American Contemporary Art (Summer 2010)

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    AMERICANCONTEMPORARY

    JUNE 2010 ART

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    S U Z A N N A F I E L D S

    W A L K E R C O N T E M P O R A R 4 5 0 h a r r i s o n a v e n u e b o s t o n m a 0 2 11 8 6 1 7 . 6 9 5 . 0 2 1 1 w w w . w a l k e r c o n t e m p o r a r y . c

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    MARTN REYNANEW PAINTINGS MAY 28 - JUNE 28

    THE HOGAR COLLECTION

    362 GRAND STREET WILLIAMSBURG BROOKLYN NY 11211WWW.HOGARCOLLECTION.COM TEL. 718.388.5022

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    Christian FaurThe Land Surveyors

    June 17 - July 17, 2010

    Kim Foster Gallery529 West 20th Street N Y, NY 10011 212.229.0044

    [email protected] www.kimfostergallery.com

    .....The Land Surveyors.... 20,000 hand cast encaustic crayons..... 30 x 60 inches..... 18 panels..... 2010.....

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    22

    CONTENTSJUNE 2010

    UPFRONT12 Museums

    14 Gallery News

    EXHIBITIONS

    19 New York

    21 Washington

    21 Chicago

    22 Boston

    22 Philadelphia

    23 Denver

    23 Santa Fe

    44 Los Angeles

    48 San Francisco

    ARTISTS

    36 Maria OMalley

    40 Linda Vallejo

    53 Christy Rogers

    54 Angela Ellefson

    56 Jaime Scholnick

    PUBLISHER Richard KalisherEDITOR Donovan StanleyDESIGN Eric Kalisher

    CONTRIBUTING WRITERSGloria Huwiler, Mark OlivalRoberta Carasso

    ART AMERICANCONTEMPORARY

    On the Cover Martn Reyna,Untitled (2), 2009, watercol-or on paper, 26 x 20 from hisexhibition at the Hogar Collectionin New York City. See page 20.

    ALIFORNIA

    ONTEMPORARY

    ARTA SPECIAL SECTION

    Advertising [email protected]

    561.542.6028 / Richard Kalisher

    acamagazine.com 2010 R.K. Graphics. All Rights Reserved

    Content courtesy of represented institutions.

    21

    48 47 44 4

    12 20

    4

    STARTING ON PAGE 29

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    520 West 24th Street New York New York 10011tel 212 691 6899 fax212 691 6877

    email [email protected] web www.mikeweissgallery.com

    Piet van den Boog /Close to reborn, without fear of the unknown...without fear of further losses / 2010 /Oil and acrylic on black steel / 59 x 86 1/2 inches (149.86 x 219.71 cm)

    Gallery

    Piet van den BoogI wanted each and every one of them, but choosing one meant losing all the rest

    May 13 June 19, 2010

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    Santa Monica Civic Auditorium

    January 13 - 16, 2011The longest running art fair in Los Angeles and

    the largest photography art fair in the country,

    is celebrang its 20th anniversary this January.

    Sponsors and adversers who wish to celebrate

    or partner on this special event can email:

    [email protected]

    photola.com

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    MUSEUMS

    12 A|C|A June 2010

    One o the most adventurous and complished artists working today, Malyn Minter uses bold, luscious colors aglossy suraces to depict extreme cloups o women oen ashion models examine beauty and decadence while posing the pleasures and dangers o glaour. Minters world, though steepedashion and glitz, is one in which beahas gone awry. She says that her art is vested in the moment when everythgoes wrong. . . when the model sweaTis exhibition presents a ocused seltion o Minters work centered on oneher most recent major paintings, OraCrush, 2009, a 9 x 15 oot triptych. Acompanying the painting are ve relalarge scale photographs and an acclaimvideo, Green Pink Caviar, 2009, origineatured on a billboard in imes Squa

    Lee Bontecou rst exhibited her steel-and-canvas sculptures at New Yorksprominent Leo Castelli Gallery in the1960s. Although they bear little resem-blance to the Minimalist and Pop artdominant at the time, these wall-mount-ed sculpturesmade in New York be-tween 1959 and 1967elicited bothcritical acclaim and curiosity. Writingabout one o them, a reviewer asked, Isit apterodactyl? A spaceship? An outsizeartichoke or a monstrous whorl o gi-ant ower corollas? Bontecous imagi-native vision encompasses all o thesepossibilities. For decades she has leher work untitled, preerring not to re-strict the ways in which it may be un-derstood. Bontecous excitement aboutthe Space Age and her memories o theSecond World War are undamental to

    her visual language. While her art dees

    easy classication, suggestions o inniteexpanse, anxiety, and threat are perva-sive, expressed, or example, in the blackcircular orms that have been insistentmotis in her work. Te cavernous blackvoids o her steel-and-canvas sculpturesand the deep black circles o her drawingsconjure associations as varied as volcaniccraters, jet engines, eye sockets, and cos-mic black holes, invoking what the artisthas described as the visual wonders andhorrors o the natural and man-madeworlds. In 1971 Bontecou le New YorkCity. Since then she has worked primarilyin rural Pennsylvania, where her engage-ment with the natural world has becomemore pronounced. Te sculpture sus-pended at the center o this installationa slowly whirling galaxy o orms sheworked on or eighteen yearsrepresentsa ulllment o her longstanding desire tocreate art that celebrates no barriers, noboundaries, all reedom in every sense.

    (clockwise from bottom left) Lee Bon-tecou: detail - Untitled, 1976, penciland colored pencil on prepared paper.15x11. MoMA, the Judith RothschildFoundation Contemporary DrawingsCollection Gift; detail of Untitled,1980-1998, welded steel, porce-lain, wire mesh, canvas, and wire.7x8x6. MoMA, gift of Philip Johnson(by exchange) and the Nina & GordonBunshaft Bequest Fund; Marilyn Mint-er: Orange Crush, 2009, enamel onmetal, 108x180. Courtesy of Johnand Amy Phelan; Gimme, 2008, c-print, 70 x 97.25 AP. Courtesy ofthe artist & Regen Projects, Los An-geles. All work respective artists.

    Lee Bontecou

    MoMANew York[through Aug 30]

    Marilyn Min

    MOCAClevela[through Aug 1

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    EXHIBITIONSMUSEUMS

    Museums 13

    Combining art and architecture, thir-ty-three Caliornia artists including DonEd Hardy, Shag, Paul Frank, and SandowBirk will install their art shacks at LagunaArt Museum. Most shacks will be open tovisitors, and some will include interactivecomponents such as music and lm.

    Abandoning the rules o the art mar-ket and pressure to create work to sell, artshacks allow the artists to create an ex-periential environment, narrowing thedistinction between art and unction, ob-ject and environment. Tough ew o theincluded artists have any direct experi-ence with living in shacks, they are pres-ent in their collective memory through

    post-apocalyptic lms like District 9 orchildhood games like MASH (Mansion-

    Apartment-Shack-House). Along thewest coast, locals are quite amiliar withsur shacks, date shacks, and iki-in-spired shacksromantic, boutique-likebungalows or the leisure visitor.

    Architecturally, a shack is the lowestorm o construction, meant to serve themost basic or immediate needs. By deni-tion, a shack is a place o disrepair madeo the most humble scrap materials likeplywood, corrugated metal, and plastic.According to the United Nations, morethan one billion people (one-sixth othe world's population) live in slumsasettlement made o shacks. In every senseo the word, a shack is temporal. It evenimplies to the more humorous, subver-sive, and misbehavedto "shack up"or

    Combining Art and ArchitectureART SHACKS INVADE LAGUNA ART MUSEUM

    abandon social norms and "shack upthe mountains."

    As part o the exhibition, Don Hardys at Cat Shack (attoo Hut) weature an activated tattoo machine. Gillette studied slums in India as the spiration or his art shack, while MarWeber's shack will eature a Super 8 Te Red Nurse and the Snowman. CrStecyk will have a small shack on the ro the museum only visible through security camera monitors, and KenSchar will have a trailer shack thatll obe shown at the opening night recepti

    Ultimately, the artists in this exhibitdey the norms o rules set against thequestioning the modes o mass prodtion, social restrictions, and perhglobal capitalism.

    Art Shacks: (top left) Marnie Weber; (bottom left) Jason Maloney (right) Kenny Schar

    Art Shackwill be exhibited at the Laguna Art Museum in Laguna Beach, CAfrom June 13 through October 3. Te opening night reception is June 12.

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    GALLERY NEWS

    Contemporary Arican art is something

    ew international collectors have accessto in the States, mainly because ew gal-leries exist that carry the work. Yet bothcontinental and diasporic Arican Art-ists abound and their rare and innovativework is testimony to the creativity andinsight that exists. Actress and gallery co-ounder Gloria Huwiler speaks about dis-covering her interest in the eld and thecreation o Anajuwa Gallery.

    In 2006 I had recently graduated romBrown University and moved to NewYork to pursue acting. I also took up apart time job in a contemporary art gal-lery in the ime Warner Center, MilleniaFine Art. My mother has always been acollector o Arican Art, and I grew upwith a keen appreciation and love o theeld. Coming rom this background, apart time job in a gallery was an idealcreative day job while I immersed my-sel in New Yorks acting scene. Carlene

    Soumas, the gallery director at MilleniaFine Art asked her new assistants to puttogether ideas or prospective exhibitionsby researching emerging artists, oeringthe possibility o an exhibition at MilleniaFine Art, New York, i she approved othe concept. I immediately turned to theplethora o contemporary Arican ArtistsId been exposed to at home and put to-gether a presentation or a group exhibi-tion o Zambian painters and sculpturesentitled Realizing an Arican Renais-sance. With the help o Carlene Soumasand various people on the ground inZambia, the exhibition took place withinthe next six months and eatured nineZambian painters and one sculptor.

    Te exhibition at Millenia Fine Art waswell received by collectors, and several othe artists' work sold out quickly, show-ing a strong demand or this new, unseenwork. In the course o preparing or theexhibition, I realized just how underde-

    Bringing Contemporary African Art to Los Angeles

    (above) An Opening at Anajuwa with actress Sydney Tamiia Poitier, writer/director/produOz Scott, Anajuwa founder Gloria Huwiler; (below) Vincentio Phiri, Chibede, 48 x 36.8

    by Gloria Huwiler

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Gallery News 15

    GALLERY NEWS

    veloped and underexposed the eld ocontemporary Arican art in the UnitedStates was. Only one contemporary Ari-can artist, Yinka Shonibare, has been soldat auction in Sothebys ContemporarySection. No auction at present is dedicat-ed exclusively to the eld, despite the actthat contemporary Arican art o superbquality continues to be produced, andauctions in contemporary Chinese, Lat-in, Indian, and European work take placeregularly. Rather, the mainstream repre-sentation o Arican art that exists in NewYork is dedicated solely to antiques andtribal artiacts. Yet, with the proposedMuseum or Arican Art currently un-der construction on Museum Mile on theUpper East Side, contemporary Arican

    art is slowly entering mainstream con-sciousness and getting the necessary ex-position and exposure it deserves.

    Having seen the success o the workat the ime Warner center, I was con-dent o the interest in contemporary A-rican art i well curated and exhibitedin a central and well exposed venue andhave been committed to continuing toprovide access and exposure to contem-porary Arican Artists since.

    In ollowing my acting ambitions bymoving to Los Angeles, I met a businesspartner keen on opening a contempo-rary Arican art gallery. Anajuwa Gallerywas borne out o our mutual interest inthe eld, and is dedicated to showcasingemerging and established contemporary

    Arican artists in Los Angeles. In my ti

    here, I have ound the the exposurecontemporary Arican art to be lackias in New York. Apart rom the supercurated exhibits at the Fowler, ew comercial galleries carry contemporary rican art and none specialize in it.

    While ew generalizations can be mon so broad a eld, contemporary rican art is a usion o traditional inences with modern and contemporstyles and orms. Debate oen abounon the nature o the work and the qu

    tion o authenticity is a commonly hconcern o intellectual art critiques. HArican does contemporary Arican has to be, in order to be considered thentic? Te question seems utterly inawhen one considers that art is an exprsion o an artists experience, his vis a projection o himsel on reality. Ctemporary Arican art is precisely than expression o modern Arica throuthe eyes o its artists, and the result is

    rich, hybrid, combination o inuenthat post modernism has wrought on rican itsel.

    Anajuwas inaugural exhibition, I gration, was displayed at Anajuwa Glerys Melrose. Te opening reception whosted by Sydney amiia Poitier, and tended by Sir Sidney Poitier, Bernie CasGina Ravera, and various membersthe Arican American and entertainmcommunity in Los Angeles. Te exhtion eatures the work o artists WilliBwalya Miko, Mwamba Mulangala, G

    phrey Phiri, Vincentio Phiri, Rikki LunBaba Jakheh, Lutanda Mwamba, the ZBrothers and Stary Mwaba. Te work wbe on display at the 8360 Melrose Aven

    gallery till the end o May and then rcated to the Fairmount Miramar Hote

    Santa Monica.

    Sydney Tamiia Poitier and Sir Sidney Poitier at an Anajuwa opening.

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    C E L E B R A T I N G T E N Y E A R S

    ART SANTA FE 2010/ AN INTERNATIONAL ART FAIR

    T H E S A N T A F E C O N V E N T I O N C E N T E RO P E N I N G N I G H T G A L A / T H U R S D A Y , J U L Y 1 5 , 5 - 8 P . M .

    JULY 16, 11- 7 PM; JULY 17, 11-6 PM; JULY 18, 11- 6 PM / TEL 505.988.8883 / WWW.ARTSANTAFE.COM

    A L L T I C K E T S A V A I L A B L E A T T H E L E N S I C B O X O F F I C E 5 0 5 . 9 8 8 . 1 2 3 4

    PICTURED LEFT TO RIGHT, TOP ROW: Jorge Fernandez, JoAnne Artman Gallery, Laguna Beach, California; Bruce Clarke, Bekris Gallery,San Francisco, California; Yayoi Kusama, EDEL, Osaka, Japan SECOND ROW: Robert Turner, Robert Turner Photography,Del Mar, California; Peter Weber, Galerie Renate Bender, Munich, Germany THIRD ROW: Friederike Oeser, Galerie Walter Bischoff,Berlin, Germany; Michael Schultheis, David Richard Contemporary, Santa Fe, New Mexico; Jimmy Ernst, Osuna Art, Bethesda, Maryland

    J U L Y 1 5 - 1 8 , 2 0 1 0

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    F. LENNOX CAMPELLO

    ALIDA ANDERSON ART PROJECTSWASHINGTON, DC ALIDAANDERSON.COM

    MAYER FINE ARTNORFOLK, VA MAYERFINEARTGALLERY.COM

    PROJECTS GALLERYPHILADELPHIA, PA PROJECTSGALLERY.COM

    Superman fying naked and low to the ground in order to avoid radar

    Charcoal on paper. 20x24 inches. Circa 2009.

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Marina AbramoviSean Kelly Manhattan

    [through June 19]

    Personal Archaeology is an intimate look intothe development oMarina Abramovi as oneo the most important artists o our time,beginning with her historic perormancework o the 1970's through to her most re-cent work rom 2010. Te title collectiono the sculpture has not been shown beorein the US. Tis highly personal work rom1997-99 consists o a large wooden cabinetcontaining numerous drawers, in which ar-tiacts rom Abramovi's lie are displayed.Te public is encouraged to look throughthe drawers to view the variety o revealingobjects and mementos that Abramovi hascollected, including photographs and hand-written notes, that has inuenced her work.

    A selection o Abramovi's iconic pho-tographs is installed in the main gallery,providing a visual time line o the evolu-tion o this pioneering perormance artist.Works such as Rhythm O, Lips o Tomas,Carrying the Skeleton, and Cleaning theHouse chart the trajectory o her careerover more than 40 years. Te main galleryalso includes one o her newest videos,which is a startling image o Abramovi,her ace covered in gold lea, staring outat the viewer. Te aint ruing o the goldlea is the only motion in the video, sodraws the viewer in close or urther in-spection; they ultimately nd themselvesmeeting Abramovi's direct gaze.

    All This And Not Ordinary

    Jeff BaileyManhattan[through June 19]

    Te trio o artists included in this group ex-

    hibition utilize a wide range o materials inunlikely combinations. Painting detritus isreclaimed as a medium or drawing; sculp-ture is co-opted as a vehicle or painting;and drawing is used as a tool to mimic ges-tural painting and explore abstraction. ChrisDuncan uses mirrored paper as a surace orpainting, stitching, or collage. Human Ab-straction (4, 5 and 7) each eature a circularorm composed o hundreds o hand paintedmulti-colored dots. Te suraces partiallyreect the viewer, but are obscured by spray

    paint and stitched paper. In Joseph Hartsmixed media drawings, color, line, and ormhave equal presence. Gestural marks are aspronounced as representational imagery.All-over compositions eature ragments o

    antique vessels and statuary, arranged in

    lyrical patterns. Fabienne Lasserre com-bines linen, paint, steel, paper, and hand-made elt to create orms that stretch, leanand drape. Her multiarious sculpturescan mimic human interaction while alsoimplying science ction creatures.

    Christopher CookMary RyanManhattan

    [through June 19]Concrete Firmament continues ChristopherCook's work in liquid graphite (graphite pow-ders, oil, and resin) on aluminum panels orcoated paper. In this new sequence o images,Cook explores the ormal and psychologicalqualities o road tunnels throughout Italy. Indoing so he is also able to reconsider an ear-lier ascination with worlds within worlds,and encapsulated space. Tese 'graphites'contain both photographic (or cinematic)and painterly elements, oen in the sameimage. Cook's method lends an enigmaticair to the everyday, allowing him to suggestthe proximity o apparently unrelated emo-tions, such as ear and nostalgia. Te samemethod also emphasizes the connection be-

    tween our experience o the world and themeans by which we orm such experience.Additionally, the dualities present in thiswork light anddark, hard and so,interior and exte-rior create a dy-namic that not onlyconveys the magicalsense o encapsu-lated space, a realm'out-o-place', butalso o conscious-ness moving to-wards a erce andintrusive light.

    Marina Abromovi, Portrait with Golden Ma2010, color video projection on DVD, 30 loop

    (from left:) Joseph Hart, Untitled (VeStudy), 2010, collaged paper, ink, acrylic, copencil and graphite on paper, 19x15; FabiLasserre, Cradled Drawing 1, 2010,linen, acrylic polymer, acrylic on paper; Chris DunPlatform, 2010, wood putty, spray paint, acpaint and mirrored paper on panel, 23.25x3

    JUNE 2010

    Christopher Cook, Flicker on the Cave, 2graphite, oil, resin on coated aluminum, 40 x

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Ben GockerPPOWManhattan

    [through July 16]

    Ben Gockers rst solo exhibition, Tereis really no single poem, does not includeany poems per se among his bright instal-lations, drawing series, and wall-mountedsculptures. He pays signicant attention tothe idea that no work o art should or canexist alone. Tis creative ethos is reectedin Gockers inscription o the names o nu-merous riends, acquaintances, and lovedones in one o the shows centerpieces, thelarge painting titled simply Namesas it

    is in Gockers display o book covers imaginary books, Floating Collection, a tastic prelude to unrealized genius. Eachthese works contains elements that canstand in solitude, that invite other elemeto surround, contextualize, and interrogthem. Each is also brilliantly illuminaby others in the show; Gocker emphasiinteraction, dialog, allusion, and sociabieven as he mourns the ephemeral servinto which these orms are pressed.

    Sarah Walker& Ken WeathersbyPierogiBrooklyn

    [through June 27]

    In this new series, Edge o Everywhere,Sarah Walker continues to develop her

    highly active and dense suraces, this timeprimarily on panel rather than paper.Structures ound within technology, thesciences, nature, and architecture providethe internal organization and logic or herpaintings, which work to visually organizeinormation. Walker's earlier works can beseen as attempts to visually organize the in-ormation overload around us. In her recentpaintings, she deals urther with the chaoticand multi-dimensional reality o existing

    simultaneously in the data overload o thereal and the virtual worlds. One painting,

    Everywhere Is Always, hints at Walker's tempt to get at where the so-called real a

    virtual have merged and the two reaare no longer easily distinguishable. KWeathersby's paintings are intense, eleggrids o primary color that subtly invert pectations in a number o ways. While soo the careully penciled and painted cvases display their colorul patterns, othein whole or in part, are turned to ace wall. Several have cut-away sections, whhave been replaced by tted inset panpainted with grids that either mimic

    contrast with the surrounding canvas. Texhibition also contains a number o twsided paintings, which may be ipped are-hung during the course o the showexpose a hidden view. Another paintinset ush within a carved-out hole andsituated within, rather than hung on, surace o the gallery wall. Tis exhibitas a whole and the individual works witit are oriented to create a visual play o otical experiences, but also a particular ko mental or conceptual engagement.

    Martn ReynaHogar CollectionBrooklyn[through June 28]

    Martn Reyna, Untitled(2), 2009, watercolor onpaper, 26 x 20.

    Expanding and melding his ongoing explo-rations o landscape, architecture, the voido nothingness and light, Martn Reynaspaintings celebrate the accident as a thingthat can be controlled. With the use o min-imal gestures his paintings provoke a poetic

    blurring o the distinction between the rec-ognizable, the purely abstract, and the placewhere the two meet together in a dreamlikestate. In both his heavily textured oils oncanvas and his intricately woven watercol-ors, a vivid use o color plays a vital role inthe representation o metaphorical analo-gies o existence and creation. With the use

    o amiliar yet mostly camouaged imagsuch as trees, geometrical shapes, and stial perspectives, the works pave a way ithe convergence o a space where landscmeets an abstracted tapestry, weaving gether the most miniscule o compone

    to make up the whole and reracting althe possible colors o the spectrum ina transcendental space that is both cotemplative and meditative. Te prismaqualities are used to ormulate and exua metaphysical by-product where particcollide, explode and separate creatingunique and spiritual view o the univers

    Ben Gocker, Names, 2010, wood, canvas, plaster,acrylic, sand. 69 diameter.

    (below left:) Sarah Walker, Compound, BlueHaze (detail), 2010, acrylic on panel, 10x11.(right:) Ken Weathersby, 177 (gothic marxism),2010, acrylic and graphite on linen, 20x33.

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Kathryn CorneliusCurator's OfceWashington D

    [through June 26]

    In this exhibition, Te Feeling o What Hap-

    pens, Kathryn Cornelius presents three newvideo series that investigate how rames ointeraction can be constructed to elicit emo-tive responses in the viewer. She also exploreshow our individual experience and underly-ing biological systems come to bear on howwe make meaning out o action. Corneliusexplores the exibility o the term 'peror-mance' through such diverse perormativesubjects as physical people and their actions,video editing as choreography, narrative anddialog construction, and visual versus audi-

    tory context. Each series is an experimenttowards engaging the audience interactivelyin the work so that the eeling o what hap-pens is ultimately expressed by the viewer.Te rst series includes How We Learn toLove, two videos in which the dynamics o

    interpersonal relationships are explored

    through simplistic actions and the ex-tremes o their expression. In the secondseries Or, Death Speaks or Us, Corneliuscreates images without images, text andcontext without explicit visual grounding.Tese videos are small, intimate looks intothe personal lives o individuals that serveas mini-portraits, imagined narratives owhat these individuals may experienceand see in their nal moments. Te thirdseries, Home Again, Home Again, pres-ents two alternatives to the lm "trailer"

    orm the comedy version and the trag-edy version. In its entirety, the exhibitionpresents a maelstrom o tragicomic emo-tions with the goal o engaging the vieweras the ultimate producer o each o thepresented works.

    Kathryn Cornelius: (left and top) How We Lto Love, Vol. 1, 2008, single-channel videoDVD), 2:52 (looped); (middle) Or, Death Spefor Us (Heather), 2010, single-channel v(HD DVD), 3:07. (directly above) Home AgHome Again (In my case, self-absorptiocompletely justifed... - Laura), 2010, sichannel video (HD DVD), 5:20. All: edition 1 o+ 2 APs. Courtesy of Curators Ofce and Art

    Martina NehrlingZGChicago

    [through July 10]

    Martina Nehrlings visual vocabulary is basedon the immediacy o the brushstroke andthe exibility o color. Her latest exhibition,

    What the Walls Heard, reect these qualities.She paints rom a near compulsion to re-spond to more than the merely visual worldand as a means o engaging in a dialog communicating through the primacy o themark compounded by the myriad associa-tions inherent in color. Her paintings proj-ect visual rhythms inspired by the sounds odaily lie, giving o a perspective that is airywhile also being substantial. Nerling says,Compelled by the pulsation o the beauti-ul and horric relentlessly clashing, I create

    compositions o accumulation. Groupedor tangled together, I use multiple distinctbrushstrokes or their graphic directness

    and use particular color relationships tointerrupt or punctuate the tracking opatterns o value and intensity.

    Martina Nehrling: (right below) untitled(deacrylic on canvas, 36 x 60; (bottom) GaDrunk(detail), acrylic on canvas, 48 x 144

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Rob MatthewsGallery JoePhiladelphia

    [through June 26]

    In his new work, Rob Matthews delves intomans interaction with his natural sur-roundings. Landscape is clearly the domi-nant orce here, while man is a eeting bitplayer. Tese intimate drawings, most 10 x8 inches, o intense graphite work are ullo symbolism and iconographic imagery(a snake, a mound o salt, or a careullyplaced skull reecting). As in Matthewspast shows, his passion or the work oAlbrecht Durer, Hugo van der Goes, andGiotto shows through. Te Devils PoolNo. 1 & 2, two densely worked landscapesshow sections o the Wissahickon Creek.

    Matthews has removed a bridge to preswhat appears to be a pristine scene. Tcompositions reveal little trace o a humpresence, yet are unsettling within the ctext o the other landscapes. Fresh deis present in a large drawing o FairmoPark showing dozens o recently killed bnailed to a tree, evidence o a bat hunt night beore. Scattered beer cans in a copanion drawing hint at activities leadingto the hunt. For Matthews, We attemptorganize and contain nature to experienit on our terms but in the end we lose cotrol and succumb to our own end.

    Paul KeeneSande Webster Philadelphia[through June 26]

    Paul F. Keene, Jr., was a master painter whoexemplies the success, tenacity, dedica-tion, and humanity o his generation. His

    artistic success and achievements in Phila-delphia and beyond, opened doors or A-rican American artists by demonstratingwhat was possible. Keenes major solo andgroup exhibition record extends acrossour continents, including shared exhibi-tion space with Picasso and Leger in Paris.Keene lived and worked as an artist in Phil-adelphia or seven decades. His passionateand soulul paintings were inspired rom

    his lie experiences and sophisticated ternational education. Keene absorbed colors, diversity, and rhythms o urban

    while growing up in North Philadelphiathis retrospective, Remembering a ModMaster, Keenes paintings can be viewdocuments o a very personal conrontion with the canvas. Images o jazz, ban walls, geometric orms and bold cocombinations dene much o his work. Amaster o paint, drawing, composition, acolor, Keene had all the necessary toolscommunicate and express his inner wor

    Carlin WingAnthony Greaney Boston

    [through July 20]

    Carlin Wing's Ceilings Where I Sleep, 2005-2010 is a collection o 130 chronologicallyorganized photos o interior and exteriorspaces in which the artist has spent at leastone night during the last ve years. Shot invarious ormats, including analog, digital,and cell phone cameras, this ongoing ar-

    chive documentsthe architec-tural details thatrame the art-ist's driing intoand awakeningrom sleep. Withher gaze xedupward on achanging canopyo textured walls,cheap veneers,patterned cur-tains, and banallighting xtures,Wing constructs

    a prosaic catalogue o intimacy whose ective kernel remains tantalizingly hiddWing also addresses the history o photraphy and conceptual art. Her mappingdomestic topography resonates with modernist archival impulse o Eugne get, among others, and its subsequent itetions in the typologically organized, seally structured photographs o artists lBernd and Hilla Becher and Ed RuscUnlike these precedents, Wing shis her

    tention rom public spaces and monumetoward architectural interiors and libidiworlds and rom a vertically positioned tical apparatus to a horizontally sited bodmatrix. Tough she may use photographevidentiary language, Wing dissolves objective lens through which 20th centdocumentary and conceptual practihave tried to capture and classiy expeence and replaces it with an unpredictaphantasmic organ. - Nuit Banai

    Rob Matthews, The Devils Pool #1 (detail),2009, graphite on paper, 10x12.5.

    Paul Keene, Winter Urban Landscape, 28x40.

    Carlin Wing,INDES Sport Hotel, San Salvador,October 24-30, 2005, inkjet ber print, 4x5.33.

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    EXHIBITIONS

    their astounding ormal innovations andconsiderable conceptual richness, Yama-no's sculptures are praised as instances othe most technically accomplished glassart produced today. In a unique methodthe artist adapted rom Japan's history ometal cras, complex ormso blown, sculpted, cut,and polished glass areused with delicatelayers o silverlea while stillhot and preced-ing copper plat-ing, allowinghim to emulatethe intricatedecorative sur-aces o Japanesescreen paintings.

    Linda FlemingRobischon Denver

    [through June 19]

    Linda Flemings solo exhibition, Lingering,is comprised o medium and large-scalesculpture works o, primarily, painted andchromed steel. With complex geometricorms that give equal consideration to thepotentialities o both the ephemeral and theuidly architectonic, each sculpture reectsan introspective investigation o the naturalworld and Flemings distinctive expansionupon it. Her intersection o circuitous ow-ing elements with hard-edged materiality in-vokes the many substantive dualities inher-ent in her work masculine/eminine andorganic/hard-edged all residing in the

    ertile ground in-between. As a vast ongo-ing study over the years in orm and scale,Linda Flemings own studio maquettescontinue to inorm and evolve as pivotalsource material or the artist. Investigat-ing the orms in nature and humankindsplace within, her intricate maquettes sug-gest encompassing universes beyond hu-man perception. Considered contextually,these diering approaches to scale allowa view into the artists larger thought pro-cess exploring a consciousness that existssimultaneously in both the concrete andthe abstract.

    Joe Ramiro Garcia& Hiroshi YamanoLewAllenSanta Fe

    [through June 27]

    Colliding polarized trends within contempo-rary art, Joe Ramiro Garcia merges Pop Art'sdistanced reproductions o cultural iconswith an expressionistic, painterly aesthetic.Colorul images o whimsical gures andeveryday objects in his playully provocativepaintings animate a space that seems at oncerecognizable and eerily mysterious - a tab-leau o discordant players depicting an enig-matic narrative. By reerencing both popularculture and private experiences, his psycho-logically resonant oil-and-alkyd paintingsnavigate between the delight o instant rec-ognition and the riddle o a dream or elusivememory. Reerencing the ocean as both abridge and a barrier between Japan and theWest, Hiroshi Yamano's art oers the sea asan evocative symbol o the conicts betweentradition and change, isolation and openness- an elemental space that both encloses andembraces the complex dialogues o personaland national identity. Celebrated equally or

    Jennifer NehrbassKlaudia MarrSanta Fe

    [through July 11]

    Weep and Wonder, the latest work romJennier Nehrbass, continues the artist's ocuson women and her attempt to turn o the pose

    o the helpless emale inside out. Te highlytechnically skilled paintings in oil on canvasoen convey an eerie clarity and might justas easily be photographs staged or a psy-chological encounter and a restrained yetambiguous eroticism can be ound in manyo Nehrbass paintings. Weep and Wonderwas inspired by Margaret Atwood's book,Te Penelopiad. Tis ongoing series o paint-ings imagines each o the twelve maidens asoval cameo portraits expressive o modern

    dilemmas, simultaneously ancient andcontemporary. Ambiguity, realism, andantasy play atmospherically in a narrative

    moment akin to magic realism. Drawnrom a Victorian obsession with sex anddeath, these portraits speak to orbid-den thoughts and desires, suggesting thatwhat is hidden rom, and orbidden to themaidens, is ultimately denied to the view-er. What the portraits yield is an intimacyo time and place that meanders throughrich details and nuanced perplexity. Forthe artist, baement is as necessary to ex-perience as delicate reasoning.

    Jennifer Nehrbass, Lights Out, 2010, oil on vas, 22x28.

    Linda Fleming, Cumulus 1/3, 2010, chrosteel, 72x46.

    (above) Joe Ramiro Garcia, Daytime TV, 2oil & alkyd on birch, 18x16. (left) Hiroshi Yano, Nagare #106, 2009, blown sculpted gsilver engraving and copper plating, 31x6.5

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    Maria OMalley36 Linda Vallejo40 Arshile Gorky46Angela Ellefson 54 Christy Rogers 53 Patrick Graham 46

    California Exhibitions 44-49

    ALIFORNIA

    ONTEMPORARY

    ART

    ne 2010| On the Cover: Mark Harrington, Depth of Field 4, 2010, acrylic on linen, 48 x 38.25.(see pa

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    Fang Ling-An

    EverythingIsStitchingTogetherSimultaneously

    CB1 Gallery Hours:

    Wednesday - Sunday, noon - 6 pm

    Friday open until : pm

    wwwcb1gallerycom

    21-86-889

    gallery@cb1gallerycom

    07W.5thStreet

    LosAngelesCA003

    May 29 - June 27, 2010

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    ONE PIECE

    bgartdealings.com hamiltongalleries.com

    1431 Ocean Ave. , Santa Monica, CA 90401

    Including collaborationswith Puma Yoshie Seki

    June 19th-July 1, 2010

    Reception: Saturday June 19th, 6-9p

    Artist Talk: Sunday June 27th, 4pm

    MIKE SAIJO

    +1 310 451 9983

    BLEICHER/GOLIGHTLY

    [email protected]

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    History and Vanity: tHe distillation of rumorBen WHite

    may 26-June 26, 2010

    5797 Washington Boulevard | Culver City, California 90232323.272.3642 | www.blytheprojects.net

    Members of Westboro Baptist Church Protest at a Neanderthal Burial Ceremony, 2010acrylic and spray paint on panel | 36 x 48 inches

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    ARTISTS

    For three consecutive nights, MariaOMalley, an accomplished gurative oilpainter, dreamed o bees. Her ancientGreek ancestry taught her to be sensi-tive to the interconnectedness o lieand that dreams can convey messages.Because o these dreams and their re-petitive nature, OMalley paid attention.Her subconscious thoughts and ensuingresearch about bees led her to determinewhat the dreams meant. She discoveredthat beeswax, also known as encaustics,

    is an ancient art orm. Except or JasperJohns encaustic resurgence, the mediumwas not popular at the time o OMalleysdreams. With no knowledge o workingin encaustics, OMalley learned all shecould about using beeswax in her art.

    While the artist investigated and studiednew art supplies, she continued to paintin oils. OMalleys gurative oils won sev-eral rst place prizes and were part o a

    long list o ne exhibitions. Tese includethe Laguna Art Museum and ChapmanUniversity. Working in amiliar oils andless amiliar encaustics, the artist realizedshe was at home using the beeswax pro-cess. Following every lead, she sought toknow more about her lies new direction.Eventually, an unknown, elderly artistin New York City graciously taught hermuch o what she needed to know.

    OMalley never anticipated that her

    Greek ancestry would come to her aidin the 20th century. Almost 3,000 yearsago, Greek artists, were accomplishedin encaustic portraits and mythologicalscenes on panels which still exist today.Homer, the epic Greek poet, sited the useo encaustics in describing the battle oroy. Increasingly OMalley was drawn tobeeswax when she realized its durabilityover other art materials. It has no toxicumes and requires no solvents. Encaus-

    tics do not deteriorate, yellow, or dark

    and do not have to be placed under glIn act, the Greeks used encaustic aresin to weatherproo their ships. Whthe process is laborious, a work o art a permanency rarely seen in other marials. Also important is health hazards reduced or eliminated making the pcess environmentally sound.

    Requiring a heat o 180 to 200 degremolten beeswax is like scalding thsyrup. It does not unite with water

    many other materials and requires snicant experience to know when iready to use. Like a neophyte chemOMalley made her studio into a labotory, nding her way in unexplored tritory. Many experiments were disastand dangerous, however, perseveraprevailed. Not only has she gained exptise, OMalley has tailored the encauprocess to suit the materials she loves aher particular artistic style. oday

    blends drawing materials into wax; vents her own equipment, and incorrates disparate supplies bought at lumyards. OMalleys unique process ingrates natural resins, and uses drawipainting, and relie sculpture.

    When OMalley went rom oils to caustics, her style and subject mattertered, yet certain key signature eaturemain. Her encaustic landscapes, as oil-based gurative paintings, engage

    viewer with large open negative spaand linear congurations. A lone treea ew trees in a solitary open white are haunting images. Or, graceul trewith elegant branches may cover the tire surace. Painted in grays and blarom graphite pencil shavings, or redsmelted Conte crayons, OMalleys lascapes are painted more rom imagition than observation. Teir enigmaquality comes rom a usion o layers t

    An Encaustic Journey by Roberta Carasso

    Maria OMalley, Cosmic Landscape, encaustic and graphite on panel, 36x48.

    Maria OMalley

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Artists 3

    ARTISTS

    may appear deceptively at or texturally

    thick, but always painterly as OMalleybuilds layer upon layer, up to 30 layers oencaustics and resins varying the densityo each area.

    Tis arduous process requires continu-ously adding and removing materials byabrasion and application; includes vari-ous drawing methods - thick and thinbrushstrokes and mark making; andsculptural methods - the carving andbuilding up o tactile suraces. Te result

    o this rich process o constructing anddeconstructing, is a luminous and mattesurace that reects light in varying de-grees throughout the composition. In ad-dition, an interplay o layers, with edgeso one process meeting layers o a ormerprocess, gives the surace an other world-ly appearance as i one can see and eeldierent time periods simultaneously.Viewing an OMalley painting is like be-ing in the moment yet going back in time,

    peeling through stratum o the past thatare either covered over or seem to juxta-pose past with present.

    Using thick leather welding gloves,sculpting tools, torches, hot air wallpaperguns, and working with molten materials,it is impossible to have preconceived no-tions or be ormulaic. Rather encausticsdemand discovery. Consequently, trainedin a representational style, OMalley nowworks conceptually, becoming a partner

    with the process as she nds sacred placesand spaces that are intuitive and organic.With each step, each abrasion, each over-lay o placing natural resins and beeswaxon the panel, surprises continuously oc-cur. Like a symphony conductor, OMalleyguides each element to ruition, keenlyoverseeing the many dynamics simulta-neous at play. Tus, like her Greek ances-

    try, OMalley creates timeless and lumnous encaustic imagery that will endu

    Roberta Carasso, Ph.D., is an electedmember of the International Art Criti

    Association, curator, and art writer. Hwebsite is carasso.com/roberta. For moinformation about Maria O'Malley vi

    mariaomalley.com.

