Blooming in the Whirlwind Whirls Away

Photo credit of installation artists, Dani Dodge

Durden and Ray together in collaboration with Level Ground have brought a brilliant mix of art, video, and poetry into being as a collision of light, color, sculpture, immersive experience and astonishing fun. The Blooming in the Whirlwind exhibition closes with an artist’s talk on December 5th.

It’s a riveting show at the Bendix building gallery, one that seems fraught with rich meaning and emotion. This whirlwind is a cavalcade of dreams, desire, and collaboration.

The conversation between collectives began with poems that inspired films, that led to visual art installations. Poets were paired with filmmakers, filmmakers with installation artists.

The title is fitting, referring to a classic poem by Gwendolyn Brooks written in 1968, another chaotic time here in the land of out of control hopes and dreams. But the exhibition itself took that chaos and made of it a thing of beauty and poignance, of fallen leaves and satin kitchens, of gilt edged tears and strangely alien sculptural “life forms.”

Curated by Level Ground’s Andy Motz, Rebekah Neel, Samantha Curley, and Simone Tetrault, poetry and filmmaker pairings included poets Christina Brown, Daniel Binkoski, DeiSelah, Jireh Deng, Karly Kuntz, Madeleine St. John, Noor Jamal, Simone Tetrault, and Tamisha A Tyler and filmmakers Andrés Vazquez, Anthony D. Frederick, Andrew Neel & Alex C. Smith, Ilgın G. Korugan, Labkhand Olfatmanesh, Leila Jarman, Meredith Adelaide, Rich Johnson, and Taree Vargas.

Curated by Durden and Ray‘s team of Arezoo Bharthania, Ismael de Anda III, and Sean Noyce were installation artists Bharthania, de Anda III, and Noyce, Dani Dodge, Kiyomi Fukui, Sean Noyce, Tina Linville, Reed Van Brunschot, Flora Kao, and Ricardo Harris-Fuentes. Artworks and many of the artists in the gallery with their work, shown below.

From Kao’s glorious autumnal forest to Fukui’s leaf-imprinted chair, de Anda III’s rocking, glowing drum kit, and Dodge’s tear-stained shower of TikTok images and gold leaf tear drops, to Bharthania’s photographic nightscape, Noyce’s towering layered sculpture, and lush tactile work by Van Brunschot, the harmony and kinetic connection between writers/filmmakers/and installation visual creators was vibrantly alive.

As with many exhibitions held at the D & R space, this collab effort was as fresh and compelling as it was entirely enjoyable. Collectives that make cutting edge cool and accessible? A resounding affirmative.

This exhibition was both response to the pandemic isolation and a glorious assault on the senses – power to the people arising from the pandemic and ponderous times.

Durden and Ray is located on the 8th floor of the Bendix Building in DTLA at 1206 Maple in the fashion district.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis


Durden and Ray Hosts New Immersive Exhibition

Singing with light and strung from the ceiling, crunching on the floor, and draped over windows and walls, Durden and Ray offers a stunning immersive exhibition now through October 2nd in the Bendix Building.

Curated by Valerie Wilcox, The Big Embrace is just that, embracing mind, body, and spirit with curiosity and reverence – and the sense of transcending place and space.

This is one you must see in person. The three artist exhibition by Flora Kao, Rebecca Niederlander, and Amanda Yamashita is dazzling, snaking, weaving, and dangling around the gallery space.

Kao’s Hope is a luxurious tent of packaging twine and bamboo. Beneath the viewers feet, the bamboo crunches and heaves like soft, other-earthly ground. The artist says in her family’s language “the word for fishnet sounds the same as hope.” The woven canopy’s palette reflects Buddhist funeral tradition and a sacred color of enlightenment and freedom. Being within it offers an encompassing, golden sense of beauty

Niederlander uses plastic coated copper conduit to form sinuous and intersecting wire sculptures that are being individually sold to support social, legal and medical needs of transgendered people. The colors of the different wires represent different iterations of sexuality in her Wald-en. The lush puzzle piece sculptures represent a wide variety of gender representations – a forest of gender and peace. It’s kinetic and alive, with new shapes visible at every turn.

Yamashita’s Linked is a glittery hung snake of nylon filled with polyester fiberfill, and shimmering with sequins. It weaves to the edge of Kao’s work and slightly within Niederlander’s, forming a perfect connection. The artist says “as social creatures people long to feel connected to others…Linked explores connection in the form of a larger than life sequined chain…creating a cocooning effect.” It’s a rivetingly beautiful one, indeed.

