Devon Tsuno
BIO
Devon Tsuno is an artist and fourth generation Angeleno. His recent spray paint and acrylic paintings, installations, and public art focus on Japanese American history. Tsuno’s recent work is a yonsei story, a Los Angeles story, indissociable from the complexities of intergenerational and collective trauma, fences and cages, gentrification, displacement, water and labor politics, and how and where we choose to live. Tsuno’s interests have been central to his work with the Museum of Contemporary Art, Topaz Museum, Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art, Hammer Museum, Candlewood Arts Festival, LA Metro, and Gallery Lara in Japan. His work has been featured in the Los Angeles Times, NPR, KCET, Artillery Magazine, and X-TRA Contemporary Art Journal. Tsuno is a 2017 Santa Fe Art Institute Water Rights Artist-In-Residence, is the 2016 SPArt Community Grantee, and was awarded a 2014 California Community Foundation Fellowship for Visual Art. Tsuno is member of J-TOWN Action と Solidarity and is an Associate Professor of Art at California State University Dominguez Hills.
Press
Recent Exhibitions
MexiCali Biennial // Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History
Seattle Art Fair 2022 // Winston Watcher
FOLK MEDIC II: PANACEA // Subliminal Projects
Felix Art Fair 2022 // Residency Art Gallery
Shikata Ga Nai // Residency Art Gallery