    Maria OMalley: (above) Red Dune, encaustic and conte on panel, 32x38;(below) White Lake, encaustic and graphite on panel, 6x24.

    Maria OMalle

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    ARTISTS

    My art is an eclectic mixture o themany nepantla realms I inhabit as an art-ist and woman o color. Renowned emi-nist scholar Gloria F. Orenstein notesthat my work narrates a mythic jour-ney rom nepantla, the space betweendivided worlds--cultures, lands, states o

    consciousness,i d e o l o g i e s ,identities--toan envisageda r c h e t y p a lrealm o lightand enlight-enment. Iam indebtedto Proes-sor Orensteinor bringing

    the nepant-lera journeyto light. Tisconcept de-scribes mypractice omoving romone artisticidea or processto the next. Icontinuously

    abandon situ-ations o cer-tainty andtravel to un-known places where I am compelled tocreate new images. I ask mysel, Can theartist move seamlessly rom one idea andmedia to the next and remain centeredon their personal vision? And I nd thatmy answer is always a resounding Yes!

    I was born in East Los Angeles, an area

    Bridges are thresholds to other realities, archetypal, primal symbols o shiing consciousness.Bridges span liminal spaces between worlds, spaces I call nepantla, a Nahuatl word meaningtierra entre medio. ransormations occur in this in-between space, an unstable, unpredictable,precarious, always-in-transition space lacking clear boundaries. - Gloria Anzaldua

    In Her Own Words:

    o diverse racial and cultural traditions.My ather, an ocer in the Air Force, wasstationed throughout the US and Europe,so our amily traveled extensively. I wasable to visit many o the worlds greatestmuseums and study the masterworks intheir collections. Recalling images rom

    these cultural strongholds, I am remind-ed o the alchemical processes that art-ists use in transorming inormation andexperiences into new works. As a youngpainter living in Spain, I was deeply in-spired by Pablo Picasso, particularlyby his ability to develop a multitude ounique and disparate styles. His ability to

    leap rom one idea to the next, over long creative lietime, ascinates me acontinues to inuence my own work.

    I believe that authentic artworks conly be created through an understaning o the artists own individual jo

    ney combinwith an artic style veloped decades d e d i c a t i oI commit least ve yeto any nbody o woI believe tl o n g - t e r

    commitmeallows me discover ap r o i c i e nly illustrthe multiand comppoints o idea.

    As a viewI am attraed to uniqand comptechnical

    proaches in the application o paint amixed media. I am especially drawnimages that juxtapose philosophisociological, spiritual, and political ements drawn rom a wide span o histoI am deeply attracted to images that drinuence rom an extended historicontext to create an image o the conte

    Linda Vallejo, Electric Landscape Full Moon in Daylight, 2009, oil on canvas, 50x60.

    Linda Vallejo

    ART AS A NEPANTLERA JOURNEY

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Artists 4

    ARTISTS

    porary world in all its complexity.

    In my orty-year career, I have gener-ated several distinct bodies o work, ina variety o media, oen ocusing on aseries o ideas around a central theme.Many times, the impetusto create a new series oworks comes rom an ac-cident o artistic alchemy.Sometimes, I nd thatthe meaning o a particu-lar work o art is not clear

    until long aer its comple-tion. Many require consid-erable time or reection.

    My newest suite oworks, Te Electrics, be-gan as portraits o theCaliornia oak trees thatsurround my home in o-panga Canyon. For twelveyears, I had been paint-

    ing Caliornia landscapesin a magical realist style.Ten one night, I triedto capture the glow o anoak bathed in the light oa ull moon. Te paintedeld dissolved into mul-tiple organic shapes andbold marks painted inunexpectedly heightenedcolors. Since that ateulnight, I have completed

    several oaks, landscapes,and portraits inspired bythis rst eort where colorbecame electric, mov-ing and vibrating across the canvas. Inthinking through the process, I believethat Te Electrics have been inuencedby Andy Warhols pop icons, the splotchy"pixels" o Chuck Closes portraits, andthe psychedelic palette o 1960s artistlike Peter Max. I can also see inuences

    rom Gustav Klimts emphatic patterning,

    combined with the visual repetition andcoloration o Huichol yarn painting andindigenous ceremonial beadwork. Teseare artists and images that I have stud-ied and enjoyed over many decades. Tis

    Nepantlera may arrive in an unchartedartistic place, but she brings a melange omemories to the new creative locale.

    Like a true Nepantlera, I have traveledull circle to emulate Picasso and his un-canny ability to mix and match inuenc-

    es, media, and style in an eort to cre

    my own unique image and vision. Artic leaps and accidental alchemies hkept my artistic juices alive, and I alwlook orward to the next inuence ainspiration.

    What others have s

    about Vallejo's work:

    Artist, educator, andcritic Nancy Kay urn

    "Vallejos work demstrates a relentless expration and manipulato materials while remaing true to her inner sion. Tere is a proouconsistency here despthe diversity o materand inuences. Valleprodigious body o wolike the artist hersel, i

    orce o nature.

    William Moreno, mer Director o the Cremont Art Museum athe Mexican MuseumSan Francisco: Vallebroad command o a riety o mediums: paiing, sculpture and sspecic installations all within her prolic o

    vre. Vallejos interests subject-matter spans considerable. Temes beauty, consumption, w

    excess, world pollution, iconic reerento international indigenous peoples aearth-based installations all reside in works.

    For more information about Linda

    Vallejo, visit lindavallejo.com.

    Linda Vallejo, Electric Landscape Joshua Tree, 2008, oil oncanvas, 48x36.

    Linda Vallejo

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    8687 melrose ave suite b222 los angeles ca 90069 | t 310.294.8577 | www.housprojects.co

    31 howard street, floor 2 new york, ny 10013 | t 212.941.5801 | e [email protected]

    h

    hous projects

    DARKmatter

    Nadine Rovner, One at a Time Archival Digital Pigment Print , 200

    Featured Artists:Narelle Autio Jen Davis

    Scott Davis Marian Drew John Houshmand

    Molly Landreth Eric Ogden Trent Parke

    Charles Robb Nadine Rovner Haley Jane Samuelson

    Phillip Toledano Nicola Vinci

    march 25 - august 17 2010

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Tim HawkinsonBlum & PoeLos Angeles

    [through June 26]

    Tim Hawkinsons work is known or itssprawling, surrealistic sel-portraiture inwhich the body, through intense introspec-tion, becomes an alien landscape open toradical redenition and transormation.Tis artistic agenda is mirrored materiallyby Hawkinsons use o amiliar and ubiqui-tous consumer packaging and householdobjects in highly unconventional ways. Tenew work continues these rerains, whilealso exploring more pointedly, temporality,mortality, and the cyclic. Hawkinson worksin a wide array o media involving sculpture,painting, photography, and installation.Te exhibition reects this range, with suchpieces as Orrery, a towering eight-oot tall

    sculpture o a woman at a spinning whatop a platorm o rotating concentric cirtire treads. Tis piece looks to mechanimodels used to illustrate the motions o planets and their moons in our solar stem. A sculptural collage o water bottplastic shopping bags, recouped hardwaand odds and ends comprise the womahead, hands, eyes, ears, and spindle; evpart o the piece is interconnected and etnally spinning. A companion sculptuCandle, takes the orm o a giant oam cdle, nearly eight eet tall. Te dramatic scpropels this domestic object into a caulandscape and volcanic totem.

    Donald JuddMaloneyLos Angeles

    [through July 2]

    Tis exhibition o rare drawings byDonald

    Judd, created between 1963 and 1977, willilluminate the process by which his sculp-ture was conceived and realized, and pro- vide an overview o the iconic orms orwhich the artist became best known: stacks,progressions, boxes, and various orms thatthe artist called Specic Objects. Emerg-ing in the 1960s in New York, Judd becameknown as a major exponent o Minimal-ism, a label he strongly rejected, preer-ring to describe his work as the simpleexpression o complex thought. Te yearsbetween 1963 and 1977 were his most er-

    tile years, a period in which the artist est

    lished the ormal dictum that would guand inorm his work throughout his liethese drawings, one can trace the trajecto Judds thought processes as he ounstarting point or the reinvention o Amecan art. Judds desire was to make a distibreak rom the tradition o European AHe rejected the symbolism and emotwork o the abstract expressionists, baon ree-wheeling use o color and gestuand by introducing the use o industmaterials, Judd developed a vocabularysculptural orm that remains unrivaled.

    Ben WhiteBlythe ProjectsLos Angeles

    [through June 26]

    Ben White's paintings merge anachronisticpersonages, events, biblical narratives, andpopular culture to create a antastic, non-linear interpretation o history. Tese con-structions play with the nature o subjectiv-ity and historical memory. He uses history

    as a medium, abstractly arrang-ing topics displaced rom theirproper contexts. o achieve thisdislocation, he lters his per-sonal interests through Googlesearches, juxtaposing disparate,arbitrary results. Each work isa mental sel-portrait rom acertain moment, showing themultiplicitous aspect o thought one might be reading aboutGauguins Jacob Wrestling withthe Angel while listening to theband Rush and dreaming about

    their 2112 tour. Tese perceptions becoa mash-up, a summation o personal istence that can't be contained by any htorical account. Americas ounding athpersecuted witches, Jesus, and other sujects rom mythology and the artistic canpopulate these works, interacting antacally with situations and personages rdistant and recent history. Te incongencies are absurd, and the absurdity itpulls them into the present. White's satdisarms imposing and amiliar gurrelieving them o their historical and ademic baggage and rendering them comiand approachable. It becomes our histagain, on equal terms with the present aonce again acceptable as subject matter contemporary painting. Historical gravleavened by wit, becomes a source o plsure and ascination. - Lara Bank

    Tim Hawkinson, Orrery, 2010, plastic bottles,shopping bags, inkjet prints, twine, string, wire,foam, springs, tape, lead, steel, 93 x 96 x 96.

