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Distributed for Hirmer Publishers

Advance of the Rear Guard

Ceeje Gallery: Out of the Mainstream in 1960s California

With Essays by Michael Duncan and Kristine McKenna
A fresh and radical view of Los Angeles art in the 1960s.

Los Angeles art of the past is a treasure trove, awaiting full excavation. Scratch the surface of LA art in the 1960s, and what you’ll discover is much more than Ed Ruscha and Robert Irwin. A range of lesser-known artists reflected the social and cultural changes of that volatile decade. Hiding in plain sight have been offbeat and lyrical works by an ethnically diverse group of artists who exhibited with a 1960s gallery with an alternative take on the mainstream, the Ceeje Gallery. Ceeje opened as the dream project of a gay couple, Cecil Hedrick and Jerry Jerome, and focused on painters who shared an expressionist style of mythic figuration and oblique narrative. This book offers a celebration of the gallery’s inclusiveness and unique aesthetic, which included artists from a variety of backgrounds and perspectives, all united in making challenging art oblivious of the commercial market.
 

180 pages | 205 color plates | 10 x 11.42 | © 2023

Art: American Art, Art--General Studies


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Reviews

"Los Angeles’s art history is seemingly as infinite as the city itself. In The Advance of the Rear Guard: Ceeje Gallery in the 1960s, curator Michael Duncan reintroduces us to a group of artists who dispel conceptions of there ever having been a singular, all-encompassing ​'L.A. style.'"

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