Forest Bathing Takes Root at Loft at Liz’s

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Memory Tree by Catherine Ruane, above

Through June 17th, take a walk in a forest of art with Forest Bathing, now at Loft at Liz’s. Curated by Betty Brown, the exhibition is a celebration of nature. Paying homage to the Japanese practice of Shinrin-yoku, the exhibition takes the idea of mindful discovery and peace through nature and transforms it into an experience in the gallery through paintings, drawings, sculptures, and photography, as well as mixed media installations. 17 artists create their own depictions of nature, and it is worthy of a long, deep forest-bath.

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Above, artist Catherine Ruane.

Catherine Ruane’s brilliantly realistic graphite drawing, “Memory Tree,” draws viewers within its massive, comforting branches.

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Lyrical and wondrous, the work feels tactile, as if the branches were embracing the viewer.

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Bibi Davidson, in contrast, gives us brightly colored trees in a surreal world that leads viewers into a dream-like state. Viewing her work is a fabulous adventure.

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Linda Vallejo’s graceful paintings of the oak trees around Topanga Canyon exude peace.

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Hung Viet Nguyen’s richly textured tributes to the trees of the Ancient Bristle Cone Pine Forest outside Big Pine, Calif., seem magical and beyond this world.

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His thick paint and vibrant palette add to the sensation of having entered a new realm.

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Speaking of a different world, Marthe Aponte takes over the Projects Room, with “Sacred Trees,” using drawing, embroidery, and paint and picote, a traditional, painstaking, and delicate form of French paper art.

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To enter the room is to step into a different dimension, a hushed and holy and strange place that glows. In the back of the room, a Joshua Tree of slightly different construction stands, as if watching over the viewers who enter the room, a guardian of a reverent place.

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Another mixed media work comes from Dave Lovejoy and Susan Feldman, who have created a contemporary grotto in one of the gallery’s stairwells, one made of wood and thread, shaping trees that are instantly recognizable as such, and yet deconstructing the shape of limbs and trunks. The use of lighting, the evocative green glow of this dimensional installation, make the work seem like a portal. It beckons, fecund.

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Also contemporary: Chenhung Chen’s 3-D tree constructed of electrical cords and wires: using this detritus of technology, she’s created a poetic and lovely reduction of the essence of “treeness.”

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Another true stunner is Samuelle Richardson’s white wood tree, occupied by cacophonus crows. You can almost hear them.

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Her fabric sculpture is evocative and haunting, but at the same time, she’s managed to convey a sense of whimsy in the work, as if one had entered a fairy tale.

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Above, glittering trees from Hermine Harman.

There are many other wonderful works taking root in the gallery forest as well. Exhibition artists include in all: Marthe Aponte, Chenhung Chen, Bibi Davidson, Barbara Edelstein, Susan Feldman & Dave Lovejoy, Renee Fox, Maria Greenshields-Ziman, Hermine Harman (whose glittering trees explode with color above), Joanne Julian, Sant Khalsa, Alberto Mesirca, Hung Viet Nguyen, Samuelle Richardson, Catherine Ruane, Jill Sykes and Linda Vallejo.

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Above, beautiful, elegatic photographic work from Sant Khlasa.

If the words dream, other worldly, mysterious, and haunting have come up in this review – and they have – it is because entering the gallery, one must give up a sense of the “real world:” the noise of the street, the crowds on the stairs at the opening, and instead embrace the sensory experience of stepping into a forest of art, one that is indeed all of those things.

From the most realistic to the most fantastical renderings, Brown has shaped a forest that embraces and explores natural beauty and our perception of it, soaking us in the shadows, serenity, and life force that is inherent in these artistic woods.  Emerge from this forest refreshed, yes, but also expanded: let these images of nature and wonder slip into your soul, and feel the better for it.

You’ll need to hurry in – but once you’re there, bask. Loft at Liz’s is located at 453 S. La Brea in mid-city. The exhibition closes June 17th.

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  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis, Susan Feldman installation photo courtesy Cheryl Henderson.

 

 

Saturday Films and Sierra Spirit Award to The Groundlings: Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019 Day 4

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What’s a Saturday morning without cartoons? As Day 4 of the Mammoth Lakes Film Festival 2019 began — with sun instead of snow showers — a screening of animated kids shorts began the day.

