Migrations: Cynthia Minet’s Sculptures Take Flight

 

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Ethereal work created from the most prosaic of materials – that’s the wonderful, rich dichotomy of Cynthia Minet’s glowing new work. Crafted from recycled materials and LED lights, Minet’s has created a stunning series of six sculptures of the Roseate Spoonbill, a large bird native to the Southeast coastal region, and serving here as an artistic surrogate for human experiences.

The works, titled Migrations, are now winging their way to the International Museum of Art and Science (IMAS) in McAllen, Texas, for a show opening April 14th and running through September 2nd. Next year, in January 2019, we’ll be able to see these beauties in flight again at the Museum of Art and History (MOAH) in Lancaster.

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In the meantime, Minet explains her process. “I build an armature first out of PVC based on the skeleton of the animal I am making. I find images of the skeleton and usually make a life size drawing, and then I measure bone to PVC pipe to get the proportions,” she explains.

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Minet also examines photos of the animal and videos, making drawings to refer to as she builds. Once she’s ready, she cuts plastic and laundry detergent bottles which makes up much of her work materials. “I wash and remove labels, and then cut it up and piece it to represent the various parts of the animal.”

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Minet has worked with materials from steel to fabrics to resin, but found the pollutant aspects of them to be difficult to work with. “The thing that is great about the plastic is that I can cut it without having to generate a lot of dust. I don’t melt it, I try to keep it as clean for my lungs as I can.”

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She came upon the idea to use recycled plastic when on a trip to Italy in 2009. “I met someone who had a nightclub where they showed art work, and it was right next door to a recycling facility. I had been making these ceramic pieces based on cloning and genetic modification of animals, and the guy said do you want to do a show. I said I could do ceramics and he said, well this is a night club and those are too fragile.” He suggested using recycling materials from the facility near his club instead, and Minet was inspired. “I had just seen a show in Finland that used fiber optics, and I just had this idea of using the recycled material with lights inside them. The nightclub show in Padova, Italy never happened, but I brought those ideas back here.”

She created a one-night show at POST gallery using these materials, and then started to work from exhibit to exhibit, embracing the poignancy of using these man-made industrial materials to shape beautiful beings.

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“What I’m after is capturing the essence of life, a sense of life and movement, and that’s why I try to make them so realistic but at the same time keeping the materials they are made of visible. I want to have a handle on or an edge or a recycled sign on them, something that links the material to the form.”

Minet says she is after many layers of meaning in her work. “I hope viewers will be drawn to the work by the light and the color and the form, first. Then once they are drawn in, that they will look at it, and come to a realization of what the materials are, and start to grasp the deeper ecological messages within the work. The materials are made from petrochemicals, from plastic that will never go away, and from using the electricity we are so dependent on. They’re all about dependencies in a certain way.”

The Texas exhibition came about through a solo exhibition Minet has at USC’s Fisher Museum. The museum curator was a USC alum and received press on Minet’s work and invited her to the border region.

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“I found that I could move the work beyond an ecological message into a political one, to make it really relevant to all of the issues having to do with immigration that we are having to deal with right now, and link the vulnerability of the roseate spoonbill as a kind of poster child for ecological issues in the Gulf Coast region,” Minet says. “Like most of my sculptures, the animals are sort of surrogates for human experience, so I linked the vulnerability of the spoonbill to the vulnerability of people needing to cross the border.” According to the artist, “There are a lot of materials that I found along the border that were dropped by immigrants, and I incorporated those into the sculpture, because I wanted people to notice and be pointed toward that issue and the real sympathy I have to that vulnerability, and the resilience of those people in that situation.

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To collect those materials, Minet visited the area along the Rio Grande border crossing with a biologist, and also met with activist and artist Scott Nicholl who provided her with materials such as Homeland Security bags, used to contain detained immigrants’ possessions.

The solo exhibition in Texas will fill a 60-foot gallery, and is site specific work that directly refers to McAllen’s position on the central flyway corridor.

