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LesPaint ~ A Smoke and Paint Class for Black Lesbians

  • POT GARDENS 3228 West Jefferson Boulevard Los Angeles, CA, 90018 United States (map)

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Cuties Los Angeles presents LesPaint: A Lesbian Paint & Smoke Session at POT GARDENS hosted by the one & only Jessi Jumanji!

We are so excited to share this offering exclusively with our Black lesbian Cuties. This is for You!

Come through Saturday November 20th at 6pm to hang out with community, smoke, and paint some gay shit! All materials will be provided. You can arrive as early as 5:30pm to mingle before we get started, we will begin promptly at 6.

Sponsored by: Green Monké ~ Happy Hour's Happy Soda

Catered by: The Gro House ~ The Gro House creates avenues for community empowerment and wellness through food, the redistribution of wealth, and curated events with their focus being the Black LGBTQIA+ community.

POT requires all indoor workshops over 4 people to be vaccinated and masks must be worn inside. Please be prepared to show proof of vaccination when checking in.

You must be 21+ to attend this event ~ BYOW :)

About your host:

Jessi Jumanji is a multifaceted visual artist from Memphis, TN, currently residing in Los Angeles, CA. With a passion for African history, nature, and the otherworldly, Jessi explores the many dimensions of Afrofuturism through digital collage and painting.

Raised in the city where Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, and having family roots in Greenwood, MS, the cotton capital of the world, Jessi has an interesting viewpoint on the black experience. Through her very own dreams and creations, Jessi Jumanji has become well-known for her contemplative perspective on black life throughout the past, present, and future.

About POT:

POT is a full-service pottery studio owned and operated by people of color, a majority of which are women and Los Angeles natives.

We are devoted to celebrating the cultures and communities surrounding us through an ancient art form that connects so many of us. We felt a need for a space that felt accessible and empowering for those that felt marginalized in ceramic spaces – namely persons of color.

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Black Magic Exhibit Panel Discussion

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November 21

Easy Like Sunday Morning