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Narrated by the ever-irrepressible Flula Borg, the shorts included the hilariously sardonic Troll Bridge, an Australian short about an old Barbarian named Cohen and his friendly encounter with a troll he was planning to annihilate, and the rather surreal and beautiful Swiss short: Autour de l’Escalier,  depicting a mysterious and fantastical town in which images and events repeat. As it concluded, Borg drew laughs saying “That’s Pittsburgh.”

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Borg also offered his take on the Shleep which disappeared as a man drifted off to slumber, quizzically asking “Where did they all go?”

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After this delightful start to the morning, festival filmmakers and press attended a panel on distribution and publicity among other topics, featuring Shalinni Dore; Andrew Borden, Katie Walsh, Gus Krieger, Mia Galuppo, and Sean McDonnell.

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McDonnell, from releasing and production company A-24 explained the importance of making one’s work known on the festival circuit; Dore discussed the ways in which she can be attracted to providing press coverage for an unknown auteur, among the other topics discussed over mimosas, coffee, and quiche.

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Shorts Block 4 included a charming but dark stop-motion animation depicting love, binary code, and a dissolving world in 11010; and the haunting cosmic images of Eyes at the Specter Glass from filmmaker Mathew Wade. Wade notes “This started as a project to see how far I could push my computer’s ability…I just started building these scenes and movements, I then wrote the score that I matched to it without even seeing the visuals again. At first I thought maybe this would just be a gallery piece, but then film festivals gravitated toward it.” Wade’s abstract vision of what appears to the creation of a universe or a space travel dream defies easy categorization; Wade himself replied to a question asking what the short meant, “I make up a different story each time someone asks me that. I don’t want to ruin other people’s take on it.”

Gone is a heart-breaking take on Lysistrata,  a beautiful, funny, sad, and terrible response to women abandoning men and boys for 5 months and counting. We see a men’s support group of one counselor and three men, each with their issues; and we see one woman leaving, making a decision that tears at her heart as well as the viewer’s. A profound film from UK-based director Emma Sullivan.

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Lemons, from Simon Werdmuller Von Elgg, was the director’s response to stories he’d listened to about child abuse and sex abuse. The film depicts a man who may or may not be a missionary revisting a childhood nanny who’d abused him. As writer as well as director, Von Elgg notes “When I moved to Nashville, the culture struck me as potentially being ripe for this kind of story about subtext.” He’ll be working with his lead actress and his producer again on future projects, asserting “We’re a team now.” The film has a gothic, tension-filled pace and palette that evokes a sense of dread in the viewer, even before its intent is revealed.

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In Diva & Astro, director Angel Barroeta and his astonishingly skilled director of photography have created  a work that “is really different. We wanted to do a piece all in one day. We shot using a telephoto lens from different locations.” Seen from a distance, the piece follows the parallel paths of the two title characters in a riveting street drama whose style as well as virtually silent story is a richly involving 9 minutes.

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For director Ariel Gardner,  the funny/sad take on dating culture in Los Angeles, Molly’s Single, became an exercise in practicality. “I shot on mini-DV because I wanted to stand out by making it look as dirty as possible. And I know how to use auto exposure and auto focus, not sure I wanted to learn on an AK rig.” He wrote out beats but allowed the actors to fill in their own dialog as he crafted a semi-autobiographical piece about a bad break up. “It was kind of a cathartic experience which began with me watching Somewhere over the Rainbow in a film clip on my phone.”

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The narrative feature A Great Lamp from director Saad Qureshi and his highly collaborative cast including Max Wilde, who also provided scoring and animated elements, was a beautiful black and white piece about three lost souls:  Max, a good-hearted,  cross-dressing street kid posting flyers about his late grandmother throughout the town; Gene, a drop out from the world of insurance processing who is lying to his father about leaving his job; and Howie, who fears a recurring dream and hopes to see a rocket launch through binoculars. Set in the dark and often derelict looking streets of downtown Wilmington, N.C., the lushly filmed, moody piece has an interesting back story. “I was having a very rough time,” Qureshi reports, “so since my friends and I all love each other, we all quit are jobs to make the movie.” Cinematographer Donald Monroe laid out the film and locations daily, cast and crew while minimal, shared fun as well as filming a work which the director calls “really a combination of ideas from three different minds.” Monroe adds “With no crew I knew I had one light and black and white was easier for me to make a cohesive language.” Qureshi sums up the experience “It was the best moment of my life to see my friends together. Life can be a sad thing, but the best way to survive is to be with your friends.” The film, which premiered at Slamdance this year, will be screening at the Arclight Hollywood July 8th.

