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March 2026

FELIX ART FAIR-HOLLYWOOD ROOSEVELT HOTEL PUFFS ITS SUITES WITH GLOBAL ART CROWD, COLLECTORS REJOICE

Felix Art Fair fills movie suites with art from around the world. Houses in Paris, London, Prague, Moscow, Berlin, Rome now hang fresh new paintings on the walls. Even “My Lover” gets a new art look! Why shouldn’t her bedroom have art too? 


Hollywood - 2.28.26. Adrian Richard, AP/ Art Press/ The 2026 edition of Felix previewed exhibitors from around the world, including galleries from Tokyo, Chicago, Buenos Aires, Milan, Seoul, Miami, London, Dallas, New York, and Los Angeles.


You’re there—inside the world’s art shows. Art media glide past with strolling cameras and great shots, a host offering a quick scripted hello —actually talking to no one—while drifting through exhibition after exhibition. There is no mental or conversational connection with the Art Crowd.© Then something different catches your eye. Look to the right. 


A trendy LaArtTV camera crew breaks from the flow. They don’t just film—they talk about art with the art crowd.© Not the voice of mega art salesmen who simply sell art, but the moment where art speaks directly to people as they indulge to talk with LaArtTV.

  

LaArtTV magnetizes the human encounter—the rare chance for “the intimate art talk.”©  Each person feels the invitation to step forward and speak in their own individuality. This moment becomes a conversation piece, sparked by the “Art & Desire Question of Today.”©. An encounter unlike any other—one you’ll still be excited to talk about with friends next week. Advertising Edge column. New – to be seen: “art marketing reimagined.” LaArtTV’s in-gallery, on-the-floor art reviews—far more captivating and sensational than usual critics—engage both seasoned collectors and new art lovers, sparking buzz and driving a fresh wave of sales. Felix Art Fair Roosevelt Hotel 2.25 – 3.1 2026. 7000 Hollywood, Blvd. Los Angeles. CA.

  

Felix Art Fair, Hollywood in your palm. Art imagined on your residence wall.

Art, crowd, talk art with LAARTTV©

  


Art, crowd, talk art with LAARTTV©

This does not happen at Frieze Art Fair—art by disabled artists is absent. But it does happen at Felix Art Fair. LaArtTV curators visited a large area dedicated to disabled artists’ work. Artist Donal Wallker isn’t there, but his art speaks—showing how creativity connects to every human being. He cannot speak, communicating through sounds and art. Some artists paint with their feet—the disability doesn’t matter. Every impression is guided by the pure spirit of art. For LaArtTV — Adrian Richard

Also see LA ART TV coverage of Opulent Mobility: Re-Imagine Disability and Mobility in May 2025 – go to the page 2025/3

“Today’s Question of Art & Desire”©

"Going to Met Gala Art Ball, I wear a Papier shifu dress by designer with a red text. Pretension, embalmed.”

"Going to Met Gala Art Ball, I wear a Papier shifu dress by designer with a red text. Pretension, embalmed.”

The image suggests that true artistic spirit cannot be bought. It reflects the psychological fact that pretentiousness is embedded in human nature. Even when expressed through AI or advanced cognitive systems, this trait remains. Because AI originates from human minds shaped by human DNA, these impulses cannot be removed—only reproduced in new forms.

 Felix art vibe. So good it splashes at your feet—you want to be there. 

If I sell my art collection for 20 million dollars, what I will do with all the money. Note: You may one day have $20 million—what will you do with it? This is your training question. by-LaArtTV©

“Golden Oscar: 2026 Academy Awards. Kafe Kafka’s Iconic Culinary Art Performance, Not Wolfgang Puck.

Let’s revisit the Iconographic and unrivaled Culinary Art Performance by Kafe Kafka.


At the center of the dessert table stood Kafe Kafka’s $15,000.00 food art masterpiece: a six -foot-tall Oscar statue, crafted from edible marzipan and sheathed in 23-karat edible gold—an impossibly tempting vision, your mind ached to taste the gold itself. Surrounding it was a three-layer, 58-pound Génoise sponge cake with Bavarian cream fresh mango and black chestnut decadence, lavishly cloaked in edible gold. 


Sunday March 14, watching the NBC CH 4, 2026 Oscars prerun, Wolfgang Puck showed the cameras with his own creation: an 8-inch tall – edible dessert Oscar statue, it seemed being dusted in mica gold food coloring. Since 1988, Mr. Puck has placed a 4-inch-tall gold Oscar cookie on each dessert plate at the Governor’s Ball—art imitating art, tradition woven with whimsy. 


In a paradoxical twist of authenticity, the 2026 Oscars presenter was Conan O'Brien, a frequent diner at Kafe Kafka across the street from the Hollywood Sunset Gower Studios. He always claimed the zebra booth by the entrance.

I was an assistant to Sue Mengers, the master of Hollywood’s social choreography and celebrity power. I remember being at Kafe Kafka for the Golden Oscar © party in 1987—an art performance itself. Eating real gold cake felt like stepping into a food-art experience in Ulysses, a moment impossible to forget. Symbolic of James Joyce: “but always meeting ourselves,” a hint of new life awaiting experience. “Once a month, Kafe Kafka staged dinner theatre of famous eccentric writers, with their favorite dishes and short scripts drawn from their books by rising Hollywood‑style writers. Two actors always all female cast, performed scenes from Kafka, Joyce, Nabokov, Ginsberg, Bukowski, and Beckett as diners savored their favorite meals.” 

Go to: Los Angeles Times: https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1988-10-16-ca-6710-story.html. Kafe Kafka closed in 1993. - by Josh Stratner: the social voyager. © 

Other unrivaled art-food performances:

CHRISTO PROPOSAL IDEA FOR HARLEY DAVIDSON RACE THROUGH KAFE KAFE KAFKA, HOLLYWOOD.

And just when you think the thrill is over, each rider is treated to a dazzling slice of gold cake after the ride!  

Go to: Los Angeles Times article. https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1993-04-25-vw-26959-story.html

In 1991, beneath the luminous yellow umbrellas of French artist Christo, Kafe Kafka turned Sunday brunch into living art. Crêpe Suzettes were flambéed tableside, flames flickering like liquid gold, Grand Marnier, teasing the tongue with hints of citrus and butter, like tasting the Ritz in Paris on the edge of California’s Tejon Ranch. 

Amid the $26 million Christo’s art show, “The Umbrellas, Japan–USA, 1984–91,” the dessert became a prelude to your own last supper, where Christo’s ephemeral vision met culinary theatre, and life, art, and taste collided. You had to be there. Translated from: Le magazine Égoïste, Paris, 12 août 1991, Dessert provocant sous les parapluies jaunes de Christo, en Californie, États-Unis.

Copyright © 2018 LA ART TV  a backstage of the art world talk™ - All Rights Reserved.


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