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AMID DOWNTOWN CLOSURES, SUPERCHIEF FIGHTS TO STAY
Los Angeles Times
|September 07, 2025
A place for those with a piqued interest in counterculture is in jeopardy
SUPERCHIEF owner Bill Dunleavy at the independent art space in Los Angeles. He is facing shrinking revenue and rising overhead costs.
Inside Superchief Gallery, murmurs of excitement and eagerness filled the air.
Around 60 people gathered in the downtown art space for a screen-printing workshop on a late summer evening in August.
Young families, friend groups and couples filled neon pink pews, ready to print designs on T-shirts. Salsa music blared over the speakers as a few stragglers took their seats and others admired artwork on the walls, including a fine-line David Lynch drawing, a ceramic Garfield and a depiction of a lowrider’s paint job.
Despite the lively atmosphere, this gathering might be one of the last. Co-founder Bill Dunleavy said the gallery may be forced to close this month if it can’t raise enough money to pay the bills.
“We thought we had until November to save Superchief, but it came early,” Dunleavy said. “It’s not easy to build the type of community we've built. It would be a real shame, and set the culture back to some degree.”
For over a decade, Superchief has established itself as a place where punk rockers, graffiti writers, street photographers, homegrown fine artists and anyone with a piqued interest in counterculture gather to celebrate art.
The gallery's possible closure would add to the list of shuttered businesses in downtown L.A. that have struggled to rebound following the COVID-19 pandemic. Although downtown continues to attract residents, many office buildings are struggling with falling values and high vacancies.
This year alone, the neighborhood has seen legacy kitchens like the Original Pantry Cafe and Cole’s French Dip face permanent closure. The Mayan, a historic nightclub, is set to shut down later this month and Angel City Brewery announced that its Arts District taproom is being put up for sale.
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