Three Solo Shows Shine at LAAA Gallery 825

Three fine solo exhibitions and one eclectic curated group show shine at LAAA’s Gallery 825 this month.

In Gallery One,  Alison Woods solo exhibit Metaclysmic abstraction in the virtual age, reveals the truth of how Woods’ describes her work as that of “an alchemist.” Layered, intricate, and sublimely interlocking shapes grace both of her large-scale works, one a mosaic green and serpentine, the other a sci-fi scene rooted on Mars (above).  A smaller work shines with gold, futuristic and evocative of both natural wealth and the accumulation of the unnatural variety, affecting life on earth.  A sculptural piece combines detritus from coffee shop bags to Kleenex in a floating, stalactite shape that also speaks to the human state.

While she delves into the Jungian and technological in all four of these fascinating works, the result in each and overall in the exhibition space is the rewarding creation of a kind of visionary landscape that layers past beliefs and visions with a strange and scintillating map of tomorrow.

Maya Kabat fills the middle gallery’s space in an immersive fashion, with some works positioned at eye level, while others reside close to the floor. Her geometric, sculptural abstract oils use supports and wood panels to shape Super Spatial, an exhibit that expands beyond the gallery’s own spatial constraints to create a body of floating, shifting architecture.

Vivid in palette and intriguingly faceted in line, this multi-surfaced exhibition seems to contain oceans and sunsets within its compelling box-like shapes.

Speaking of color…Seda Saar creates exceptional, glowing rainbows in the third gallery, with her show In Revelations: Seeing Light. Saar offers rainbow towers; vivid yellow and sienna prisms that replicate a rising or setting sun; and a sensual midnight blue in a half-raindrop shape, with a silvery mirror at its heart. There is a crescent moon that reflects a second planet, a series of color bright connected ovals, and a double reflective oval, opalescent in tone.

Spiritual and visceral, Saar’s delightful work lights up with mystic beauty.

 

In the north gallery, curator Cynthia Penna presented a juried group show titled SUPERSENSE. A suspended, jeweled hexagon by Espe Harper is one of a variety of works exploring (either? both?) “tactile presentation or fetishism” as the exhibition describes its theme. There were colorful flowered bustiers and shadowy profiles, candy cool hyperrealism from Lauren Mendelsohn-Bass, and a bright melting lollipop from J’Attelier.

All exhibitions will be on view through September 15th. LAAA is located at 825 N. La Cienega in West Hollywood. Open 10 to 5 Monday-Saturday by appointment.

  • Genie Davis, photos by Genie Davis

 

California Art Here We Come

In California: Now & Then, on view at bG Gallery, curator Juri Koll takes viewers on a tour de force exhibition of California culture, environment, and of course, art. Moving from the early 20th century to 2023, among the exhibiting artists are Sam Francis, Bradford Salamon, Barbara Kolo, Catherine Ruane, Hung Viet Nguyen, Charles White, Sam Francis, Lilly Fenichel, Ulysses Jenkins, Betye Saar, May Sun, Peter Alexander, Gloriane Harris, Edmund Teske, Lyn Foulkes and more than 30 more, including work by Koll himself.

Much of the art was culled from Koll’s personal collection, while others were lent to the exhibition by the artists themselves, collectors owning the works, or museum collections. To see such a mix of stellar artworks all in one salon-style presentation at bG Gallery is a kaleidoscopic experience, a mix of abstract works with the figurative.

We see seascapes and city views, faces and geometric forms, the whimsical, the magical, and the inchoate voids. Traveling through generations of work, we see the evolution of form and color, the trends and traditions, the willingness to change, each of which characterizes California itself.

Through it all, we follow the light.  One of the most fascinating finds in the exhibition is from 1904, Lockwood De Forest’s “Santa Barbara Marsh.” Suffused in gold and peach radiance, it shines like a beacon of promise, a stillness, a quiet kind of gold rush as memorable today as it was when curated. Entirely different is the abstract landscape of curator Koll’s 2023 “Käepigistus Ukraine 60,” a startlingly bright petri dish of geometric shapes seemingly swimming under an art microscope.

