant lesbian clientele still gathers.

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

A defunct El Sereno lesbian bar is the subject of a photo exhibition and talk.

In the early 1990s, a friend dragged artist Laura Aguilar to a small bar on an industrial stretch of Alhambra Avenue in El Sereno for a night on the town. “I’m a very shy person,” Aguilar explains. “I don’t hang out at bars.”

But once she arrived, she found herself inspired. The Plush Pony, housed in a squat, one-story building amid auto body shops and warehouses, was a lesbian bar that attracted Mexican and Chicana women with drink specials and Latin grooves.

“It was always festive,” Aguilar says. “It had all the beer stuff hanging for whatever holiday was coming.”

The scene was working class, and it was “very butch/ femme,” the artist says. When she stepped into the place, she knew immediatel­y that she had to take pictures.

Aguilar is a photograph­er who has recorded identity, gender and the organic forms of the body — often her own. At the time, she had been working on a series devoted to Latina lesbians — but the women she had worked with had been largely educated and profession­al: activists, artists and lawyers.

“This was the counterbal­ance,” she says. “I wanted to show the whole community, not just half a community.”

So Aguilar got to work shooting portraits of the anonymous women (and one man) who regularly came through the doors of the Plush Pony, which shut down roughly a decade ago. Those images are now on view at the Vincent Price Art Museum at East Los Angeles College. They are part of the artist’s first comprehens­ive museum retrospect­ive, “Laura Aguilar: Show and Tell,” which continues into next year as part of the Pacific Standard Time: LA/LA series of exhibition­s.

Beyond the exhibition, the museum is paying special tribute to the Plush Pony on Saturday with a talk and event that will explore the importance of this underthe-radar social space.

“It’s a whole landscape that isn’t really visible,” says Pilar Tompkins Rivas, director of the Vincent Price museum. “Those kinds of spaces are really significan­t for a lot of intersecti­ng communitie­s.”

Saturday’s event, organized in collaborat­ion with the media arts group LA Freewaves, will feature a discussion with various Los Angeles artists. And because this is a bar that is being honored, there will be a rollicking after-party.

“We’ll begin with a discussion led by Eve Oishi of Claremont Graduate University that will bring together a group of artists to talk about gender and the realm of what queer artists are doing,” Tompkins Rivas says. “Then we’ll move into our lobby to have a party.”

On the lineup are performanc­e artist Nao Bustamante, painters Carolyn Castaño and Shizu Saldamando, artist and dancer Sebastián Hernandez and conceptual­ist Alex Donis, whose work explores the intersecti­on of race, politics and LGBTQ issues. Guadalupe Rosales, whose archival project “Veteran as and Rucas” has been key to documentin­g Eastside party crews of the 1990s, will take part in the forum and host a DJ set.

The space that was the Plush Pony is now a notary and legal office. But Chela Plush, who ran the bar, is still active in organizing LGBTQ events for workingcla­ss Latinos across genders. (She could not be reached for comment.)

Even if the bar is gone, Aguilar’s photos remain, a vital record of a time and a place.

“The kind of work she was doing was ahead of its time in terms of representa­tions of queer communitie­s of color,” Tompkins Rivas says. “Today we have these conversati­ons about identity and gender fluidity. And I think it was so significan­t that Laura was documentin­g this scene almost 25 years ago.”

Interestin­gly, Aguilar says the project didn’t get off to the best start. She offered to photograph the women for free and give them pictures in exchange for their time, but everyone reacted suspicious­ly.

“They were, like, ‘Who is this person who wants to take our picture for free ?’” she recalls. “So I said, ‘OK, five bucks.’ And then they said, ‘OK.’ And the first one signed the model’s release and then they all signed the model’s release, and I took their picture. And they never paid me!”

What about the lone man who appears in some of the images?

“Oh, he lived around the corner,” Aguilar says with a chuckle. “His wife, at least she knew where he was. He wasn’t going to be seeing anybody.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Laura Aguilar UCLA Chicano Studies Research ?? THE COMMUNITY at a former bar is documented in such Laura Aguilar photograph­s as “Plush Pony No. 2.”
Photograph­s by Laura Aguilar UCLA Chicano Studies Research THE COMMUNITY at a former bar is documented in such Laura Aguilar photograph­s as “Plush Pony No. 2.”
 ??  ?? PHOTOGRAPH­ER Laura Aguilar is seen in the selfportra­it “Don't Tell Her Art Can’t Hurt (Part A).”
PHOTOGRAPH­ER Laura Aguilar is seen in the selfportra­it “Don't Tell Her Art Can’t Hurt (Part A).”

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