Get connected, find hope, or lie back on pillows to contemplate the fascinating diversity of Wald-en. Hurry though.

Saturday’s only, or by appointment through October 2nd ONLY.

Durden and Ray is located at 1206 Maple #832 in the Fashion District.

  • Genie Davis, photos by Genie Davis

Partita II at Durden & Ray Adds Art for the Holidays

Who wouldn’t want to enjoy the works of stellar contemporary artists, have a fun and festive evening, and help support one of the most cutting-edge and globally-linked art collectives in LA? Certainly not you, right?

Artist: Nadege Monchera Baer

Partita II at Durden & Ray in DTLA’s Bendix Building this Saturday night offers you the opportunity to bid on, enter a raffle for, and simply enjoy the art of:

Lillian Abel, Kim Abeles, Mark Acetelli, Daniel Adkins, Robin Adsit, Kim Alexander, Dawn Arrowsmith, Nurit Avesar, Carlos Beltran Arechiga, Christine Morla Armstrong, Dawn Arrowsmith, Kristine Augustyn, Nadege Monchera Baer, Malado Baldwi, Marsha Effron Barron, Quinton Bemiller, Arezoo Bharthania, Jodi Bonassi, Jorin Bossen, Gary Brewer, Janine Brown, Stefan Bucher, Suzanne Budd, Gavin Bunner, Julian Bustill, Gul Cagi, Jane Callister, Debbie Carlson, Jennifer Celio, Chenhung Chen, Sijia Chen, Mika
Cho, Trine Churchill, Norman Clark, Daniel Barron Corrales, Natalie Cruz, Joe Davidson, Ismael de Anda III, Ilknur Demirkoparan, Mark Dimalanta, Glenda Dixon, Dani Dodge, Tom Dunn, Lana Duong, Martin Durazo, Cliff Eberly, Michael Emmanuel, Mitra Fabian, Marielle Farnan, Roni Feldman, Cia Foreman, Christian Franzen, Sarajo Frieden, Josh Friedman, Steven Fujimoto, Sean Michael Gallagher, Martin Gantman, Gabe Garcia, Michael

Garcia, Yvette Gellis, Lawrence Gipe, Audra Graziano, Phyllis Green, Kio
Griffith, Jenny Hager, Steve Hampton, Stephanie Han, Aska Irie, Ben Jackel,
Claire Jackel, Dion Johnson, Brian Thomas Jones, Flora Kao, Yasmin
Kazam, Kate Kelton, Shane King, Nadim Kurani, Jay Kvapil, Connie DK
Lane, David Leapman, Tidawhitney Lek, Stephen Levy, Echo Lew, Nikki
Lewis, Kevin Linehan, Susan Lizotte, Amelia Lockwood, Mela M ( Mela Marsh), Maya Mackrandilal, Alanna Marcelletti, Aline Mare, Jane Margarette, Kim Marra, Anne Martens, Javier Martinez, Lynne McDaniel, Annelie McKenzie, Amanda Mears, Kathleen Melian, Yevgeniya Mikhailik, Hagop Najarian, Hung Viet Nguyen,
Khang B. Nguyen, Sean Noyce, Labkhand Olfatmanesh, Elizabeth Orleans, Miguel Osuna, Billy Pacak, Paul Paiement, Kristopher Paos, Chris Pate, Olga Ponomarenko, Elizabeth Preger, Max Presneill, Michael Provart, Katie Queen, Mei Xian Qui, Kristopher Raos, Samuelle Richardson, Frederika Roeder, Ann Marie Rousseau, David S. Rubin, Frank Ryan, Liza Ryan, John Sollom, Annie Seaton, Sonja Schenk, Kristine Schomaker, Nike Schroeder, Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia, Steve Seleska, Rafael Serrano, Shilla Shakoori, Maccabee Shelley, Stephanie Sherwood, Dimitra Skandali, Jeffrey Sklan, Charles Snowden, Robert Soffian, David Spanbock, Curtis Stage, Kayla Sweet-Newhouse, Eric Minh Swenson, Jill Sykes,Vincent Tomczyk, Katya Usvitsky, Emily Van Horn, Melissa Walter, Ann Weber, Joan Weinzettle, Dana Weiser, Stacy Wendt, Tracy Weiss, Valerie Wilcox, Sammy Jean Wilson, Surge Witron, Steven Wolkoff, Alison Woods, and Jacob Yanes.

