Mile 17: Sleepy Lagoon

May 10, 2025 | 4pm-7pm PDT
$20 suggested donation - or pay what you wish!

The Kiki’ing with the River series continues with visual artists and performers Page Person and Christopher A. Velasco!

Join us for a riveting golden-hour afternoon of performances along Paayme Paxaayt (LA River) followed by a conversation moderated by co-curator Juan M. Silverio. Through their use of humorous storytelling and drag aesthetics, Person and Velasco confront head-on the historic and present-day challenges LGBTQIA2S+ communities face. Their offerings will be presented within the backdrop of the historical site of Sleepy Lagoon.


River Sessions: Kiki’ing with the River

Kiki’ing with the River is an outdoor, artist-guided series along the Paayme Paxaayt (aka the LA River) that celebrates queer resilience and community activism through social sculptures and creative engagement. Each session highlights regional LGBTQIA2S+ artists and Indigenous culture bearers, featuring performances, sound, and multimedia installations that explore the balance between nature, control, and liberation. Co-curated by Tiffany Naiman and Juan Silverio, the series amplifies the voices of diverse and resilient queer communities.


About the artists

Page Person is a visual and performing artist based in Los Angeles. Her work has been exhibited in galleries including Peres Projects, Noon Projects, Stuart Shave/Modern Art and Deitch Projects; and museums such as the Hammer Museum, The New Museum, DESTE Foundation, Kunsthalle Schirn, and Kunsthalle Vien. Person’s work has been reviewed in Artforum, Frieze, The New York Times, The Believer, Artillery, Flash Art, The Wall Street Journal and the Village Voice. She has taught at the University of California Los Angeles, Art by DTLA Proud and the Los Angeles LGBT Center. Her work is in the permanent collections of the Hammer Museum, Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Contemporary Art, Frank Cohen Collection, DESTE Foundation and the Luckman Gallery of Los Angeles City College. Person has performed at the Hammer Museum, the Broad Museum, LAXART, Highways Performance Space, Glasslands, Los Angeles LGBT Center, Human Resources, Los Angeles Nomadic Division, and in queer nightlife spaces throughout Los Angeles.

Christopher Anthony Velasco (b. 1983) is a photographer and performance artist based inLos Angeles, known for his exploration of the queer brown body and his innovative blend of horror and camp aesthetics. He earned his Master of Fine Arts from UC Santa Barbara in 2019 and his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the California Institute of the Arts in 2011.

Velasco has contributed to his field through various internships, including positions at the Santa Monica Museum of Art (Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles) and UCLA’s Chicano Studies Research Center and Library as a Getty Marrow Undergraduate Intern. He is an adjunct professor at Moorpark Community College and East Los Angeles College, and CSSSA (California State Summer School of the Arts)

His work has been prominently featured in exhibitions at esteemed venues such as the Art Center College of Design, AD&A Museum, Avenue 50 Studios, the California Institute of the Arts, the Hibbleton Gallery, the Getty Museum, and the Vincent Price Art Museum. Furthermore, Velasco has collaborated with Harry Gamboa, Jr., notably through Virtual Verite, and performed at Los Angeles Union Station, UC Santa Barbara, and LAST Projects.

About River Sessions
River Sessions is an ongoing series of creative site visits that bring artists and cultural practitioners to the LA River to create public activations engaging themes of environmental justice, resilience, and community storytelling. By centering historically marginalized perspectives, River Sessions foster critical dialogue and deepen cultural connections to the River.
Join us to experience art, culture, and place along the 51 miles of the LA River. In the spirit of Hyonaayn’ar--a Tongva word that means both teacher and student--we will learn about the River’s ephemeral histories and imagine it’s ecological futures, all while exploring diverse and dynamic cultural responses to the watershed.
Watch this 10min documentary featuring our three Indigenous Advisors whose artist residency on the River culminated with: A Day of Joyful Intervention: Returning the River