Lack of affordable housing in Los Angeles' Venice Beach neighborhood inspires activism and art

Artist Sumaya Evans, right, gives a kiss to writer and activist Judy Branfman in the entrance to Beyond Baroque gallery by a map she created as part of an exhibit titled "Where Has All The (affordable) Housing Gone?" on Friday, Nov. 3, 2023, in the Venice Beach area of Los Angeles. Word spread about her photo project and Branfman started hosting community meetings where residents could share their experiences with evictions that forced them to move out of the area and, in some cases, into homelessness. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel)

LOS ANGELES (AP) — As more and more of her friends and neighbors found themselves priced out of rental units in Venice Beach, Judy Branfman began photographing the dozens of houses, bungalows and apartments being sold, renovated and then relisted at double or triple the cost.

Branfman started with only the vague idea that she should be documenting the growing problem of evictions and housing unaffordability in her beloved west Los Angeles neighborhood. The writer and activist lamented that Venice, where tourists flock to the famous boardwalk and Muscle Beach, has been slowly shedding its historically bohemian vibe and becoming another enclave for the wealthy.

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