La Mancha Gallery — Featured Program

Arts Pavilion at the
Central Avenue Jazz Festival

11 Years of Curatorial Vision  |  La Mancha Gallery

Where jazz and visual art converge — a decade-long curatorial program rooted in Central Avenue's living cultural legacy.

Curatorial Statement

A Living Dialogue Between Two Art Forms

Jazz and visual art are not parallel traditions. They are the same impulse — improvised, communal, responsive to the moment, and rooted in the stories of people who made beauty out of circumstance. The Arts Pavilion at the Central Avenue Jazz Festival was built on that premise, and La Mancha Gallery has curated it with that conviction for eleven consecutive years.

Central Avenue is not simply a location — it is a living archive. Charlie Parker played here. Duke Ellington played here. Billie Holiday sang into rooms that trembled with possibility. The festival, founded in 1995 and presented in partnership with the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, was built to honor that history and insist that it remain alive. The Arts Pavilion extends that mission into the visual realm — creating a space where painting, photography, and installation do not merely accompany jazz but enter into genuine dialogue with it.

Each edition of the Pavilion is developed through an iterative curatorial process — structured, responsive, and refined in direct conversation with the artists and the community it serves. What began as a curated exhibition space has grown, year over year, into a multi-layered program encompassing live art demonstrations, interactive workshops, youth partnerships, and retrospective exhibitions. The 2025 edition, anchored in the festival's 30th anniversary, represents that process at full maturity.

"The Arts Pavilion has transformed the festival into a dialogue between jazz and visual art. This 30th anniversary honors how both mediums uplift community and creativity."

— Omar Holguin, Curator & Founder, La Mancha Gallery

Exhibition Details

2025 Arts Pavilion at a Glance

Event

30th Annual Central Avenue Jazz Festival

Date & Time

Saturday, September 20, 2025
11:00 AM – 7:00 PM

Location

Central Avenue between MLK Blvd. & Vernon Ave.
Los Angeles, CA

Admission

Free — Presented in partnership with the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs

Pavilion Year

11th Annual Arts Pavilion
Curated by La Mancha Gallery

Artists Featured

7 Featured Artists across photography, portraiture, muralism & multidisciplinary installation

Program Highlights

What the 2025 Pavilion Delivers

Retrospective Exhibition

Curated exhibitions celebrating a decade of artistic contributions to the Pavilion — a milestone survey of visual work produced in conversation with jazz.

Live Art Demonstrations

Artists paint and create in real time in direct response to live jazz performances — making the improvisational exchange between both art forms visible and immediate.

Interactive Workshops

Hands-on programming for all ages blending visual creativity with music appreciation — designed to engage families, students, and first-time gallery visitors alike.

Community Partnerships

Deepened collaborations with local schools and arts organizations across Los Angeles — extending the Pavilion's reach into the next generation of artists and audiences.

2025 Arts Pavilion

Featured Artists

Seven artists whose practices span photography, portraiture, muralism, and multidisciplinary installation — united by a commitment to cultural memory, community, and emotional truth.

Photography

Jimmy Velarde

A twelve-time Emmy Award recipient, Velarde works at the intersection of music and visual documentation. His black-and-white photography captures blues and jazz legends with a rawness and intimacy that feels less like portraiture and more like testimony — images that don't simply depict musicians but seem to carry the sound within them.

Portraiture

Mohammed Mubarak

Mubarak centers his practice on portraiture as an act of historical affirmation — creating powerful works that honor Black history and insist on the dignity of its subjects. His presence in the Pavilion grounds the exhibition in one of jazz's deepest and most essential cultural inheritances.

Painting

Kenneth Gatewood

Gatewood's work offers a warm and nostalgic register — imagery that recalls the textures of childhood innocence and the domestic intimacy of everyday life. His paintings remind us that jazz, for all its sophistication, was also the music that filled living rooms, front porches, and schoolyards.

Contemporary Art

LP Aekili Ross — LPAE38

LPAE38 brings an energy that has earned admiration well beyond gallery walls — works celebrated by a devoted following that includes prominent figures in entertainment and culture. His practice pulses with contemporary urgency while remaining deeply rooted in craft and conceptual integrity.

Multidisciplinary

Skira Martinez

Martinez works fluidly across disciplines — wearable art, installation, object-making — creating a body of work that refuses easy categorization. Her multidisciplinary practice mirrors jazz's own resistance to being confined within a single form, expanding the boundaries of what art in a festival environment can be.

Muralism & Urban Art

EnkOne

EnkOne brings the street into the gallery. Known for landmark works including the Crenshaw Mural of African-American Progress, his practice is rooted in the preservation of urban culture — the visual language of Los Angeles communities that have long expressed themselves in public, for everyone. His work belongs on Central Avenue.

Painting & Mixed Media

Kevin T. Williams

Williams synthesizes African, Native American, and musical traditions into work that is visually striking and culturally complex. His paintings speak across histories, finding resonance in the layered cultural landscape that Central Avenue itself has always represented — a place where many stories share the same ground.

Curatorial Process

How the Pavilion Is Built

The Arts Pavilion is not assembled — it is developed. Each edition begins months in advance with a curatorial framework that identifies themes, artists, and programming priorities in direct response to the cultural moment. From that foundation, the program is built incrementally: artist selections are confirmed, programming layers are added, community partnerships are deepened, and the physical environment is designed to support both exhibition and live experience.

La Mancha Gallery applies an Agile operational framework to this process — structured around iterative planning cycles, defined roles, and continuous feedback from artists, venue partners, and the community. What began in 2014 as a curated exhibition in a 60×30 ft tent has grown, sprint by sprint and year by year, into a half-block Arts Pavilion spanning 120×60 ft — a program that has featured hundreds of artists and engaged tens of thousands of festival attendees over eleven years.

Program Legacy

Eleven Years. One Street. A Living Platform.

The Arts Pavilion represents one of the most sustained independent curatorial programs in the Los Angeles festival landscape. Rooted in La Mancha Gallery's Alternative Venue Exhibition Model — active since 2008 across more than 200 exhibitions in hotels, restaurants, community centers, and cultural institutions — the Pavilion is the fullest public expression of that model: high-visibility, high-impact, and deeply accountable to the community it serves.

11

Years Curating
the Pavilion

200+

Exhibitions Across
Alternative Venues

1K+

Artists Featured
Since 2006

Thirty years of jazz. Eleven years of art. On September 20th, Central Avenue will once again be exactly what it has always been at its best — a place where culture is not observed but lived.

Presented By

La Mancha Gallery

Arts Pavilion Curator & Organizer — Omar Holguin

In partnership with the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs
30th Annual Central Avenue Jazz Festival | September 20, 2025