Posts Tagged ‘sculpture’

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

This is very exciting. OK, it’s been out for two weeks already, but it’s still very exciting. We got our first review in Art in America, a national art magazine! And, it’s CB1 Gallery artist Mira Schor’s second review in the magazine.

The abandonment of explicit imagery or words and a reliance on the expressiveness of the paint itself to communicate leave us searching for clues, meditating on the paintings’ secrets. It appears as if Schor is finally, truly, “painting paint.”
–Constance Mallinson, Art in America

Read the entire review here.

Portrait of My Brain, 2007

Mira Schor, Portrat of My Brain, 2007

Also, Larry Mantello got a review in ArtScene’s April Continuing and Recommended list. It looked the show from a different angle.

His deliberately over-saturated boldness finally comes across as an attempt to exorcise the demons of pop-cultural overstimulation for our collective well-being.
–MS, ArtScene

Read the entire review on ArtScene. You have to scroll down pass halfway point of the page.

We are very happy that Los Angeles Times published a wonderful review on Larry Mantello’s show.

Larry Mantello’s second solo show in Los Angeles picks up where his last one left off: using cheap souvenirs and tacky novelties to tell a story whose high points revolve around love, loss and redemption and whose low points look toward meaninglessness as a welcome release from the despair of self-loathing.

Mantello’s first solo show in L.A. was 18 years ago. Back then, his installation stuck out like a sore thumb on steroids. At a time of hyper-serious identity politicking, his mind-scrambling extravaganza threw its lot in with pleasure and excess to herald a new era, which has gone a long way to define the present.

At CB1Gallery, “Together Again” is tighter, more focused and loaded. It reveals an artist whose vision and delivery have matured, growing more complex and nuanced while losing none of the youthful insouciance — and cheeky verve — of Mantello’s earlier works.

Read the entire review.

Larry Mantello - Together Again

Edith Beaucage also had a couple of interviews. One was featured on Huffington Post.

Edith Beaucage’shurluberlu” paintings, which feature idiosyncratic figures and architectural references are about the rich interaction of the imagination and social spaces. Beaucage’s new series has a Rococo energy, and is peopled by an engaging cast of lusciously painted faux-naif characters. The paintings are sweet, challenging, and utterly original.

To better understand the artist’s ideas, I sent her a set of questions, and also asked her husband, Glen Irani, if he would add his perspective.

Read the entire interview.

Edith Beaucage - .hurluberlu

She also did an interview with blogger Jeff Tutt. Here’s an excerpt:

Q: You speak of painting in terms of language – signs of abstraction or portraiture – and of the characters that inhabit your paintings as narrative ‘types’. Do you see painting as a literary or theatrical operation?

A: The paintings are just images, but the process that takes place in my mind while I am painting is closer to a literary composition. I built the sign of a figure that is next of kin to a character. I use the character as a way to make the image more interesting to me and to the viewer. The abstractions are also signs and characters. I am not using photographs or models to build the  figures. They come from my mind: a memory image repertoire. I consider the image development as a similar exercise as if I was building a character for a literary text.

The entire interview can be downloaded as PDF.

A local art blogger Tracey Harnish also wrote a review each for Larry and Edith. Click on the links to read them. :-)

Hi all! It’s been a while again. Life is just busy, busy, busy here in Downtown Los Angeles. I am again back in school, too. Just trying to keep learning and staying fresh, good for the brain.

We got two solo exhibitions coming up with the opening receptions on Saturday, February 26. Here’s some info for you. I hope to see some of you at the gallery!

Larry Mantello

Together Again

February 26 – April 3, 2011
Opening Reception: Sat., February 26, 5 – 7 p.m.

CB1 Gallery is proud to present Larry Mantello’s return to Los Angeles for his first solo exhibition in six-years. The exhibition, Together Again includes several series of works ranging from Floats (sculpture), to Off-Springs, and Rijiggers, which include temporary tattoos on paper and multi-layered wall-hangings.

Mantello’s current work is redolent with a pop-culture critique, which he packages with a reminiscence of childhood, a temptation with the body, and his interest in “the value of pleasure”. Throughout these works he suggests a subtle sense of sadness just below the surface, which is as important to the works as exuberance and celebration.

Read more and see more pictures on the exhibition page.

Larry MantelloLarry MantelloLarry Mantello

 

Edith Beaucage

.hurluberlu

February 26 – April 3, 2011
Opening Reception: Sat., February 26, 5 – 7 p.m.

CB1 Gallery also presents “.hurlurberlu”, our first solo exhibition of the work of Los Angeles painter Edith Beaucage. The exhibition continues the artist’s exploration of painted images that investigate relationships between signs of abstraction and figuration and how we derive meaning by simple juxtaposition of these signs.

Beaucage invents characters and places them side by side with an abstracted form into a scenario that mimics what happens in a social space. The emotional thread woven into the paintings, the social spaces, is meant to stimulate discourse with the audience.

Read more and see more pictures on the exhibition page.

triakistetrahedron.hur

Another fantastic night at the gallery. Opening reception for Ling-An’s show, Everything Is Stitching Together Simultaneously, had a wonderful turnout. The ArtScene preview brought many people from outside of Los Angeles. A few even traveled from San Francisco to see the show! Congrats Ling-An! Oh, and the Chinese dinner afterwards was delicious! :-)