Artist Clovis Blackwell Creates Transformative Layers of Color

Clovis Blackwell works in layers of color, thematically focusing on redemption and transformation amid apocalyptic images of change. If you haven’t quite grasped that, all you need to do is look at lovely yet unsettling works that Blackwell says were “inspired a lot by my childhood during the late Cold War, when the fears of nuclear war collided with sci-fi/fantasy and 80’s pop-culture.” He adds “A lot of the way I was exposed to this reality around me was through this rehashing of heroic myths often in a post-apocalyptic setting. In grad school I was exposed to Joseph Campbell and began to employ this apocalyptic imagery to my explorations of suffering/transformation.”

His layers of screen printing are inspired, he says, by William Burroughs and his use of the cut-up method. “There may be some differences between our intents, but that process has stuck with me since learning about his work during my undergrad.”

Blackwell’s work has evolved over the years, but one constant is his sense of being deeply connected to his art, and through it, seeking to express an idea important to him personally. “In the early 2000’s I began [to be] pretty ill with rheumatoid arthritis, and then had some other family losses over the next few years. It was an intense and painful time for me, and the work that came out of it was exploring suffering, and the feelings I had of being incapacitated or even incarcerated in my own body. That work was self-portraiture using pencil drawing and gold leaf inside of found boxes.”

He terms those images “heavy and sincere” but relates that it didn’t capture is complete persona. During graduate school he began to explore ideas of invincible superheroes and super villains, which he saw as Super-Clovis and Anti-Clovis. It was an exploratory phase in his work, as he examined everything from “commerce/commercialism, Jungian psychology, comparative mythology …all still rooted in coming to terms with how I dealt with suffering. Like the previous body of work, I was employing my own body/image, but doing so in a wide variety of media: screen printing, internet art, photography, performance art, sculpture, installation, merchandise.”

When his son was born, Blackwell saw another significant change in his life, and while he joked that his own world had ended, he stopped using his own image and turned to work that had more commonality with viewers, yet still examining the idea of suffering or loss leading to transformation. “This coincided with further reading of Joseph Campbell and a more detailed examination of my childhood, trying to make sense of growing up during that unique time. In 2010, I started working with the mushroom cloud by drawing it in bright floral colors. That year I also began teaching screen printing at a local university and so I focused my creative efforts into this discipline in order to improve my mastery of it,” he attests.

Most recently, he’s begun to mirror his printer layers either “on a vertical axis, or by adding more and more layers to further obscure the image. I really enjoy the ‘Rorschach effect’ that happens from the symmetry, and especially the response from my audience—I love to hear what people see into the work,” he attests.

He has also worked images using a lush complexity of beads, a medium he attests that he loves, and plans to use again.


He hopes that through his work, he can guide viewers to “reach conclusions that were helpful to me. That we sometimes go through painful experiences, but that we are not alone in this, that it is a universal experience, and that if we are open to it, we can change and grow through it. I try to make my work pretty for this reason. To make it easy to look at.” Ultimately, he’d like those viewing his work to be able spend time with it, and “absorb the idea of transformation into a daily routine.”

Blackwell thinks of his art in cycles. “I might at times explore the highs or the lows of transformation and redemption both equally important parts of a cycle. Joseph Campbell wrote about Emanations and Dissolutions, and I’ve included these terms in the titles for my pieces. I define them in this way: Emanations are things coming into being, and Dissolutions are things coming undone. This cycle may be as small as a delicate flower, as large as the universe itself, or it may be our own lifespan. This gives me lots of room to play while staying within these thematic bounds.”

Using images of flowers and nuclear explosions are both lovely and potent takes on apocalypse and change.  Blackwell explains these choices as something he feels compelled to make. “When I started working with the mushroom cloud image we seemed to be at a low point with nuclear proliferation, but then things heated up with Russia, Iran, North Korea, and China…so that changed the context of already very loaded imagery. This may have factored into my use of that vertical symmetry, which obscures the mushroom cloud imagery a bit.”



Despite expressing fervent hopes for lasting and positive changes in society, he is aware that the world has to some extent caught up with his art. “Now we’re in what feels like an actual apocalyptic event, and so I suppose there’s some potential for timeliness. I do hope that we can come out of this as a society and make some lasting and positive changes.”

Blackwell’s work is immersive and dream-like, a blend of dreamy evolution and a transition point from nightmare to positive awakening. He thinks of himself as an interdisciplinary artist despite a focus on screen printing.

“I’m really driven by process and learning new ways to make art, and the specific contexts each disciple brings, is always exciting to me. Screen printing keeps challenging me though, so I keep going deeper. Honestly, no other medium has held so many continuous surprises for me.”  


Blackwell’s compelling, redemptive work can be viewed in an upcoming solo show in 2021 with Shoebox Projects; don’t miss.  

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist

Valerie Wilcox: In a Year Where Nothing Seemed Possible – “A Bridge to Possibilities II”

Mixed media artist Valerie Wilcox works with common, salvaged materials creating what she calls “connections between our everyday lives and ideas about how we construct our physical and psychological space. I like to push the surreal with ambiguous shapes that hover between a two-dimensional plane and a three-dimensional structure.”

Her dimensional works play with space and perception, using the effects of light and shadow. She turns the objects with which she shapes her work into canvasses of sorts, emphasizing the materials as well as the painted and textured surfaces she creates.

“I form these hybrid dimensional constructions/paintings using discards, found elements and humble materials. Ideals of perfection versus inherent human fallibility are fundamental in my work. I embrace the mistakes,” she says.

Following the ideology of Wabi Sabi and the acceptance and beauty of transience and imperfection, she rejoices in the anomalies arising from the process of construction, she relates, saying they add elegance to the final work.

Wilcox says she is always experimenting with different materials throughout Constructs, her continuing body of work, enjoying the freedom to explore a wide variety of materials. “I started working with found discards and humble materials when I found myself with a lot of remnants leftover from my design work and previous projects. I was looking for the opportunity and resources to develop more sculptural 3D compositions while still working as a painter.” She adds “This way of working continually opens up new possibilities…Starting with the materials becomes e a meditation on form and shape. It’s like working with puzzle pieces that don’t fit together, but at some point, they make themselves awkwardly happy collaborators.”

Wilcox used these techniques in creating a vast commissioned piece, “A Bridge to Possibilities II.”

Creating the work, she employed her usual process, with one large difference involved: she had to start from scratch with the pieces she used to create it, as she had no scrap to work with and she needed to do specific design sketches for approvals, and pieces cut to fit the layout.

“This is not how I normally work,” Wilcox attests. “I’m very process oriented and usually start from the inspiration that the materials provide me, not from a pre-ordained design.”

The biggest challenge however was creating an extremely large work in her studio space. “The sculpture was made with 26 individual pieces combined to make the finished size of about 6 ft x 17 ft. I made it in 4 sections so it could be easier to transport and install.”

Because her studio isn’t large enough to work on all the pieces together, she purchased three 6 ft. tables and set them up in her home’s tandem garage. Using this system, she could paint the work all together when laid out flat.

According to the artist, “It was a new challenge for me to work this large, however, because of the way I work in general, which is to work on the separate pieces first and then combine them together, I was able to work like a production line and prepare the individual pieces separately in my studio and in the garage. In order to see how the piece was working and provide progress photos to the client, I had to lay it out in our driveway and shoot it from our rooftop to get it all in one photo.” Next time, perhaps, a drone.

While many of the techniques she used to create the work remained consistent with her work on other pieces, in this case she used a stronger but just as lightweight material called Gator Board to make the work easier to install.

“I also worked with a fabricator to create a wood cleat system on the back for hanging. They did the installation using a matching cleat system on the wall. This was hung in 4 sections that fit into each other like puzzle pieces,” she says.

The piece was commissioned through an art consultancy formed hired by a New York-based designed firm that renovated the hotel. The team liked Wilcox’ original “A Bridge to Possibilities,” and sough a larger iteration of it that used colors fitting well with their interior design.

The piece will have to wait for the pandemic to – finally – end to find its audience. It was commissioned by the Manchester Grand Hyatt San Diego, located in the downtown San Diego harbor area, and it’s installed in the main bar. The bar is of course closed until restrictions are lifted.

That makes Wilcox’ large and lovely artwork another gem to look forward to experiencing in the coming new year. It will be a “Bridge to Possibilities II” indeed, for most of us.

  • Genie Davis; photos, Genie Davis and courtesy of the artist

Shockboxx Rocks

Shockboxx Gallery, Minimalism exhibition; featured image “Freeway” is by Alison Corteen.

Pandemic or no pandemic, the show must go on. The art show that is. Shockboxx has been providing exciting new shows for by-appointment viewing in the gallery’s airy space, as well as offering virtual opening and closing events and artists’ talks since the pandemic first began. If establishing a community is more important to the art world than ever before, then this Hermosa Beach gallery is upholding that important mandate big time.

As we face a new wave of both viruses and restrictions, we would do well to visit gallerist Mike Collins’ “shockingly” good space in the South Bay whether virtually or with a visit IRL.

I am remiss in my coverage: I have seen two virtual and two live exhibitions here, and they have all been fantastic. Living in the Beach Cities myself, where there is a dearth of excellent art spaces (Torrance Art Museum aside), Shockboxx is all the more vital a space.

Let’s take a look around:

First up for me online this summer was a solo show by Brazillian-born, Hermosa Beach-local artist Drica Lobo, whose swooping, lush, brilliantly vibrant paintings were placed in a custom setting as awash with the sea and moon and female energy as you can get. The lovely, peaceful look of the exhibition was matched by a powerful sense of color and urgent motion.

