ENZO ART FAIR
LOS ANGELES
LOS ANGELES
SZILVIA BOLLA
TASHI FAY
ANN SLAVIT
TASHI FAY
ANN SLAVIT
FEB 25, 2025-
FEB 28, 2025
FEB 28, 2025
1634 W Temple St.
Los Angeles, CA 90026
Los Angeles, CA 90026

SARA’S is pleased to participate in the inaugural edition of ENZO Art Fair in Los Angeles with a presentation of new works by Tashi Fay and Szilvia Bolla, along with historical work by Ann Slavit. ENZO is a new boutique art fair launching this February, coinciding with Frieze Los Angeles. February 25-29, 2026 1634 Temple Stt, Los Angeles.
Szilvia Bolla (b. Budapest, Hungary) lives and works between Budapest, Hungary and The Hague, The Netherlands. She explores the personal, social, and cultural dimensions of depression, transgenerational trauma and memory through sculpture and photography, evoking bodies shaped by biopolitics. In recent years, her work has been presented at Gossamer Fog, London; Krupa Art Foundation, Wrocław; Trafó Gallery, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest and Victoria & Albert Museum, London. She has been an artist in residence at Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris; the International Studio & Curatorial Program, New York City; Brno House of Arts, Brno; and the recipient of the Eastern European Network Fellowship at Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart. She’s part of the artist duo Alagya with Áron Lődi. They construct new possible forms of literacy to decode planetary life in the capitalocene through writing, storytelling, and installation.
Tashi Fay (b. 1992 Los Angeles, CA) is a visual artist based in Los Angeles. She works between painting, collage and sculpture to create uniquely bizarre and dreamlike narratives. Mining the visual depths of her experiences with insomnia, vivid dreaming, and sleep paralysis, she extracts figures, symbolic arrangements, and other objects to populate her idiosyncratic oil paintings. Fay’s background in textiles and collage is woven throughout her intimately rendered scenes, which maintain stark outlines, a playful two-dimensionality, and lush, contrasting textures.
Szilvia Bolla (b. Budapest, Hungary) lives and works between Budapest, Hungary and The Hague, The Netherlands. She explores the personal, social, and cultural dimensions of depression, transgenerational trauma and memory through sculpture and photography, evoking bodies shaped by biopolitics. In recent years, her work has been presented at Gossamer Fog, London; Krupa Art Foundation, Wrocław; Trafó Gallery, Hungarian National Gallery, Budapest and Victoria & Albert Museum, London. She has been an artist in residence at Cité Internationale des Arts, Paris; the International Studio & Curatorial Program, New York City; Brno House of Arts, Brno; and the recipient of the Eastern European Network Fellowship at Akademie Schloss Solitude, Stuttgart. She’s part of the artist duo Alagya with Áron Lődi. They construct new possible forms of literacy to decode planetary life in the capitalocene through writing, storytelling, and installation.
Tashi Fay (b. 1992 Los Angeles, CA) is a visual artist based in Los Angeles. She works between painting, collage and sculpture to create uniquely bizarre and dreamlike narratives. Mining the visual depths of her experiences with insomnia, vivid dreaming, and sleep paralysis, she extracts figures, symbolic arrangements, and other objects to populate her idiosyncratic oil paintings. Fay’s background in textiles and collage is woven throughout her intimately rendered scenes, which maintain stark outlines, a playful two-dimensionality, and lush, contrasting textures.
Fay graduated in 2014 with a BFA from RISD. She has participated in recent exhibitions at Leila Greiche LLC at Casa Ishi in Miami, FL (2024); No Agency x Café Forgot at The Salon by NADA & The Community in Paris, France (2024); SARA’S in New York, NY (2024); The Horse Hospital in London, UK (2023); and 15 Orient (2019), among others.
Ann Slavit (b. Binghamton, New York) is a visual artist best known for the monumental, air-filled sculptures she has created for institutions and public spaces, such as the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), Boston’s historic Fanuiel Hall, the Martin Beck Theater, the Museum of Contemporary Crafts (MCC) and traveling installations in The People’s Republic of China and U.K. Combining technical engineering and fine art approaches, Slavit’s sculptures play with the experience of familiar public space and challenge social assumptions about gender, the mass media and popular culture. Her most iconic work, Della (Street) has been widely cited as a milestone in the development of inflatable art.
Slavit graduated from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Tufts University with a BFA in Painting (1970) and MFA in Sculpture (1983). She is presently at work on a publication with her husband Joseph Gordon titled "My Little Sculpture Stories," which illustrates, from a distinctly woman's point of view, the challenges and opportunities that went along with making large scale public art in the U.S. Her 20-foot tall pneumatic sculpture Della (Waiting) is scheduled for exhibition this June at The Wolfsonian Museum in Miami Beach.
Slavit’s work has been featured in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, NPR, People, Metropolis Magazine, The Boston Globe, The China Times, The London Evening Standard and numerous books on arts and education, including “Elliot Erwitt’s New York” and Howard Gardner’s “To Open Minds.”
Ann Slavit (b. Binghamton, New York) is a visual artist best known for the monumental, air-filled sculptures she has created for institutions and public spaces, such as the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM), Boston’s historic Fanuiel Hall, the Martin Beck Theater, the Museum of Contemporary Crafts (MCC) and traveling installations in The People’s Republic of China and U.K. Combining technical engineering and fine art approaches, Slavit’s sculptures play with the experience of familiar public space and challenge social assumptions about gender, the mass media and popular culture. Her most iconic work, Della (Street) has been widely cited as a milestone in the development of inflatable art.
Slavit graduated from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and Tufts University with a BFA in Painting (1970) and MFA in Sculpture (1983). She is presently at work on a publication with her husband Joseph Gordon titled "My Little Sculpture Stories," which illustrates, from a distinctly woman's point of view, the challenges and opportunities that went along with making large scale public art in the U.S. Her 20-foot tall pneumatic sculpture Della (Waiting) is scheduled for exhibition this June at The Wolfsonian Museum in Miami Beach.
Slavit’s work has been featured in The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, NPR, People, Metropolis Magazine, The Boston Globe, The China Times, The London Evening Standard and numerous books on arts and education, including “Elliot Erwitt’s New York” and Howard Gardner’s “To Open Minds.”
ENZO LOS ANGELES
1634 W Temple St.
Los Angeles, CA 90026
VIP / Press Preview
February 25, 2-8pm
Public Opening Hours
February 26, 2-8pm
February 27, 2-8pm
February 28, 2-8pm
ARTWORK: