

Felix Art Fair
The Hollywood Roosevelt 7000 Hollywood Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90028 United StatesA

+1 323-856-1970
February 13 > 16, 2020
The 2020 edition of Felix LA will feature a new, redesigned format throughout the hotel’s guest rooms for optimal access and client experience, while keeping the scale intimate and personal. Felix LA 2020 will showcase a diverse selection of 60 exhibitors, including galleries from China, Germany, Ireland, Italy, Mexico, Poland, and the United Kingdom.
For the first time, Felix LA will welcome Curator of Special Projects William J. Simmons, who will organize the on-site projects and programming throughout the hotel’s hallways, lobbies, ballrooms, and bungalows. The site-specific projects, which range from installations and paintings to video and performance, will be installed throughout the hallways, ballrooms, bungalows, and lobbies of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.
Project highlights include a selection of works by artist Judy Chicago chosen by Jill Soloway; Bettty Tompkins’s Women Words series, which depicts phrases commonly used to describe women; Martha Wilson’s works, Makeover: Melania and Mona/Martha/Marge, in which Wilson transforms herself into well-known public figures; Eve Fowler’s text-based works that foreground queer-feminist poetics; and a unique installation by Luis Flores on the chandelier in the Hollywood Roosevelt lobby.
/ Gallery - City / :
/ 56 Henry - New York
/ Adams and Ollman - Portland
/ Baik + Khneysser - Los Angeles
/ Nicelle Beauchene - New York
/ Michael Benevento - Los Angeles
/ Bortolami - New York
/ Brennan & Griffin - New York
/ Matthew Brown Gallery - Los Angeles
/ Bureau - New York
/ CANADA - New York
/ Chapter NY - New York
/ C L E A R I N G - New York and Brussels
/ Company Gallery - New York
/ Corbett vs. Dempsey - Chicago
/ Creative Growth - Oakland
/ DOCUMENT - Chicago
/ Galerie Frank Elbaz - Dallas and Paris
/ Empty Gallery - Hong Kong
/ Fomo Haber - Athens
/ James Fuentes - New York
/ Grice Bench - Los Angeles
/ Kavi Gupta - Chicago
/ Jack Hanley - New York
/ Institute of Contemporary Arts - London
/ Alison Jacques - London
/ Anton Kern - New York
/ KLEMM’S - Berlin
/ Carl Kostyál - London
/ Andrew Kreps - New York
/ Tanya Leighton - Berlin
/ Josh Lilley - London
/ LINN LÜHN - Düsseldorf
/ Lulu - Mexico City
/ M+B - Los Angeles
/ Marlborough - New York and London
/ Martos Gallery - New York
/ Nino Mier Gallery - Los Angeles and Köln
/ Morán Morán - Los Angeles
/ mother’s tankstation - Dublin and London
/ Neue Alte Brücke - Frankfurt
/ Nicodim - Los Angeles and Bucharest
/ P·P·O·W - New York
/ Parrasch Heijnen - Los Angeles
/ Patron - Chicago
/ Peres Projects - Berlin
/ PRAZ-DELAVALLADE - Los Angeles and Paris
/ Project Native Informant - London
/ Galeria Raster - Warsaw
/ Rental Gallery - New York
/ Residency Art Gallery - Los Angeles
/ Roberts Projects - Culver City
/ Kenny Schachter - London
/ Jessica Silverman Gallery - San Francisco
/ Soft Opening - London
/ Thomas Solomon Art Advisory - Los Angeles
/ Sweetwater - Berlin
/ Rachel Uffner Gallery - New York
/ Volume Gallery - Chicago
/ Galerie Barbara Weiss - Berlin
/ Wentrup - Berlin
/ Kate Werble - New York
/ White Columns - New York
/ ZERO - Milan
For the first time, Felix LA will welcome Curator of Special Projects William J. Simmons, who will organize the on-site projects and programming throughout the hotel’s hallways, lobbies, ballrooms, and bungalows. The site-specific projects, which range from installations and paintings to video and performance, will be installed throughout the hallways, ballrooms, bungalows, and lobbies of the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel.
Project highlights include a selection of works by artist Judy Chicago chosen by Jill Soloway; Bettty Tompkins’s Women Words series, which depicts phrases commonly used to describe women; Martha Wilson’s works, Makeover: Melania and Mona/Martha/Marge, in which Wilson transforms herself into well-known public figures; Eve Fowler’s text-based works that foreground queer-feminist poetics; and a unique installation by Luis Flores on the chandelier in the Hollywood Roosevelt lobby.