It would be impossible to take in this truly gorgeous solo show without feeling as if you were swept up by the sea, enveloped by the aura of mermaids, magic, and moonlight — but in an entirely fresh and original way. Iconic local images were approached in gracious and brand new way, offering a new way of seeing familiar landscapes that rendered them as an entirely different world.

Transcendent use of color and light created a pattern that mesmerizes the viewer; Lobo’s lovely use of the gallery space made a visit a respite for pandemic-wearing souls and eyes.

Next up for me was the semi-response to Lobo’s astute, pastel-driven, meditative aura: the rowdy, darker, prankster-laden visuals of the all-male group show Swordfight. Described more as a distaff companion to the all-female artists of the gallery’s earlier Powerhouse show, it nonetheless was a wonderful counterpoint to Lobo’s solo as well.

Jack George

Here there was a rich counter-play of images that expressed a wonderful energy, one that was also tinged with angst, anger, fun, and an edge of frustration infused with hope.

Online – the opening included performance art

Terrific curation and a great conversation between artworks fueled a show both fast and furious – for an adrenaline boost to the eye and the spirit that was not without its darker, introspective moments.

Scott Meskill has art in and curated the splendid Swordfight
Mike Collins
“Le tournoi des meurtres,” Mike Collins
Glitter Shark – Paul Roustan
Scott Meskill
Preston Smith

Following the passionate Swordfight came the group open show, 2021? – an overflowing feast of art, with a wide range of mediums, perceptions, and textures.

Tanya Britkina, “Eve and Her Cat”
Karrie Ross
Justin Prough
Chloe Allred

As inclusive as it was cutting edge, there were not only a broad selection of tastes and palettes, but a sense of connection and intimacy between the works and viewers. Some group shows seem haphazardly curated, but not this one: works were positioned to truly interact – from Aimee Mandala’s giant boot to MUKA’s fabulous teddy bear.

Routine Traffic Stop by Jonathan Crowart

Glancing from side to side or traversing back to front in the gallery space, it had an immersive, museum-quality aesthetic that actually took viewers on a journey from the more realism driven to the more fanciful and back again – as if the exhibit itself represented time spent in our own heads, planning for the future, regretting the past, working through the ongoing roadblocks of the present. In short, the ultimate group show for pandemic times.

Monica Marks

Like a palette cleanser if you will, the current Shockboxx exhibition, Minimalism, is just that – subtle and suspended, allowing the windows and doors of the mind to open and travel through these powerfully limited landscapes.

Mark Eisendrath
Joy Ray
Young Shin
Frederika Roeder – “Whiteout – Whiteout”

Mimialism will close physically this coming weekend, but you can continue to view works online.

But here’s the thing: whatever is next on the walls at Shockboxx, go get electrified by it – whether you’re Zooming in or stopping by after a brisk walk on the beach, you can bet that this gallery will get you plugged in.

The gallery is located at 636 Cypress Ave. in Hermosa Beach; visit online at Shockboxprojects.com

Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis, and courtesy of Shockboxx/exhibiting artists. Note: Featured image is by Alison Corteen

High Beams 2 Blasts Halloween Light

Hagop Najarian enters the exhibition space at High Beams 2

Held in the Gallery Also parking lot in Lincoln Park, High Beams 2 was an absolutely terrific treat for Halloween night. In a year like this one, an outdoor show with wildly wonderful art and artists in costumes as well as pandemic-safe masks, would’ve been a great experience no matter what art was being shown.

But thankfully, High Beams 2 went far beyond that base line, to present an exciting, visually stimulating, perfect-for-nighttime show that literally and figuratively was a blast of light.

The High Beams concept of collectives that each show an installation of art is planned to continue next year, which is something to look forward to. This was the second iteration of the concept, the first having taken place on a parking garage roof and involving drive-through attendees.

Halloween night featured a curatorial collection of primarily Bendix Building art spaces in a walk-through exhibition.

Some were interactive, such as a wonderful, haunted pirate themed mini-golf course from Gallery Also, and the mesmerizing shifting portal of Sean Noyce’s projected work, “Portal 2,” presented through his gallery with Katya Utvitsky, Noysky Projects.

He describes the piece as “using conventions common to a witches’ magic circle, a gateway to the paternal spirits of my family in Utah.” The work uses a pyramid to harness both “masculine and feminine power, concentrating their energy at the zenith where the four corners meet.” Noyce views the work as “an opportunity to learn from the mistakes and blunders of my ancestors, while cumulatively building on their core strengths and values.” The digital projection, from a purely visual perspective, is stunning, while culturally fascinating in its exploration of homage paid to ancestors who “were imperfect at best and downright repugnant at worst.” 

