Steven Arnold: Cocktails in Heaven, on view at Del Vaz Projects from February 25 to April 25, 2026, offers an immersive return to the ecstatic, theatrical universe of a singular visionary. Oakland-born and later based in Los Angeles, Steven Arnold built a body of work that blurred art, ritual, performance, and devotion. This exhibition centers on Zanzabar, the decaying house Arnold transformed into an opulent, otherworldly studio, where found objects, costume jewelry, and improvised luxury became the raw materials for elaborate tableaux vivants. Within these interiors, fantasy was not escapism but a mode of survival and self-definition.
Restaged within the gallery, Zanzabar reappears as both environment and archive. Photographs, sculptures, furniture, posters, and intimate ephemera trace Arnold’s devotion to cinema as a spiritual force and to queerness as something radiant and sacred. His baroque aesthetic—excessive, humorous, and deeply felt—hosted a vibrant social network of artists, performers, and countercultural figures, collapsing distinctions between celebrity and community. Arnold’s work embraced masquerade and artifice, yet always pointed toward emotional truth, vulnerability, and longing.
Throughout the run of the exhibition, the space functions not as a static display but as a living container. Contemporary artists, thinkers, and organizers are invited to respond to Arnold’s legacy through programs that activate dialogue, collaboration, and imagination. In this setting, the gallery becomes a site of world-building, echoing Arnold’s own practice of turning domestic space into a stage for transformation and communion. His work, shaped by joy and loss, speaks powerfully to ongoing conversations around visibility, care, and chosen family.
Created in collaboration with photography, moving-image, and queer-focused institutions and archives across the United States,
Cocktails in Heaven foregrounds Arnold’s enduring influence while introducing his lesser-known contributions to new audiences. More than a retrospective, the exhibition is an invitation to dwell inside a cosmology where spirituality is surreal, art is devotional, and creativity becomes an act of defiance. In revisiting Arnold’s world, the project affirms his vision as urgently resonant—then, now, and still unfolding.
Image:
Steven Arnold Connecting to the Infinite (1), 1985. © Courtesy The Steven Arnold Museum & Archives.