About Men at Castelli Art Space

About Men, closing July 13th at Castelli Art Space, offers the perfect balance to the #metoo era. Evocative, beautifully wrought works created about and by men offer a perceptive look at the masculine half of the species.

Curator Dale Youngman stresses that the group exhibit was created in honor of Fathers Day. “There is no deep intellectual backstory, but rather a look at how today’s society impacts the modern man.  What it is like to be a man today?  What do men think about, what drives them, interests them, worries them? What inspires them to select a particular subject, or is important enough to form the basis for their body of work? On a personal level – as a woman –  I often scratch my head and ask myself ‘What was he THINKING??'”
The exhibition includes works by 7 artists creating in a wide range of mediums.
Tom Garner Muscle Car oil on denim
Above and below, incredibly rich work from Tom Garner. Both hyper-realistic and dream-like, a reflection of California culture and a slice of life, the oil on denim “Muscle Car” is visceral and immersive, a literal and figurative window into a world.
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Luis Sanchez
Above and below, Luis Sanchez offers mixed media sculptures that dazzle with detail; a boy’s toybox of imagination that shapes creatures filled with motion and infused with a playful sense of fun. Cat imagry: major bonus. To Forte’s right: a collection of his paintings, which like the sculptures are powerfully frought with motion, and evoke mythological figures, Greek gods.
Luis Sanchez The Judge, The Spy, and the Buck Take a Tea
Above, “The Judge, The Spy, and The Buck Take A Tea.” Perfectly, minutely crafted, the calculated golden paint drips are indicative of a melting mask. Each of these elements, each personality perhaps, makes up a man. Strip off the artifice and you have disparate, even conflicting, sometimes merging, aspects that shape one soul.
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Above and below, Joe Forte. His mixed media works are vibrant with bright colors, and offer a poignant collage of insight into what makes a man tick – a passion for sports and beautiful women, sure, but also the fairytale they represent.
Joe Forte Old School (OG$)
Stuart Kusher Sketch Book mixed media
Above and below, Stuart Kusher’s mixed media “Sketch Book” is just that: a sketch of what’s in the artist’s mind and soul. From woman and dog to money and a dark and shadowy, dimensional masked figure, it’s a rich conglomeration of images that depict the jumble and profundity of an artist’s craft. Below, Kusher stands beside this piece and a lustrous gold sculptural work, revealing some of the depths and differences in his artwork.
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Patrick Donovan
Above and below, Patrick Donovan with his touching portraits of men. Infused with surrealist elements, these graceful works also riff on Renaissance style. The works are created using classical images that are beautifully detailed. Each image has a haunted quality, filled with an intrinsic sense of loss. Is any one man enough?
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Above and below , Bert-Esenherz’ with his large scale, monochrome “Len’s Men’s Club” is awash in noir mystery. His shadowy, faceless figures are both every man, and man in transition. What face do men – and does mankind – embrace?
Bert Esenherz Len's Mens Club acrylic on canvas
Below, Jack Avetisyan, “The Go Getter.” A wonderful mix of the surreal and representatitive, this painting gives us the working world, the chaotic mind, the white collar job, all skewered and revealed as one big cartoon. Avetisyan’s use of line is terrific, filled with power, humor, and the opposite: inaction, hidden fears. Only the cheerful white dog seems immune.

Jack Avetisyan The Go Getter

Fresh, insightful, and lovely, About Men is also about people, what it means to be human, and what it means to dream.

The gallery will host a closing event July 13th from 6 to 9 p.m. Castelli Art Space is located at 5428 Washington Blvd. in mid-city.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Dale Youngman

The Community of Art: Thomas Canavan

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Curator and artist Thomas Canavan has a hope for the future of art. “I hope everyone working within the arts is working toward creating more opportunities for the community to enjoy art and making art programming more accessible for everyone. The elitist art world is over and will take us down with it if we don’t change,” he attests.