Noyce viewed the exhibition itself as “a refreshing way to experience the social aspects of an art opening, but without all the safety issues related to a traditional one. We’re all figuring out how to live our lives by maintaining our mental health and other ancillary aspects that are germane to being an artist. It makes you realize how important it all is.” 

ARLA
ARLA

From projected images such as Noyce’s and superb film by Ibuki Kuramochi, to the mixed media sculptures presented by ARLA, to a gorgeous, crystal-like pillar of changing colors and mind-skewing geometric shape, the exhibits each had a somewhat supernatural quality that fit the theme of “The dead tell no tales.”

Museum Adjacent
from Museum Adjacent’s installation

At Musuem Adjacent location, according to Hagop Najarian, “Our concept was to say goodbye to and destroy old things from 2020, so each member from our group made a video of themselves destroying their art work. I made a loop video of all 5 members videos that we palyed all night. The display was a memorial/ graveyard, if you will, of our works.”

Seen below, the wonderful pillar is Ismael de Anda III’s “Lazaro’s Run,a riff on the science-fiction film Logan’s Run, depicting a utopian future society, revealed as a dystopia where everyone who reaches the age of thirty dies.

“To track this, each person is implanted at birth with a ‘life-clock’ crystal in the palm of the hand that changes color as they get older and begins blinking as they approach their ‘Last Day,’” de Anda explains. “’Lazaro’s Run’ is a thirteen-foot-tall mutation of the giant robotic crystal hand sculpture featured in the film… A varied, geometric, negative space ‘crystal’ pattern is featured in the center of the cardboard hand with pulsating LED lights placed inside the sculpture, allowing colored light to emanate as a beacon from the center…”

de Anda with his work

He adds “From the original film’s title, Logan is changed to Lazaro, my grandfather’s name, the Spanish version of Lazarus, a biblical figure that rises from the dead.”

Exhibiting for Durden and Ray along with fellow collective artist Tom Dunn, who offered complex, intense, and involving wall artwork, de Anda calls his inclusion “an honor. It was exciting how all the organizers for the High Beams events are continuously looking for alternative and innovative ways to present art to the public… On this astronomical night of the rare blue full moon, observing safety protocols, I had the rare opportunity during these times to make new friends and feel a reinvigorated solidarity with L.A.’s dynamic and unique artist community.”

Work by Tom Dunn, to the right
de Anda by Tom Dunn’s work

According to Durden and Ray collective curator Alanna Marcelletti, termsthe exhibition exuded “a fun-house-style” creative experience, “It has been such an exciting experience to create a show… with an amazing mix of curators from different artistic backgrounds and curatorial initiatives.”

Carl Baratta, left

Artist and curator Carl Baratta says the motivation for holding the second High Beams exhibition on Halloween night was primarily “fun. We knew the following week would start to get cold, and the elections were gearing up, and like everyone else, we wondered if we were trying to hold an event with ideas of civil war or whatever floating around. The pandemic is hard enough as it is, so, we decided to pick the most fun night we could to keep the momentum going after our successful run with the drive-through exhibition.”

Monte Vista Projects

Baratta notes “We just thought carving out some space to take a break and see unexpected things not on video chat would hopefully energize folks for the week(s) to come with election madness. We also really love throwing these events for our art community and miss the interaction, so we really pushed hard to get things together in time. For me it was really nice to show Ibuki Kuramochi who’s at home taking care of an elderly loved one. She couldn’t make it to the event in person, but it still gave her something to look forward to, and that’s in rare supply these days. We all need something to look forward to that’s positive.” Describing the experience as “great” and one that offered a fresh mix of artists, Baratta says the collectives are looking forward to more alt space High Beams events in March 2021. He says the group will “start hatching new plans for 2021 on Monday.”

Participating art spaces/collectives this time around included:
Acceptable Risk LA, Durden and Ray, Gallery ALSO, Monte Vista Projects, Museum Adjacent, Noysky Projects, TSALA, Wow Project LA, and 515 Gallery, the latter offering a musical presentation.

Featured artists were Ismael de Anda III, Rachel Apthorp, Carl Baratta, Michael Castañeda, Coby Cerna, Carly Chubak, Sean Cully, Tirsa Delate, Tom Dunn, Dominick Garritano, Lesya Godfrey, Linus Gruszewski, Matt Haywood, Ibuki Kuramochi, Kim Marra, Easton Miller, Oliver Mayhall, Lauren Moradi, Hagop Najarian, Sean Noyce, Alaïa Parhizi, Alyssa Rogers, Adrienne Sacks, Katie Shanks, Katya Usvitsky, Josh Vasquez, Cheyann Washington, Surge Witron, Larissa Nickel.

Ismael de Anda III and Tom Dunn
Katya Usvitsky and Sean Noyce
  • Genie Davis; photos, Genie Davis and Ismael de Anda III