Whew Chile the Ghetto: An Immersive Experience at TAG Gallery

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Los Angeles-based artists Rakeem Cunningham and Ramon Espinosa created a cutting edge series of photographic works, installation, and mixed media last month in their Whew Chile the Ghetto, exhibited in TAG Gallery’s loft space. The space was given to Cunningham – who works as a gallerist at TAG – with no restrictions from gallery’s board. Free to shape a true passion project, together the two created an immersive and fresh look at queer, non-white bodies and viewers interactions with them, and all art.

It sounds like a lot to take on, but the pair shaped a riveting, memorable exhibition literally packed with color, life, and emotion.

The show’s title comes from a much-memed video clip of Nene Leakes walking through the streets of Atlanta while saying “Whew chile! The ghetto!” The phrase has been adapted as a response to a wide range of experiences by younger people of color – and here, by Cunningham and Espinosa to shape the frustration of being a queer person of color in the art world, and their ghettoization within that world.

The result: a vibrant, layered, series of images that sinks in slowly for the viewer and then lingers with a resonant impact. And – a show that’s bright, absorbing, and richly entertaining, too.

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Cunningham relates “The overall idea for this exhibition was exploring the humanity in queer bodies, and in my case, a queer, black body. I really wanted to take the concept and the idea of ‘the ghetto,’ as this space that is actually something to be admired and honored. I grew up in Sylmar and Pacoima in the San Fernando Valley, and these aren’t areas that have art galleries around. The population is largely black and latinx peoples and I wanted to focus in and take what makes that place and ‘the ghetto’ special, and create images and work to uplift that.”

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He adds that once Espinosa came on board, the project expanded to “taking a look at how the art world really condemns and looks down on these spaces. We wanted to uplift the space and our queer family in a way that felt genuine to us, but also allowed us to vent out frustrations with how we’ve been treated in navigating the art world. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve seen people not take the time to learn how to pronounce the names of artists of color or spell them wrong in emails. I’ve seen black artists work be called ‘primitive,’ and I’ve had my work be downplayed because of where I’m from, or because I didn’t grow up with an arts education. I wanted to say f*&k all of that, and honor and do what I know and love.”

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The vibrant colors and layered look of the exhibition added to the intensity of emotion that the subjects conveyed for the artists. The show was Cunningham’s first in LA, but undoubtedly not his last. “I wanted it to pay homage to my past and present in order to look towards the future,” he asserts.

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Cunningham says he hesitates to tell people what to take away from the show, but he does want viewers to start thinking about who the gatekeepers are for what is considered “‘art with a capital a,’ and how that history has excluded queer artists like myself and Ramon. How that history has excluded black artists, women artists, trans artists, and honestly art from any group that doesn’t fit in the ‘main historical art canon,’ and how that affects marginalized groups.”

In short, those hearing – and seeing – his artistic voice should consider why they haven’t heard it before.

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The artist and curator also asked viewers to consider the value of certain art objects and precisely why some are held in “high esteem.” He wanted the exhibition to allow for the questioning of institutions, life, relationships, and the idea of creating a space in places that artists have contributed to yet felt excluded from.

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Asked his favorite work in the exhibition, Cunningham cites the installation he positioned on the farthest wall of the loft space.  Indeed its layers are rich and varied, and viewers could easily, in a good way, get lost in the dynamics of it. It successfully creates a full world, and a riveting one.

“Installation is a new avenue for me,” he notes, describing the end result as “really getting to see a half used tub of Vaseline juxtaposed next to a copy of Final Fantasy, next to a photograph that took 45 minutes to setup and take – and that’s next to a picture of me on my old basketball team – and the connections go on and on,” he asserts. “There’s literally so much going on that you have to sit with it for a good while to notice certain things. And there’s even things that viewers have pointed out to me that I might not have noticed myself.”

Cunningham refers to the piece as being a “shrine-like clusterf*&k of materials.” He says he loves it because “it’s so messy, like myself. I also really loved Ramon’s work, especially the series of pieces titled to prop because it’s this cheeky response to people saying his work is so precious and needs to be framed,” he explains. “So he literally just painted wood and propped it up as a ‘frame.’  And on top of that, they’re placed in a part of the room where it’s easy to trip over them,” Cunningham laughs. “During the reception a friend of ours got drunk and knocked it over, and we both laughed so hard, because we love work that messes with the viewer.”

