Given the falling gross sales and rising prices for these doing enterprise within the artwork world, now would possibly appear to be an inopportune time to open a gallery. Ariel Pittman disagrees. “If I look again at historical past,” says the artwork historian and former director on the Los Angeles galleries Vielmetter and Varied Small Fires, “actually the tougher the time, the extra experimentation there was.”
Pittman’s experiment launches on 30 Could with the opening of Official Welcome, a brand new Los Angeles gallery in MacArthur Park. It joins the gallery O-City Home within the Granada Constructing, an artists’ live-work complicated inbuilt 1927.
“We are able to’t depend on gross sales alone,” Pittman says, so she is diversifying conventional gallery income streams by providing a variety of companies. Appearing as each seller and advisor, she is offered to help artist shoppers with mission administration, communications or profession technique wants. The house can be out there to lease, she provides, for conferences, readings and different occasions which can be “extra art-related and fewer art-related”.
Gary Tyler, Indignity, 2017, 2024 Photograph Courtesy of the artist, Library Road Collective, and Official Welcome, Los Angeles
The title Official Welcome, borrowed from a 2003 efficiency by Andrea Fraser, alludes to a way of hospitality or an open invitation. “My want is to have a lot of factors of engagement,” Pittman says, describing the programme as “omnivorous”. The inaugural exhibition, California Break up (30 Could-3 July), options an array of California artists throughout generations and disciplines, with works by June Edmonds, Jay Lynn Gomez, Henry Taylor, José Guadalupe Sanchez III, Barbara T. Smith and Diane Briones.
Subsequent programming features a “micro-cinema presentation” of Elegy for the Future, a piece by Los Angeles film-maker Christina Phensy. Solo exhibits scheduled over the subsequent 12 months will characteristic the works of artists like Courtney Coles, a younger photographer who brings a tenderness to erotic portraiture, and the multidisciplinary Beverly Semmes, who has these days been appropriating pornographic imagery because the canvases to her work.

courtney coles, b.r – march 2025 pasadena, california, 2025 Courtesy of the artist and Official Welcome, Los Angeles
Costs for works in California Break up start at $800. “After I first began working [in the mid-2000s], I used to be capable of purchase distinctive, fascinating work for below $1,000, and till fairly not too long ago you might purchase an incredible work for $5,000,” Pittman says. However over the past decade, as hypothesis and inflation have soared, “the perceived bar to entry to amass work by promising, fascinating rising artists has elevated dramatically”. A silver lining of the cooling market is the chance to reset and have interaction the untold numbers of potential younger and upper-middle-class collectors who would in any other case be priced out. “Artwork is for everybody,” Pittman says, although “not each artist’s work is perhaps for you”.
Pittman is a Los Angeles native who spent ten years working at Vielmetter and two at Varied Small Fires. Within the speedy aftermath of the wildfires that struck town in January, she co-founded the mutual support organisation Grief and Hope, serving to to distribute $1.5m in assets to devastated artists and artwork staff. The undergirding theme of her profession has been a politics of inclusivity and direct motion. After incomes her Grasp’s diploma in artwork historical past and criticism from the College of the Artwork Institute of Chicago, she was drawn to work in business galleries for the immediacy with which they profit artists: “You make them cash in order that they will make artwork.”

Beverly Semmes, Pearls, 2025 Courtesy of the artist and Official Welcome, Los Angeles
In the meanwhile, Pittman is concentrated on holding the gallery’s operations lean. “As soon as I’m capable of do issues like rent workers and characterize artists” she hopes to ascertain a extra equitable construction for distributing earnings. “Usually talking, in a gallery, the vary of earnings amongst artists and workers is kind of drastic.”
Following fashions set by galleries like Commonwealth and Council, which maintains a discretionary support fund for its artists, Pittman would maintain a small share of product sales in a belief and distribute it equally between workers and represented artists on a quarterly foundation. Along with serving to “soften that disparity”, she says, it may cushion the touchdown throughout moments like this, when an upward market comes again all the way down to earth.








