
Nick Taggart
From Camden Town to Tinseltown: 1976 - 1983
Curated by Michael Slenske | April 5 - May 1, 2025
Nick Taggart
From Camden Town to Tinseltown (1976-1983)
Curated by Michael Slenske
April 5 – May 3, 2025
Megan Mulrooney is pleased to present From Camden Town to Tinseltown: 1976 - 1983, the artist’s first solo exhibition at the gallery. Curated by Michael Slenske, this selection of paintings and works on paper span 1976-1983, and trace a defining period in Taggart’s career, capturing the city as both a subject and a state of mind.
Born in Stockport, England, in 1954, Taggart arrived in Los Angeles in the mid-1970s, drawn to its openness and creative energy. He quickly became immersed in the city’s cultural industries, producing album covers, magazine illustrations, and paintings that straddled the line between commercial work and a more personal vision of the city. The works in this exhibition—some commissioned, others made from direct observation of scenes and people—offer a view of L.A. that shifts between intimacy and detachment, warmth and cool remove.
Spanning the soft haze of the ’70s to the electric velocity of the early ’80s, Taggart’s works depict a city in flux. In some works, freeways cut through the landscape like charged veins, their glow turning the urban sprawl into something hypnotic and unreal. Elsewhere, softly-rendered signs hover over fashionable shop fronts, while houses settle quietly into foothills. Taggart taps into LA as a city of surfaces—glassy, scintillating, and hard-edged—but also one of sun-faded posters, slow afternoons, and unpolished bohemia. Taggart renders both with equal clarity, attuned to the tension between the city’s theatricality and its moments of unexpected solitude.
His portraits—of musicians, actors, and everyday passersby—likewise oscillate between sleekness and imperfection. Some are the refined, carefully staged images of an era transfixed by appearances; others, painted from life, catch their subjects in unguarded moments. Street scenes unfold with the rhythm of a place always on the move, where light, signage, and architecture shape an ever-changing stage.
Though widely circulated at the time, Taggart’s work never fully aligned with the dominant fine art movements of the period. His commitment to figuration and cultural storytelling placed him outside an art world increasingly concerned with conceptualism and abstraction. This exhibition revisits his contributions, foregrounding an artist whose images—whether glowing with possibility or edged with intensity—distill something essential about the City of Angels.
Nick Taggart (b. 1954, Stockport, England; lives and works in Los Angeles, CA) studied at Bideford Art School, Devon; Torquay College of Art, Devon; and Cambridge School of Art in Cambridge, England. His work has been featured in exhibitions at Angles Gallery, Santa Monica; Richard Heller Gallery, Santa Monica; Armory Center for the Arts, Pasadena; Signal Gallery, London; San Jose Museum of Art; and ODD ARK•LA, Los Angeles, among many others. His work is in the collection of MOCA, Los Angeles.
SELECTED PRESS
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Nick Taggart
Robert, 1977
Color pencil on paper
23 5/8 x 16 1/2 in
60 x 41.9 cm
(NTA24.001) -
Nick Taggart
Diedre, 1977
Color pencil and watercolor on board
30 x 20 in
76.2 x 50.8 cm
(NTA24.003) -
Nick Taggart
Randa, 1977
Watercolor and color pencil on paper
23 1/4 x 16 3/4 in
59.1 x 42.5 cm
(NTA24.007) -
Nick Taggart
Norman and Francie, 1978
Watercolor and gouache on board
30 x 20 in
76.2 x 50.8 cm
(NTA24.004) -
Nick Taggart
I Think I'm Going Back, 1978
Acrylic watercolor, color pencil on board
30 x 20 in
76.2 x 50.8 cm
(NTA24.029) -
Nick Taggart
Mick and Ros, 1978
Watercolor and gouache on board
24 x 19 3/4 in
61 x 50.2 cm
(NTA24.005) -
Nick Taggart
Self Portrait in Camden Town, 1976
Color pencil on paper
16 1/2 x 23 1/2 in
41.9 x 59.7 cm
(NTA24.006) -
Nick Taggart
Ed, 1978
watercolor and color pencil on board
20 x 30 in
50.8 x 76.2 cm
(NTA24.019) -
Nick Taggart
What We Did on Our Holidays, 1979
watercolor and gouache on board
19 3/4 x 29 3/4 in
50.2 x 75.6 cm
(NTA24.062)

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Nick Taggart
The Largest Drug Store in the World, 1978
Watercolor, color pencil and acyclic on board
14 x 29 in
35.6 x 73.7 cm
(NTA24.057) -
Nick Taggart
The View from the Hill Behind My House, 1977
Color pencil on paper
18 x 23 in
45.7 x 58.4 cm
(NTA24.047) -
Nick Taggart
Hardware, 1980
Color pencil on paper
12 1/2 x 23 1/2 in
31.8 x 59.7 cm
(NTA24.041) -
Nick Taggart
China Club, 1982
Color pencil on paper
17 x 23 1/2 in
43.2 x 59.7 cm
(NTA24.044) -
Nick Taggart
Right Bank Clothing Company, 1980
Color pencil on paper
23 1/2 x 16 1/2 in
59.7 x 41.9 cm
(NTA24.043) -
Nick Taggart
Juschi, 1980
Color pencil on paper
16 1/2 x 23 1/2 in
41.9 x 59.7 cm
(NTA24.042)
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Nick Taggart
Downtown Los Angeles, 1982
Acrylic on paper
48 x 68 in
121.9 x 172.7 cm
(NTA25.001)
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Nick Taggart
Camden Drive, Beverly Hills, 1982
Acrylic on paper
22 1/4 x 30 in
56.5 x 76.2 cm
(NTA24.054) -
Nick Taggart
K Mart, 1978
Watercolor and Color pencil on board
22 x 15 3/4 in
55.9 x 40 cm
(NTA24.040) -
Nick Taggart
Ocean Boulevard, Santa Monica, 1982
Acrylic on paper
22 1/4 x 30 in
56.5 x 76.2 cm
(NTA24.055) -
Nick Taggart
New House in the Foothills, 1978
Watercolor on board
13 1/4 x 15 1/4 in
33.7 x 38.7 cm
(NTA24.053) -
Nick Taggart
Izzy’s place, 1979
Color pencil on paper
13 3/4 x 17 in
34.9 x 43.2 cm
(NTA24.048) -
Nick Taggart
Heading Downtown, 1983
Oil on paper with wood frame
40 1/2 x 26 1/2 in
102.9 x 67.3 cm
(NTA25.007) -
Nick Taggart
View From My Studio, 1983
Acrylic on paper with wood frame
26 1/2 x 40 1/2 in
67.3 x 102.9 cm
(NTA25.006) -
Nick Taggart
Frogtown, 1983
Acrylic on paper with wood frame
26 1/2 x 40 1/2 in
67.3 x 102.9 cm
(NTA25.005) -
Nick Taggart
Cypress Park, 1978
Watercolor on board
7 3/4 x 12 in
19.7 x 30.5 cm
(NTA24.021) -
Nick Taggart
1978, 1978
Color pencil on paper
24 x 20 in (framed)
61 x 50.8 cm (framed)
(NTA25.008) -
Nick Taggart
Gillean, 1980
Acrylic on board with wood frame
23 x 23 in
58.4 x 58.4 cm
(NTA25.002) -
Nick Taggart
Hoover Dustette, 1976
Color pencil on paper
11 3/4 x 16 1/4 in
29.8 x 41.3 cm
(NTA24.051)