Light and Dark: Major Solo Shows at MOAH Cedar

Now at MOAH Cedar,  stunning solo shows are filling the gallery spaces with color, light, and noir magic.

Gay Summer Rick’s evocative Southern California landscapes glow with sunset, sunlight, foggy mornings. A video presentation is a part of the exhibition, explaining in part her painstaking process, as well as the light spectrum that she creates. Her textured, luminous work speaks to sky and shadow, light and air. The viewer could almost float through these images and emerge again bathed in a prolific wash of color and glow. Follow the Sun is as meticulously created as Bonassi’s, but Rick’s work uses a careful application of oil by palette knife.

Her careful, poetic use of color gives us light along the sea and in the city, in mist or wildfire smoke, on a crystalline morning and in the stillness of dusk. Her paintings take us into a full spectrum of sunlight. The urban landscape of downtown Los Angeles provides the setting for a reverential sunrise gilding the summer streets of downtown in “City of Angels.” Heading west to the airport, “Into White” revels in a haunting wash of pale blue and white, as a plane lands in deep fog. The airport is again the setting for “Stand By,” as a rich pink sunset welcomes travelers to the LAX runways. While her work feels in so many ways influenced by and a love letter to Los Angeles light, Rick also depicts New York City in this exhibition. The twice-annual occurrence of “Phenomenon,” in which the sun sets precisely between iconic skyscrapers, takes on an almost supernaturally transportive loveliness in Rick’s skilled hands.

Positioned in the middle gallery space, Lynne McDaniel offers an equally evocative and stunning body of work. Unlike Rick McDaniel’s work glows without vibrant color – or perhaps just a dash of it. McDaniel’s May I Place You on a Brief Hold? flies into a chiaroscuro world, with bold dark and light contrasts creating rich dimension and light.

As she explores environmental issues and man’s fraught relationship with nature, her beautiful, shadowy landscapes haunt both with quiet beauty and the awareness that something just might be amiss. Like Rick, McDaniel also focuses primarily on the Los Angeles area, here depicting primarily the neighborhood sidewalks, streets, and trails around her home in the LA foothills near Pasadena. Elevating the ordinary elements of life to something extraordinary or worthy of deeper consideration, McDaniel gives us a brilliant orange and yellow tot’s pedal car, or a bright orange traffic cone positioned in the middle of a hauntingly curved dirt road lined with lush dark monochrome conifers. An intimate series of smaller, square works include a faint orange/gold shadow of light, as if appearing hazily from a sky grey with wildfire smoke; overhung with trees and shrubs, one bush takes on a reddish cast. As if emerging from a noir dream, the cityscapes McDaniel depicts are in palette, approach, and texture quite different indeed from Rick’s, but equally driven by the Los Angeles they love, and its light and shadow.

In contrast to these landscapes are McDaniel’s purely delightful images of her expressive black cat in “January/December 2020.” The feline’s gold eyes will rivet you, as does so much of McDaniel’s fine work. Look up above the doorway to be sure not to miss them.

Reviewed in another publication is the third, magnificent solo show now at Cedar, Jodi Bonassi’s gorgeous, color-jewel birds.

All three, Bonassi’s astounding winged creatures; Rick’s light-filled dazzling landscapes traversing the color spectrum of light; and McDaniel’s superb monochromatic and intimate depictions of our fragile neighborhoods and environment – these exhibitions are too fine to miss.

Visit MOAH Cedar through March 13.

MOAH Cedar is located at 44857 Cedar Ave. in Lancaster. The galleries are open Thursday-Sunday, 2 to 8 p.m.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Genie Davis

Fantastic Four: A Super Hero and Heroine Quartet Hit the Art World

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Left to right, above, it’s the fantastic four artists and friends: Bob Branaman, Gay Summer Rick,  Catherine Ruane, and Mike Street.

At Venice’s Mike Kelley Gallery at Beyond Baroque through March 15th, the work of four exceptional SoCal artists makes up the Fantastic Four exhibition. Each artist is quite different from the other, yet their work in the rambling upstairs/downstairs gallery is brilliantly compatible in a quite wonderful show curated by Bob Branaman.