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An Evening with the Groundlings, the renowned comedy theater troupe and school based in LA, offered a short documentary on the history of the group and its alums; Groundling Cheri Oteri’s hilarious  short Turkey’s Done, and a second viewing of Groundlings’ member Ryan Gaul’s poignant and funny Jack.  Oteri’s short was a straight-up hilarious revenge comedy of a cheated-on Philly wife on Thanksgiving; Gaul’s – discussed at length in yesterday’s review segment – is a sweetly humorous tale of putting a beloved pet to sleep.

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What followed was a pure hour of delight, in which festival director Shira Dubrovner presented the group’s managing director, Heather de Michele with the Sierra Spirit Award.

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Dubrovner, Sweeney, Sterling, above

Dubrovner conducted an absorbing hour-long panel celebrating Groundlings members “for life” Julia Sweeney, Ryan Gaul, Jordan Black, Mindy Sterling, and Cheri Oteri discussed how many years of Groundlings classes they took; current projects; working in a male-dominated world on Saturday Night Live – where many Groundlings alums found new homes; and the differences between the Groundlings rigorous Sunday Show, which the “best of the best” participate in following class training, before graduating to the Saturday company.

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Oteri, Gaul, Black, above.

As Gaul says “We are like a weird gang. We’re addicted to improv, we love it.” Sterling seconded that assessment. “You do it for the love of it.”

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The group discussed everything from the non-pay of Groundlings actors and their labor-of-love experiences in the theater, to performing on SNL, developing their characters, and more.

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A highlight: Black and Gaul performed a short-form improv with an audience member: a father-daughter talk about car ownership, below.

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To catch any of these performers live at The Groundlings — still located on Melrose Ave. in West Hollywood after all these years – stop by regularly: almost everyone on stage still drops by to perform. Black runs a regular monthly show called The Black Version, which he described as “long form improv. Audience members suggest a movie, and my cast and I do our ‘black version’ whether it’s the Titanic or whatever is suggested.” Sweeney, who just jubilantly returned to showbiz after a 15-year hiatus raising her daughter, is back doing improv regularly on Tuesday and Wednesday nights. Gaul can also be seen performing in The Last OG on TBS weekly.

Full day, fun night – and more tomorrow.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Jack Burke

 

Randi Matushevitz: Reflecting Her Existence Through Art

01. Matushevitz_DoYouSeeMe_...KeepYourEyesOnTheRoad_154x277cm_LgArtist Randi Matushevitz is something of a chameleon, always driven by an exploration of the human spirit and the desire to evoke and reflect the reality of existence: both her own, and that of others.  Prolific and profound, her work has shifted and changed over time, moving from pastels and bright colors to darker and edgier territory in terms of both palette and subject. As layered and nuanced as her art itself is the meaningful thematic nature of her work: regardless of style, a deep sense of kindness and hope can be extruded from even the darkest piece.

She describes her earliest works as “‘an exploration in making special,’ a phrase coined by social anthropologist Ellen Dissanyake. Dissanyake’s book proposed that making special is a social biological need necessary for good health. Her emphasis was on the need to partake in the creative act as nurturing and necessary.” The book offered examples ranging from tribal culture to today’s city dwellers, touching on creative work from body marking to designing clothing.  Matushevitz says “The idea of nurturing through artwork was interesting to me, as a woman who did not follow the traditional role model for marriage and children that was the standard.”

She created three installation works between 1998 and 2000 that explored female identity at the beginning of her career.

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The first, Milk to Meat exhibited at Leonora Vega Gallery in New York City.  It was an installation of 1500, Even-flo glass baby bottles with the company name embossed,  wooden tables, and personal ephemera.  “The quip, ‘you are what you eat,’ led me to think about how we feed our young and the priorities of adulthood,” Matushevitz says.

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The bottles were filled with everything from birdseed to battery-operated lights, insects, and plastic multi-racial babies. “The idea is connecting the baby bottle and the water bottle, that we are still suckling, that the bottles were symbolic of nurturing.”