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“There are three different avian flyways that converge in the area, and birds migrate down to Central and South America from there,” Minet notes. “But this is really a project that speaks about both avian and human migration… it came from researching the location, and in our current political climate, looking at migratory birds, I wanted to add the specific issues there in the fascinating liminal space of the borderlands.”

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Minet is intensely aware that the border is simply an imposition on the land, one that constrains not just humans but also animals in their natural migratory habitat. This dimension to her work is new for the artist; also new is a collaboration on lighting with Vaughn Hannon.

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“He worked with me to create programmable LED lights and animation and color. He’s responsible for that, for the know-how on motion sensors and sound. I’ve been working with LED lights and stringing them together, but this is the first time to make programmable lighting. We saw there and made up the animation – it was like painting with the lights,” she smiles.

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The glowing sculptures truly soar. Wish them well as they wing across the country to southeast Texas, and be sure to plan a visit when they make their own migration back to California again.

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For more information on Minet’s Migrations, visit

http://theimasonline.org/
http://cynthiaminet.com/

Get in the Huddle at Shoebox Projects

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You won’t want to miss Huddle #2.

Opening March 17th, the 2nd postcard art show at Shoebox Projects at the Brewery Art Lofts is the #equalityforall #resist postcard art show. Hosted by Shoebox Projects and Art and Cake and curated
by Kristine Schomaker, all work is donated to the show and sold for $25 each. 100% of proceeds will be donated equally to the ACLU, Planned Parenthood, and the Trevor Project. Payable by check, cahs, or card at the reception, you’ll get incredibly reasonably priced art, political action, and a warm and welcoming group of like-minded folks all rolled into one.

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According to Schomaker, “After the first Women’s March, they had a list of ten things you could do in a hundred days to support others and get the word out. One of the things was called a huddle. You get together with your community, invite people over and have a kind of get together to discuss other ways you can get your voices heard.  It is kind of like a weight being lifted off your shoulder. Just knowing you are not alone is huge.”

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From there, Schomaker decided that she without much time to volunteer – she is running several businesses and creating her own art – she decided to do a huddle that involved art. “It’s in my wheel house, it’s what do. And I thought about a post card show. Why not put the word out and far and wide, and have people all over the world send in post cards that have to do with equality. ”

With her first Huddle, Schomaker received 200 post cards with sales benefitting Planned Parenthood, the Trevor Project, and ACLU.

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“And it was just amazing to see these voices speaking out, it brought tears to my eyes to see we weren’t alone. So I had leftovers and I just found an opening in my schedule for the project space, and put out a call for more postcards. Now I have a couple hundred more and I am still waiting for more to come in the mail.”

Why choose mailing the postcards uncovered, and receiving postmarks on the work? “I wanted it to go through the USPO, I wanted the eyes of those government workers to see them.” However, she notes with a laugh, people still sent the cards in envelopes, ignoring her instructions.

Along with new works and more expanded origin points – including Texas, Madrid, Canada, and New York; the new show with a call for art which was promoted solely through social media, has one other change. Rather than a hard and fast payment, Schomaker decided “I’m saying a suggested donation of $25, I wanted anyone who wanted to buy one to buy one. That way we could sell more. Hopefully that will get people to buy them,” she explains.

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To have a handle on truth in the face of cultural gas-lighting, and to experience true community and know you’re not alone in these highly charged, polarized political times, head to Shoebox Projects on Saturday from 3-5 and go home with an inexpensive yet supremely valuable work of art and sense of belonging.

Shoebox Projects is located at 660 South Avenue 21 #3 in the Brewery in DTLA near Lincoln Heights.

Go.

  • Genie Davis; photos by Kristine Schomaker

Black is Back – at Loft at Liz’s

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With the stunning group show Black, at Loft at Liz’s through March 26th, the color glows, shines, and spills texture. Curated by gallery owner Liz Gordon, the exhibition reveals the ways in which this color is not just one rich, dark shade, but an entire palette of blackness, nuanced and thought-provoking.

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Like the spill of ink or a shimmering backdrop to stars, there is a wonderfully vast feeling to the work on display; in fact there is so much wonderful art that it spreads beyond the main gallery into a small section of Liz’s Antique Hardware store on the floor below.