 

This Saturday, at Castelli Art Space in mid-city, along with his co-curator Isabel Rojas-Williams, Canavan is presenting the pop-up launch of his new digital gallery, Sanguine. Patssi Valdez  exhibition Vases, a collection of Valdez’s ceramics accompanied by gouache paintings will be on display as will Chicago-based artist Jefferson Pinder’s exhibition Ghost Light, created for Iowa’s Figge Art Museum through a series of essays that Sanguine commissioned.

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Asked what inspires his work, Canavan asserts “I’m inspired most by the effect a community of people can have by creating exhibitions together. Opening night for me is like sitting on a museum bench staring at a Rembrandt; looking at all of the pieces that have come together and knowing the journey from idea to reality, and then to watch people interacting within that space and with the artwork itself. Ultimately, it’s the impact that exhibition will have on our community and the journey of creating it.”

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He says that mastering minutiae is how excellent exhibitions are created. “I attempt to treat those details with respect and elevate each component within an exhibition to the same status as the artwork.”

He’s been curating since his days at the University of Maryland and completing a masters in arts admin from Boston University, some 15 years.  “I haven’t made artwork in some time, but I would say philosophically they’re  (curating art and creating it) similar in that both are focused on communicating the beauty and intricacies of our communities while highlighting craftsmanship through exceptional art making.”

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Currently Canavan is jurying Apocrypha at LAAA, and planning the Alt 66 exhibit at the Millard Sheets Art Center, which is the fine art exhibition at the LA County Fair, his regular place of employment for the last four years. “Alt 66 is an immersive, installation-based exhibition that brings attention to the counter/sub/alt-culture within America’s Route 66, which is this year’s LA County Fair theme,” he relates. “Topics include everything from commercialism, consumption, racism, discrimination, urbanism, migration, isolation…it’s all there. The exhibition includes 19 artists who were provided with stipends to create fourteen separate installations. We have been working toward reestablishing the Millard Sheets Art Center at Fairplex as a resource for artists and art education in Southern California and this exhibition will play a big role in this realignment.” Alt 66 will hold an opening reception on August 25th from 6-8:30 p.m.

Last but not least, Sanguine Gallery is on his mind. canavan 4

Working with artists Isabel Rojas-Williams, Patssi Valdez, and Judithe Hernández, he explains their goal “Sanguine is an internet-based gallery that features Women Artists and Artists of Color. To celebrate the launch of the gallery, we’re hosting an exhibition and party at the Castelli Art Space on July 21st . He adds “The aim of the event is to introduce everyone to our programming that includes our exhibitions, podcasts, essays, and artist and gallery merchandise.” 

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Of each of his exhibitions, Canavan attests “I simply try to provide a perfect environment for the artwork and viewer to meet and figure one another out.”

Castelli Art Space is located at 5428 W. Washington in mid-city. The Sanguine pop-up event is Saturday, 6-10 p.m.

  • Genie Davis; Photos courtesy of Thomas Canavan

 

 

A Second Look: Susan Lizotte and Trine Churchill at Castelli Art Space

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Artists Susan Lizotte, above; Trina Churchill, below. Two evocative solo shows offer an insightful and emotional view of memory and meaning.

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Miss the opening reception? Artists Lizotte and Churchill will be present from 10 to 6 every day besides May 7th at Castelli Art Space. The two artists have created a rapturously lovely pairing of solo shows; the exhibition’s last day is the 12th.

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So what are you waiting for?

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Churchill above; Lizotte, below.

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The beautiful images are jewel like in palette; each artist unique, yet sharing a rich world heightened by floral elements, memory, loss, imagined moments, and dreams.

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Lizotte’s work is a moving tribute to the passing of her adoptive father, the passage of time, and an Edenic look at life/death/meaning in her New Works. 

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The rich textures and vibrant colors reach out to viewers; tactile, vivid, and suffused with light.

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Trine Churchill’s The Woodstock Landscape is based on family photographs, the artist’s own on-going journals, and a serene sense of the wonderful, swiftly passing moments of life.

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Dream-like, memory-filled and memory-creating – Churchill’s work is both delicate and strong, whether the piece is created in acrylic on canvas or watercolor on paper.

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Go visit!

This gorgeous show is located at 5428 W. Washington in mid-city.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Genie Davis