Gay Summer Rick’s intense golds, oranges, and pinks are the stuff of California dreams; Catherine Ruane’s delicate, ruminitive pieces are touched in gold and have an astonishing jewel-like glow; Mike Street’s work feels both modern and yet that it would not be out-of-place in Greco-Roman times, both monochromatic and richly narrative; while Bob Branaman’s work is all vibrant color, exuberant and blossoming with life.

In short, this is an exhibition to savor, in terms of its differentness among the artists – who are all friends – and their similarities. Each in their own way present work that is emblematic of their lives in California; images born both of imagination and the emotional alchemy that arises in the diverse environments of their home state and the fertile field of aristic dreams.

Enjoy the fantastic ride: these four take you on roads of beauty that refuse to remain unmapped.

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The glow of Gay Summer Rick’s work, above and below is astonishing. It is the fire of sunsets, the rising light of dawn, the backdrop, love-song, and legacy of Los Angeles. From freeway commuter views toward the sea to the skies that simmer and shift above the downtown cityscape, Rick is perhaps the quintessential artist for LA. Radiant work here, as is her norm; with an underpinning of dreamy light even in the most prosaic landscape.

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With Catherine Ruane’s work, below,  there are familiar aspects of her oeuvre, too, and many previously unexperienced. Her gorgeous, often black and white drawings of trees and branches, flowers, and desert have been supplanted here by smaller, very jewel-like etchings.

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From beautiful, motion-filled, wind-swept palms to fish with gold highlights on their scales, this is perfect, dazzlingly precise work. Each piece is a work of wonder, something so finely crafted that the viewer simply does not want to look away.

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Mike Street’s work here is somehow timeless: it is of this place and era and yet it could also easily be  from a distant world.

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There’s a sculptural quality to each piece, and their monochromatic use of color adds to that. Rich in depth, they remind the viewer of the  past, somehow transported to our time and space through the conduit of Street’s artistry.

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To some extent, these fascinating faces remind the viewer of a daguerreotype, as if created on a silver-covered copper plate.

If Street’s work offers an elegant, restrained use of palette, Branaman’s work provides the exact opposite: imposing color, the delight of a hippie kingdom, a tie-dyed world, rainbows.

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There is a fierceness to his colors, to his stained-glass-like patterns; an impulsive, vibrant quality that leaps at the viewer and catches one up in its powerful exuberance. Below, Branaman stands with Gay Summer Rick.

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So – which of the four is the most fantastic? It’s a tough call – you’ll have to go see for yourselves.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Genie Davis

Gay Summer Rick: Transporting Viewers in Beauty

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Gay Summer Rick is a quintessentially Los Angeles artist. It is in her color palettes, in her images, in the innate glow of her work. Even when she is not creating works that epitomize Southern California, her LA-state-of-mind fuses her images with something recognizable, wonderful, and soulfully West Coast.

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She says “The work will likely transport the viewer to a very calm and quiet place. My paintings are impressions from moments on my journey. I have discovered an unexpected beauty in commonplace elements within the urban landscape.” She adds “Once I took the time to really see and experience that, the tension associated with being stuck in the middle of the freeway, or circling over a city for landing, endless delays, noise, etcetera, the positive elements outweighed those stressors and beauty won.”

Rick says that her color palette changes depending on where she hopes to take the viewer and the feelings she wants to share.

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“I have a thousand images running through my head that I know I will paint. They are the impressions I have taken with me of moments in time in places I’ve been, primarily throughout Los Angeles and New York.”

Sometimes the paintings are saturated in color, and warm, and sometimes they are muted with light, and cool, she relates. “It just depends on what feeling I was left with from that moment in time, and what I would like to share with the viewer from that experience.”

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Rick says she’s always lived on one coast or another, east or west. “There’s something about the moisture in the air where cities meet the sea, the diffusion of light through mist that, for me, has a calming effect. Being at the ocean gives me the ability to tune everything else out, breathe, and focus.” 

This sense of simply breathing and being is intangible and yet present, a thread of communion with the viewer through her work.