    Ben White, The First Council of Nicaea Agrees on the Natureof Leviathan, 2009, acrylic and spray paint on panel, 30 x 49.

    Donald Judd, Example work from Drawings,1963-1977. Courtesy of Maloney Fine Art.

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    EXHIBITIONS

    William Swanson &Jill WeinstockWalter MacielLos Angeles

    [through July 2]

    William Swansons new show, Mass Con-tinuum, takes a slight departure rom hisold, both in terms o perspective and place-ment o imagery. Although still interestedin presenting an illusionary view o highlyarchitectural orms colliding with natu-ral environments, he now takes the viewerinside to peek at the conceptual structuraldesigns rom the interior. Te works ex-amine propagation o ora within vacatedpublic spaces including halls, corridors andatriums. Te empty spaces stand as skeletalrameworks holding grids o light xtures,sections o walls, and partitions. Tesestructures indicate a once active corporateor retail inrastructure now abandoned andstripped o its original unction. Done romhand and without any computer generatedimagery, the compositions are created with

    multi-layers o visual inormation piled ontop o each other. In Swansons paintings,

    the imagery creates a dialogue betweenthe eco-system and man-made construc-tions and the eects both have on eachother respectively. | In her new work, JillWeinstock continues the use o repetitionin cast rubber orms with an emphasis onthe nostalgia o ones own childhood. Usingan original Fisher Price dollhouse rom the1970s as her mold, Weinstock casts the toyin dierent shades o pigmented rubber toexplore how experiences o objects in earlyyouth bridge the gap between reality andreminiscence. Trough this intensive pro-cess o transorming the toys into concep-tual mementos, Weinstock recalls the ob-jects past, suggesting its greater connectionto our collective memories, desires, anddisappointments. Weinstock's sculpturesput orth a potent cultural resonance or

    representing memory in tandem with theormation o sel-narration.

    (Top of Page) William Swanson, Particle Horizon, 2010, acrylic on wood panel, 30 x 47

    (Directly Above) Jil Weinstock, Group of DoHouses, 2010, pigmented cast rubber, editioof 2 each, 10 x 15.75 x 9. Courtesy of WaMaciel Gallery, Los Angeles.

    Ginger Wolfe-SuarezltdLos Angeles

    [through June 26]

    Ginger Wole-Suarez explores the psychol-ogy o built space and perceptions o placewhile re-engaging notions o site-specic-ity. Approaching ragility and imperma-nence, the material, textural, and odierouswith the same complexity as site and scale,Wole-Suarezs sculptures operate phenom-enologically, the exhibition space reormed

    into a temporal and experiential zone or theviewers body. Utilizing a material paletteo wood, rock, paint, transparencies, light,yarn, as well as various odors and scents,her latest exhibition, Memory Objects in-cludes sculptures and installations ques-tioning how moments are made physical.Wole-Suarez negotiates a tension between

    presence and non-presence, dispelling no-tions o reduction, in what the artist termsa symbolic abundance through absence."Both a collapsing o representation and aquestioning o material andprocess are embedded withinthe trajectory o Minimalismand the Minimalist object.

    Meaningully endowing mem-ory with physicality, the artistssculptures explore boundariesbetween constructed, ound,and cast-objects as well as dis-tinctions between collective,psychological, personal, andhistorical memory.

    One Piece is a dynamic ocean culture ex-hibit by Mike Saijo, including collabora-tions with ashion designer and artist PumaYoshie Seki. Te exhibit juxtaposes easternand western sociocultural history in rela-tion to oceanside lie. Saijo and Yoshi crosscultures as well as art orms, drawing romboth popular and academic movements.Conceptual mixed-media, traditional Japa-nese painting, sur art, Anime, and otherorms converse to explore the mythologyand ethos o the ocean environment. WhileSaijo is known or his book pieces, de-constructing pages o books and interplay-

    ing them with images upontext, he will be branching outto new areas or this exhibit,including on-location beachinstallations, sculpture, andthe incorporation o painting,glass, and sculptural elementsinto his works. Collaborationswith Puma Yoshi begin withMike's usual Xerox composi-tions on book pages as the starting pointor new orms. Saijo reengages the Con-textualist ideal o deriving meaning in artrom soci-cultural and historical contex.

    Mike Saijo & Puma Yoshie

    Bleicher/Golightly &HamiltGalleriesSanta Monica[through July 2]

    Ginger Wolfe-Suarez, Here (detail), 2009-20wood, concrete, glitter, rock, mirror.

    Saijo, Grand Line (detail), wax & charcol on paof Jungs Symbols of Transformation on wood p

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Mark Harrington: (top) Depth of Field 2, 2010,acrylic on linen, 43.25 x 38.25. (bottom) GreatWhale, 2010, acrylic on linen, 79.5 x 72.5.

    Mark HarringtonEdward CellaLos Angeles

    [through July 10]

    Depth o Field, a new exhibition romGerman-based artist Mark Harrington,presents new non-representational paint-ings, distinguished by their thickly layeredsuraces organized in rhythmic bands osubtle, contrasting color. Inspired by thecinematographer's term depth o eld the range o distance within a photographor lm image that is acceptably sharp theexhibition presents a sequence o paintingsexploring the dynamic visual relationshipbetween the painting's physical suraceand its illusory visual ground. With a debtto resco, Harrington imbeds multi-tonal veins o color into monochromatic eldsthrough repeated insertions and reduc-

    tions o paint. Using a minimal or redtive system o compressed layers o built-and stripped-away paint, the artist contrwhat the eye perceives in terms o imery. In doing so, Harrington establishedialogue between illusory bands o traparent, distressed color and the plassculptural nature o his materials. Invtigating the interaction o color and liHarrington's large-scale abstractions oon space, pictorial depth, and light. Eploying the workmanship inherent to classical traditions o European paintiHarrington's paintings represent a conteporary reinterpretation o the aestheticsmodernist painting.

    (above) Arshile Gorky, Untitled, c.1930-35, two-sided drawing, graphite on paper, 11.25x8.(center page) Patrick Graham, Wreath (Collat-eral Series), 2005-2006, oil on canvas diptych,72.87x134.63.

    Patrick Graham & Arshile Gorky

    Jack RutbergLos Angeles

    [through July 31]

    Monumental paintings and drawings byPatrick Graham, widely regarded as Ire-

    lands most important contemporary artist,will be eatured in this major exhibition ohis recent works, joined by a number o theartists most iconic, large-scale paintings othe last 25 years. Patrick Graham has beencredited by art historians with changing theace o Irish painting, and has been recog-nized by Ireland as a living national trea-sure through his induction into Aosdnasince 1986. Fact o the Matter is his rstexhibition in Los Angeles since 2002. It o-

    ers a rare opportunity to view a major pre-sentation o Grahams works; some recentlyexhibited in the critically acclaimed muse-um exhibition Te Quick and the Dead inDublin. | Opening in conjunction will be arare exhibition o drawings Armenian-born

    artist Arshile Gorky(1904-1948), one o 20th centurys most important paint

    and a seminal orce o American modeand contemporary art. Te exhibition weature Gorkys early sketchbook drawidating rom the early 1930s. It was durthat period when Gorky absorbed and dened European avant-garde sensibilithaving at that time a proound impact upsuch artists as Willem deKooning, HBurkhardt, Stuart Davis, John Graham, aIsamu Noguchi. [In act, Burkhardt wassponsible or introducing Gorky's work

    the Los Angeles artists and curators.] Tdrawings in this exhibition reveal Gorkearly ruminations on cubism and biomphic abstraction, predating his encounwith the European expatriates who arrivin New York during World War II.

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Jamie IsensteinMichael BeneventoLos Angele

    [through June 26]

    Mostly known or her perormance-based sculptures that test the perma-nence o objects, New York artist JamieIsenstein presents a room o objects onre in House o Hot. For the exhibition,Isenstein transorms various tchotchkes,including cookie jars, Jell-o molds, nov-elty teapots, and porcelain gurinesinto unctioning oil lamps. As productso mass-production gathered rom junkstores and garage sales, these objects areinconsequential and replaceable, yet maderom enduring, permanent materials. Un-like candles that melt when set on re, theseoil lamps are not consumed by the amesthey sustain. Drawing on Isenstein's inter-est in immortality and the concept that artis supposed to last orever, these oil lampsreerence the uses o oil lamps in religious

    establishments, burial memorials, and theOlympics as a way to invoke the realm oeternity. In addition, in response to the term

    "nature morte," these oil lamps are groupedin clusters o still-lies with the ames en-livening and giving presence to the staticobjects. In the back gallery, presented like agreenhouse ull o plants are Flowers o Evil,a series o photographs documenting ow-ers ocially registered with sinister namessuch as Ghost rain, Anvil o Darkness, andArmageddon. Tis relates the owers tothe historical art tradition o using owers

    as symbols or mortality; the price o eachower is displayed below the name suggest-ing that even death is or sale.

    Jamie Isenstein: (above) Flowers of Evil, video installation ofphotographs; (images on right) two selections from the House

    of Hotexhibition. Courtesy of Joshua White/Michael Benevento.

