410 Cottage Home Street
Los Angeles, California 90012
Inquiries
310-428 -2964
info@thomassolomongallery.com
Thomas Solomon
Owner
Bettina Hubby
Director
Hours: Wednesday through Saturdays from noon until 6pm.
President and owner of Thomas Solomon Gallery, Thomas Solomon, provides many services nationally and internationally, building unique perspectives for exhibitions and art collections. Thomas Solomon continues to explore new ways of assisting clients in purchasing and defining the important artworks of the 20th and 21 century.
Thomas Solomon Gallery and Thomas Solomon Fine Art Appraisal Services were established in 1987 in Los Angeles, California.
Solomon began working as a private dealer in the secondary market as well as continuing his diverse exhibition programming and curatorial projects. Developing both private and corporate collections, Solomon has built a highly regarded international reputation specializing in post-World War II contemporary masters.
As a public forum, Solomon mounts 3 shows per year dedicated to emerging and mid-career artists, often encompassing the works into a larger art historical context.
Services include:
*Auction advice and purchase
*Development of Private and Corporate collections
*Fine Art Appraisal Services
*Artist's Editions: Aardvark Letterpress Editions (ALE)
*Exhibition curation for Galleries and Museums
Thomas Solomon
is owner and director of Thomas Solomon Gallery in Los Angeles. Solomon has
flourished in many different types of art spaces, in Museums, galleries, abandoned
buildings and other non-art venues. He was director and Chief Curator of
White Columns, and alternative, non-profit art space in New York City from 1982
to 1985, and then moved to Los Angeles in 1986. He served as owner and Director
of Thomas Solomon’s Garage (in a two-car garage) in Los Angeles from 1987 to
1996, working with local and international artists from many different
generations, including Robert Barry, Sol LeWitt, Franz Ackermann, and Jorge
Pardo. He has also curated numerous museum exhibitions throughout the world.
While serving from 1999 to 2001 as Administrator and Curator of the Peter and
Eileen Norton Museum Donations Program, he devised and executed a diverse
program for the Norton collection that has since donated more than 1000 works
of art to 34 worldwide museums. In
2001 Solomon instigated a series of curatorial projects in hotel rooms
throughout Los Angeles; these Solo Projects featured single works by artists
such as Gordon Matta Clark, Andy Warhol, and Kurt Schwitters. Each
exhibition presented a seminal artwork in a non-art space. In 2002,
Solomon curated “Beyond Boundaries: Bay Area Art of the 1970s,” for the
Pasadena Museum of California Art. It was a show of Seventies conceptual art of
the Bay area: Howard Fried, Tom Marrioni, Paul Kos, Terry Fox, Jim Melchert,
Lynn Hershman, Tony Labat and David Ireland. In 2004
Solomon started another LA gallery in a garage space also called 'Solo
Projects,' continuing the idea of focusing on one work of art, shifting later to include more works
from each artist, such as drawings by Lee Lozano from the 1960s, Marcel
Broodthaers from 1975, and Joe Zucker drawings from the 1970s. Solomon moved to
Chinatown in 2006 to Rental Gallery and did four exhibitions, one sculpture
show called "Material Space," combining artists from different
generations, such as Fred Sandback, Alan Saret, John Chamberlain, Michael
Gonzales, and Krysten Cunningham. It was a drawing show disguised as a
sculpture show. He followed with an sculpture show disguised as a photography
show, titled ‘Interventions,’ which included artists Robert Smithson, Gilbert and George,
Bas Van Ader, to name a few. Gordon Matta-Clark drawings from the early 70s was the next exhibition, followed by a one-person photography show by Los
Angeles artist Eve Fowler. Thomas Solomon
and Cary Brooks Oken of Aardvark Letterpress launched Aardvark Letterpress
Editions (ALE), with a Letterpress collaborative edition project between Los
Angeles artist Karen Kimmel and Creative Growth, a non-profit art studio and
gallery in Oakland, California. The sales of this unique three-part edition go
to benefit Creative Growth Art Center. The second ALE edition is by Los Angeles
artist Greg Colson, and more information on both these pieces can be seen under Editions on this site. In 2007, Solomon
was hired to curate LA25 by Skadden & Arps, an international law firm
interested in supporting the arts in Los Angeles. LA25 celebrates 25 emerging
artist’s from Los Angeles in a three-part exhibition at the law firm. Skadden
also shows their support by acquiring work from each artist for the firm’s
collection. All 25 artists shown at Skadden as a part of LA25 will be curated
by Solomon into an exhibition at LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions) in
Oct./Nov 2008. Solomon is now
entering in on a unique opportunity in 2008 to join forces with three young
galleries, two from Los Angeles: China Art Objects and Sister, as well as
Peres Projects from LA/NY/Berlin, in a collaborative space called Cottage Home.
The large space (4000 sq. ft.) in Chinatown, formerly a movie theater, will
house rotating shows by each gallery and one collaborative group show per year.