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  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Rakeem Cunningham

Dive into “Life in this Ocean” at the Annenberg Community Beach House

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Get ready to dive into Life in this Ocean, an exhibition of artists opening at the Annenberg Community Center this weekend. Co-curated by exhibiting artists Deirdre Sullivan-Beeman and Kathy Taslitz, the exhibition also features work by Donna Bates and Lena Rushing.

A hauntingly beautiful show, the images seem awash in the light and motion of the sea. The Annenberg makes the perfect setting for an exhibition that references the ocean, which addresses themes of female empowerment, community, and culture – as well as offering up a wide range of images and styles.

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History, nature, daydreams all infuse the works, that feature women persevering, struggling, dreaming, and conquoring. Each of the artists offer their own take on the female experience, serving up work as diverse as it is rich. Figurative images range from seaside settings to urban environments; mediums are equally varied.

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Sullivan-Beeman’s delightful modified oil and egg tempera works are infused with a golden aura, alight from within. Exuding both this inner light and a dream-like quality, Sullivan-Beeman’s work is both perfectly figurative and surreal; in her “Seahorse Girl,” the artist creates a lovely, classically clad young woman in conversation with an oversize seahorse opening a treasure chest. As fantastical as the image is, it’s grounded in realism – the treasure is ours for the taking if we believe in ourselves – and our own inner magical seahorse, perhaps. Mystical and alchemic, Sullivan-Beeman’s work is haunting and spiritual – and quintessentially, powerfully feminine.

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The artist has expressed that the “qualities that girls possess” is an inspiration to her. Full of life and power, unafraid, “The era of the girl is now,” Sullivan-Beeman says. Perhaps this belief has never been more powerful than today, as the political and judicial battlefield erupts with #metoo stories. But putting external forces aside, the girls in Sullivan-Beeman’s works also represent the internal aspects of the artist herself, her subconscious, her dreams, demons, and angels. She describes her work as creating every aspect of herself, and painting images that depict each of these aspects or girls within herself.

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“Selfie Esteem” by Kathy Taslitz provides a strong contrast. Here are firmly grounded images of a group of friends facing toward us as if in a selfie; the image is positioned on an aluminum smiley-face emoji on which is superimposed text of visual and character traits. Taslitz says she creates art that explores human interconnection with input from nature and technology. Hers are bold and humorous images, too.

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With “War Paint and Curlers 02,”  Donna Bates gives viewers a look at a woman defiant, ready as is to fight and sustain herself. She can take on the universe if she has to, and win. With a golden crown suspended above her head, a lush heavenly sky behind her, and an apple with one bite in her hand, the image evokes female images from Eve to Snow White. Bates describes her work as speaking to women’s rights and struggles and depicting strong, sexy, powerful “bad-ass chicks.”

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“There’s Always One” by Lena Rushing gives us a delicately rendered woman in pink and white, peering down into a sea in which some very strange pink and white sea creatures are seemingly snapping up at her, allowing her to tame them. Their somewhat phallic shape cannot be a coincidence. Rushing’s work is graceful, precise, and in this work evokes art deco style. 

In short: Sullivan-Beeman and Taslitz are terrific curators – and this is a richly pertinent show as well as a beautiful one.

The Annenberg Community Beach House is located at 415 Pacific Coast Highway, Santa Monica, CA 90402 on the west side of Pacific Coast Highway. For more information including parking details:  https://www.annenbergbeachhouse.com/ 

The exhibition opens Saturday the 29th with a reception from 2 to 4 p.m., the gallery itself stays open until 5:30. An artists talk is scheduled for November 1st.

– Genie Davis; photos provided by the artists 

Gilena Simons: Artist and Local Leader Joins California Heritage Museum Board

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Assemblage artist, entrepreneur, and local business and community leader Gilena Simons has joined the board of the California Heritage Museum in Santa Monica.

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Photo of Simons above, credit Lisa Margolis

Simons, both a longtime-supporter of the arts and history lover, is  a natural fit for the board. “After founding my vintage shop, TATABA on Main Street and moving to Santa Monica, I joined the board of the Main Street Business Improvement Association to help with its mission of building and nurturing partnerships to improve and enhance the quality of work and life in our neighborhood.  Joining the board of the California Heritage Museum seemed a natural next step, both as a way to help fulfill this mission and direct my passion for art and history,” she attests.  “Plus, I live four blocks from the museum and can walk there,” she laughs.