This is the black of coffee, of night, of puddles, of lightless woods, of just-about-morning, of rain storms with thick clouds, of those perfect cocktail party dresses, of contrast – with pops of gold, red, and white. It is ice caves and moonless midnights, the bottom of a well, the ash from a fire.

You won’t know just how black and how varied black can be until you take in this show.

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Kelly Berg’s  sculptural wall art uses shards of mirror and plexiglass creating shining, physically and emotionally sharp works that remind one of chunks of hail, ice, or broken glass stabbing through the blackness; Berg also offers additional sculptural pieces which weave in color that reference the fashion industry, shoes and purses.

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Carlos Grasso’s mixed media works are a fascinating study in textural contrast, as are the volcanic, molten, obsidian-like works of Jeff Iorillo.

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Michael Hayden’s encaustics fall into a different sphere, layered, with  a golden, horizon-like light weaving in gold leaf and salvage.

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Veda B. Kaya creates swirling, abstract images in white and orange on her oil and acrylic works, patterns that evoke snowflakes and shimmer with both surface and hidden light.

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Andy Moses, also working in oil and acrylic, gives viewers large scale works with black backgrounds against which hypnotic white and blue patterns seem to move, slowly, to the viewers eye, as if they were ice flows.

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Lindsey Noble makes a pointed reference to the energy devoured by the cryptocurrency industry in her series of ribbed and webbed works, and in taking on that industry also evokes some of its shadowy, dark, deep beneath the ground “mining.”

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Miguel Osuna offers stunning textures, and in “Difficult Pleasure,” a rose pattern within his midnight black works.

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This is dizzying, fabric-like, highly textured work you could sink inside.

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Red and white faces and bodies pop like vampires or creatures born in darkness within Stefano Panichi’s large scale black backgrounds.

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And then there are the seductive and sinuous sculptural limbs created by Camilla Taylor. Cast from stoneware, lino-cut, ceramics and pewter, these are powerful pieces, haunting, dismembered, burnt, scarred, redeemed.

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This is a poetic and beautiful show, one that somehow, almost magically, carries the viewer deep within the heart of blackness, making viewers forget – or realize the fallacy of – the monochromatic color scheme.

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Above, Liz Gordon, curator and gallerist.

Black is back indeed – riven with passion – or perhaps it never left. It’s bold, it’s big, it’s gotta be seen.

Loft at Liz’s is located at 453 S. La Brea in mid-city.

  • Genie Davis; Photos by Genie Davis; additional photos: Carlos Grasso and Michael Hayden

 

 

Kim Kimbro: Magical Realism in Briar Rose or The Faerie’s Revenge

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The delicate beauty of Kim Kimbro’s work is never to be taken for granted.

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Her stunning depictions of creatures large and small: birds, polar bears, deer, horses – have, in this exhibition, just closed at Los Angeles Art Association, moved her intensely realistic yet undoubtedly magical and emphatic work to new subjects: humans.

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These particular humans are poised on a cusp of discovery, children approaching puberty, adolescents clinging to childhood and innocence and a pure belief in magic by a linear thread.

They are all soul, with backgrounds a delicate, luminous wash of color, in most cases indistinct. The central image of these children outgrowing childhood – yet retaining its beauty and freshness – remains the focus, both realistic and impressionistic, a web of color and light radiating from rosy skin and just out of sight.

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Whether swaddled in the cocoon of a down coat like an emerging butterfly; or shyly profiled in a gauzy dress with other dresses hanging in the background – choices, so many choices ahead – these beautiful, magical creatures, sleeping beauties about to emerge into the full, raw bloom of life, are memorably lovely and graceful.

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And yet, not quite among us, yet. Hiding an eye in a visual hide and seek with the viewer; floating against a sunrise-pink, suspended, sleeping, adrift; both considering and considered —  these images are magnetically potent.

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Kimbro’s work is finely attuned to both nature and the spirit – if there is a difference between the two, and the artist’s work infers that there may not be.

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It is life itself that she is celebrating, and the magic that makes it real.

Her work is a joy to see.

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Above, the artist with her own family of graceful, growing children.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Genie Davis