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“Perhaps it has something to do with the scientific phenomenon of the ‘Blue Space’ effect and the change in negative ions from open water. The coast has always had this effect on me, and this carries into my work. From my studio I can see the bay, and even in my cityscapes that quality is definitely present in my work.”

She embraces a sense of peace in her process and her creation.  “As loud as the city or the ocean may be, the light and atmosphere that comes through in my work is always quiet and calm. There’s something about the water. I’m drawn to it.”

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Rick has a new body of work opening October 13th at bG Gallery’s new location on Ocean Park Blvd. at 30th in Santa Monica. Titled Skyways and Highways, her new body of work includes her well-known urban and coastal atmospheric land and cityscapes, but includes images culled from “the sky with a window-seat view over the landscape. The view is gorgeous up there,” she enthuses.

Her inspiration for this body of work came in part from a change in flight patterns over the past year that found her looking up at air traffic and shaking her head, initially.

“I’d be sitting in a friend’s backyard in Los Angeles and we would have to stop talking because jets were flying low in this new concentrated pattern overhead. But then I thought about how my view of highway traffic changed as I began to notice just how beautiful the view from the highway really was, with headlights and tail lights, the colors of road signage, and the silhouettes of palms, power lines, and light poles against the sky…So, I thought about my most memorable trips, looked back through many photos and video from flights I had taken, and I even rerouted some planned travel, carefully choosing which side of the plane on which to sit, to ensure that I had the best window-seat views over places I thought I might like to paint.”

She adds “When I look at these paintings I feel like I am traveling. For me it is almost Zen-like.”

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Along with this upcoming show, Rick currently has paintings of fireworks and surfers in a group exhibition, Love in Color 2 at Art Project Paia on Maui in Hawaii, which runs through November. She’ll also be a part of a group exhibition, Out and About, opening this coming weekend, September 22nd at Rebecca Molayem Gallery on Fairfax in Los Angeles. 

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As to the dreamlike nature of her work that many viewers note, she says “Because it is all about capturing the feeling of a particular moment from some place I’ve been, I include elements that make a place recognizable, sometimes by only a small detail. It is never an exact representation, but it is exactly my impression of a moment in time.”

In regard to her process, Rick stresses that her work makes use of an environmentally responsible process. “I use oil paint and palette knives to create my paintings. No brushes, no toxic solvents. This process not only helps me tell a visual story through layers of paint that create a history and a certain vibration in the juxtaposition of colors, it also helps me achieve a goal of being a good steward of the environment.” It takes the artist one to three months to complete a painting.

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Asked for a few words that describes her work best, Rick considers before replying “Calm. Quiet. Mnemonic. And, I’ll throw another in because I keep hearing it from people when standing in front of the work: luminous.”

Come feel the glow.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist and by Genie Davis

 

Art Makes Change

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VisionLA ‘15 presents Art Makes Change, a group exhibition of 60 local artists. Through over 200 pieces of art from photography to sculpture, these works inspire viewers to confront the climate-related issues in today’s world.  These beautiful pieces are divided into four categories: Earth, Water, Recycle, and Awareness. Co-curators Dale Youngman and Lilli Muller hone in on the ways in which art can create and promote change.

Each piece speaks of either or both the beauty of the earth and the challenges facing it, such as drought, pollution, endangered species, and climate change.

Participating artists include:

Mike Anderson, Jacki Apple, Cody Bayne, Clara Berta, Om Bleicher, Jody Bonassi, Wanda Boudreaux, Qathryn Brehm, Bill Brewer, Gary Brewer, Wini Brewer, Mark Brosmer, Kate Caravellas, Michael Carrier, Nathan Cartwright, Morgan Chavoshi, Steven David, Roberto Delgado, Ben Dewell,Beth Elliott, Karen Fiorito, Nicole Fournier, Barbara Fritsche, Anyes Galliani, Tom Garner, Brian Goodman, Patrick Haemmerlein, Erin Hansen, Michael Hayden, William Hogan, Brenda Hurst, Liz Huston, Dave Knudsen, Juri Koll, Jamie Lynn Kovacs, Stuart Kusher, Jonna Lee, Aline Mare,Michael McCall, Rick Mendoza, Monica Mader, Colette Miller, Rebecca Molayem, Michael M. Mollett, Suzi Moon, Jen Moore, Pamela Mower-Conners, Lilli Muller, Julie Orr, Miguel Osuna, Billy Pacek, Yael Pardess, Vinnie Picardi, Naomi Pitcairn, Jena Priebe, Osceola Refetoff, Gay Summer Rick, Robert Rosenblum, Karrie Ross, Avi Roth, Catherine Ruane, Louise Russell, Gwen Samuels, Elizabeth Saveri, Winston Secrest, Moses Seenarine, Karen Sikie, Paul Soady, Sean Sobczak, Marilee Spencer, Anna Stump, Jill Sykes, Alexandra Underhill, Rachel Van Der Pol, Andrea Villefane, Geoffry White, Rush White, Tami Wood and Ron Zeno