Artist: Christine Morla

The one-night-only small works exhibition and fundraiser is designed to help Durden and Ray to continue its international artist exchanges which this year took viewers on a one-of-a-kind art exploration here in LA with compelling contemporary artwork from Rome, Luxemborg, Greece, Berlin, and Iceland. The result for viewers is an exploratory adventure.

Artist: Max Presneill

For this show, Los Angeles-area artists were invited to make small-sized art that represents, according to Durden and Ray member Dani Dodge, “the unification across distances through image and discourse. They are the physical remnants of experience.” The works are available for $50 each, with 100% of the proceeds benefitting Durden and Ray.

In short, the night is a holiday gift for attendees and might just help you wipe out your entire gift list besides.

The raffle will include larger artworks and experiences such as portrait sessions and studio visits. Raffle tickets are $5 each and will be available at the event. The raffle will be held at 8:30 p.m. the night of the event.

Event curators are Arezoo Bharthania, Joe Davidson, Ben Jackel, Alanna Marcelletti, David Spanbock, Curtis Stage, and Valerie Wilcox.

The evening runs from 6-9 p.m. at Durden and Ray, 1206 Maple Ave. #832 in the Bendix Building. Santa says go, and so do we.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Durden and Ray and Genie Davis

Specter of Documentation at Durden and Ray

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Curated by Jenny Hager, Jennifer Celio, and Valerie Wilcox, Specter of Documentation – closing November 3rd at Durden and Ray – is the perfect show for today’s news cycle, and tomorrow’s memories.

Edgy and fascinating, the show features artists Sydney Croskery, Dani Dodge, Marielle Farnan, Ed Gomez, Claudia Parducci, Sabine Pearlman, Liza Ryan, Curtis Stage, Joe Wolek, Steven Wolkoff, and Tim Youd.

In a wide range of mediums, the artists take on the idea of documentation, of gathering and recording,  of saving and analyzing. In combination with this, the show deals with an unnamed phantom, a specter that haunts, or perhaps shifts a ghostly light onto the inner soul behind the prosaic.

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From the serene oil on panel visual postcards of nature by Croskery to her oil work of a jujjjyfruits box to the haunting devastation of Parducci’s charcoal on canvas “OK City,” there is much to dive into here.

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Surface viewing barely scratches the meaning of each image, which seem to be inhabited by an almost unearthly, biting, deeply felt knowledge the artists each seek to impart.

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There is the intricate shredded acrylic paint strip mosaic sculpture of Wolkoff’s “50 Girls I didn’t call” paired viscerally and sardonically with his “65 women who Charles Manson didn’t kill,” the perfect distillation of the recent Supreme Court nominee debacle.

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Woleck’s video sculpture “In the Foothills of Appalachia (Lipstick on a Pig)” offers a mysterious glimpse of a life we haven’t led, yet one that feels oddly prescient and familiar.

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Farnan’s photographic works shot in Forest Lawn cemetery edge on the surreal.

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Dodge’s striking installation “Khartoum” intricately sews stories clipped from the Los Angeles Times to velvet and polyfil, crafting a stunning horse’s head that evokes the iconic horse’s head depicted in The Godfather. Red thread binds the head, neck, and crumpled blanket to the ceiling as if with sinews torn from flesh or ribbons of blood. The horse’s eye has a pupil that reveals the orange-faced image of Donald Trump, the ultimate thug.

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Gomez’ mixed media sculpture “20th Century” reminds the viewer of Calder, a kite, a frozen field of kinetic energy all in one; modern, fragile, spooky.

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Curators and artists, above

You want to see this show for so many reasons: it’s this day, this age, this year, this time; it will stay with you like a fragment of a mirror embedded in your skin and heart. And it’s a beautiful, strange, mysterious show: you learn from it without needing to understand; it reveals and compels with a silent power.

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Addendum: When in Rome…Durden and Ray just opened Los Angeles Is, Once Again  at the Gallery of Art, Temple University Rome. That exhibition is curated by Camilla Boemio and features Durden and Ray artists Dani Dodge, Ed Gomez, Sean Noyce, Max Presneill, Ty Pownall, Curtis Stage, Alison Woods, Gul Cagin, Roni Feldman, and Joe Davidson. If you’re aheaded abroad, that exhibition runs through November 22nd. The opening event included performance art by Sean Noyce and Katya Usvitsky.

Genie Davis; photos by Genie Davis (Rome photo provided by Durden and Ray)