Skip to Content
Art

‘Karan Koron’ Group Show ~ Meltdown Comics ~ West Hollywood

a.p.

Intercultural love flowed through the air at Karan Koron, the phenomenal show of traditional Japanese wooden sandals that had been painted, warped, modified, and more by over 60 artists both East and West, and a couple spots in between. Curated and organized seamlessly by Los Angeles legend Galo "MAKE" Canote, the vibe was killer, with live painting, hot bartendresses, and plenty of surprises imported from Japan, from a metal-to-the-core performance artist with a giant welded iron Cujo that spit fire with him to a noisy-in-a-good-way punk band fronted by a badass singer in old-school curlers.

a.p.

But yo, it's gotta be the shoes!! Yeah, best of all was the art, with smooth acrylics in designs that were inspired by the cultural exchange (ninja, koi fish, onis) with our Pacific brethren to some crazy innovation like complex woodburned figures to incorporating hardware or rat traps as in one political piece. In fact the artists managed to say a lot despite the possible restraints of a theme, a refreshingly dope surprise considering the number of gimmicky group shows filled with nothing less than everyone's cartoons. Killer art, positive vibes, sake, music, and lots to experience, Galo throws a tight party along with an inspiring show! ~ Had

Photos 455er

a.p.
a.p.
rhinos.jpg
sticker combo 455ER
a.p.
a.p.
a.p
a.p.
to-fu

~455

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from L.A. TACO

Protester Whose Testicle Exploded After LAPD Officer Shot Him with ‘Less Lethal’ Firearm Receives $1.5 Million Settlement

Benjamin Montemayor had been protesting on Hollywood Boulevard for several hours on June 2, 2020, when at least 50 police officers descended upon his group and began firing munitions at the crowd, according to his civil rights lawsuit filed in Los Angeles federal court.

May 17, 2024

Westlake’s Oldest Gay Bar Set to be Demolished

Opened in the early 1960s, the Silver Platter has long been known as a safe space for immigrant gay and transgender communities in Westlake. The building dates back to the 1920s.

May 17, 2024

What To Eat This Weekend Around L.A.: Salvadoran Fried Chicken Sandwiches, 48-Hour Pho, and Tacos Placeros

Plus, a new Enrique Olvera-approved monthly "mercadito" in D.T.L.A., a new arepa spot with patacon burgers that use fried plaintains for buns, and more in this week's roundup.

May 17, 2024

The 13 Best Tacos In Boyle Heights

Boyle Heights is arguably the city’s most important local taco galaxy in the larger taco universe that is Los Angeles. Remember, this is Boyle Heights! It's not East L.A., and it is most definitely not just some vague place known as “the Eastside.”

May 16, 2024

Here Are All the Restaurants (and the One Taquería In the Entire Country That Got a Star) On Michelin’s First Ever Mexico Guide

Europe's Michelin Guide recognized both Baja Californias, Quintana Roo, Mexico City, Oaxaca, and Nuevo Léon. Most of the usual nice restaurants got stars, but there were some questionable omissions. Also, in a country teeming with life-changing street food, only one taquería in the entire country was awarded "1 star."

May 15, 2024
See all posts