Press Release
Frankfurt Ordorica is pleased to present Sculpture Show, an exhibition of new artworks by four artists who live and work in Los Angeles; Quintin Atchison, Michael Bala, Sula Bermudez-Silverman, and Charlie Engelman.
Quintin Atchison (b. 2001, San Jose, CA) lives and works in Los Angeles. He received a BA from the University of California, Los Angeles. Primarily working in carved plaster, Atchison’s work addresses subjective experience as subordinate to popular visual archetypes. Working with a distinctive formal language, his sculptures are often slim, elongated frames and characterized by their multilayered relationship to mimesis wherein the artwork is both a reproduction and a novel object. The works bend and halt, twist and ripple, stand erect and lie comatose such that their foreignness as forms sits in the process of becoming familiar. Atchison’s work has been included in recent exhibitions at Not There Gallery, Los Angeles; Giovanni’s Room, Los Angeles; Attom, Los Angeles; Chez Coronado, Los Angeles; Sade, Los Angeles; and Guerrero Gallery, Los Angeles.
Michael Bala (b. 1994, Maui, HI) is a Los Angeles based artist working in sculpture. Bala’s work centers around the reframing of found objects and salvaged architectural fragments. Overlaying structure and ornament, Bala’s material interventions construct a typology of ever-mutable forms from society’s cast-offs. Bala’s work has been included in exhibitions presented at Overduin and Co, Los Angeles; From the Desk of Lucy Bull, New York; Theta, New York; Michael Benevento, Los Angeles; Clearing, Los Angeles, Castle, Los Angeles; Tiffany’s Door in Los Angeles, Et al., San Francisco; and Paul Soto, Los Angeles. Bala received a BFA from the University of California, Los Angeles.
Sula Bermudez-Silverman’s (b. 1993, New York, NY) sculptural practice is guided by the contextual origins and present trajectories of her materials. Components such as sugar, salt, glass, iron, and resin often serve as physical homonyms that alter familiar motifs through color, scale, and translucency. These processes and transformations connect disparate epistemologies and question how history is camouflaged into the subconscious. Bermudez-Silverman lives and works in Los Angeles and is currently included in the Whitney Biennial 2026, curated by Marcela Guerrero and Drew Sawyer. Her work is in notable public collections such as the California African American Museum, Los Angeles; de Young Museum, San Francisco; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; and Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT.
Charlie Engelman (b. 1988, Los Angeles, CA). Charlie Engelman's sculptures arise from a spirit of plastic freedom, nourished by the artist’s dedicated and roaming research and his immersion in the language of objects. Working in varied materials such as high-density foam, aluminum, and old growth redwood, the volumes and contours that give form to Engelman’s work are both expressive and refined. Engelman’s technical and material facility allow him to explore abundant prospects of form and plasticity through a distinct process that elicits a static shape from a material blank. In these forms, Engelman rouses a displaced familiarity often lying just beyond the associative, where the referential tremors in the work with an entirely new resonance. Charlie Engelman received is MFA from ArtCenter College of Design, Pasadena, CA. His work has been exhibited at Chateau Shatto, Los Angeles; LOMEX, New York; Karma, New York; and the Wolford House; Los Angeles.
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