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Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles

  • Exhibitions
    • Current
    • Upcoming
    • Past
  • Calendar
  • Learning
    • Digital Projects
    • Public Programs
    • Schools & Community
    • Special Projects
  • Residencies
    • Artists In Residence
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    • Field Workshop
  • Visit
  • About
    • Staff
    • Governance
    • Press
    • Partnerships
    • Opportunities
    • Annual Report
  • Shop
  • Get Involved
    • Incognito
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Jackie Castillo: Through the Descent, Like the Return April 05 ➽ August 31
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Jackie Castillo: Through the Descent, Like the Return April 05 ➽ August 31

Jackie Castillo: Through the Descent, Like the Return

Exhibitions
Through the mediums of film photography, sculpture, and installation, Los Angeles artist Jackie Castillo (b. 1990, Orange, CA) considers the relationship between city infrastructure, collective memory, and the isolation and anxiety felt by the working class. Raised in Santa Ana, California, to parents who immigrated from Guadalajara, Mexico, Castillo’s practice reflects a close attention to demographic and structural changes across time and place, and a profound consideration of the fraught systems of labor that sustain our everyday lives. Through the Descent, Like the Return—the artist’s first institutional solo exhibition—considers architecture as a site of memory, holding histories of labor and generations of lived experience in its constitution and its remnants.

Made from industrial rebar and repurposed terracotta shingles, the sculptures on view reference the work of re-roofing a home. While walking in her Mid-Wilshire neighborhood in Los Angeles, Castillo observed laborers as they removed roof tiles and tossed them into a dumpster below. As if held in a state of suspension, the sculptures depict the repeated twists and turns of the shingles as they fell, speaking to the cyclical relationship between destruction and renewal, loss and resilience. The artist worked on this installation in close collaboration with her father, Roberto Castillo, who engineered the equilibrium and strength necessary to hold each shingle in place. For the artist, this gesture honors the reciprocal support often found in working class, immigrant families and expands upon Castillo’s desire to preserve cultural and familial knowledge, even amid ongoing erasure. 

Also on view are a suite of photographs that loosely situate the sculptures within a composite lands …

Made from industrial rebar and repurposed terracotta shingles, the sculptures on view reference the work of re-roofing a home. While walking in her Mid-Wilshire neighborhood in Los Angeles, Castillo observed laborers as they removed roof tiles and tossed them into a dumpster below. As if held in a state of suspension, the sculptures depict the repeated twists and turns of the shingles as they fell, speaking to the cyclical relationship between destruction and renewal, loss and resilience. The artist worked on this installation in close collaboration with her father, Roberto Castillo, who engineered the equilibrium and strength necessary to hold each shingle in place. For the artist, this gesture honors the reciprocal support often found in working class, immigrant families and expands upon Castillo’s desire to preserve cultural and familial knowledge, even amid ongoing erasure. 

Also on view are a suite of photographs that loosely situate the sculptures within a composite landscape. In one image, we encounter the facade of an LA apartment adorned with decorative wrought-iron fencing and cast in a red, clandestine glow. In another, taken in Mexico, a rebar pillar constructed by Castillo’s grandfather ascends toward an expansive blue sky, suggesting a building in progress. In the third photograph, we see Castillo’s own writing and reflections embedded in the sidewalk. Together, this imagery calls attention to the disparity between the lives of those who build the roof and those who live in the comfort of its shelter. 

Evoking both the scaffold and the debris, the repair and the ruin, Through the Descent, Like the Return maintains a sense of impermanence and instability reflective of historical and material changes in a built environment, as well as the precarious and often invisible labor responsible for its making, unmaking, and rebuilding. 

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_Gutting_, installation view, As-is Gallery, 2021. Image courtesy of the artist.
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Installation view, Jackie Castillo: Through the Descent, Like the Return, Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, April 5–August 31, 2025. Photo: Jeff McLane/ICA LA
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April 05, 2025, 3 PM - 7 PM
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April 25, 2025, 6 PM - 7:30 PM
Art Buzz: Jackie Castillo: Through the Descent, Like the Return
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April 21, 2025, 6:30 PM - 8 PM
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June 11, 2025, 7 PM - 8:30 PM
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July 18, 2025, 6 PM - 7:30 PM
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July 22, 2025, 6 PM - 8 PM
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August 20, 2025, 7 PM - 8:30 PM
POV Tour: William Deverell on Through the Descent, Like the Return
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August 08, 2025, 6 PM - 7:30 PM
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Exhibition Guide (English)
Exhibition Guide (Spanish)
June 25, 2025
Class, Migration, Survival at Core of Jackie Castillo’s New Art
May 08, 2025
Artist installs an ICA L.A. homage to construction crews — with her dad’s help
May 07, 2025
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Jackie Castillo: Through the Descent, Like the Return is organized by Amanda Sroka, Senior Curator, with Emilia Shaffer-Del Valle, Curatorial Associate.

ICA LA is supported by the Curator’s Council and Fieldwork Council.

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.
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