Los Angeles Times

South L.A. artist’s grand design

Lauren Halsey unveils first look at sculpture park to be built for, about neighborho­od.

- By Jessica Gelt

For 17 years Lauren Halsey has dreamed of creating a monumental work of installati­on art for — and about — her South Los Angeles neighborho­od, and on Monday she released the first renderings for the project, which has grown into a public sculpture park scheduled to open next spring.

Constructi­on has already begun on the project, titled “sister dreamer, lauren halsey’s architectu­ral ode to tha surge n splurge of south central los angeles,” which will rise on a vacant lot whose exact location has not been disclosed. Renderings for the temporary park, scheduled to close in fall 2026, reveal a gleaming white courtyard reminiscen­t of earlier iterations of Halsey’s project at the Hammer Museum in L.A. and the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York.

Eight sphinxes and eight Hathoric columns will be carved with images that are meaningful to Halsey, including personal heroes, family, friends, community activists and organizers. Surroundin­g walls and a cube-like central seating area will be constructe­d with glass-fiber-reinforced concrete panels, and native plants will ring the project.

The park received crucial support from the Mellon Foundation’s Monuments Project and is being presented by the nonprofit arts organizati­on Los Angeles Nomadic Division, which

specialize­s in site-specific public art and programs. LAND co-founder Christine Y. Kim is the project’s curator and co-producer.

Halsey’s nonprofit Sum-maeverytha­ng Community Center, founded in 2019, will oversee public programmin­g for the site, including film screenings, health and wellness events, jazz concerts, sports, lecture series and youth programs. The site will serve as a staging ground for the center’s activities while architect Barbara Bestor works on building a permanent home for the organizati­on.

The monument park is a “dream project” that Halsey has been “visioning, proofing and prototypin­g” ever since she studied architectu­re at El Camino community college in Torrance, Halsey said in the announceme­nt Monday. “I’m beyond thrilled and honored to finally present it to, and in, the community that I’m from, adore and believe in most.”

Halsey’s installati­on nods to ancient Egypt with its iconograph­y, but a closer look reveals how it’s firmly rooted in the Black culture of South L.A., where her family has lived for generation­s. An early imagining was part of the Hammer’s 2018 “Made in L.A.” biennial.

Former Times art and design columnist Carolina A. Miranda described that titled “The Crenshaw District Hieroglyph Project (Prototype Architectu­re),” as having “a low-rider, palm trees and the patterns of the braids on a young girl’s head — as well as Marcus Garvey, the Pan-African nationalis­t who was active in the early 20th century, looking regal in a plumed hat in one corner.”

At the time, Halsey mentioned wanting to find a permanent site along Crenshaw Boulevard to accommodat­e a public monument that would pay tribute to Black life in the neighborho­od. An even earlier prototype was shown at the Studio Museum in Harlem in 2015.

Halsey attended the Los Angeles Center for Enriched Studies, or LACES, graduating in 2005 before studying at El Camino. She went on to the California Institute of the Arts in Santa Clarita and received a master of fine arts from Yale University.

She has one solo exhib ition closing this month at Gagosian gallery in Paris, and another opening at London’s Serpentine Gallery this fall.

In the park announceme­nt, Halsey stressed that the “sister dreamer” project is more than a monument. It is “a living expression of the dynamic power of community,” the announceme­nt said, one that “aims to inspire liberation, self-definition, community building and economic autonomy.”

 ?? From Lauren Halsey and Current Interests ?? A RENDERING of the South L.A. project, titled “sister dreamer, lauren halsey’s architectu­ral ode to tha surge n splurge of south central los angeles,” features nods to ancient Egypt and the area’s Black culture.
From Lauren Halsey and Current Interests A RENDERING of the South L.A. project, titled “sister dreamer, lauren halsey’s architectu­ral ode to tha surge n splurge of south central los angeles,” features nods to ancient Egypt and the area’s Black culture.
 ?? Russell Hamilton LAND ?? ARTIST Lauren Halsey calls her vision “a living expression of the dynamic power of community.”
Russell Hamilton LAND ARTIST Lauren Halsey calls her vision “a living expression of the dynamic power of community.”

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