Damon Willick

Professor of Art History

  • Los Angeles CA UNITED STATES

Professor of Art History

Contact

Biography

Damon Willick is a Professor of Modern and Contemporary art with a teaching and research concentration on American visual culture of the post-World War II period and served as Chair of Art History from 2016-2022. Dr. Willick received his Ph.D. in Art History from UCLA in 2004 where he also completed his undergraduate studies. He is the author of Valley Vista: Art in the San Fernando Valley, ca. 1970-1990 (Angel City Press, 2014), a publication that accompanied his curating an exhibition by the same title at California State University, Northridge. His writing has appeared in such journals as X-TRA, NKA Journal of Contemporary African Art, East of Borneo, Spiritus, and Artpulse, as well as numerous book chapters and museum catalog essays. Dr. Willick is also an active curator and art critic, and he currently serves as a contributing editor of the journal X-TRA Contemporary Art Quarterly and on the Fellowship Advisory Board of Friends of Residential Treasures, Los Angeles (FORT LA).

Education

University of California, Los Angeles

Ph.D.

Art History

2004

Areas of Expertise

Los Angeles Art and Culture
Modern Art
Contemporary Art

Industry Expertise

Arts and Crafts
Training and Development
Research
Education/Learning

Media Appearances

'Valley Vista' at Cal State Northridge takes a stand for Valley art

Los Angeles Times  online

2014-09-06

The local 7-Eleven is the meeting place, watering hole and cultural center of the San Fernando Valley.

At least that's what Valley-raised artist Jeffrey Vallance wrote in a 1985 essay titled "Avenue of the Absurd: Landmarks of the West San Fernando Valley."

Today Vallance's kitschy mixed-media installations featuring the Oscar Mayer Wiener mascot known as Little Oscar are displayed, along with the work of nearly 40 other artists, including Valley professors and people born, raised or educated there, in an exhibition that opened this weekend titled "Valley Vista: Art in the San Fernando Valley, ca. 1970-1990" at the Cal State Northridge art galleries...

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'Valley Vista' art exhibit argues the Valley is no 'cultural wasteland'

89.3 KPCC  radio

2014-09-25

Mention the "the Valley" and, for many, what comes to mind is suburban sprawl, fast-food joints, mini-malls, and "Valley girls."

A vibrant art scene? Not so much...

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Event Appearances

Faculty Pub Night

Art in the San Fernando Valley  Von der Ahe Family Suite

2014-09-16

Articles

Gallery 32 and Los Angeles’s African American Arts Community

Journal of Contemporary African Art

2012-09-01

This essay reconsiders Los Angeles’s Gallery 32 and its vital contribution to Los Angeles art history from 1968 to 1970. Founded and run by Suzanne Jackson, Gallery 32 exhibited challenging, controversial work and became a gathering place where not only art but politics and society were discussed and explored. As such, the gallery partook of the broad political struggles of the times and contributed to the city’s remarkable artistic diversity.

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Suzanne Jackson’s Gallery 32 and Los Angeles’s Burgeoning African American Arts Community

NKA Journal of Contemporary African Art

2012-06-01

This essay reconsiders Los Angeles’s Gallery 32 and its vital contribution to Los Angeles art history from 1968 to 1970. Founded and run by Suzanne Jackson, Gallery 32 exhibited challenging, controversial work and became a gathering place where not only art but politics and society were discussed and explored. As such, the gallery partook of the broad political struggles of the times and contributed to the city’s remarkable artistic diversity.

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In the Valley with Jeffrey Vallance

East of Borneo

2013-12-03

Situated between the Santa Susana, Verdugo, and Santa Monica Mountains, the San Fernando Valley encompasses the northwest section of Los Angeles. With a current population of close to two million “Vals,” it is home to more than one-third of the city’s total inhabitants. Vals have long been outsiders to the cool school of LA mythology. Predominate views of the Valley reek of cultural elitism and classism and cast the region as ground zero for all that is detested about Southern California: suburban sprawl, smog, porn, mini-malls. Bad taste, however, is not the same as no taste, and there is a significant art history of the San Fernando Valley that is worth exploring in relation to Los Angeles’s broader development as a contemporary art center...

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