Artist and Activist Mel Greet and Jeff Vespa’s Photographic Works Put the Spotlight on Gun Control

EtMfE5JT

Sculptural social realist Mel Greet presents a powerful and unique show, The Truth of Consequences, at the Bruce Lurie Gallery, opening February 9th. Green’s three-dimensional work is commanding, as he conceptually reshapes conventional objects to provide meaningful insight into social conditions.

shNDsU-J

The familiarity of many images allows viewers to find and understand essential issues, while offering sometimes humorous takes on the world around us.

Paired with Greet at the Gallery are works by photographic artist Jeff Vespa, to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the seventeen students murdered at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb 14th last year in Parkland, Florida. Vespa offers 16 black and white portraits of the victim’s classmates along with a large screen video installation with testimonials created by Vespa. His work was originally featured in People Magazine and Buzz Feed.Wall Layout

Greet and The Bruce Lurie Gallery are donating part of the proceeds of two of his works “Going Shopping” and “New Math,” to the Brady Campaign. Greet hopes that the exhibition itself will serve as a focal point for politicians to recognize and act on sensible gun legislation.

MBNezxl4

As to Greet’s work itself, his sculptural pieces utilizes a wide range of mixed media, from copper wire and textured plastic to the actual taxidermied skin of a snake. The artist’s involving textures help to shape his subject matter, and his sometimes whimsical take on modern life reflects the surrealism of Rene Magritte, the artist’s namesake. His goal is to create a connectivity with his viewers to engage them, encourage understanding, commitment, and action. 

ZKcyNH5u

“Going Shopping” exposes just how easy buying an automatic weapon is — as easy as going to the grocery store for a carton of milk. If we haven’t recognized the horror of our bullet-riddled shopping sprees before, the artist demands we notice it now. This work uses a classic, discontinued grocery cart model as base, with bronze automatic weapons rise like a bristling bouquet inside the cart basket.

PO_8allN

“New Math” features a chalkboard as canvas, with  hash marks that eerily appear to represent attacks from or death by automatic weapon. The weapon itself is suspended in front of the board and hash marks, as if it were the chalk used to write this legacy of violence and destruction.

“Ultimately,” Greet says, “the question we all must ask is, how will we embrace the future collectively and individually?”

ghpmoVHh

Born and raised in Hollywood, Greet’s show biz experience as a child actor and film studio marketing executive informs his work, entraining and educating with visceral, vibrant images.  His media experiences have made him acutely aware of how imagery can impact society and shape communication about issues.

His inclusion of Vespa’s work in his gallery show began with an introduction to Vespa by Ross Misher of the Brady Campaign LA office, he explains.  “We all felt that it should accompany the sculptures, making the evening a much larger conversation, since it’ll be the 1 year anniversary of the Parkland shooting on Feb 14.”

Through Vespa’s contacts, Greet and the gallery enlisted TOMS brand clothing and shows, what he describes as a “giant push towards ending gun violence.” As a partner in the exhibition, TOMS will have iPads available for attendees to sign up to send postcards from TOMS.com as part of their End Gun Violence Together initiative. Each postcard urges merembers of Congress to take immediate action by passing legislation for universal background checks, which over 90% of all Americans support. TOMS is currently driving across the country to deliver 700k-plus postcards to Congress, and collect stories from  and voices of Americans affected by gun violences along the way. The volunteer-led postcard distribution to Representatives in Congress will be made February 12th.
dvOOo-ES
Greet asserts that “What I most want viewers to know about this exhibition, is what the title states: The Truth of Consequences. That there’s a consequence for complacency and I feel compelled to address certain issues: planet exploitation, drought conditions, old age, #me too movement, sensible guns laws, the rat race, an elevated level of hate, wage inequality, truth manipulated.” He notes that all too often “interacting with one another is distant and impersonal and only validated by social media.” He posits that our images of “how we see our own true selves in these times of fractured truths” is important and could be viewed as “half full or half empty.”
aKCNO8NQ
The Truth of Consequences opens February 9th, and runs through February 28th.
Lurie Gallery 2736 S. La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 https://www.luriegallery.com/
Genie Davis; Photos courtesy of artist.

