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Track 16 Gallery
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Track 16 is a contemporary art gallery with locations in East Hollywood and in the fashion district neighborhood of downtown Los Angeles.[1]

History

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Track 16 was founded in 1994 by Tom Patchett and was located at the gallery hub Bergamot Station which launched that same year.[1] They remained at Bergamot for 17 years until their building was demolished to make way for Metro's Expo Line train station. In 2012 they relocated to the Hayden Tract in Culver City where they focused on performance and theater work. Then in 2017 Sean Meredith became partners with Patchett and relocated them to the Bendix Building in downtown Los Angeles. More recently they opened a second exhibition space in East Hollywood, debuting the space with a solo exhibit of Eve Wood's work.[2] In the early years of the gallery, they staged exhibits with the artworks of Man Ray, Manuel Ocampo, the early Punk scene in L.A. ("Forming"), and contemporary Latin American art ("Amnesia", "While Cuba Waits").[3]

Artists

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Selected exhibitions

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  • 1994: Burt Payne 3: Access[21]
  • 1995: EATS[22]
  • 1995: Martin Kippenberger: LA International[23]
  • 1995: Jack Pierson: Paradise[24]
  • 1995: Chain Reaction, An Abbreviated Survey of Idea-Based Art, Curated By Steven Leiber[25]
  • 1996: Decade of Protest: Political Posters from the United States, Viet Nam, and Cuba 1965-1975[26]
  • 1996: William S. Burroughs: Concrete and Buckshot[27]
  • 1996-1997: Man Ray: Paris~L.A.[28]
  • 1997: Manuel Ocampo: Heridas de la Lengua[29]
  • 1998-1999: Ruben Ortiz Torres: Alien Toyz[30]
  • 1998-1999: Viggo Mortensen: Recent Forgeries[31]
  • 1999: Karen Finley: Pooh Unplugged[32]
  • 1999: Forming: The Early Days of L.A. Punk[33]
  • 1999-2000: Don Ed Hardy: Tattooing the Invisible Man[34]
  • 2000: Pedro Alvarez: On the Pan-American Highway[35]
  • 2000: Eduardo Abaroa: Soon After Before[36]
  • 2000: Ruben Ortiz Torres: Power Tools[37]
  • 2000: Surf Trip, Curated by Bob Carrillo and René de Guzman[38]
  • 2000-2001: Don Ed Hardy: 2000 Dragons[39]
  • 2002: The Godfrey Daniels School of Charm, Curated by Georganne Deen[40]
  • 2002: David Byrne: Elective Affinities[41]
  • 2003: Le Dernier Cri: Legendary Publishers of the International Underground[42]
  • 2003: Table Turners[43]
  • 2004: Show Your Wound: The Death and Times of Joseph Beuys[44]
  • 2007: Mondongo: Thread/Bare[45]
  • 2007: Johanna Went: Ablutions of a Nefarious Nature[46]
  • 2008: Mondongo: Gaslighting[47]
  • 2008: Don Ed Hardy, When East Meets West[48]
  • 2008: Robbie Conal, No Spitting No Kidding[49]
  • 2018: Robbie Conal, Cabinet of Horrors[50]
  • 2019: Marsian De Lellis, Simone Gad, Debra Broz, Stuck Together[51]
  • 2019: Elyse Pignolet, You Should Calm Down[52]
  • 2020: Rakeem Cunningham and Clifford Prince King, INSTALLATION #000000[53]
  • 2021: Galia Linn, Beauty Queen, Heartbreaker, High Maintenance[54]
  • 2021: John Collins, Moonlight Graham[55]
  • 2021: I Like LA and LA Likes Me: Joseph Beuys at 100[56]
  • 2022: Elyse Pignolet: I'm Not Like the Other Girls[57]
  • 2022: Alicia Piller: Atmospheric Pressures[58]
  • 2022: Sandow Birk: Los Angeles and Her Surroundings, and other works[59]
  • 2022: Kathleen Henderson: Bluebeard and Other Poolings[60]
  • 2022: Confluence, curated by Debra Scacco[61]
  • 2023: Camilla Taylor: Dry Tree[62]
  • 2023: Molly Segal: What We Whispered and What We Screamed[63]
  • 2024: Mondongo: Calavera 8[64]
  • 2024: Nao Bustamante: Bloom[65]
  • 2025: Joseph Beuys: Potential Goods[66]

References

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