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Her subsequent installation, The Feminine Side of Life, offered a series of miniature 6” round acrylic and collage paintings. “The bodiless dress is the protagonist in a body of work that compares and contrasts traditional expectations of women with the contemporary life style of contemporary women.”

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Matushevitz’ Rose de Amor explored life cycle of romantic relationships considering pacification. To create the exhibition which dealt with the how and why in which people pacify themselves, by collaborating with a professional glass blower in Miami, to design and create three 40-inch tall by 25- inch wide glass pacifiers.” The three, frosted glass, purple, rose, and green hand-blown nipple shapes were presented on a vertical bed of sand; the first had lost its nipple, the second was whole, and the third was in pieces.

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Matushevitz continued exploring art as a nurturing medium with Salt of the Earth, in which she noted both positive and negative options for self-soothing with an installation of nine over-sized soft sculptures set on astro-turf, vinyl tablecloths, and surrounded by ephemera and site-specific wall drawings connecting “the feminine side of life with ideas of pacification and sex.”

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Overtime, her work changed and evolved. While some series were whimsical, even light-hearted, others went deeper.

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With her work in the 2014-2016 series Mysterious, there arose a stream of consciousness practice in mixed media drawing that involved charcoal, pastel, spray paint and acrylic. “A friend had given me a ream of large print paper, 42 inches by 27 inches, as a moving present. That is how the practice began.” Creating big works led to big ideas. “These open-ended narrative drawings became a metaphysical, spiritual and psychological study in my relationship to myself, to the tough and the joyful experiences that challenge fortitude for survival or madness. I began to see the wear and tear of daily life, aging, love and loss on others,” she relates.

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With her series Conundrum, Matushevitz moved into darker territory, with immersive and emotional images that can best be described as dark and intense. The work used multiple layers of charcoal, pastel, spray paint, and acrylic, and involved symbols, stencils, and a deep look at the emotion of human culture and society, bursting with the hope and fear of our current socio-political times.

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Currently, Matushevitz is at work on a richly diverse series titled Ugly Portraits, which she recently exhibited at Coagula Gallery in downtown Los Angeles. The series grew out of a desire to paint with oil, she explains, as well as an interest in “finding alternative ways to see each other.”  She adds that “The recognizable power of a facial expression transmits inaudible information that engages the viewer in a conversation that is simultaneously anonymous and identifiable. Growing up in Las Vegas provided the perfect backdrop to observe us, humankind. These portraits meet the viewer on their own terms with a silent gesture in an inaudible moment.”

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She describes the work aptly as being both sublime and grotesque, “colorful and textured, these synthesized expressions of strangers, family and friends serve as a tactile and psychological expression of humankind absent of culture or language.” The faces are not just of everyone, they are with the “every” that we each carry inside us.

Matushevitz says that what draws her into darker places is the through-line of each series she creates, an exploration of the human condition and spirit.

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With Mysterious, she began to release the darkness from inside out, making a decision to work in a stream of consciousness. “I needed to release…the dark, dystopian, and anxious came out, of me, or rather through me, and so did the light, the uplifting and the joyful.” She asserts that “The spirit of my work is reflective of my existence.  As I grow and evolve into a more complete human, I see my work as connected to the larger energy of the whole. Communicating, affecting the world to be a connected place, where humans consider all life, culture and language as special.  It is what drives me. I am the vehicle.”

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The artist terms her work both existential and figurative. It is intuitive and formal both, and it would be remiss not to note that it is also infused with elements of magic, and the power of “our ability to affect the world for positive or negative outcomes.”

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Her art often has the quality of a fairy or folktale; a narrative that’s brave, loving, and a little bit spooky. There are symbols and signs, figures and landscapes – the impact of viewing her work is immersive and emotional. Enter the world of Matushevitz and become transformed. This is an alternative universe, like our own but unlike it, both delicate and intense.

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Matushevitz says her favorite mediums are whatever she is exploring at the time. “The medium that best solves the questions I am asking,” is the one she most prefers in the moment. She also notes that palette and texture are both developed through the process of making. “Each painting develops within a wide spectrum of layered materials, hues and values to create a psychological state, an illusionistic place and time, a philosophical inference.” Approaching color both intuitively and formally is also an important aspect of her work and the development of the inferences and nuances in her work.