Devin Thor: Paleolitic Creatures Cut from Stone

 

50882500_10216427681391788_8757765507152609280_nWith several unique stone sculptures now on exhibit as part of MOAH’s powerful Peace on Earth, running at the Lancaster museum through April 21st, it’s a good time to take a look at Devin Thor’s powerful sculptural presence.

At MOAH, Thor presents three pieces from his Paleolithic Creatures stone works, raw, unique works that make extinct creatures live again as sculptures cut from sandstone. Both in their use of color: russet, gold, brown; and in their use of material, they appear as if they arose from the earth itself, creatures of a Southwestern world, of raw, open plains and red-rock wanderings.

50626168_10216427671231534_6052076092246720512_n

The artist’s use of material makes these flat works fascinating in texture as well as image. Seeming tribal in nature, their beautiful simplicity serve as an elegy to the losses of the past, and a pristine prayer for a better future. Thor is a geologist as well as an artist, which is in part the likely reason for his choice of material here. The rough brown surface creates an elegant but primal visual perspective, a tribute to the beings themselves, and the land on which they roamed. His minimal approach is wonderfully relatable; he has shaped easily recognizable, universal figures that open the world of the past with hope for tomorrow.

Thor says of his stone work that it is “an homage to our prehistoric ancestors, but also an exploration of the global influence of humans on our environment…” adding that “modern humans have modified the planet and now must take on a stewardship role, otherwise we might face the permanence of extinction ourselves.”

SetRatioSize780640-6-Paleolithic-Grazing-Bison-2015-thor2

Inspired in part by the cave paintings of Lascaux, Thor relates that he paints and sculpts using “the energy that flows from my emotional imagination. As a geologist, I explore the structure of the natural world with the logic of a scientist.”

SetRatioSize780640-1-Paleolithic-Antelope-2015-thor

The works displayed at MOAH include the jewel eyed “Antelope Doe and Antelope Fawn II” as well as “Sentinel Bison II.” The former pieces incorporate vividly colored stained glass as their eyes, and stand on thin iron legs.

50644838_10216427670431514_917265071506194432_n

The latter work has no crafted eye, yet the crags of the sandstone chosen to create his bison series hang as if they were fossilized fur, disguising the eye of the massive creatures.

SetRatioSize780640-Paleolithic-Sentinel-Bison-2014e

Some bison images Thor has created are grazing, or bent; some crafted from cast iron, others from different colors of rock.

croppedimage132132-5-Paleolithic-Grazing-Bison-2015-thor

 

In each, there is a poignant reminder that despite the bulk, the weighty purpose of these beings, they were in the end too fragile to survive. They are a cautionary tale for preservation of other species, and our own.

SetRatioSize780640-Gumby-Goes-Borg-X3

Thor also creates the more whimsical wood and found objects in his Gumby Goes series. These fanciful images are based on the Claymation character of Gumby, his magical adventures, and his iconic cultural status. Despite these green wooden works witty characteristics, Thor says they represent a darker side of human nature. With gauges as eyes, a gear ringing his mouth, and an alarmed expression, “Gumby Goes Borg X2” is a study of futuristic anxiety. “Gumby Goes Pinball,” which includes pinball machine parts, is brighter in color but no less fraught with a sense of anxious awareness of the human condition. We are perhaps all being played.

SetRatioSize780640-Gumby-Goes-Pinball

Additional sculptural works include more abstract images, such as “Space Relic X01,” created using salvaged Sycamore wood, plywood, anodized aluminum, and stainless steel tubes. Again, Thor has managed to create a work both delicate and substantial, named for the space beyond us yet somehow representative of the planet on which we reside.

SetRatioSize780640-Space-Relic-X01

Thor’s sculpture are indeed a sign of our times: of life on this planet, our collective past, and our equally bound future.

Art, Theater, Therapy: Elizabeth Tobias Creates Immersive Engagement

41409143_10155879871139639_2866156707413753856_n

 

“Self-nurturing and healing through the arts.” That’s how Elizabeth Tobias, a trauma-informed therapist, community advocate, and multi-media artist describes her work. She creates change, through immersive arts therapy programs that have assisted both individuals and groups, offering profound assistance in dealing with and overcoming depression, anxiety, trauma, assault, and PTSD. She also provides relationship therapy. And, she performs works of art at public events that address timely social issues. Her purpose is always about creating positive change: with her performances, she’s engaged in creating awareness in the community about a wide range of issues.

Tobias says “Expressive arts therapy aligns so well with what I do as a perfromance artist …it’s about the process, not the product. We are on a journey together…whatever the theme may be…not knowing what the outcome will be, and just trying something different, taking risks in order to try to create change.”

As both artist and therapist, Tobias has always been a risk-taker. With an MA in Spiritual Psychology from The University of Santa Monica and a Professional Diploma from The Expressive Arts Institute in San Diego, she’s prepared herself to combine her artistic discipline and achievements with game-changing performances and installations that confront some of the most serious issues of contemporary life.

From elementary to high school groups, to The San Diego Unified School District Department of Student Advocacy, The LA Gay and Lesbian Center, Girl Up, and Lifting Generations, to The Expressive Arts Foundation, Tobias has opened hearts and minds, assisted with mental health issues, addressed and offered relief from traumas. And running like a thread throughout her career is her unique ability as artist and advocate to address cultural and societal issues that impact a broader audience as well as affecting smaller groups and individuals.

umoca_detail_install_medium

 

In 2011, she addressed food scarcity with her Let Them Eat Cupcakes, exploring hunger in LA. She traveled throughout the city setting up home-made cupcake pop-up shops from Skid Row to Beverly Hills, exchanging cupcakes for stories about hunger and homelessness. The culmination of this program was partcipation in a group show at Chapman University. In the group show, her pop-up became installation art, an ersatz colorful cupcake party housed in a yellow emergency tent. She earned a Durfee Grant for this exhibition on the hunger epidemic in 2012, traveling the project nationwide to destinations including Harvard College. In 2014, she received a Learning Innovation Fellowship from the National Science Foundation for a collaborative project on climate change.

49729247_573238409770596_7400312785122361344_n

 

Now, in 2019, the LA Art Association selected her to develop a presentation for The LA Art Show. Her performance will touch on another pressing and prescient issue: sexual assault. With Survivor! Share Your 98 Second Story, she’s working with a collective of 24 artists.

Calling her work experimental as well as experiential, Tobias says “I work to engage audiences with me in a process that helps to bring awareness to very sensitive issues …I take these issues very seriously, whether I am working in a private or public venue.”

47319284_555508294876941_6341835652849467392_n

Survivor! is a strong continuation of her multifacted approach to art and therapeutic transformation. Tobias, whose advocacy on this subject has recieved commendation from Sen. Kamala Harris, will use a combination of live performance, audio, and her unique social practice to create a fully immersive project for viewers. Choreography for the performance was assisted by the Ooh La La dance company. The project also includes support from Los Angeles Art Association/Gallery 825, Shoebox PR, Kristine Schomaker, Peter Mays, Micol Hebron, Dawniel Carlock, Stewart Naomi, Tara Judith, Greer Essex, Wes Chester, Expressive Arts Institute, Tara Graviss, Anna Cirronis, Felís Stella, Joi Cole, Robyn Alatorre, Dee Weingarden, Kayla Cloonan, Natalie Brewster Nguyen, Seven McDonald, Janet and Jennifer Danica Teyssier, Lifting Generations, and the many more.

45514900_541865559574548_5056432226980331520_n

Sexual assault is an epidemic in this nation, yet it is often under-reported. The #MeToo movement has barely scratched the surface. Survivor! will illuminate the overwhelming and brutal fact that every 98 seconds there’s a sexual assault occuring in the U.S. The hash tags that Tobias is using in regard to the piece are to the point: #WeInsistOnProgress#ThisIsHowWeEndSexualViolenceSpoken word and improvised sound form the delivery system for Tobias’ performance along with an ensemble of artist survivors. They’ll speak to the need to raise awareness and advocacy for sexual assault survivors throughout the public – and specifically in the art community as well. 

Part of Tobias’ advocacy with this project is devoted to addressing the need for support and resources in general terms; within the arts community, she is looking toward the expression of survivor stories within it and beyond it, for those who’ve experienced or been impacted by sexual assault.

27173458_10154962897591036_2427208060576649094_o

In both her upcoming performance at The LA Art Show and moving forward with this project from there, Tobias aims to not only destigmatize what survivors have experienced, but to decrease the potential for future assault.

How so? Interpersonal violence expert Dr. Jennifer Freyd, has presented imperssive statistics that show the literal act of speaking out – which Tobias is doing at The LA Art Show, has a measureable impact on decreasing violence. Optimally, courageously, Tobias’ group performance has the potential to directly reduce the statistics. Now that’s true political, consciousness-raising art.

Survivor! will take place at The LA Art Show at the LA Convention Center at 2 p.m. on Sunday the 27th.

Don’t miss.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Elizabeth Tobias and LA Art Show

 

Haleh Mashian: Meditative Magic

50247451_10216367571009066_4130589547438276608_n

At first glance, the body of work in Haleh Mashian’s latest series of large scale paintings on wood panel reminds the viewer of the glory of rain. It reminds the viewer of the wonder of water falling from the arc of the sky and nurturing the earth below. Of rivers and fields nourished, of clouds softening the landscape, of vision turned inward.

50314667_10216367567248972_2835276876103024640_n

In Figurine, Mashian has created images of the female figure, and of a woman’s tears – not just one woman, but a collective feminine humanity, she says. The figurative images of women are lush and highly textured – like all of the work here, they are mixed media paintings, large and yet intimate, layered with resin, glitter, gels, fabric, paper, jewels, and beads; or as Mashian describes her work, “Whatever moves me. I wanted all of them to be in a jewel tone, because …of the richness of being a woman. We have a lot going for us,” she laughs.

50525867_10216367570449052_1067916804669571072_n

Mashian certainly does. A life-long artist, she opened Mash Gallery in the DTLA arts district last August, and has from the start drawn large crowds to diverse shows with skilled curators. “I like to create a place of creativity. I don’t want to be put in a box, I want the space to be fresh and heartfelt. My energy affects it a lot.” It’s her first foray into running a gallery. She has an eclectic mix of shows scheduled for the remainder of the year and ahead into her second. This year, exhibitions covered nature, fashion, and the color red in its inaugural event, Incarnadine.

“In November of every year was are going to have fashion and art. I’ve launched a fashion line,” she attests. Her Maison H fashion line made the cover of American Apparel News, her vivid and prolific designs gracing blankets, bathing suits, shawls, bomber jackets, T-shirts, dresses, bags, and leggings among other items.

46426394_2069617926393331_1359456607741673472_n

50458338_10216367572409101_2195441484755369984_n

Of the impetus to take on so many new projects, she says “I just feel ready. I feel a lot freer than in my 20s. I feel I keep getting younger, so I might as well do it, it’s an energy exchange.”

50218101_10216367571729084_823389537525825536_n

The energy emanating from her work in Figurine is highly emotional, and distinctly, as she puts it, “feminine.” She attests that “The pieces came to me through meditation. I’ve been studying meditation for 25-years. Love is a big part of the journey, what does it mean to be feminine, what is my journey as a woman?” Mashian adds “It is like being an archer. You have to aim high, you cannot go after the feminine until you go after divinity, and connect to the silence there. Then you find you’ll fall into the feminine.”

In a gallery note on the show, Mashian writes “This series is a dance in color and a flowering expression of receiving sacred silence, love, and ecstasy.”

50060817_10216367559168770_6870750503005847552_n

The exhibition features images of women, each created with unique textures: layers of paper or fabric, for example, mix with the thick applications of paint. Lines, softness, and even dark backgrounds converge to create that kind of blurry, rain-soaked vibe; its furthered by the thoughtful curation of the show by Helene Brown, who has alternated the figures of women with Mashian’s stunning, light-filled tear drop pieces and dewy flowers.

50632905_10216367560728809_1922830908226797568_n

50599275_10216367561688833_3267021651715293184_n

Like translucent raindrops on wet roses – both flowers and tears glow.

50462020_10216367563568880_886522786523119616_n

The tearful images radiate complex emotions, some opalescent, some sparkling, one, “Jeweled LED Backlit Tears,” illuminated in such a way as to resemble teardrops morphed into fire opals; Mashian says the intent was to represent the clarity and illumination one feels after crying.

50013064_10216367570649057_1054312491464523776_n

“Jeweled White Tears” evoke peace; “Jeweled Black Tears” tears of pain. Her “Jeweled Red Tears,” two paired panels, represent tears of passion. “Jeweled Gold Tears” appear to represent the pure worth of tears.

50542011_10216367566008941_2418781291680890880_n

“Unless you have really cried you don’t know who you are,” Mashian says. “There is something so majestic about getting in touch with your feelings. The images of tears were all formed from crying meditation. Sometimes you don’t know if you are crying your own tears, or the collective memory of women that we carry inside us.”

50502958_10216367566488953_8868839958496935936_n
She feels that women are blessed to be open, attuned to nature, and connected to the cycle of life and death. “We are in constant flux, we are magical, one minute we are cold as ice, the next hot as fire. That’s what makes us interesting,” she laughs.

50221042_10216367571329074_433548120710709248_n

50077667_10216367566608956_5693455540030537728_n

Her figurative works, which she created working with live models, include “Mona Hissa,” whose fabric elements remind one of the scales on a snake or the feathers of a very hardy bird. The woman’s arms appear to sheathed in red wings.

49680361_10216367560328799_8856077205478834176_n

“Femme 2,” soft and impressionistic, very much resembles an image seen through rain or tear-blurred glass.

50058576_1988467641449572_1286721048821104640_n

So, too does “Femme 8” a bathing-suit or lingerie-clad figure who could be standing behind a curtain of image-fracturing rain. It is what is hidden, or partially concealed in these works, as much as what is revealed, that make them powerful. “There is the pensive innocent, the warrior, the complicated Medusa,” she says. “It all comes out at different times in us. There is no need to apologize.”

Below, “Femme 6.”

48406738_2101893739832416_2221091686577078272_n

Mashian says that all her works represent a narrative of her personal journey to her femininity. “I want people to know that this all comes from an inner knowing; it’s experiential, it needed to come out and be expressed, and it carries a certain energy of something that moved me.”

50226154_10216367562928864_7600131220831207424_n

The exhibition also includes a variety of intense floral images in red, hot pink, bright yellow. “The roses came from a meditation of looking into someone’s eyes and giving that person a rose. They come from the idea of defining beauty. How do you do that? It’s from the beyond, and always changes, there is a surrender in it.”

49662987_10216367564968915_8965508432400482304_n

50456929_10216367564688908_8582716839329529856_n

The swirling, liquid beauty of her flowers – whether a single rose or a group of scattered blooms – look upon closer inspection as if one were seeing the dynamic nature of the universe contained within the petals of a single flower.

43557755_2013263282028796_7793409353356148736_n

While Mashian likes working on a large scale, and with series of images, such as her deeply textured large-scale series of trees, above; she also creates smaller pieces, as with some of the stained-glass-like images she uses for her fashion design, which she creates digitally on her iPhone, below.

50059405_10216367565728934_2703224653433798656_n

She calls art a “mysterious process” for her. “They say an artist should be known for only one thing, but so much is happening inside me all the time. I tap into that.”

48390944_1973206402975696_4666655715710992384_n

Figurine was a plunge into the unknown for Mashian. “The work came from a more courageous place inside me. I love not knowing what’s going to come out, but trusting my gut, trusting what you’re going to put into the work. It just brings you more courage in life.” According to Mashian, “At some point the painting tells you what feeling it conveys.”

50226154_10216367562928864_7600131220831207424_n

For the viewer, what the work in this show – whether roses, women, or a dazzling world of embryonic tears – tells you overall, is to experience the radiance and magic of the work, and fall into their spell and their depth.

50305653_10216367567528979_6361721514638704640_n

Mashian plans to continue her work with illuminated tears, and create an ocean series following that. For the gallery, next up in March will be a large group show featuring 15 to 18 artists, Radiance Spectrum.

50255283_10216367562488853_6706396973764706304_n

But for now, it’s time to revel in Mashian’s own works in her solo show Figurine, which opens this Saturday night and runs through March 2nd.

Mash Gallery is located at 1325 Palmetto Street in DTLA.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis; “Femme 6” and image from Nature Worship provided by Mash Gallery