by Deborah Granger
Award-winning television & radio talk show host and author Susan Irby, aka The Bikini Chef™ is bringing a new food-age experience to TribeLA magazine for our readers to digest. We have a group of exciting guest appearances scheduled to educate and motivate us on the new age of food, wine, and spirits movement.
by Deborah Granger
Rather, you are emerging or established and you’ve GOT ART, we are interested in representing some of your art pieces in TribeLA Magazine. In addition to the magazine (print and online) you receive a lot of love on our website, our blog, and our new Art-on-Walls community-based project. We offer publicity to help you gain international recognition in addition to art exhibits, art-in-the-workplace, product placement, and sales. We also offer you an artist portfolio plus an online art gallery.
by Deborah Granger
One of the goals of TribeLA Magazine is to bring more ART into our lives, our homes, and our workplaces. Research has proven that art improves creativity, productivity, and even helps the healing process. Knowing what type of art to use depends on your intentions for that space. We will journey into ART to learn more about this magical portal that has survived through thousands of years.
by Deborah Granger
Good-bye Rain Room. “Rain Room is a remarkable work of art, whose creative courage and extraordinary concept have captivated audiences around the world,” said RH Chairman and CEO, Gary Friedman. Random International’s Rain Room is part of LACMA’s ongoing Art + Technology initiative, a series of contemporary programs that support artists’ experiments with emerging technology.
by Hattie Xu
“I just want people to be happy when they see my paintings” says artist Erin Hanson. In her studio, golden frames surround large panels of dizzying flower fields, jagged red cliffs, rivers trickling over rocky beds, and dense mountain forests. Erin’s art draws inspiration from the great outdoors. Whether she is visiting a new city for a show or touring a national park, she is constantly in search of scenes to paint.
Many of her works are inspired by her experiences rock-climbing and backpacking—she still takes week-long trips once or twice a year for the sheer enjoyment as well as to find more material for her paintings.
Erin has developed a personal style, called “open impressionism” making oil paint her primary medium because she likes the texture and its resemblance to the great Vincent van Gogh.
by Chris Bonno
Today, Chris Bonno is an award winning Los Angeles artist and comedian who received his Fine Arts Degree from the University of Texas at Austin with honors. He started out as an illustrator with work shown in publications such as Austin Chronicle, National Lampoon, The WGA magazine, The L. A. Weekly with regular exhibits in galleries in Texas and California.