Posts Tagged ‘historic core downtown’

Paul Donald "Woulden" Installation

At first glance Paul Donald’s sculptures are brightly colored, cheerful and toy-like. Yet, they are a little odd, inviting you to take a closer inspection. Shapes that resemble animals and machinery at the same time, even phallic. Are they some strange creatures? weapons? someone’s trophies? I watched over these sculptures during November’s Downtown LA Art Walk. The most asked question was, “what are they made of?”

They are wood sculptures made by whittling with the exception of the shield-like components. Small pieces assembled together to give more reference to toys that children assemble at play. Spray painted in bright colors, they have a sheen that confuses people into thinking they are made of plastic, or some other material. Only one person at Art Walk recognized the marks left by whittling.

Paul invites people to examine and question what these pieces are, challenging our perception, how we recognize objects, letting our imagination do the work. These deceptively simple objects are packed with symbolic meanings. For example the whittled pieces look organic, resembling a creature out of our wild fantasies. Yet, they are combined with these meticulously crafted shields (or crests,) sometimes like a collar, sometimes like a trophy. Crests were used to show the heritage and power of a family or kingdom. These neatly crafted shields also strongly display human attention. This combination of the wild and a show of human strength brings a degree of sadness to the toy-like creatures. Domesticating the nature.

Paul Donald
Woulden
October 29 – December 4, 2011

Read the press release. Hey, see, even the show title invites to wonder what it means. Wouldn’t, wooden?

GunpuppyPaul DonaldWallflower(leaky)Paul Donald "Woulden" InstallationPaul Donald "Woulden" Installation

Oh, I have not been keeping up with my blog lately, even missed announcing our current summer shows. There is a lot of stress lately. Some work related, but mostly from the family business in China. I am not going to get into the details, just a lot of waiting and uncertainty right now. UGH!

Our summer group shows have been up for almost 2 weeks! We are very excited about them. Both are curated by guest curators, John Souza and our very own Alexander Kroll. Artists also include long time friends Roy Dowell, Renee Petropoulos and Carter Potter. Below are the links to the show pages and slideshow of the opening reception. Shows are up until August 20, 2011.

The Haunted Word, curated by John Souza

painting. design. speculation. generosity., curated by Alexander Kroll

Ah, forgot to share David Pagel’s review on HK Zamani’s show at our gallery. Here’s an excerpt:

Their humble, down-to-earth demeanors make a virtue of ambiguity. Each seems to be an expansive landscape and a tabletop still life. “Untitled (15)” evokes Morandi and sand castles. “Untitled (12)” brings together the beauty of the Taj Mahal and the pleasure of a long hot bath. Others turn tiny details — four blades of grass, three lime-green lumps and a slithering pink line — into worlds of possibility.

– David Pagel

Read the entire review on Los Angeles Times.

Added at 11:52 AM, and I forgot about this article in the local Bunker Hill Magazine. It talks about the gallery, about CB and HK’s show. The printed copy is quite nice, pick one up if you can get to them.

Just want to share a little picture show for the opening reception of our current show. First a few installation shots, then the slideshow. :-)

DSC_00HK Zamani: In-between Air, Land and Sea07HK Zamani: In-between Air, Land and SeaHK Zamani: In-between Air, Land and SeaHK Zamani: In-between Air, Land and SeaHK Zamani: In-between Air, Land and Sea

Brand new exhibition being installed today, and the opening reception for the artist is tomorrow. Come join us if you are in town. Here’s the press release that we sent out. :-)

HK Zamani

In-between Air, Land and Sea

May 22, 2011 – July 2, 2011
Opening Reception: Sunday, May 22, 5 – 7 p.m.

HK Zamani

CB1 Gallery is pleased to announce its first solo exhibition of the work of Los Angeles-based artist HK Zamani, In-between Air, Land and Sea. Zamani’s work over the past 20 years can be located within the extended field of painting, ranging from paintings and objects to site specific, multi-media installations—often including performances. The artist’s new paintings will be on view from May 22 through July 2, 2011. A reception for the artist will take place on Sunday, May 22, 2011 from 5 p.m. – 7 p.m.

HK Zamani’s images in this series of new paintings grow out of or away from their predecessors—they are sometimes devils, then angels. Some are on land, in the air or sea, occasional remnants, reformed or transformed over multiple applications of paint. The artist’s dome paintings from recent past exhibitions were portraits, perhaps even self-portraits, fragile portrayals. Some were ruins, some were vessels that transport— chrome and against corrosion—DeLorean, stellar. Many of the artist’s dome/tent paintings were more about the image than paint. The artist’s new paintings over the past 2 years, including the paintings in his current CB1 Gallery exhibition, are most definitely about paint.

In an LA Times review of For Your Pleasure, CB1 Gallery’s August 2010 group exhibition, David Pagel wrote that “Zamani’s meaty paintings come from the no-man’s- land between sleep and wakefulness, when consciousness is not fully functional and every little detail is more mysterious than usual. Cartoons form the backstory of his boiled-down compositions, but abstraction comes to the forefront in his idiosyncratic pictures that hover on the cusp of recognizablity.”

Iranian-born American HK Zamani (Habib Kheradyar Zamani) is a Los Angeles based artist and curator. His work is guided by multi-cultural influences ranging from ascetic Islam to psychedelia. He performed in the 2006 Prague Quadrennial and has exhibited at venues such as Kulturzentrum bei den Minoriten, Graz, Austria; Hohenthal und Bergen, Berlin; Pierogi, New York; W139, Amsterdam; ARC, Vienna; Kampa Museum, Prague; and Lincart, San Francisco. His work is in the permanent collections of LA County Museum and Berkeley Museum of Art. He received a C.O.L.A. Grant in 2004, and a California Foundation Getty Grant in 2005. Zamani is the founder and director of POST (1995-2005), and its recent renewal, PØST, a subversive venue for contemporary art in Los Angeles, where he has hosted over three hundred exhibitions.

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