Simons has been involved in the museum for only a few months as a board member, but says she’s already witnessed “significant steps toward a more vibrant museum.  As a board member, my first priority is raising funds so we can provide more community involvement and more frequent exhibits.  We’ve recruited three new board members so far, and are always looking for more passionate, enthusiastic people to further these goals,” she says.

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Above, John Haley watercolor from a recent museum exhibition.

Asked of plans to raise awareness for the museum, she responds  “This interview is one of the ways to raise awareness…  I can’t tell you how many times in the past few months I’ve encountered locals who didn’t know where the museum is or if it’s still open. By strengthening bonds with community associations (OPA) and the merchants on Main Street, we can make the museum more vibrant and accessible to both tourists and locals.”

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The museum, located on Main Street at Ocean Park Blvd., opened in 1979, and is located in an historic 1894 structure that was originally built as a seaside home.

According to Simons, the museum’s programming includes both contemporary local art and exhibits of the culture of California, including surfers, skaters and tattoo artists.  She notes “I am working closely with longtime executive director Tobi Smith to continue to provide quality exhibits that mine the rich fabric of California. In the future, we hope to have more events at the museum including a book club and dance nights,” she adds.

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And speaking of events, the museum’s annual flea market is a well-known one – a month long occasion that’s running now through the 21st of October. The market serves as a major fundraiser for the museum.

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Simons is enthusiastic about the flea market.  “Oh now, you know I love a great flea market! Ours is the best ever and you never know what you will find.  Because it lasts an entire month, the selection changes as more donations are brought in, and so we frequently have repeat visitors scooping up amazing art, books, clothing, jewelry and more.”

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The fundraiser also makes a great time to to “clean out your or your grandmother’s garage and help a very worthy cause,” Simons suggests. “We always accept donations during business hours, which are Wednesday to Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., and we’re a 501c3 organization, making all donations tax deductible.”

Finds at the flea market are varied and unique. “We sold a set of four beautiful stained glass windows to a lovely couple redoing their Craftsman home. We’ve had a unique chess set, great vintage clothes, and doll houses. You never know what you will find – that’s what makes it so much fun.”

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Simons is excited to be on the board, and wants to see the museum grow and thrive. “I want it to be the gathering space it once was, and a true asset to the community.  This all takes time and resources.  Again, we are looking for people passionate about art, history, and, most importantly, fundraising, to make all of this happen,” she says.

Being on the board dovetails with Simons’ own beautiful, evocative dollhouse art. She calls being a part of the museum “a joy.  As an assemblage artist who works with old tiny treasures, I can’t imagine a better fit.  I would love to have a show/sale of them to benefit the museum, so look for that coming soon.”

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Simons relates that “My work deals with history, memory, heritage and not disgarding things. This is all an emotional thing for me in my own personal family drama, the idea that you are treasured then gone. My art is all about providing homes for little things,” she says.

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“We hold onto our little treasures. We may shove them in a drawer but we don’t throw them away. My art is about bringing out those treasures so you can see them and share them. I curate and I edit…to make something beautiful that can be seen every day. That’s where my heart is.”

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Her magical minatures are based on honoring once-treasured vintage items, and her committment to providing new homes for lost or forgotten things.

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Simons recently exhibited some of her work at the Museum of Art and History in Lancaster, and last March held an exhibit at her own shop, TATABA. Currently on hiatus, the highly curated vintage shop will move to its new address at 2914 Main Street in April 2019.

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She’s jubilant to have just received her permit to historically restore renovate her new location. Having purchased the building, she’s excited to create a space that she hopes will have a friendly and communal vibe that fits the community. Once renovations are complete, her new location will house an art gallery featuring underrepresented and local artists – with an emphasis on assemblage art – and a rotating selection of vintage home décor and fashion.

In the meantime, Simons is throwing herself into her new role at the California Heritage Museum, where there’s little doubt she’ll find more historic treasures to cherish and display.

