Archive for June, 2010

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“The art that dare not speak its name.”


2010
06.28

One more exhibition wrapped up, installation for the next one has begun. We are also opening up the wall between the East and West galleries. Did I mention that we took on another space?

Next exhibition is a group show, four painters. Here’s the press release followed by a few images of their paintings:

CB1 Gallery proudly presents the work of four emerging LA-based painters—Edith Beaucage, Alexander Kroll, Matt Lifson and Lily Simonson—in an exhibition entitled, “The art that dare not speak its name.” In her February 10, 2010 article in The New York Times, art critic Roberta Smith, discussing current trends in the “art world” says, “What’s missing is art that seems made by one person out of intense personal necessity, often by hand. A lot but not all of this kind of work is painting, which seems to be becoming the art medium that dare not speak its name… These four artists proudly speak the name of painting. The exhibition opens on July 7, 2010 and closes on August 1, 2010. A reception for the artists will be held at the gallery on Saturday, July 10, 2010, 5 – 8 p.m. An artist talk will take place July 14, 2010 at 7 p.m.

Character and abstraction are linked on the canvases of Edith Beaucage in a way requiring no other narrative outside of these two elements. Reflecting emotions with paint, backgrounds often disappear and, in contrast to the characters, the “abstractions” play a variation of roles in the images, oftentimes behaving as portraits.

Alexander Kroll’s modestly scaled abstract paintings are simultaneously structural and intuitive. The layers of painterly information both highlight and obscure previous ideations leaving the viewer an artwork that is at once a highly specific painted object and a record of an activity, a subjective engagement with painterly space.

Exploring narrative through juxtaposition and psychological metaphor, Matt Lifson is interested in the cinematic element of painting, where there are paused moments that linger somewhere between clarity and ambiguity. Charged with sexuality and humor, his paintings draw inspiration from youth subculture, ritual and exploration.

Lily Simonson’s paintings of invertebrates seek to evoke transcendent states of being in which the boundaries between the self and the external world are breached and transgressed. Simultaneously anthropomorphizing the creatures and highlighting their otherworldly ambiguities, her paintings represent liminality, transformation, and human experiences of mystical and erotic ecstasy.

Edith Beaucage, Untitled, 2010

Alexander Kroll, Untitled, 2010

Matt Lifson, Reflected Paths, 2010

Lily Simonson, Der Eierbeutel, 2010

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Final Class Project


2010
06.26

I am a little late with this post. I guess I relaxed a little too much after school was done. This was my final project for the drawing class, album covers for a favorite musician. Since we just had Mike Garson doing a intimate concert at the gallery, and he totally blew my mind with his improv, I made an album design for him. We had to draw a face on the front cover, and anything related to the person on the back. My main goal was to try to make him look as real as possible. Although the shape of the head was completely wrong, the facial features were good I think. I also experimented with color pencils.

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Illuminated Letter


2010
06.05


This is the first project that I have to do for the drawing class. No final exam, but need to turn in 2 projects.

For the first project I had to create an Illuminated Letter. Being a Buddhist I chose the letter B for the Buddha (Self-awakened One), Buddho (Awakening in Pali), Buddhist. I used the lotus to represent purity, purified Mind which is the result of the mindfulness practice. Lotus grows in muddy water, but the blossoms rise above the water surface without blemishes, a beautiful symbol for purity. I used all stages of the plant, blossoms, flower buds, seed pods and leaves. Swirly lines for water.

I researched different styles for the drawing. I started trying to construct the letter with Tibetan knotting pattern, but soon found it very difficult to do the “over and under” pattern just right. I am sure with time it could be done, but I had a deadline. The second idea was the one I used in the project, a tattoo style design. The third one was more of a Japanese style illustration with lotuses rising out of a bed of leaves and through the letter B, with Japanese wave pattern as background. A fourth idea was done in the Tibetan Thangka style, quite traditional looking with the B formed with ribbon. I also wanted to add the four elements, Earth, Wind, Water and Fire, but couldn’t find the right spot for Fire. It just didn’t make sense to have fire around the ribbon B.

In the end I chose the high contrast of the tattoo style. It’s clean, the shape is unmistakably B, and I like the flow of the design.