Gloriane Harris’ 1973 “Evening Shade” resembles a surreal moon hovering just above and just below dark periwinkle water. This is a different form of the geometric, both entirely of and transcending the period in which it was created. Evoking the same era – the quality of moving beyond the traditionally representational, reflecting the multitude of changes and restless emotion of the Vietnam years is David Alfaro Siqueiros 1972-73 color lithograph “Reclining Nude,” exuding pathos and perhaps a few bad dreams in its rhythmic brush strokes and discreet representation of body.

Beautifully current are the white lilies in Imogen Cunningham’s 1929 “Two Callas,” their fluidity and luster perfectly captured. Also cutting edge is Wynn Bullock’s 1951 gelatin silver print, “Child in the Forest,” a lush and surreal look at a child lying face down in a fecund fern-filled grove of trees. In aches with a sense of loss and wonder, a fairy tale and a cautionary tale both at once. There’s light here, too, shafting down between the trees, still and silvery. From the same year comes Hans Burkhardt’s “Untitled,” conjoins rectangles and squares dominated in golden yellows.

Sea views have always drawn me as a viewer, and there are plentiful examples here. Hank Pitcher’s 2005 “Solstice Swell at Government Point” offers lavenders and blues in a rising wave infused with a white, opalescent light. Osceola Refetoff’s radiant pink archival pigment print, created this year, is an alchemic look at “Tiny Island, Antarctica.” Hung Viet Ngyuen’s “Sacred Landscape III #18” is a fanta-sea if you will, a small 2017 oil on board work that is magical in its vibrating brush strokes, featuring both the edge of a sea or lake and a rushing river descending from dark mountains. Ruth Weisberg’s 2005 “Darkship,” a monochromatic monoprint gives viewers a ship loosed upon dark waves.

Also compelling are cityscapes such as Gay Summer Rich’s mix of headlights, lit high rise windows, and the iconic neon of the El Rey theater in her 2023 “Ready For a Night Out – El Rey.” Her carefully rendered oil on canvas, created entirely with palette knife is somehow both impressionistic and realistic at the same time, and again, the light. And, it’s also about the light – red swirling clouds above what could either be a sprawling city of dotted lights or a massive airport runway – in Peter Alexander’s 1992 “The Locus,” a surreal and absorbing mix of ink and acrylic on paper.

There could be nothing more bursting with light than May Sun’s 2023 “Datura (Yellow) Offering,” a diptych of acrylic on two wood panels featuring both a brilliant lily held high and the chartreuse like wave of land against with three farmworkers in yellow straw hats work, framed against a fierce orange sky. Diminutive but also exuding a burning orange is Ralph Allen Massey’s “Eight,” the letters casting deep shadows in the foreground against that sun on fire.

And what happens if you stand too long in the sun? The clean, stylized look of Barbara Carrasco’s sweet “Burnt Girl,” a child whose sunscreen application was sadly lacking.

There are sculptural works as well, such as Stuart Rapeport’s 2015 “Minimal Brush,” a bronze artist’s proof that resembles a magician’s wand. The sculptural stand-out in the exhibition is Sonja Schenk’s 2023 “Light for the Sun,” a floor work that combines California sandstone with stripes of 24K gold, an homage to the rich veins struck in the Gold Rush, and again, the light, the light that draws so many California transplants and dreamers, artists and writers. Comprised of three separate pieces it is a glorious work, positioned as if calling to the vast array of wall art surrounding it. Very different is the mysterious, even ominous “Studio in Dorking,” Gordon Wagner’s 1974 mixed media box, that include legs clad in hoof-like shoes and no upper half to the body attached to them. Cosimo Cavallaro’s mysterious “Black Arrow,” a 2023 work in stainless steel, absorbs and reflects the light – the antithesis to Schenk’s piece. There is also Timothy Washington’s sparkly “Many Faces, One Race” from 2019.

Some included works were startling for being so far from the same artist’s current oeuvre. This includes Catherine Ruane’s 1974 “Untitled,” her delicacy and precision of line remains the same, but this muted and intimate abstract is quite different from her charcoal and graphite roses, oak and Joshua Trees created in more recent years. Speaking of abstracts, there are a wide range to view:  Larry Bell’s  1988 “Untitled,” a black orb depicted in profile against a white background, a bit reminiscent of a black hole or nuclear blast, or perhaps the emptiness of Reagan-era politics. Then there is the dancing, music-evoking 1957 “Color Sinfony,” from Oskar Fischinger; Emil Bisttram’s 1950 “Abstract,” of a plant and a beehive, everything a fluid supple motion of line; and Sam Francis’ 1976 monochrome “Untitled,” which resembles sail boats buffeted by sea spray. Max Presneil’s vibrant 2020 “MiT #149” radiates pink, red, and chartreuse persisting despite a black hole at the center left, indicative of how many felt during that year. The surreal is well represented, too, including a 2018 work by Robert Nelson, “Self-Fulfilling Prophecy.”

