
On view in ICA LA’s Project Room is the first institutional solo exhibition dedicated to the work of Los Angeles-based artist Jackie Castillo. Embracing the mediums of film photography, sculpture, and installation, Castillo’s work is marked by an ongoing investigation into the relationship between city infrastructure, collective memory, and the isolation and anxiety felt by working class immigrants.
Born in Santa Ana, California to parents who immigrated from Guadalajara, Mexico, Castillo’s site-specific installations combine photographs of suburban landscapes with architectural remnants to explore the ways in which place, labor, memories, and identity can become fractured, estranged, or made invisible. Often printed on, or adhered to, materials such as reclaimed tiles, bricks, and cement pavers, Castillo’s photographs of rose gardens, fenced lawns, and domestic facades are only visible in parts—mirroring the violent shifts of a city plagued by increasing displacement and gentrification. At once the scaffold and the debris, the repair and the ruin, Castillo’s works maintain a sense of impermanence and instability reflective of the historical and material changes in the built environment and the precarious and often invisible labor responsible for its making, unmaking, and rebuilding.
For her solo presentation at ICA LA, Castillo is developing a new and ambitious installation experimenting with scale and sculptural material. Featuring discarded rooftop shingles, Castillo’s work calls attention to the disparity between the lives of those who build the roof and those who live in the comfort of its shelter.
Created in close collaboration with her father, this project also expands upon Castillo’s enduring interest in preserving forms of shared cultural, architectural, and familial knowledge, even amidst ongoing erasure.
Jackie Castillo is a Los Angeles-based artist working in sculpture, installation, and film photography. Her work has been exhibited at Various Small Fires, Los Angeles (2024); As-is Gallery, Los Angeles (2024); California Museum, Sacramento (2023); Long Beach Museum of Art (2023); The Mistake Room, Los Angeles (2023); UCLA Broad Art Center, Los Angeles (2022); Charlie James Gallery, Los Angeles (2022); Mexican Center for Culture and Cinematic Arts, Los Angeles, CA (2021); Park View/Paul Soto Gallery, Los Angeles (2020); and the Material Art Fair in Mexico City, MX (2022). In 2023, Castillo’s work was acquired by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. She was also awarded the 2021 Individual Artist Fellowship by the California Arts Council.


The Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (ICA LA) is a contemporary art museum in the Arts District of Downtown Los Angeles, United States, known for cutting-edge exhibitions, artist residencies, and a rigorous public program. Housed in a 12,700-square-foot renovated industrial building designed by wHY Architecture under the leadership of Kulapat Yantrasast, the museum was founded in 1988 as the Santa Monica Museum of Art and reestablished in 2017 with its current identity and location.

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