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As her work evolves, so does Matushevitz’ sense of both the beautiful and the bleak in human nature, and in finding the good in even the darkest moments. It is an almost spiritual place that she reaches with her work, the spiritual place that lives in each being. She attests “I do not shrink from responsibilities. I’m not afraid to change my mind. I try to practice what I preach. I am afraid of the hate human beings can have for each other.  My motto is ‘we are more connected than we realize.'”

The artist’s work is based on the idea that what we see has a deep effect on human perception and feeling – and what affects the individual also affects a larger society. She’s exploring all sides of the idea of love and the artifacts of human emotion, using her own unique combinations of symbols, palettes, and patterns.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Randi Matushevitz

 

Sway Moves Us: Exciting Exhibition from Seven Artists at the Brand

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Curated by Chenhung Chen with project management from Linda Sue Price, Sway, at the Brand Library and Art Center, is an exciting exhibition that is both perfectly curated and filled with stunningly original art work in a variety of mediums.

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One of the most beautiful aspects of the exhibition is Chen’s astonishing ability to create a show in which the works seem to truly speak to each other; they are linked and separate at the same time, a cohesive presentation that pulls viewers into the experience of the exhibition.

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Each of the seven participating artists use a variety of materials including wire, cords, neon, plastic, found materials, graphite works, and acrylic and pencil. Primarily sculptural, the dimensionality of the works adds the to sense that the exhibition is a living, mutating form that swims with motion – or shall we say, sways with it. If this is a world of art – and it is – it’s a new world, composed of lines and light, intense color, grand patterns, and highly tactile images.

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Chen’s flowing,  often delicate wire copper wire crochet work constrasts and compliments her thicker wire abstract sculputures. Both styles of her work undulate, as if they were strange sea creatures, or alien life forms.

That sense of the alien and unexpected, of sea life and forest floor, permeates the exhibition and the viewers’ gaze. We are invited to experience something unique, alive, delicate materials made strong and connected.

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Snezana Saraswati Petrovic’s work here includes a room-sized installation that utilizes video images as well as delicate, lace-like plastic to immerse viewers in an a dive deep into a sea of art.

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Other works of Petrovic’s pulse in fierce orange or yellow, and again we seem to be a part of a world of mysterious alien shapes, puzzling and vibrant, highly textured and dream-like.

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She gives us starfish and stars, sea nettles and dimensional snowflakes, webs, fissures, and the illusion of plunging beyond or into our own consciousness.

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Price’s neon works throb with kinetic energy and motion, the colors seem impossibly vibrant, they are as vivid and visceral as light pulled from the center of the earth and straight through the soul.

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Pieces that literally move and those whose colors dance create a sense of nighttime magic, a glorious lit-up world that is both transcendent and emersed in noir.

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Speaking of light, Echo Lew creates drawings based on light and shadow, strange and ethereal, as rhythmic as if they had sound.

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His unusual process in creating these drawings from something as ephemeral as light itself is reminiscent of auras, ghostly presences, a spirit world.

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Both Debbie Carlson and Gina Herrera work with found materials that include articles as diverse as ladders and yarn and bottle caps and latex gloves.

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Herrera in particular creates works that are infused with a sense of humor and wit, fantastical and fairy-tale-like. She creates both creatures and abstract shapes out of what could be artistic detritus in less gifted hands.

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Carlson’s sculptural works link prosaic articles and repurpose them into something sublime, strange, and cooly geometric.

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The eye studies the lines that make the shapes that fuse recognizable objects into something far more interesting and rich.

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Anne Marie Rousseau exhibits a series of painted acrylic images, both sharp, modern, and shiny with color; lines of gold dance and opal-like paint shimmers within the works like the veins of rich minerals found within the earth.

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The large scale works seem to vibrate; located on the outside wall of the main galleries, they serve as a kind of introduction or portal into another realm. Her work is always filled with a sense of motion, here, the pieces are perhaps the most literal and lyrical interpretation of the show’s title.

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It perhaps goes without saying that the works here are each magical, they invoke and call out a sensual beauty, a reworking of line, shape, form, and texture that upends the expected and presents a new and intensely satisfying view of the world.

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Above, curator Chen, attendee Betty Brown, artist Petrovic

Sway is an exhibition to be savored – go take it in. The Brand Library and Art Center is located in Glendale – or perhaps, with this show, in another universe entirely. The exhibition runs through June 14th.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis