Heaven on Earth Takes on the Corporate Culture

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Manfred Manz’ Heaven on Earth: Imperialistic Evolution of the Corporate World,  at CMay Gallery through August 31st, gives viewers a vision about all-too-real messages in the clouds.
Upending the viewer with images of bucolic  scenery and quiet roads, the cloudscapes reveal commercial messages that seem to explore the soullessness of our corporate-driven culture and its constant advertising.
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The idea of product placement in tent-pole motion pictures seems quaint compared with today’s all-encompassing corporate advertising. In this exhibition, the artist presents a disturbing future that has to a large extent already overtaken us.
As timely as it is haunting, the exhibition begs for discussion. On August 24th, the artist will conduct a walkthrough and talk about his own messaging with Shana Nys Dambrot, who composed an essay for the exhibition that intriguingly discusses the “pernicious intrusiveness and low key mind control perpetrated by the corporations that rule the world.”
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Menz’ work is both satiric and astute, using simple images to incorporate our complacent buy-ins to corporate sponsorship, advertising, promotion, and ownership. It would come as no surprise if Amazon actually advertised its near monopoly on the white fluffy clouds above us; or if Nike put it’s footprint on the sky.
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Presented as a series of 14 photographs, Menz looks at clouds as if they were corporate billboards flashing their moving images and familiar logos in advertisements.  We see Coca-Cola on a fluffy white cloud; American Airlines advertised on chemtrails, Netflix taking over a growing nimbus cloud much as the service obliterated video stores and conventional media viewing. Binge watch Menz’ warning, a cautionary tale as sharply observed and amusing as it is terrifyingly true.
Our politicians are brands, some of them as toxic as weed killer; our prediliction for the consumption of products define us; Amerika is the land of the corporate shill. All in all, it is one small leap to a bar code for the soul.
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Menz is not new to creating a satiric view of a prescient subject: a previous exhibition, the Invisible Project, presented images with flora and fauna surrounding nothingness, their famous man-made landmarks, such as the Spanish Steps, not-seen above, obliterated.
Before being scanned into the Big Lots of life, take in the surrealism, wit, and darkness of Menz’ powerful new exhibition and the insightful talk this Saturday — and take the first step in resisting the corporate entities that insidiously engulf our consciousness.
CMay Gallery is located in mid-city at 5828 Wilshire Blvd. in Los Angeles.
– Genie Davis; photos provided by the gallery

Joy Ray: There’s a Darkness on the Edge of Light

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Artist Joy Ray wants viewers to know that she’s “kind of obsessed with the end of the world. Everything seems a bit precarious right now, and I find myself thinking: what if it all goes sideways?”

If it does, the deep, lush, and highly sculptural works in her new Postapocalyptic Petroglyphs series, set to debut September 7th at Launch LA, will at least prepare viewers for the end of days with beauty and grace.

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She relates “This stuff is pretty dark, but I’ve been thinking lately that it’s also optimistic: the desire to leave a mark indicates a faith that there will be someone around left to find it, to care.”

Works that she categorizes as artifacts, talismans, portals, and hieroglyphs are their own mysteries, each alluring, somewhat enigmatic, and magical.

“In my new body of work, I merge paint and textiles to create what I think of as mysterious artifacts from the end – or maybe the rebirth – of civilization. I explore how visual communication might be used in dire situations: to communicate covertly with others, to communicate with the gods, casting spells, or as a way of documenting history,” she says.

Ray’s work has evolved over the years from an artistic journey that began with what she calls “typical embroidery materials: hoops, self-made patterns, traditional stitches. But I started feeling like this was too rational, methodical and slow. I wanted to incorporate spontaneity, speed, and emotion into textile/fiber art.” With that in mind, she created her own vocabulary of stitches and began incorporating mixed media materials such as paint, plaster, sand, paper, chalk, “even burnt toast. Hand-sewing and fiber materials remain a central component of my work, but I think of what I do now as ‘textile paintings.’”

Joy Ray - Artifact (the vow)

She creates work that is both intellectually and materially dense. According to Ray, “I’m very interested in creating 2D works that have a sculptural, physical quality. Lately I’ve been mixing construction sand with house paint to ‘concretize’ my canvasses, then deconstructing and reconstructing them to resemble hides. I use roving (loose wool) and bulky yarn to make patterns and symbols. I paint over the top of those with layers of thick gel mediums.”

The layering itself feels fused with tension and seems to represent an exposure of an almost geological slice of the soul. Perhaps it does.

“There’s something really terrifying and liberating about spending dozens of hours hand-sewing something, only to paint over the top of it,” Ray notes.

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While each work is densely layered, the artist paints in minimal colors, still shaping a complete emotional palette. Ray explains “Like Pierre Soulages, I’m drawn to black, plus grayscale and a bit of red. This is both an aesthetic preference, a nod to the punk/goth aesthetic I grew up with, and a way to access the intuitive state in which I seek to work. I’m very interested in the role of chaos and accident and intuition in artmaking, like Brion Gysin and the automatic embroidery of Jeanne Tripier.”

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A resident of both the Big Island of Hawaii and Los Angeles, it is not the vivid flora and fauna of either location that speak through her art, but rather the “stark and volcanic” landscape of parts of the Big Island. “Large areas are uninhabited, covered with old lava flows. When the Kilauea volcano was erupting last year, I found myself thinking a lot about what lies beneath the old flows, what communities and lives have been buried over the centuries,” Ray attests. “I’m fascinated that while the ground beneath our feet seems stable, actually it’s just a thin shell over a cauldron of magma that can burst out at any time. It speaks to the power of things that are unseen, lying just below the surface.”

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The power of the unseen is what viewers may feel in viewing Ray’s current work. There is something both alchemic and tribal in her approach and in the finished works. There appear to be layers within layers, not just texturally, but with elliptical meaning seething just out of reach, ready to emerge in the fullness of time.

“What influences me most about living on the Big Island are depth and layers, hidden energetic forces and latent destruction. Just because we can’t see something, doesn’t mean it’s not there,” she relates.

Ray’s self-described interest in secret worlds, the archeological, and even the occult is an outgrowth of what she calls her long-standing fascination with mysterious things, including lost languages, secret societies, cults, and ancient ruins.

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“There are petroglyphs all over the Big Island, but no one is really sure what they mean, or why they were made. It’s so interesting to think about dreams, the afterlife, ghost stories, magic—are these real? It’s not always possible to know the truth,” she says. “I love the feeling of existing in the presence of mystery.”

And that is a presence Ray herself shapes, an alluring one to viewers, and one that will be visible in upcoming exhibitions throughout Los Angeles.

Ray will be sharing the exciting two-artist exhibition Beyond/Within at Launch LA with Samuelle Richardson; also ahead are New School Abstract, at Shockboxx in Hermosa Beach; and Art Under Cover: A Top Secret Art Show at Shoebox Projects, Los Angeles.

  • Genie Davis; photos supplied by the artist

Tasty Street Food Cinema Ahead

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Now in its eighth season, Street Food Cinema offers the largest outdoor movie series in LA, with over 50 films this year, and will be finishing up its 2019 season October 26th.

In short, there’s no time like the present to enjoy a long summer season at one of the many iconic settings where Street Food Cinema hosts its film events. With venues ranging from Will Rogers State Historic Park in the Pacific Palisades to Beverly Hills’ Pan Pacific Park, the L.A. Arboretum in Arcadia, and on to Manhattan Beach, Pasadena, Culver City, DTLA, Glendale, and Eagle Rock, late summer and fall should be ideal times to take in an outdoor flick no matter where you reside in the Southland.

 

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Founded in 2012 by the husband and wife team of Heather Hope Allison and Steve Allison, cineaphiles love the top-notch tech production that includes high-definition DLP projection on a 50′ screen with QSC speakers and subs.Attendees enjoy food trucks, live music, interactive games and of course a wide range of film choices every Saturday night.  

The Allison team, operating under their company name of Til Productions, have recently expanded to Phoenix and San Diego, and hope to continue expanding their new-concept of “dinner and a movie” to other cities, soon.

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The food trucks on offer are just as eclectic as the films and locations, including everything from cutting edge Chinese to donuts worthy of the designation “lush.” You’ll find choices such as Cousins Maine Lobster, Pinch of Flavor, and The Fat Queso; there’s excellent Kettle Corn, too.

Dine while musical artists perform before the film, including hot local acts like Katie Welch and So Many Wizards scheduled for the current season.

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This Saturday, we’ll be getting our inner space geek on with a screening at the Downtown Historic Park on the edge of Chinatown. The grassy setting offers a sparkling spread of city lights as a backdrop to a big-screen presentation of the Star Wars series classic, Episode V, The Empire Strikes Back. Also on the bill, the guitar-pop sound of The Flusters. The band played at Coachella in 2016.

Elsewhere in LA this weekend, Monsters Inc. will screen in Griffith Park along with a musical performance from The Eiffels.

On Sunday the 11th, Breakfast at Tiffany’s will add sparkle to the Heritage Square Museum grounds in Santa Monica.

Whether your cinematic tastes run more Fight Club or more toward a double feature of Toy Story 2 and 3, or the pulsing score of Bohemian Rhapsody, it’s time to take a taste of the eclectic Street Food Cinema.

Find the full schedule here. And stay tuned for our on-site review.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Street Food Cinema

Looking Ahead: Echo Lew and Chenhung Chen in Time. Timeless. at OCCCA

 

Coming September 7th through 28th at the Orange County Center for Contemporary Art in Santa Ana, Time. Timeless features the fluid and ethereal works of Chenhung Chen and Echo Lew. The exhibition offers a look at the fascinating repeating patterns that comprise the universe, turning the prosaic features of daily life into a profound experience.

 

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Los Angeles-based international contemporary artist Echo Lew creates meditative work that immerses the viewer in a world of lines, time, and light. In this exhibition, Lew continues his exploration of the mysterious and wondrous link between time and line. He posits a mesmerizing link between the chance arrangements of hair on paper with the gestures of dancers and lights captured in his previous series of photographic work.

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Using a single strand of his own fallen hair on a 6-inch square, he creates swirling, sinuous images that reflect the same sense of magical movement that his photographic works depicted. But here, rather than catching the long exposure of moving lights with his camera, Lew shapes almost ethereal lines from his hair, lines as varied and similar as each day of the year. The prolific artist worked daily for 365 days to create a single image using this unusual medium.

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He was drawn to this work through the vicissitudes of time itself. According to Lew “Time is my style.” Citing his practice of Zen Buddhism and daily meditation, he has taken the modern habit of creating timelines and both interpreted and subverted it into an evolving and intimate take on the power of the line itself, on the body’s aging process, and the spiritual movement of the human soul.

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That rigorous discipline is paired perfectly with Lew’s view of art as “an experimental adventure, a profound form of play.”

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Above photo by Jeffrey Sklan

Also based in Los Angeles, Chen uses mixed media to express both her fascination with American DIY culture and her perception of the inner existence. While Lew works exclusively with one medium, Chen uses many recycled materials in her three-dimensional work, including copper wire, cable, and electronic and computer components that harness power just as humans are conduits of their own spiritual power. As Chen notes “The cable conducts electricity, just as humans do…we are conduits of that Power.”

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Both artists offer insightful, disciplined, yet richly playful works that radiate  concepts of time, line, and a world outside human comprehension.

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OCCCA is located at 117 N. Sycamore Street in Santa Ana: the opening reception, from 6-10 p.m. September 7th takes place in conjunction with the Santa Ana Artwalk.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artists