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artHouse LTA presents “Freeze Frame” a First Friday Event

BEND, OR — December 5, 2025 — Bend’s newest creative space, artHouse LTA, announces its latest First Friday event, Freeze Frame, a vibrant, winter-themed night of contemporary art, color, texture, and community connection. The event takes place on Friday, December 5th, from 5 – 9 pm at 113 NW Minnesota Ave., right in the heart of downtown Bend.

Since their Grand Opening on November 7th, Freeze Frame marks the first step in artHouse’s mission to bring a refreshing, modern alternative to Bend’s long-established fine-art landscape. In a city known for galleries that can feel buttoned-up, beige, and politely predictable, artHouse stands defiantly on the other end of the artistic spectrum. artHouse is loud where others are quiet, disruptive where others play it safe, and deeply human where others lean into pretense.

At the center of Freeze Frame is gallery owner and artist Gabriel LTA, whose large-scale, layered, highly-textured paintings have quickly become recognizable for their bold palettes, emotional transparency, and signature surreal motifs, including the beloved “Angelephant” figure featured in the event artwork.

Visitors can expect:
– Brand-new winter-inspired works created specifically for the event
– Immersive textures and abstract landscapes that reflect Bend’s coldest season in unique & unexpected ways
– Light refreshments and a carefully curated atmosphere designed to highlight the coolest of tones contrasted against frozen motion
– An exhibition space intentionally designed to be un-stuffy, un-pretentious, and deeply welcoming

“Bend has incredible artists, but the gallery experience here has been stuck in the same temperature-controlled box for too long,” said Gabriel LTA. “artHouse is about breaking that mold—giving people a space that feels alive, accessible, and artist-first. Freeze Frame will capture that energy: like seeing your breath on a cold, crisp evening against the vibrance of a full moon.”

Since opening, artHouse has quickly become a creative hub for artists, collectors, community members, and visitors who crave something different—something with a pulse.

Event Details
Freeze Frame — First Friday at artHouse LTA
Date: Friday, December 5, 2025
Time: 5 – 9 pm
Location: artHouse LTA — 113 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend, OR 97703
Instagram: @arthouse.LTA

About artHouse LTA
Founded by painter and recording artist Gabriel LTA (Like The Angel), artHouse LTA is a contemporary gallery & creative studio pushing Bend’s art scene forward through bold expression, immersive color, and unapologetic individuality. Focused on large-scale textured works and a modern, approachable gallery experience, artHouse challenges the traditional fine-art atmosphere by replacing pretense with authenticity and connection.

Media Contact
Gabriel LTA
Founder & Artist, artHouse LTA
Instagram: @gabriel__LTA
Website: yrstruly.co
Email: yrstruly.LTA@gmail.com

Thrown Together Dinner Party at Mud Lake Studio

Mud Lake Studios is teaming up with chef Eva Berg to bring you the Thrown Together dinner series! Each dinner party will feature a luxurious 3-course meal, dreamed up and skillfully prepared by Eva, and served up on custom 4-piece place settings by Mud Lake members. Each setting will be beautiful and unique and yours to take home, washed and dried, at the end of the night.

For our inaugural candlelit dinner, we will be hosting outdoors under the hawthorn trees on the charming patio of our Old Ironworks neighbor, Cafè des Chutes*. This will be a family-style meal, so come with friends and family, or come and meet someone new. Your place setting will consist of one large plate, one smaller side plate, a bowl and a drinking vessel, all carefully designed and crafted by a local potter. The menu can be found on our website and Instagram!

Anton Yakushev Shapes Art and Expression in Metal

Anton Yakushev fits in well at Dry Canyon Forge in Bend. His bear-like frame equals the size of hulking machines around him. Five-pound hammers sit at ease in his calloused hands, as do the tongs holding a glowing bar of steel just removed from a 2,300-degree forge. Yakushev does not hesitate as he pounds a shape on the anvil, yet his focused eyes make sure all is right before each strike. In steel sculpture, Yakushev’s braun and artistic grace alloy into finely balanced creative expression.

Neither the acquisition of blacksmithing skills nor his relocation to Bend were quick nor easy. Like one of his sculptures—entirely hand-forged, never cast—Yakushev’s success has relied on perseverance, dedication and long-term vision.

Metalwork

Forging Ahead

Originally from Kolomna, a historic city on the outskirts of Moscow, Yakushev pursued a fine arts degree in the early 2000s. In school, he excelled at drawing and knew he wanted to sculpt, but he hadn’t yet discovered the right medium. A visit to a friend’s forge ended the search. Seeing what could be done with steel, the equilibrium between weight and elegance, Yakushev decided to invest a decade of time learning the craft of blacksmithing so that one day he could make art.

Following a few years spent observing blacksmith artists, and eight more as an apprentice, Yakushev opened his own blacksmith studio in Kolomna. He built handrails and other architectural pieces as he honed his ability further. He started making sculptures, which led to shows in St. Petersburg and Moscow, and to teaching workshops across Europe.

Metal work sculpture
“Star Horse”

In 2018, Yakushev and his wife, Kat, first visited Bend, invited by the Central Oregon Metal Arts Guild (COMAG) to give demonstrations and teach workshops. Yakushev felt appreciated here, not a common feeling he had in Russia, where he said art had to be made according to rules.

“When I was doing demonstrations in America, people who were watching kind of absorbed everything—they wanted to learn, and they were so grateful,” Yakushev said through Kat as interpreter. “And you sense that it’s a very important mission. It’s so wonderful that people are interested. I feel so welcome here.”

In February 2022, the Yakushevs arrived for another trip to the United States. Two days later, Russia invaded Ukraine. Anton, whose mother is Ukrainian, applied for political asylum here and the Yakushevs have been living in Bend ever since.

“The Owl”, metalwork sculpture
“The Owl”

Forging Ahead in Central Oregon

Central Oregon has given Yakushev a fresh perspective on life and art. “There’s just a different mood here—I feel safe, and that influences my art,” he said. “I would never make a lamp with a bird in Russia, but now I have several projects about nature. Here, I started to feel more life, and that’s why I’m able to enjoy nature around me, and to show it through my art.”

The Central Oregon and North American metal arts community also benefits from Yakushev’s presence. He’s a member of COMAG, and he continues to teach and share his knowledge. Friend and fellow blacksmith, Joe Elliott, remains impressed by the skills and techniques Yakushev has brought to Bend.

“It’s a new skill set of how to make proportionally correct sculptures out of multiple pieces using traditional joinery,” Elliott said. “That wasn’t here beforehand.”

Elliott owns Dry Canyon Forge and rents space to Yakushev. The two have collaborated with others on projects including a life-size bald eagle, covered with 400 hand-forged feathers, that Yakushev designed for the High Desert Museum. Elliott marvels at Yakushev’s innate ability to capture movement, something often missing in sculptural work.

Metalwork sculpture
“1.5” from The Leaves Cover the War Project

“Anton’s work is unique, not only in terms of design but in terms of how he puts things together,” Elliott said. “He uses traditional joinery with contemporary design. It’s a very unusual technique using rivets and collars, as opposed to just welding or casting, and I don’t know of anybody else really doing that.”

Currently, Yakushev is working on a life-size horse that, like his eagle, will require the help of other blacksmiths. He has also taken to jewelry, a testing field for the sculptor. As Yakushev learns to work with silver and gold, and to set stones, he expands his own experience as a metal artist.

“I believe if you like what you’re doing, challenges can help you develop and grow,” Yakushev said. I like [the part] during the process when I say, ‘Okay, this is a challenge, so how can I do it?’ Then, I just keep working.”

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