    Judith Foosaner& Carlo MarcucciLora Schlesinger Santa Monica

    [through July 9]

    Step in ime, a new exhibition by Bay Areaartist Judith Foosaner, eatures black andwhite abstract paintings and collages. Foo-saner's work commences with a delicate linethat evolves into bold complex orms andcompositions. In her painting, Kiss, organicorms resembling leaves oat gently within

    elds o rich black paint. Similar shapes areound and transormed into puzzle-like col-lages in Pursuit. Te uidity and rhythmo each shape is disrupted, cut and thenmounted on canvas, resulting in even moreelaborate compositions. Te interplay be-tween light and dark, consistent throughout

    her work, accents the shadows o the linesand shapes that encompass the entire can-vas. With her signature style, her new workcontinues to exude energy and ervor. TeEast gallery will eature Wheatelds, wall-mounted sculptures by Los Angeles basedartist Carlo Marcucci. Te artist creates

    smooth, minimal sculptures by mountingdry pasta side by side in rows creating anillusion o wood or mosaics. Some o thesculptures are designed in multiple sectionsand others include intersecting structuresmade o transparent Plexiglas, changing thenature o the pasta itsel.

    Rachel HarrisonRegen ProjectsLos Angeles

    [through July 10]

    New York artist Rachel Harrison's practiceincludes sculpture, painting, collage, pho-tography, video and installation. Her work

    is consistently layered, creating a multiplic-ity o meaning and perspectives, engagingthe viewer both visually and conceptually.Investigating space, time, and context, theworks redene existing terms between im-ages and orms while positing alternate re-lationships to consider. Playing with color,objecthood, and language, Harrison con-stitutes analogies that lead to new thoughtsand investigations. Tis exhibition Asdkl; presents six sculptural works composed

    o statuesque abstract orms painted andcombined with ready-made objects. Tesesculptures are complex amalgamations that

    resemble monuments but arecompletely non-reerential.Te title (Asdfkl;) describesthe standard placement o one'sngers when typing. It is men-tally tactile, as it speaks to themoment when one is just aboutto touch an object. Te rapidlychanging relationship to writ-ing produced by the aid o ma-chines is central to this title.

    Carlo Marcucci, Wheatfelds LXII (62), 2udon noodles, squid ink spaghetti, regular ghetti, salmon spaghetti on plexiglas, 14.5x9

    Rachel Harrison,Asdfjkl; (installation view). Courtesy RegenProjects, Los Angeles. Photograph by Brian Forrest.

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Lael CorbinLuis De JesusSanta Monica[through June 26]

    In this new show, Greetings rom Earth, LaelCorbin compels us again to redene ourunderstanding and relationship to material

    reality. akinghis cues rom thespace programso the late 1970s,like NASAs Voy-ager spacecraand its GoldenRecord, Corbinexamines ideasand ways inwhich we mightc o m m u n i c a t ewith extrater-restrial lie. Heoers an instal-lation o specic

    images and objects that draw upon bothnarrative and poetic relationships to lan-guage, while evoking such notions as his-

    tory, science, space, and time, as wellplay, curiosity, and wonder. Corbin has quently dealt with language through the o able, allegory, narrative, and poetry, ploring how ctitious or inanimate objecan convey precept or truth, and calling iquestion the very materials and methodogies that orm, what he calls, the multituo other conceptual rameworks that shaour perception today. Tis has led himexperiment with a broad range o methoand unconventional materials, employa strategy in which research, building, amanuacturing processes mix seamlestogether with dream-like imagery, rments o inormation, syntax, memory, acompeting timelines. Stripped o a normcontext, objects and processes that, at glance may appear amiliar, in the end o

    us to question how these orms t into olarger consciousness.

    Teo GonzlezBrian GrossSan Francisco[through July 3]

    Tese new minimalist paintings by the NewYork artist Teo Gonzlez were achieved bythe artist methodically painting thousandso tiny dots in loosely gridded arrange-ments. Subtle variations in the size, den-sity, and placement o the orms result inshiing, dynamic compositions that engage

    and captivate the viewer. Te paintings onview present a new direction in Gonzlezsworking method. Previously, the artist ap-plied paint to the canvas in tiny droplets us-ing an emulsion that orces the pigment tothe outer edge as it dries. Le behind were

    ghost-like traces that call to mind varionatural orms, such as cells, stars, eyes, egand molecules. In his new works, Gonzamimics the residual orms by painting shapes directly instead o using dropleteliminating the element o chance inherin the dropping method and giving the a

    ist greater control o the creative procTe result is vacillating abstract elds tare at once meticulously precise and rhymically organic, possessing a vital enethat gives them a lie o their own.

    Jeff Adams & Younhee PaikBraunstein/Quay San Francisco

    [through June 26]

    In his recent paintings, Jef Adams createslevels o physicality by incorporating a va-riety o mixed media onto his canvases, us-ing everything rom acrylic, oil, and jute,to burlap, asphalt and plaster. However, hisis a "material with no implied or inerredmeanings." Instead, Adams' paintings high-light the artist's interest in achieving a workthat is highly subjective. Viewers react tohis paintings with sensorial responses or"the silence o an action" as Adams calls it while others could eel they are devoid omeaning. Adams builds upon the at sur-ace o canvases that hinge on the nuanceso the gure and memories o landscapes,

    and through varied brushwork and textuhighlight action. Younhee Paik, an arparticipating in the ACCESS Program, rives inspiration rom nature and the cstant challenge o nding ones place in vastness o time, space, and beyond. "Ito explore and express my ever expaning perception o the relationship betwethe physical and the spiritual," writes PaMany o the images in her work are memries rom her childhood in a Korean ing village: the waves o the ocean, shipsthe water, and stars at night. Floor planscathedrals and the geometry o New Yhigh rises also play a role in her painting

    Lael Corbin, Brn-77, 2010, wood, glass,shoes, audio and video recordings, 48x12x18.

    Teo Gonzalez, Untitled 593, 2010, acrylic oncanvas over board, 78 x 78.

    Younhee Paik, St. Peter Rotunda, 2008, oil oncanvas, 50 x 54.

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Tis show includes a new installation, In-verse Studies, eaturing twenty-our oil andencaustic paintings. Tey represent a depar-ture rom Amy Ellingsons established scale(all works are 16 x 12 inches) and method-ology o predetermining all elements o herpaintings via digital technology. Te works

    are indicative o a rediscovery and integra-tion o a more intuitive painting method,

    Wonder Box, a solo show o Matthew Pal-ladino's latest paintings, reerences a 19thcentury viewing device that contained ex-otic scenes that a small audience could seethrough a peephole or a nominal ee. It isin this vein that Palladino's new paintingsare presented, a contemporary peep show

    where ideas o morality are disoriented andrecongured in a playul ashion. Te pieceslack any clear moral compass, causing the

    Frederick Hayes & Ernest JPatricia SweetowSan Francis

    [through June 26]

    contrasted with Ellingsons amiliar geo-metric module. In Summer Frieze, worksare presented in a linear installation, withthe paintings placed at irregular intervalsover a varying progression o laser-cut vi-nyl elements, composed in situ. Tis layer-ing beautiully highlights the juxtaposition

    o colors employed in both the paintingsand the vinyls.

    Amy EllingsonHaines San Francisco[through July 10]

    Matthew PalladinoBaer RidgwaySan Francisc

    [through June 12]

    viewer to investigate the images' ideologi-cal content through the unique lens o theirown experience. Te gallery door becomesthe hole and, once entered, the viewer iswithin the Wonder Box or a peek at theartist's distorted scenes o the erotic, spiri-tual, and mundane. Not unlike a private

    dancer at a peep show, these pieces, paintedup and protected by a layer o glass ask theviewer to look, but don't touch.

    Frederick Hayes' latest exhibition, Cityscape:Drawings, Installation, and Painting, con-tinues his exploration o Arican Americanportraiture and urban landscape using char-coal and paint. Hayes's exhibition takes theviewer on a walk through his city albeita ctionalized city lled with aces bothknown and unknown, billowing cloud or-mations over geometric urban cityscapes,and detailed brick acades o massive archi-tecture. His subjects are never accidental,but rather thoughtul and provocative, pro-viding a rich portrait o urban lie. "I havean undeniable interest in portraiture, theArican American experience, the workingclass, and the sort o learned approach to artmaking that maniests itsel in various guis-es and disguises," says Hayes. Also on dis-play is the work o artist Ernest Jolly, who

    combines his musical background with vi-sual artistry in unique ways. Jolly's explo-ration o material and orm is inspired by

    social and eco-logical issues.His installa-tions bring to-gether sculp-ture, sound,and light, us-ing commonbuilding mate-rials like con-crete, wood,and wire. In

    Just Of Shore,Ernest Jolly collaborates with M. ChrisEvans, a cellist, who combined a variety osounds with Jolly's video projection o ahazy coastline and oreground sculpturesthat suggest a pier and broken boat. Tecombination creates a serene installation

    that also alludes to the decay and aban-donment o man-made materials.

    California Contemporart Art is a publication ofAmerican Contemporary Art magazine.

    (left) Frederick Hayes, Cedrick, 2009, acrylicanvas, 14 x 11. (right) Ernest Jolly,AlcheI(detail), 2010, mixed media, 46x117x46

    Matthew Palladino, The Rapture, 2010, acink on paper, 49x 37.

    Amy Ellingson,Inverse Study #1, 2009, oiland encaustic on panel, 16 x 12 x .875.Courtesy of Haines Gallery, San Francisco.

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    JOHNHOUSHMAND

    N 002GNAWED BEAVER BRANCHES WITH 3/4 GLASS TO

    72 x 48 x 13

    8687 melrose ave suite b222 los angeles ca 90069 | t 310.294.8577 | WWW.JOHNHOUSHMAND.CO

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    EXHIBITIONS

    Artists 5

    ARTISTS

    Space intrigues me, says Christy Rog-ers, My work is essentially a study inthe intricate nature o space and time.For an artist, this makes or boundlessexploration. Her uency in the languageo three dimensions is hardly a uke. TeLos Angeles-based photographer beganher career as a lmmaker.Over the course o vari-ous avant-garde projects,the sel-taught artist in-tensely pursued her ex-ploration o the visual. Inphotography, she oundher most acile means oexpression.