Bradford J. Salamon’s 2023 “Silver Spoon” gives the viewer a gold and white striped dessert confection one can almost taste, dancing in elegant light that glistens off the eponymous spoon. Its intimacy is placed comfortingly near another source of the intimate, the powerful and intimidating 2023 “Self Portrait,” from Don Bachardy,  streaks of white light representing facial lines and shadows.

And while there are many other worthy works in the exhibition, perhaps it’s best to close with Barbara Kolo’s 2023 “Escape Into Amber,” with both the title and the minute Pointillism of her approach drawing the viewer into a vibrating flower of gold, orange, purple and red, almost as if the corona of the California sun were waiting to pull both artist and viewer deep among these unfolding petals.

The exhibition is on display at bG Gallery through August 15th. bG is located in Bergamot Station at 2525 Michigan Ave. #A2 in Santa Monica. Don’t miss.

  • Genie Davis; photos: by Genie Davis and as provided by curator

The Cheech Celebrates Art and Starts a Second Year

Cheech Marin was there. But that’s not a surprise, given that the art celebration in mid-June was both to open three new exhibitions and commemorate a super successful first year at The Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture of the Riverside Art Museum in downtown Riverside.

Last year’s opening show was stunning, and this year offered a new bevy of treasures to mark the anniversary. And what an anniversary it is: the museum far surprassed predicted attendance by 30%, and provided a much needed home for Chicano art in Southern California.

The museum was developed as a public-private partnership between the City of Riverside, Riverside Art Museum, and Marin. As such the museum also received Marin’s prolific collection of major artworks – over 500 stellar works in all.

In helping to establish The Cheech, the Riverside Art Museum received the 2023 National Medal for Museum and Library Service, the nation’s highest honor given to museums and libraries due to the significant contribution The Cheech made to the region. Marin is justifiably proud and pleased at both the response to the museum, and the exhibitions held there. The gloriously airy, modern space is equipped with comfortable, open galleries that showcase the work, and provide the room for large scale pieces and wall art alike.

Present at the celebration – which included make your own tacos, craft brews, ceviche, and Mexican pastries for desert – Marin stated his purpose. “Riverside Art Museum’s work in the community, its educational mission, and its broad support of Chicano art is why I decided to gift my collection and work with them to create a national center.” He cited the impact the museum has had on the community, and the ways in which the museum is providing the space to show Chicano art and educate viewers about it.

As honestly enormous of a cultural success as the museum is, it’s also a bastion of innovative, beautiful, and often profound art, revealing and passionately exploring political and social issues while presenting wall art and sculptural works that not only defy expectations but go beyond them.

The anniverary introduced three new exhibitions. On the first floor, there’s a new grouping of Marin’s personally collected works in Cheech Collects, an exhibition that included a few beauties viewed last year, but a lot of new pieces as well. The art is steeped in images of Southern California and family life, as well as in the social struggles, work, community, and protest that are a part of the rich Chicano community. Curated by Maria Esther Fernandez, Marin’s collection sings with color and light, and features many works by the always impressive Frank Romero, among 40 other artists. Romero’s “City of Night” is a vision of emerald green freeways.

Throughout the collection we see images such as Carlos Almaraz’ splendid “Mystery in the Park” diptych, and Eloy Torrez’  appropriate and beautifuly rendered “It’s a Brown World After All.” These works will be on display through next May.

In the upstairs galleries, Xican-a.o.x. Body intimately explores and celebrates the ways in which Chicanx artists have placed their physical and emotional bodies within these works, establishing their presence and also indicating a necessary willingness for protest and resistance. This exhibition was created by The American Federation of Arts, and features over 125 works ranging from photography to to sculptures – the visual grabber perhaps being a hot pink low rider, Justin Favela’s “Gypsy Rose Pinata (II) is a visual confection, an enormous and vibrant sculpture.  

Narsiso Martinez’ truly stunning “Magic Harvest,” is a dimensional, sculptural painting of a migrant worker created on boxes of the produce gathered, and is wonderful from all angles, bringing the depicted worker both physically and emotionally present and fully realized.  Linda Vallejo’s heartbreaking colored pencil and photographic “23.9% of Sex Trafficking Vicimes in the US were Latino in 2010” is both sharp in color and message. These works will be on view through early January of 2024.

Last but definitely not least, there are works of emerging and local artists curated by Cosmé Cordova. Among them are Man One, Andrew J. Castillo, Carlos Beltran Arechiga, Richie Velazquez, Martin Sanchez, Denise Silva, and Jacqueline Valenzuela. This one requires you to use a bit of alacrity in visiting The Cheech – it will close October 1st. Among the many fresh and riveting works, a massive geometrically abstract work from Carlos Beltran Arechiga, “Border Field State Park,” is a particular favorite, as woven as a tapestry, as complex as memory. Arechiga also has a smaller “Self Portrait” in the mix.

Yes, the 91E is a slog from LA to Riverside, but you’ll find a true oasis of art, culture, and meaning at The Cheech, and all you Los Angelenos owe it to yourself to make a visit.

The Cheech is located at 3581 Mission Avenue in Riverside.

  • Genie Davis; photos by Genie Davis

Diving Into the Surreal and Otherworldly Photography of Tim Walker

Luminous and whimsical, Tim Walker’s photography offers an immersive journey at The Getty’s latest exhibit. Wonderful Things,  Walker’s Renaissance-themed photography collection, features the playful and vibrant shots the photographic artist is known for, both surreal and otherworldly. His cultural legacy and unique vision shapes a tour de force show,  not dissimilar to The Getty’s Pacific Standard Time multimedia exhibit, which presented original Latin American and Latino art from the WeHo Artes program.

Born in 1970 in Guildford, Surrey, Walker spent a bucolic childhood in rural Dorset, where he and his brother were free to run wild among the valleys and rivers. Having the freedom to explore natural wonders inspired him, and his first photographic images were taken by stealing his brother’s instant camera, using film with developing chemicals already embedded. Later, he’d borrow his father’s camera to snap shots of the countryside around the family’s home. Initially intimidated by the technical components of photography, Walker took a three-year photography course at Exeter College of Art, which led him into the world of fashion photography.

Walker started his career as an assistant to Richard Avedon, learning the art of storytelling from the photographic fashion icon.  This knowledge led to a break-out commission with Vogue in 1995, and other high-concept fashion shots for major magazines. Overtime, he shaped the surreal photography style all his own, one distinguished by his fantastical dreamscapes and his childhood-derived penchant for using medium-format film cameras—particularly the Pentax 6×7—when shooting. Using common film formats like 35mm and instant film cartridges, his work has a unique coloring allowing viewers to see his subjects as they would in the real world. Contrasted with the sets and props Walker constructs for each shoot, his photos are uniquely-colored, ethereal escapes that shape another world, one emulating the daydreaming common in children but so often lost among adults.

All of this led to the collaboration with the Victoria and Albert Museum exhibition begun in 2016, featuring his past work in the fashion industry and new work in conjunction with the museum. Walker spent a year exploring the museum archives to find what excited him.

An illustrated manuscript made for the Duchess of Brittany in the 1470s and a dress from Alexander McQueen’s Horn of Plenty were among his selections, shaping new photographic projects for nine photoshoots, the creations of a white room retrospective of his past images, and opulent room sets by Shona Heath to display new images along with the objects that inspired them.  Wonderful Things had arrived.

Walker’s 2023 Wonderful Things at the Getty is a revamped version of his previous Victoria and Albert Museum project. On display are previous works, and a replication of his process, drawing inspiration from museum objects. This iteration also includes another series of photographs, this time prompted by two paintings from The Getty. This lustrous photo exhibition runs May 2 to August 20, and serves as a terrific exploration of Walker’s magical worlds, one that encourages contemplation and some – very much needed in today’s world – daydreaming revelations.

  • Collaborative post, edited by Genie Davis; photos provided by The Getty