About Men at Castelli Art Space

About Men, closing July 13th at Castelli Art Space, offers the perfect balance to the #metoo era. Evocative, beautifully wrought works created about and by men offer a perceptive look at the masculine half of the species.

Curator Dale Youngman stresses that the group exhibit was created in honor of Fathers Day. “There is no deep intellectual backstory, but rather a look at how today’s society impacts the modern man.  What it is like to be a man today?  What do men think about, what drives them, interests them, worries them? What inspires them to select a particular subject, or is important enough to form the basis for their body of work? On a personal level – as a woman –  I often scratch my head and ask myself ‘What was he THINKING??'”
The exhibition includes works by 7 artists creating in a wide range of mediums.
Tom Garner Muscle Car oil on denim
Above and below, incredibly rich work from Tom Garner. Both hyper-realistic and dream-like, a reflection of California culture and a slice of life, the oil on denim “Muscle Car” is visceral and immersive, a literal and figurative window into a world.
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Luis Sanchez
Above and below, Luis Sanchez offers mixed media sculptures that dazzle with detail; a boy’s toybox of imagination that shapes creatures filled with motion and infused with a playful sense of fun. Cat imagry: major bonus. To Forte’s right: a collection of his paintings, which like the sculptures are powerfully frought with motion, and evoke mythological figures, Greek gods.
Luis Sanchez The Judge, The Spy, and the Buck Take a Tea
Above, “The Judge, The Spy, and The Buck Take A Tea.” Perfectly, minutely crafted, the calculated golden paint drips are indicative of a melting mask. Each of these elements, each personality perhaps, makes up a man. Strip off the artifice and you have disparate, even conflicting, sometimes merging, aspects that shape one soul.
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Above and below, Joe Forte. His mixed media works are vibrant with bright colors, and offer a poignant collage of insight into what makes a man tick – a passion for sports and beautiful women, sure, but also the fairytale they represent.
Joe Forte Old School (OG$)
Stuart Kusher Sketch Book mixed media
Above and below, Stuart Kusher’s mixed media “Sketch Book” is just that: a sketch of what’s in the artist’s mind and soul. From woman and dog to money and a dark and shadowy, dimensional masked figure, it’s a rich conglomeration of images that depict the jumble and profundity of an artist’s craft. Below, Kusher stands beside this piece and a lustrous gold sculptural work, revealing some of the depths and differences in his artwork.
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Patrick Donovan
Above and below, Patrick Donovan with his touching portraits of men. Infused with surrealist elements, these graceful works also riff on Renaissance style. The works are created using classical images that are beautifully detailed. Each image has a haunted quality, filled with an intrinsic sense of loss. Is any one man enough?
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Above and below , Bert-Esenherz’ with his large scale, monochrome “Len’s Men’s Club” is awash in noir mystery. His shadowy, faceless figures are both every man, and man in transition. What face do men – and does mankind – embrace?
Bert Esenherz Len's Mens Club acrylic on canvas
Below, Jack Avetisyan, “The Go Getter.” A wonderful mix of the surreal and representatitive, this painting gives us the working world, the chaotic mind, the white collar job, all skewered and revealed as one big cartoon. Avetisyan’s use of line is terrific, filled with power, humor, and the opposite: inaction, hidden fears. Only the cheerful white dog seems immune.

Jack Avetisyan The Go Getter

Fresh, insightful, and lovely, About Men is also about people, what it means to be human, and what it means to dream.

The gallery will host a closing event July 13th from 6 to 9 p.m. Castelli Art Space is located at 5428 Washington Blvd. in mid-city.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Dale Youngman

Jeffrey Sklan: His ELEGY Rocked Kopeikin Gallery and Rocks On

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Photographic artist Jeffrey Sklan presented a stellar exhibition at Kopeikin Gallery in the Culver City arts district last week. ELEGY offered beautiful and poignant images as a call to action against violence and mass shootings, and offered that call with grace and resonant, delicate botanical imagery. At his June 22nd opening, the gallery was packed with supporters for a lively opening.

Filled with a glowing light and using a deep, rich color palette that reflects the artist’s love for Baroque-era artists such as Rembrandt and Caravaggio, Sklan pays tribute to lives lost in mass killings and murders. The works are both radiant and lovely, solemn yet ethereal.

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The artist first exhibited this series at Photo LA in January; at Kopeikin, he added new images including those dedicated to Parkland student Sydney Aiello, Nipsey Hussle, (above) and celebrants of both Easter in Sri Lanka and Passover in Poway, California. They are glorious images, quietly lush.

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Sklan’s inspiring works are now moving on,  he says. “I’m starting to design a book of the images,” he relates. “And we are going to hang the show after July 12th at Finishing Concepts in Monterey Park.” While the exhibition is on display at that location, a documentary short film will be made about the work.

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Designed as a traveling show, Sklan relates that ELEGY will “most likely be exhibited at a university on the East Coast in the fall, and in North Dakota in the spring or summer of 2020.” As plans solidify, Sklan hopes ELEGY will continue to find new venues for future exhibitions. To defray  shipping and installation costs, limited edition fine art prints are for sale so that “even more people can view it, and, ideally, be inspired to remedy the wrongs they perceive in the communities where they live.” He adds “The message is simple: we are each, in our own way and according to our capacity, capable of affecting change.” 

The project began with a single image created after the Pulse nightclub shootings in Orlando, Fla. in June 2016, it truly took form for the artist following the July 2016 Bastille Day celebration in Nice during which 87 people were killed. He continues to add images as an homage that serve as both evocative rumination on the fragility of life, and an affirmation of the beauty of life itself. Filled with solace and beauty, Sklan’s photographs are filled with his passion for life as well as his awareness of how brief life can be.
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The artist explains “This project is no longer mine. It belongs to every community memorialized. It belongs to the families whose loved ones are honored. It belongs to those who want to change their world. There has never been any other motive for me in this. The edition of prints is intentionally small: my net proceeds will always go back to defray transportation, insurance, and exhibition costs.” He suggests viewers reach out “if your school, entity, or gallery would be a good fit to exhibit this.”

Finishing Concepts, where the show will next be viewable in the Southland, is located at 1230 Monterey Pass Rd.; stay tuned for updates as to hours and dates. For more information on purchasing prints and supporting the exhibition, visit the artist’s website store, here. Or contact the artist direction at jeffreysklan@aol.com

– Genie Davis; photos Genie Davis, and provided by the artist.