“ICA LA’s AIR Program feels like a received prayer — a pause between fights and a chance to bring many of my ideas into the world. I’m deeply grateful to ICA LA and everyone who made this possible.”
Mohammad Tayyeb is a Los Angeles-based multidisciplinary artist working in performance, visual art, mixed media collage, and community centered projects. Their practice brings fragments into relation, including histories, inheritances, and dispersed ways of knowing. Through ritual and sound, body and voice serve as vessels for memory, proximity, and care, and as portals into states of oneness. Through collage, Tayyeb gathers printed matter, archival fragments, textiles, and found materials into forms where joining is intentional and process remains visible. Drawn to thresholds where absence meets presence, they attend to what lingers just out of frame. The work is a ritual of return and an ongoing attempt to grasp self, the world, and the time they live in, and to move within a larger orbit. ...
“ICA LA’s AIR Program feels like a received prayer — a pause between fights and a chance to bring many of my ideas into the world. I’m deeply grateful to ICA LA and everyone who made this possible.”
Mohammad Tayyeb is a Los Angeles-based multidisciplinary artist working in performance, visual art, mixed media collage, and community centered projects. Their practice brings fragments into relation, including histories, inheritances, and dispersed ways of knowing. Through ritual and sound, body and voice serve as vessels for memory, proximity, and care, and as portals into states of oneness. Through collage, Tayyeb gathers printed matter, archival fragments, textiles, and found materials into forms where joining is intentional and process remains visible. Drawn to thresholds where absence meets presence, they attend to what lingers just out of frame. The work is a ritual of return and an ongoing attempt to grasp self, the world, and the time they live in, and to move within a larger orbit.
“Alongside a long bond to the “hustle,” an LA studio eluded me. This bounty(!) invites me closer to folks I have worked with and formally opens to those I long to be in dialogue with. Grateful to ICA LA’s gift of time and space.“
Julie Tolentino is an interdisciplinary artist who creates durational movement-based installations using the raced and gendered body as a site of intervention. Permanent faculty at California Institute of the Arts and a 2025 Guggenheim Fellow, Tolentino has been commissioned and presented solo and group works since 1992, including originating the Clit Club in 1990. Tolentino also led other queer club spaces such as Tattooed Love Child and Dagger and was a member of ACT UP New York, Art Positive, and House of Color collectives.
“Alongside a long bond to the “hustle,” an LA studio eluded me. This bounty(!) invites me closer to folks I have worked with and formally opens to those I long to be in dialogue with. Grateful to ICA LA’s gift of time and space.“
Julie Tolentino is an interdisciplinary artist who creates durational movement-based installations using the raced and gendered body as a site of intervention. Permanent faculty at California Institute of the Arts and a 2025 Guggenheim Fellow, Tolentino has been commissioned and presented solo and group works since 1992, including originating the Clit Club in 1990. Tolentino also led other queer club spaces such as Tattooed Love Child and Dagger and was a member of ACT UP New York, Art Positive, and House of Color collectives.
“We are grateful for the opportunity and space to expand our research, workshops, and performances around hwa byung (fire illness) and pay respects to our past, present, and future ancestors in honor of the Korean diaspora.”
Hwa Records is a collective of Korean diasporic artists and healers—Roger Kim, Saewon Oh, C. Ryu, and Kayla Tange—exploring hwa-byung (fire sickness), a folk syndrome where suppressed anger manifests in the body. While hwa-byung in South Korea occurs primarily in middle-age to older women suffering under a patriarchal society, in the diaspora it can be caused by displacement stresses such as racism and the pressures of navigating dual cultural identities.
The mission of Hwa Records is to create community space for diasporic Koreans to alleviate these stresses. Developed in response to the rise of anti-Asian violence and the lack of cultural frameworks for addressing emotional needs, Hwa Records creates a safe space for participants to process and release hwa, or suppr ...
“We are grateful for the opportunity and space to expand our research, workshops, and performances around hwa byung (fire illness) and pay respects to our past, present, and future ancestors in honor of the Korean diaspora.”
Hwa Records is a collective of Korean diasporic artists and healers—Roger Kim, Saewon Oh, C. Ryu, and Kayla Tange—exploring hwa-byung (fire sickness), a folk syndrome where suppressed anger manifests in the body. While hwa-byung in South Korea occurs primarily in middle-age to older women suffering under a patriarchal society, in the diaspora it can be caused by displacement stresses such as racism and the pressures of navigating dual cultural identities.
The mission of Hwa Records is to create community space for diasporic Koreans to alleviate these stresses. Developed in response to the rise of anti-Asian violence and the lack of cultural frameworks for addressing emotional needs, Hwa Records creates a safe space for participants to process and release hwa, or suppressed anger and rage, through collective and creative practices. Through workshops and performances, they address racism, inherited trauma, and the lasting impact of the Korean War and Japanese imperialism. Their performances integrate meditation, storytelling, and musical play to release collective hwa, honoring and letting go of ancestral burdens.
Hwa Records has performed at the Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco, Blue Ribbon Garden at the Walt Disney Concert Hall, and 41 Ross Gallery; and has received funding from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts, Studio for Creative Inquiry, Meantime x ICA SF, & Carnegie Mellon University.