Mel Odom
DREAMS FOR SALE
June 06—August 15, 2026
Mel Odom’s work is right out of Roman and Greek mythology. His accomplishment is so locked into our memories of Beauties, Beasts, tables that walk on claw-balled feet, and candelabra held up by bodiless hands that extinguish their flames when some dark wind blows. – Ray Bradbury
Sea View is pleased to present DREAMS FOR SALE, the solo exhibition debut of New York-based artist Mel Odom (b. 1950, Richmond, VA) in Los Angeles.
After moving to New York City in 1975, the artist, Mel Odom, was quickly immersed in a Downtown cultural milieu defined by nightlife, performance, publishing, and queer culture– conditions that would shape his sustained pursuit of beauty amidst the backdrop of loss, reinvention, hope, and disease.
Early in his career, Odom rose to prominence for his singular commercial drawings for publications such as The New York Times Magazine, Rolling Stone, Playboy, Time, Viva, and Blueboy, while illustrating for writers such as Ray Bradbury, Edmund White, Tom Robbins and Roald Dahl. In 1995, shortly before Odom’s boyfriend, Gene Bagnato, passed away from AIDS, Odom invented the collectible fashion doll, Gene Marshall– whose elaborate world of old Hollywood nostalgia reflected not only Odom’s interest in fantasy and identity construction, but also his desire to commemorate those he lost through fictional retellings. Like his drawings and paintings, the Gene Marshall narrative was elaborate and emotionally complex, assembling a complete cinematic universe of rivals, lovers, costumes, and lore. “Gene was a huge gift to me not just in a financial or creative sense, it gave me something beautiful to focus on when I lost Gene,” Odom recalls.
Although Odom has been widely celebrated for his commercial work and collectible design, his art practice has increasingly been understood for its distinctly tender contributions to queer image-making and storytelling in contemporary art. Working across graphite, watercolor, gouache, pastel, and oil, but never airbrush, Odom has crafted a rigorous visual universe through exceptionally precise drawings and paintings that combine a baroque sensuality with a poignant meditation on mortality.
Odom belongs to a unique generation of gay men that experienced the halcyon decade of post-Stonewall, pre-AIDS New York City. This glittering epoch, and the devastation of what came next, manages to coexist within Odom’s spectral portraits of larger-than-life individuals. Referencing everything from Art Deco to the pre-Raphaelites, Aubrey Beardsley to Old Hollywood, Odom has cultivated an aesthetic that resists the dominant visual codes of the masculine and homoerotic that are associated with gay representation. Instead, his work embraces fragility, romance, artifice and ambiguity as anchors of emotional truth.
DREAMS FOR SALE presents a unique opportunity for viewers to engage with many never-before-seen drawings and paintings spanning the mid-1970s through the present– a historical register of work which is at once deeply personal, unabashed in its depiction of beauty, simultaneously humorous and melancholic, and wholly valorized as a boundary-breaking art form.
Mel Odom has been recognized with multiple honors from the Society of Illustrators. Recent solo & two-person exhibitions include Nothing Vast Without a Curse, Sans titre, Paris, FR (2026); Blind Tongue, David Lewis, New York, NY (2023) and Gorgeous, Daniel Cooney, New York, NY (2019). Recent group exhibitions include L'âge du trait, Sans titre, Paris, FR (2026); Cupid’s Bow, curated by Milano Chow, Bel Ami, Los Angeles, CA (2023) Works on Paper: 100 Years, Amanita, New York, NY (2023), Neo Rising, Polansky Gallery, Prague, Czech Republic (2022) and Idols of Perversity, Bellwether, Brooklyn, NY (2005). His drawings have been published in the monographs First Eyes (1982), Dreamer (1984), and Mel Odom: Gorgeous! (2024).
Mel Odom "The Swimmer," 1985 Pencil, dyes, and gouache on illustration board 17 3/8 x 14 5/8 in (43 x 36 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Devil and the Dice," 1984 Oil on board 20 x 16 in (51 x 41 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Questions," 1986 Graphite, pen, dye and gouache on board 17 x 14 1/4 in (43 x 36 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Charlie's Madonna," 1987 Oil on masonite 19 3/4 x 16 in (50 x 41 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Cinderella," 1976 Pencil and gouache on layout paper 18 3/4 x 18 1/2 in (48 x 47 cm) framed
Mel Odom "In the Blood," 1991 Pencil, dyes and gouache on board 17 3/4 x 15 1/2 in (45 x 40 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Undersea," 1987 Pencil, dyes and gouache on board 14 3/4 x 16 3/4 in (38 x 43 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Erik Von Sternberg," 1999 Pencil, dyes, and gouache on board 16 1/4 x 14 1/4 in (41 x 36 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Hard Hearted," 1990 Pencil, dyes, and gouache on board 18 1/4 x 18 1/4 in (46 x 46 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Georgia James," 1999 Pencil and gouache on board 15 1/2 x 15 1/8 in (40 x 38 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Lady with Stars," 1990 Pencil, dye, and gouache on board 16 3/4 x 13 5/8 in (43 x 33 cm) framed
Mel Odom, "Coded," 2020 Pencil and colored pencil on paper in frame 27 x 21 1/8 in (69 x 53 cm) framed
Mel Odom "The Red Orchid," 2021 Oil on board 24 x 20 in (61 x 51 cm) framed
Mel Odom "Lava Lamp (Portrait of Elvis)," 1992 Graphite, colored pencil and gouache on board 10 x 13 in (25 x 33 cm) framed