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Above photo, Tim Bomba

The California Heritage Museum is located at 2612 Main Street in Santa Monica. For more information about the museum and its flea market fundraiser, visit www.californiaheritagemuseum.org 

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by artist or credited above

 

 

 

Gay Summer Rick: Transporting Viewers in Beauty

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Gay Summer Rick is a quintessentially Los Angeles artist. It is in her color palettes, in her images, in the innate glow of her work. Even when she is not creating works that epitomize Southern California, her LA-state-of-mind fuses her images with something recognizable, wonderful, and soulfully West Coast.

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She says “The work will likely transport the viewer to a very calm and quiet place. My paintings are impressions from moments on my journey. I have discovered an unexpected beauty in commonplace elements within the urban landscape.” She adds “Once I took the time to really see and experience that, the tension associated with being stuck in the middle of the freeway, or circling over a city for landing, endless delays, noise, etcetera, the positive elements outweighed those stressors and beauty won.”

Rick says that her color palette changes depending on where she hopes to take the viewer and the feelings she wants to share.

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“I have a thousand images running through my head that I know I will paint. They are the impressions I have taken with me of moments in time in places I’ve been, primarily throughout Los Angeles and New York.”

Sometimes the paintings are saturated in color, and warm, and sometimes they are muted with light, and cool, she relates. “It just depends on what feeling I was left with from that moment in time, and what I would like to share with the viewer from that experience.”

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Rick says she’s always lived on one coast or another, east or west. “There’s something about the moisture in the air where cities meet the sea, the diffusion of light through mist that, for me, has a calming effect. Being at the ocean gives me the ability to tune everything else out, breathe, and focus.” 

This sense of simply breathing and being is intangible and yet present, a thread of communion with the viewer through her work.

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“Perhaps it has something to do with the scientific phenomenon of the ‘Blue Space’ effect and the change in negative ions from open water. The coast has always had this effect on me, and this carries into my work. From my studio I can see the bay, and even in my cityscapes that quality is definitely present in my work.”

She embraces a sense of peace in her process and her creation.  “As loud as the city or the ocean may be, the light and atmosphere that comes through in my work is always quiet and calm. There’s something about the water. I’m drawn to it.”

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Rick has a new body of work opening October 13th at bG Gallery’s new location on Ocean Park Blvd. at 30th in Santa Monica. Titled Skyways and Highways, her new body of work includes her well-known urban and coastal atmospheric land and cityscapes, but includes images culled from “the sky with a window-seat view over the landscape. The view is gorgeous up there,” she enthuses.

Her inspiration for this body of work came in part from a change in flight patterns over the past year that found her looking up at air traffic and shaking her head, initially.

“I’d be sitting in a friend’s backyard in Los Angeles and we would have to stop talking because jets were flying low in this new concentrated pattern overhead. But then I thought about how my view of highway traffic changed as I began to notice just how beautiful the view from the highway really was, with headlights and tail lights, the colors of road signage, and the silhouettes of palms, power lines, and light poles against the sky…So, I thought about my most memorable trips, looked back through many photos and video from flights I had taken, and I even rerouted some planned travel, carefully choosing which side of the plane on which to sit, to ensure that I had the best window-seat views over places I thought I might like to paint.”

She adds “When I look at these paintings I feel like I am traveling. For me it is almost Zen-like.”

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Along with this upcoming show, Rick currently has paintings of fireworks and surfers in a group exhibition, Love in Color 2 at Art Project Paia on Maui in Hawaii, which runs through November. She’ll also be a part of a group exhibition, Out and About, opening this coming weekend, September 22nd at Rebecca Molayem Gallery on Fairfax in Los Angeles. 

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As to the dreamlike nature of her work that many viewers note, she says “Because it is all about capturing the feeling of a particular moment from some place I’ve been, I include elements that make a place recognizable, sometimes by only a small detail. It is never an exact representation, but it is exactly my impression of a moment in time.”

In regard to her process, Rick stresses that her work makes use of an environmentally responsible process. “I use oil paint and palette knives to create my paintings. No brushes, no toxic solvents. This process not only helps me tell a visual story through layers of paint that create a history and a certain vibration in the juxtaposition of colors, it also helps me achieve a goal of being a good steward of the environment.” It takes the artist one to three months to complete a painting.

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Asked for a few words that describes her work best, Rick considers before replying “Calm. Quiet. Mnemonic. And, I’ll throw another in because I keep hearing it from people when standing in front of the work: luminous.”

Come feel the glow.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist and by Genie Davis