KRISTY MORENO

KRISTY MORENOTHE COMPANY WE KEEP

January 6 - February 10, 2024
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA

OCHI is pleased to present The Company We Keep, an exhibition of new work by artist Kristy Moreno. This is the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. The Company We Keep will be on view at OCHI, located at 3301 W Washington Blvd in Los Angeles, California from January 6 through February 10, 2024. An opening reception will take place on Saturday, January 6th from 4:00 to 7:00 PM PST.

The Company We Keep features new ceramic vessels, figures, and wall works that celebrate female friendship, sisterhood, and chosen community. Blending elements of SoCal Latinx culture with the sugary aesthetics of late 1990s girl power and a retro-futuristic approach to fashion, Moreno builds worlds in which female protagonists express their individuality, explore the world, and thrive together. Deeply inspired by the diverse voices that emerge from various D.I.Y. subcultures such as punk pioneer Poly Styrene, multidisciplinary artist Margaret Kilgallen, and authors adrienne maree brown and Gloria Anzaldúa, Moreno’s ceramic characters band together in the face of oppression, chaos, and harm as they echo the ethos of self-sufficiency and empower one another with an eye toward speculative futures.

Building voluminous vessels intuitively, Moreno draws into the surface of the clay, fitting figures together like a bioorganic puzzle, carving out detail and adding shape as needed. Moreno creates friends that embrace, link arms, pose back-to-back, and offer each other gestures of comfort, support, and affection. Absent of solitary figures, The Company We Keep proffers abundance and solidarity—Moreno’s young women always have someone to stand up for and to stand with. While clay vessels traditionally stored or served food and liquids, Moreno’s vessels hold her figures together—asking the viewer to physically circumnavigate each sculpture in order to observe the full scope of love and style embodied by each group.

Though Moreno’s protagonists are always together, they are individually distinguishable as fashionistas, endlessly borrowing from an array of historical sources—midcentury Chicanx lowrider culture; 1950s beehive updos; the bold geometric prints of Moreno’s mother’s wardrobe from the 1980s; contemporary punk visor sunglasses; and 1990s Chola staples like nameplate jewelry. Featuring sassy or subversive phrases, many of Moreno’s characters don earrings emblazoned with terms of endearment like MIJA (my daughter), CHULA (cute), or CHINGONA (bad ass woman) and exclamations of personal boundaries such as NOT YOURS or GO AWAY. Soft pastel colors pair well with hard stares and sharp attitudes—Moreno’s girls wear their hearts on their sleeves. Pushing cuteness beyond the commodifiable and forging space to care for themselves and for one another, Moreno crafts a world in which being in community is the first step to social change.

Kristy Moreno (b. 1991, Inglewood, CA) received her Associates in Arts from Santa Ana College in Santa Ana, CA and her BFA in ceramics from California State University, Chico in Chico, CA. Moreno’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at venues including MUZEO Museum and Cultural Center in Anaheim, CA; Glassell Gallery in Baton Rouge, LA; Lucy Lacoste Gallery in Concord, MA; Volery Gallery in Dubai, United Arab Emirates; and at Thinkspace Projects and Tlaloc Studios in Los Angeles, CA. Her work has been featured in publications including Voyage LA, Las Vegas Weekly, Beautiful Bizarre, and Artfix Daily. Moreno is the recipient of various awards and residencies including the Taunt Fellowship, the Windgate-Lamar Fellowship, and the Jack Winsor Memorial Scholarship. Moreno recently completed a two-year residency at the Archie Bray Foundation in Helena, MT and will begin a three-month residency at Cerámica Suro in Guadalajara, México in February 2024.

A ceramic sculpture of two women walking side by side with their arms holding each-others' shoulders. They are wearing pink jumpsuits and are looking at each-other with a look of support.A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting three women leaning on each-other. The one in front has fiery red eye shadow, a hat with the brim folded reading the initials KM, and a light blue choker.A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting a woman looking off to the side with earrings that read "Chingona."A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting a woman in a blue outfit looking off to the side with her index finger held up to her lips.A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting a few women in motion. The one in the front has a blue cap on with a backpack. She looks off to her right with an empowering gaze and appears to be mid-stride.A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting a woman with retro futuristic sunglasses and the arm of a friend leaning on her shoulder.A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting a group of women wearing light orange outfits. The one in front looks up and holds her gaze confidently as the others stand by her side.A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting two women leaning on each other. They are wearing mint green outfits and the clay body/skin tones are red clay colored. They look towards each other with carefree and comfortable expressions.A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting a group of women. The three visible women are looking in different directions and are positioned with their profiles facing the viewer. The frontmost one has an orange earring that reads "Chula."A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting two women leaning back to back. The one in front looks off to the side with a speculative gaze. The other's earring appears on the left side of the vase reading "Chula."A carved and glazed ceramic vessel depicting a woman sitting in the passenger seat of a pink car with flame decals. Her left arm is raised up to her hair with a bold expression on her face.An amoeba shaped glazed ceramic wall-work depicting two women facing away from eachother. They have red skin and hair. One is wearing a jacket that reads "Chinga la migra" on its back and the other looks forward with a bold expression.An amoeba shaped glazed ceramic wall-work depicting two women looking forward. The one on the left holds the other in a sheltering manner. They both have confident expressions on their faces.An amoeba shaped glazed ceramic wall-work depicting a two women holding each-other by the shoulders. The one on the left looks over at the other one in a supportive manner, while the one on the right tips her head down with closed eyes.An amoeba shaped glazed ceramic wall-work depicting a group of four women, all wearing narrow futuristic sunglasses. They have red skin and hair and are in front of a light mint green background.An amoeba shaped glazed ceramic wall-work depicting two women holding one another closely and whispering.

Press

  • Kristy Moreno

    Artist Talk: Kirsty Moreno

    Greenwich House Pottery, New York, New York

    November 13, 2024

    LINK

  • Kristy Moreno
    Why, at 95, Magdalena Suarez-Frimkess Matters for a New Generation of Women Ceramicists
    Frieze
    March 2, 2024
    LINK

  • Kristy Moreno
    Kristy Moreno and “The Company We Keep”
    Juxtapoz
    January 30, 2024
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  • Kristy Moreno
    10 Shows to See in Los Angeles This February
    Hyperallergic
    January 29, 2024
    LINK

  • Kristy Moreno
    Kristy Moreno: The Company We Keep at OCHI, Los Angeles
    Ceramics Now
    January 22, 2024
    LINK

  • Kristy Moreno
    9 L.A. happenings to pull up to now that you’ve fully settled into the January flow
    Los Angeles Times
    January 18, 2024
    LINK

  • Kristy Moreno
    Kristy Moreno’s Ceramic Sculptures Exude Female Empowerment
    HypeArt
    January 16, 2024
    LINK