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Evan Senn

Evan is the Editor in Chief of Inland Empire Weekly, Culture Magazine, and Rogue Art Research & Writing (RARW). Raised in Los Angeles, Evan received her M.A. in Art History from Cal State Fullerton in 2011 and her B.A. from Loyola Marymount University. Her writing specializes in localized burgeoning art, feminist theory and contemporary art with an emphasis in low brow and new media work. Evan also writes freelance for many publications including OC Register, Artillery, LocalArts, Laika, OC Art Blog and United4:Good. She has also written for Juxtapoz, Art Ltd., ArtScene, and many more. Evan cannot stay still for very long, and traverses across the LA, OC, and Inland Empire counties regularly, exploring and enjoying all that her SoCal home has to offer.

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still from Qigong Series: ENERGY by Ann Kaneko
"Long Live LA" is a multimedia program by 6 contemporary media artists to create 35 collaborative video works that address the major public health issues in L.A. County.
Iranian-American artist Samira Yamin's work hints of feelings of separation and isolation inspired by her experience as a child of the Iranian diaspora .
Coffee culture has bled into many aspects of Downtown L.A. life, including the fine art scene.
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Hurley Skate Park in Costa Mesa will be open to the public on Nov. 21for a celebration and a re-envisioning of the relationship between skateboarding, graffiti and fine art.
L.A. Utility Box Art by Joshua Callaghan
A new project in Santa Ana seeks artists' help to give color to those ubiquitous utility boxes.
A 20th anniversary tribute to Laguna Art Museum's 1993 "Kustom Kulture" exhibition, "Kustom Kulture II" celebrates artists who have impacted lowbrow art movements.
"Intervention B with Jennifer from JCPenny®," 2013. | Courtesy of DEHSART.
Visual artists Larissa Nickel and Karyl Newman turn illegally dumped trash into whimsical recycled sculptures, encouraging their community to rethink their conceptions about waste.
In the new exhibition "Being Here," Inland Empire artists express themselves.
"Keys," by Patrick Faulk. Photo courtesy of artist.
Patrick Faulk creates provocative sculptures dealing with sound, structure, theory, existence, and identity in Santa Ana.
As its new director, Inland Empire native Drew Oberjuerge has a vision for the museum to be accessible and relevant to all communities.
Jennifer Backhaus brings dance to the site specific performance art realm that has never been done in OC before.
The Santa Ana Noise Fest hits a demographic that is rarely thought of to be present in the OC scene. Visiting headlining band Brutal Poodle offers insight in to what the Noise scene is all about.
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