    Her new collection,Siren, praises the humanorm in water, a moti asmagic as mermaids andas primal as the womb.Wrought rom a mini-malist palette, her gures

    within a watery darkness,at lie-size, are deeply a-ecting. Nude and hal-clad, the images o thegures dazzlingly mix thetraditional and contem-porary.

    Deploying the danceo human orm withtextiles o cool warmth,Rogers creates images

    that are hypnotic in thepeace they induce. Teworks are printed on cot-ton archival matte, whichurther diuses detailsalready made smooth by the underwa-ter shot. With gorgeous gures againsta background o black, the photographsconnote the best o oil painting. Toseversed in the western tradition cannothelp but see the iconic hands o Da Vinci

    or the bold coloration o Michelangelo.

    Here the obsessed leitmoti o Courbetmeets the glory o Delacroixs action.Singular light worthy o Rembrandt illu-mines each lone gure.

    Born and raised on the Hawaiian island

    o Oahu, Christy Rogers requented itssuperlative beaches growing up, regularlyswimming in their turquoise and clearwaters. In L.A., I take a lot o baths, shequips when asked how shes made thetransition to urban lie. When I come

    back to the Islands, the rst thing I do

    dive into the ocean. It rejuvenates me.As viewers, we share that eureka mment o hers the ecstasy o that rst dback into the ocean. oward that end, ithe naked shot itsel that is o paramodesign. What she sees is what you ge

    the images have not bedigitally manipulated all. Te catching o genine ephemera gives thimages their cachet. I obsessed, she says w

    the beauty o impertion and the drama o hman passion. Her phosay nothing less.

    Raised in a amily o msicians and artists, Chty Rogers is also a polmmaker, and musiciHer newest project, Oyssey, which she has be

    working on since the ginning o the year, wshowcase these disparinterests. A massive udertaking comprised over a hundred lie-siimages in concert wexperimental video, work-in-progress will low the viewer to expeence that which had pviously only been allow

    Odysseus, the oppornity to marvel at the soo the Siren.

    Siren is currently represented at LaurRathe Fine Art in Houston, exas; SouStreet Gallery in Honolulu, Hawaii; an

    Blackman Cruz in Hollywood, CaliornFor inormation, visit christyrogers.com

    SIREN: CAPTURING THE HUMANFORM EMERGED IN WATER by Mark Olival

    Christy Rogers, Argentina, 35x46.

    Christy Roger

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    ARTISTS

    Im an artist that is heavily inuencedby psychological thought and theories,especially those o Carl Jung. I denemy artwork as,Te Art o Chaos, anart process which is derived through animplementation o my belies, whereinthe objective is to produce art that has noconscious beginning, but achieves dis-tinctive end results. In theory, Chaos

    makes no predictions and appears as astate o disorder, making it very sensitiveto its initial conditions. In other words, anumber o variations in the initial condi-tion produces a chaotic dynamic systemthat leads to even larger variations insubsequent behaviors. Art, on the otherhand, is the process o deliberately orinadvertently arranging elements andobjects in a way that aects our subcon-scious or unconscious mind.

    Te unconscious is the area o mind thatstores collected inormation that has beenrepressed and is not easily brought to ourawareness. Tese repressed memoriescan be episodes o trauma, or even sim-ple thought patterns, desires, and senseimpressions that remain ar below theaccessible surace. Tey are in essence,inaccessible without psychoanalysis, butcan drive and control the conscious mindthrough artistic orms o expression. It is

    believed that a thought derived in a state

    o consciousness is protected by our egos.Jung views the ego as our sense o sel andhow we portray ourselves to the world.Our egos put limitations on our real sel,which only emerges in dreams. Tis isa time when our unconscious mind letsgo o the ideals and deense mechanismsthat we hold to protect us rom thosethings we eel make us vulnerable andaraid.

    Jung believed that all things can be

    viewed as binaries, such as, good/evil,male/emale, love/hate, and black/white.Working in opposition to the ego, is the"counter-ego," or what he reers to as theshadow. Te shadow represents the re- jected aspects o ourselves, those thingswe do not wish to acknowledge. It is here,In Shadows, that I wish to create. Us-ing Black and White, I strip down theegos illusions o sel to a primitive state.Using variations o color would be my

    egos role o manipulating the artworkand thus creating an illusion o sel, or anideal o what art should be - an imita-tion o lie. Te end result o such think-ing is a world o art that is merely a slightmisrepresentation o another. o stiethe egos inuence is to unleash the un-conscious mind, allowing pure thoughtsto emerge, thoughts that aect art in away that has not been brought to light butmerely lingered below the surace waitingto be harvested by our dreams.

    According to Jung, dreams are a way ocommunicating and acquainting yourselwith the unconscious. Dreams are not at-tempts to conceal your true eelings romthe waking mind, but rather they are awindow to your unconscious. Tey serveto guide the waking sel to achieve whole-ness and oer a solution to the problemsthat arise. Dreams shi and sway in a waythat is not completely controlled by our

    conscious mind, revealing strange

    chetypes and metaphors in place o coscious thoughts.

    Nietzsche said, "You must have Chwithin you to give birth to a dancstar. I create Chaos when I approacblank canvas with a clear mind, when only intentions are to unleash movemeTrough this process, I gain the reedthats lost within an immediate objectand I nd that my hands will solve a mtery that my intellect has struggled w

    in vain. By avoiding the path, but goinstead where there is none, and thleaving a trail is one way to produce that is dierent, that is personal; art treveals a true sense o sel in every pie

    Franoise Sagan once said, Art must treality by surprise. Trough the ArtChaos, reality is lost in a dream. It is hthat we can oat, where we can escthe constraints o the world, bypass n

    tions o rhyme and reason. My art is lwith archetypes, subconscious omissioshiing realms o terror and conusiAs shapes progress across the canvas, athe lines collide with one another, jlike a dream, awareness brings revelatiothat have been waiting to emerge. Belong, aces, places, things orm rom shadows to reveal a subconscious pgression o thoughts. Upon a closer loone can see there is order in chaos, this beauty in the mundane. Ultimately,

    artist is not a person endowed with will who seeks his own ends, but one wallows art to realize its purpose withthemselves.

    EMBRACING THE CHAOS OF THE UNCONSCIOUS

    Angela Lynthia Ellefson: (above) Under TheSea; (right page) Solar Plexus. Both works:2010, black ink on acrylic paper, 12x9.

    Angela Lynthia Ellefson

    For more inormation aboutAngela Lynthia Elleson, visit

    raisedinblack.com.

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    ARTISTS

    This latest series is a return to sculp-ture while exploring my obsession with

    line and love o drawing. Te Styrooampieces in their original shapes (no cut-ting involved) dictate the design. It tapsinto a subconscious, spontaneous way oworking that is devoid o the prior, sel-conscious need to tackle big issues didac-tically. I eel that not being so obvious inmeaning (as in my past series) makes thiswork stronger. Tis material was oncedebris, cushioning the ar superior itemthat was desired. Here, the roles havebeen reversed, elevating this material to

    Jaime Scholnick

    "Art" while the initial object it held has oreventually will become the reuse.

    Tis desire to push my work to newlevels energizes me. I think it was DeKooning who emphasized that it is para-mount or an artist to reinvent herselover and over again to keep it resh. Tepresent work eels amiliar but isn't. Cer-tainly there are the obvious reerences toDubuet or any number o artists thathave used Styrooam. At the same timethe work is unlike anything that has pre-ceded it. Some pieces are architectural

    but that isn't my ocus either. Tere idesire to transorm the reuse and nsimply use it as ound. Te Duchampideal "any object becomes art becaussay so" is an outdated paradigm.

    I am always most satised with wothat is open-ended allowing the viewto make their own comparisons and nrative meanings. I contemporary art ects current dialogues then the very o this material as the inception or creative work encompasses a ull sptrum o ideas and belies that I hold.

    Jaime Scholnick is represented by CBGallery in Los Angeles. For more info

    mation, visit cb1gallery.com.

    Jaime Scholnick:(left) 2 Towers, 2009,styrofoam, blackgesso, acrylic paint,62x24x9.(right) PS: Red Cross,2009, styrofoam,gesso, acrylic paint,22x10.5x 8

    IN HER OWN WORDS

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    Santa Monica Civic Auditorium

    January 20 - 23, 2011

    www.artla.net

    original artwork, Norman Kulkin

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    TheAbstractWorksof

    NA T A L I E G R A Y

    T H E

    G A L L E R Y

    H A P P E N I N G

    M A R I N A D E L R E Y

    4 0 4 7 L i n c o l n B l v d M a r i n a d e l R e y C A 9 0 2 9 2 3 1 0 3 0 5 A R T S ( 2 7 8 7 )

    i n f o @ T h e H a p p e n i n g G a l l e r y . c o m w w w . T h e H a p p e n i n g G a l l e r y . c o m

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    D r e a m w e a v e r 1 8 x 2 4 N o w a v a i l a b l e i n a l i m i t e d e d i t i o n p r i n t

    Jun2-Jun30ReceptionSatJun126-9pm

    PartofTheHappeningGallerySummerFineArtShow

    FeaturingTenAstoundinglyTalentedArtists

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    www.stoehr.uswww.stoehr.us

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    Whimsical DanceStainless Steel

    10 feet in height

    7001 West 35th Ave I Wheat Ridge, CO 80033

    303 431 4758 I [email protected] I kevinrobb.com

    Pieces of Sushi6 feet in height

    Chop Sticks7 feet in height

    Playing Ball16 feet in height

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    KOKAYCEE

    OLSEN

    GALLERY