CALL AND RESPONSE COMES TO STARTUP ART FAIR!
I am thrilled to participate in Shoebox Arts Call and Response Collaborative Book initiative to be presented at the Start Up LA Art Fair
February 27 – March 1, 2026
The Kinney Venice Beach | 737 Washington Blvd, Venice, CA 90292 | Room 202
After five years of digital exchanges connecting artists across six continents, Call and Response is going physical for the first time.
In October 2025, Shoebox Arts helmed by the extraordinary Kristine Schomocker randomly paired 190 artists to create collaborative books together. Four months later, we have approximately 90 unique collaborative works—oracle decks, teabag weavings, painted photographs, sculptural volumes, accordion books, visual puzzles.
Each book represents a creative conversation between two artists/humans/makers. Participating artists have navigated time zones, shipping logistics, language barriers, and completely different creative approaches to make something neither could have conceived alone.
This is Call and Response at its core: connection, radical trust, real collaboration.
This is collaboration without permission. Connection without barriers. Artists proving quality work doesn’t require institutional blessing—just willingness to make something with another.
A project of @shoeboxarts.la
Exhibition: @callandresponseart

The intimate hotel suite setting allows visitors to interact closely with each work—books displayed throughout the space on beds, tables, and dressers. This is a selling exhibition with works split equally between the two collaborating artists and Shoebox Arts.
Hours:
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Friday, February 27: VIP Early Access 5-7pm | All Access 7-10pm
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Saturday, February 28: 12pm – 9pm
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Sunday, March 1: 12pm – 7pm
To attend this fun and wild event:
Get Tickets: www.startup-art.com/los-angeles
In the next post I will share about my collaboration with artist Michelle Robinson!



It has been a joy and an honor to be the 2025 / 5786 “Days of Awesome” Artist in Residence for the 

















The production team, Curt Neill and Jonny Solomon did a great job, and the process took much less time than we anticipated. Jonny had some strong and solid shower curtain rods he brought from his previous home, and they worked beautifully as extensions of the hanging mechanism into the open space between the gates, creating an entry way that altered the space yet allowed for comfortable ingress and egress. We secured the bottoms of the panels loosely so that they wouldn’t blow around, yet stitchers could reach in-between two sides of the panels to pull their needles through.









Photographer Tiffany Hsuld in action,
























