As part of PST ART: Art and Science Collide, Blum is pleased to present Los Angeles-based artist Umar Rashid’s third solo exhibition with the gallery, The kingdom of the two Californias. La época del totalitarismo part 2.

This second installment in Rashid’s Epoch of totalitarianism series rejoins the artist’s fictional Frenglish conquerors—whose visual tale the artist has authored for upwards of fifteen years—in the 1800s as they attempt to maintain a stronghold in the Americas. Drawing an intentional parallel to the history of the Spanish Empire in the Californias, Rashid emphasizes the power of the colonial Frenglish as he portrays them with hyperbolic advantages such as weaponry from the twenty-first century, vibrant red muscle cars, and superhuman powers. At the core of this embellished retelling is Rashid’s signature mode of allegorical critique and revisioning of the histories embedded within the location of his exhibitions. The kingdom of the two Californias links the colonial legacy of the former region of Las Californias with California’s contemporary issues of racial inequity and police violence as witnessed in the 1992 Los Angeles Rebellion, the 2006 march against House Resolution 4437, and much more.

Acting as a table of contents or a teaser for the exhibition’s narrative, The West Coast is the Best Coast. Or, Map of the Two Californias. 1799-1800 (2024), offers viewers entering The Kingdom of the Two Californias a map of the California coastline from San Francisco to Baja. Dotted amongst recognizable city names are the epic battles that Rashid illustrates as part of this presentation. Figures of fallen soldiers, aquatic monsters, women in early 1800s finery, and much more, further freckle this landscape—all foreshadowing the parabolic tableaus that wait in the next rooms.

Peering through Ishtarian Stargate to points unknown and, right here. (2024) as if traveling back through time, our story begins on the first room’s north wall. The battle of Los Cabos (ante up!) or, The Daquan Maneuver (2024) tells of the explosive Battle of Los Cabos—the Frenglish rendition of the Battle of San José del Cabo in the Mexican-American War. Setting the tone for the rest of the exhibition, each canon’s flight path scribes a quip of introspection such as “Stage of remorse regret” or “What should we have done?”

In the next room, Cosmic lovers leap through the monolith into Pomo country. The Russian trappers engage a beast, Human lovers caress against the stone. A starship attempts an abduction. Or. Owl bear don’t give a shit and why don’t aliens abduct people of color? (2024) depicts a lush scene in Northern California where native residents fight a colonial fur trapper with crossbows—only to have their target whisked away by a spaceship. This otherworldly technology lightly references the influx of tech money in the Bay Area that has displaced so many—particularly the Latinx population of San Francisco’s Mission District, which declined from 51.9 percent in 1990 to 34.7 percent in 2020. That fact that the Mission District’s name originates from Mission San Francisco de Asís, established there by the Spanish in 1776 to oversee and convert the Native Americans, further reinforces Rashid’s critique of generational oppression.

In the final room of the exhibition, No more parties in L.A. Or. The cause has a cost. Run that! (2024) features a banner declaring “No more parties In LA” seemingly in direct retort to the banner of “All Tomorrow’s Parties” in the exhibition’s first room—indicating that those who have been taken advantage of will endure it no longer. In No more parties in L.A. Or. The cause has a cost. Run that!, Rashid’s rebels have organized to defeat their colonial oppressors—providing an optimistic anecdote to this chapter in the Frenglish chronicles. Across the room, Rashid’s large portrait of Jairo and Anastasia. The dynamic duo of love, money, and fighting. (2024) look on in triumph.

Umar Rashid (b. 1976, Chicago, IL) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA. He received his BA in cinema and photography from Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, IL. His work was featured at The Huntington and the Hammer Museum as part of the biennial Made in LA 2020: a version. Recent institutional solo exhibitions include Ancien regime change 4, 5, and 6, MoMA PS1, Queens, NY (2022); What is the color when black is burned? (The gold war part 1), University of Arizona Museum of Art, Tucson, AZ (2018); and The belhaven republic (a delta blues), University of Memphis Galleries A and B, Memphis, TN (2017). Rashid’s work is represented in the public collections of the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY; Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, NY; Jorge Pérez Collection, Miami, FL; Mount Holyoke Art Museum, South Hadley, MA; Nevada Museum of Art, Reno, NV; Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art at Hamilton College, Clinton, NY; Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA; Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT; and the Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa, Cape Town, South Africa, among others.