New work chronicling the prolific and life-changing time  period of 2007-2011, when Garcia fled LA and moved to a  cabin in the Northern California woods.  
  The natural world inspires this work: her themes are  disenchantment with modernity and the problems of  becoming too removed from the natural world.  
  Garcia’s layered, broken narrative paintings of wasteland  fairy tales are influenced by William Burroughs’ cut-up  writings and surrealist film, as well as vintage Disney  and Fleischer cartoons, acting as critical commentaries  on the failures of capitalist utopias, blending nostalgic  pop culture references with a satirical slant on modern  society.  
  This work is from shows in New York, Berlin, and Los  Angeles, Escape to Darlingtonia (2007) The Grand Illusion  (Berlin, 2008) Ambien Somnambulants,(New York, 2008),  The Hydra of Babylon, (LA, 2009), and Snow White and the  Black Lagoon (LA, 2011). 
           
          
          
  
  
  
    Camille Rose Garcia is the child of a Mexican activist  filmmaker and a muralist/painter. She apprenticed at age  14 on murals while growing up in Orange County, visiting  Disneyland and going to punk shows.
  Her work has been displayed internationally and in  numerous magazines including Juxtapoz, Rolling Stone,  and Modern Painter, and is included in the collections  of the LACMA, The Resnick Collection and the San Jose  Modern Museum of Art. Her book, The Illustrated Alice in  Wonderland (Harper Collins) was a NYT Bestseller. The  recipient of the Stars of Design award from the Pacific  Design Center, she now lives in the Pacific Northwest.