The Los Angeles Convention Center will become the center of the art world when more than 90 galleries come together for the L.A. Art Show this month.

“We have something for everybody from all around the world at the show,” said Kassandra Voyagis, director and producer of the show, which returns to the downtown venue Wednesday through Feb. 23.

This year marks the 30-year anniversary of the show, which will take over 200,000 square feet of the convention center with galleries from around the globe, including the Licht Feld Gallery in Switzerland, Columbia Road Gallery in the United Kingdom, Ukraine’s Snisarenko Gallery, and Art in Dongsan from South Korea.

The sprawling show will include media from paintings to sculptures to photography to abstract pieces and contemporary and poignant works.

One potentially impactful exhibition will be “She, Unbroken,” a series of paintings by Ukrainian-born women who have experienced the ravages of war.

Art fans may also be impressed by Viktor Freso’s breathtaking, 36-foot “Bear Sculpture,” which is presented by Slovakia’s Danubia Museum.

It will be standing tall in the lobby of the convention center as a symbol of power and resilience, Voyagis said.

Another notable exhibit, presented by Art in Dongsan, will be the work of sculptor Youngkwan Choi, whose metal pieces repurpose industrial materials into artistic forms.

“It’s really cool. He takes this steel and transforms it into large sculptures. I like when you take something and repurpose it into something creative and artistic,” Voyagis said.

Local stars will also take part in the show, including Los Angeles-based muralist Robert Vargas, who will be creating a 24-foot-tall mural during the show titled “Heroes” that represents first responders who fought the recent Los Angeles County fires.

“It’s going to be huge and you’re not going to want to miss it,” she said.