Chaz Bojorquez, DEFER, Estevan Oriol, and RETNA
Los Angeles: A Visual Lineage at Woodbury House brings together pioneering artists Chaz Bojorquez, DEFER, Estevan Oriol, and RETNA in a landmark group exhibition exploring the evolution of the city’s distinctive visual language. Spanning calligraphic traditions, graffiti abstraction, and photographic documentation, the presentation traces a continuous cultural genealogy shaped through community, authorship, and lived experience. On view from 27 February to 24 April 2026, the exhibition offers London audiences a rare opportunity to encounter these influential practices in dialogue for the first time.

Woodbury House presents 'Los Angeles: A Visual Lineage', a major group exhibition bringing together four foundational figures whose work has collectively shaped the visual and cultural identity of Los Angeles. Featuring Chaz Bojorquez, DEFER, Estevan Oriol, and RETNA, the exhibition marks the first time these artists have exhibited together, presented in London as a unified exploration of lineage, transmission, and cultural continuity.
Opening with a Private View on 26th February 2026, 'Los Angeles: A Visual Lineage' will be open to the public from 27th February to 24th April 2026. The exhibition invites audiences to engage with Los Angeles not as an aesthetic export, but as a cultural system one built over decades through discipline, community, and continuity.

Rather than focusing on a single movement or medium, the exhibition examines how visual language in Los Angeles has evolved across generations from early hand-painted name inscriptions and calligraphic traditions rooted in the street, through graffiti and abstraction, to contemporary forms and photographic documentation. Together, the works on view articulate a continuous visual genealogy, revealing how culture is passed forward, refined, and preserved.
At the origin of this lineage is Chaz Bojorquez, widely regarded as the 'Godfather of Cholo Writing'. Working in East Los Angeles from the late 1960s, Bojorquez approached writing as language and authorship long before graffiti emerged as a global movement. His practice established the foundations of a visual language that would later be expanded, abstracted, and reinterpreted by subsequent generations.

DEFER extends this inheritance through abstraction and spiritual intent, evolving the discipline of writing into a contemporary visual language grounded in rhythm, restraint, and belief. RETNA further advances this evolution, transforming writing into a monumental, codified system recognised internationally, while remaining anchored in calligraphic discipline and structure. Together, their practices demonstrate how a street-born language can mature without losing its integrity.
Providing the essential documentary dimension, Estevan Oriol records Los Angeles as lived experience. His photography captures the environments, communities, and cultural conditions from which these practices emerged, anchoring the exhibition in real places and real lives. His work situates the evolution of the visual language within the social and cultural fabric of the city itself.

The presentation of 'Los Angeles: A Visual Lineage' in London is both timely and significant. It offers an opportunity to encounter the evolution of Los Angeles street and graffiti culture from its origins to its global influence presented with historical clarity and seriousness. Notably, this marks the first time these four artists have exhibited together, making the exhibition a landmark moment that brings an entire visual lineage into dialogue within a single space.
Joseph Bannan, Partner at Woodbury House, said:
"This exhibition is about continuity rather than trend. Each of these artists represents a different point within the same visual genealogy, and seeing their work in dialogue reveals how culture is passed forward, refined, and preserved. 'Los Angeles: A Visual Lineage' traces the evolution of Los Angeles' distinctive visual language from its origins to its contemporary expression, brought together through the work of its most influential pioneers."
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Woodbury House is an international gallery based in Mayfair, London, with a second space in Dubai, dedicated to artists whose practices have played a formative role in the development of post-street, graffiti, and contemporary art. Founded in 2014, the gallery works closely with historically significant figures and leading contemporary voices, placing their work within a broader cultural and art-historical context.
Through a research-led exhibition programme, Woodbury House is recognised for presenting work with clarity, integrity, and historical rigour, offering audiences and collectors access to rare, museum-level works.
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Thumbnail image:
ESTEVAN ORIOL, ‘Hoppin SD vs. LA, 2013’, B&W Silver Gelatin Darkroom Print - Edition 1 of 10 Plus 2 APs, 20 x 24 in