Christopher Michno | KCET
Christopher Michno

Christopher Michno writes about the visual arts, and is an editor for Artillery, a bimonthly contemporary art magazine, and DoppelHouse Press, a Los Angeles-based publisher of books on art and architecture. His work has also appeared in the LA Weekly, ICON Italy, and other publications.
Recent Articles
-
Visual Arts
Artbound
"In the Sunshine of Neglect" Reveals Nuances of the Inland Empire
Post date: 2019-03-07T08:43:47-08:00“In the Sunshine of Neglect," a double venue exhibition, exposes the many layers of life in a vast area of contiguous valleys nestled below the San Gabriel and San Bernardino mountains: Inland Southern California.
-
Multi-disciplinary
Artbound
Radio Clandestina Gives Voice to a Marginalized Latinx Community
Post date: 2019-01-16T15:43:04-08:00It was 1996, and big media was swallowing up smaller stations in L.A., leaving little room for Latinx voices. It was into this barren media-scape that the pirate radio station Radio Clandestina emerged.
-
Music
Artbound
This Riverside Art Rock Band Looks to Life in the Region for Inspiration
Post date: 2017-08-31T15:33:05-07:00The ambient art rock band Motherboy is only loosely a rock band. The trio's sets are a multimodal interplay of ambient music, video and performance.
-
Visual Arts
Artbound
An Artist Collective From the Inland Empire Reflects on the Region's Diversity
Post date: 2017-08-29T08:05:31-07:00Boys of Summer, an art collective with origins in the Inland Empire, is one of the few in the Los Angeles area that addresses the experience of living in the area.
-
Cultural Politics
Artbound
Creating Art in the Desert? Conservation Groups Want You to Consider These Guidelines
Post date: 2017-04-26T06:55:00-07:00The Mojave Desert Land Trust has launched ecological guidelines and curriculum for artists looking to create art in the desert.
-
Architecture and Design
Artbound
Brutalist Building Set for Demolition Raises Questions of Sustainability and Design
Post date: 2016-09-19T09:56:00-07:00Pomona College has intentions to tear down a modestly scaled Brutalist building. The planned demolition prompts questions about the preservation of cultural resources.