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Above: a photo chronicle of Mud People, the living sculpture project helmed by artist and performance artist Mike Mollett.

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Co-curator Dale Youngman says “I am so happy about this opportunity to curate a show of this magnitude for such a really important cause.  I think that artists have an ability to engage the public in meaningful conversation through their work, and if they can affect or inspire change through their efforts, that is a wonderful thing.”

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Morgan Chavoshi has focused on the plight of endangered animals for many years. She painted these wild mustangs as if in a void, because they are disappearing from our landscape. Her sensitivity is equal to her passion for changing people’s behavior through awareness.

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Osceola Refetoff’s evocative photographs above focus on both the wonder and potential ecological disaster that is the Salton Sea. Refetoff has also worked on depicting the desert and its relationship to Los Angeles itself as part of a long term project with writer/collaborator Christopher Langley.

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Absorb the water. Robert Rosenblum’s stunning photomontage technique mirrors the life in each drop.

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Colette Miller’s vibrant wings make a great spot to pose for a photo and show support for the environment — and soar to protective, guardian angel heights to help preserve it.

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Sculptures by Mike Mollett…wires that seem to bloom like dry-weather plants.

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Support art and the environment with many of these beautiful eco-centered pieces making a very reasonable holiday gift.

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Artist Gay Summer Rick has four pieces in the show, all featuring local beach scenes in Santa Monica and Venice. “I like to paint what I see as I’m making my way around town,” she says. “I paint the bay, and I try to show the mood I feel at the moment,” she relates. “In Atomic Trash Can (left) I included the trash can of course and also tractor marks from sand combing. I wanted to create a little different impression of preserving our beautiful beaches.”
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Rick says she paints using only a palette knife, no brushes or solvents. “I’m very environmentally friendly. Very little goes into the landfill when I create my art. I want to be a good steward of the environment and still deliver a message about how beautiful nature is.”

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Youngman says: “I have selected works that  depict endangered animals, photos of drought–stricken areas, and assemblage pieces that utilize recycled and re-purposed materials to spark the flame of realization regarding environmental issues.”

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Bill Leigh Brewer’s take on the desert focuses on the Salton Sea in this series of evocative black and white prints. Viewers can almost touch the magic, the aloneness, the dryness, the preciousness of water.

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Steve David’s sculptures seem to show the human head as a flower. What ideas are we planting?

“This show speaks loud and clear that climate change is one of the most important issues facing the world today,” Youngman notes.

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Jonna Lee’s compelling Folly uses grass, dirt, wire, and wood. A whole new kind of topiary art.

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“I hope people recognize the power of art to make change – and I pray they come out to support this endeavor by purchasing work here that will benefit these artists and the Vision LA Fest non-profit cause,” Youngman says.

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Mike Anderson created the forest of art above.

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So much to see, so much to take in: art mirroring the environment, art respecting the environment, art as a song to action.

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Foreground: Mike Mollett’s balls of beauty and detrititus.

The free and truly awe-inspiring Art Makes Change exhibit is open daily Dec. 1st through Dec. 10th, at the VisionLA ’15 Home Gallery at Bergamot Station, located at: 2525 Michigan Ave, Building G1 in Santa Monica, CA 90404

all pieces in the exhibition are for sale

  • Genie Davis; all photos: Jack Burke