For the Love of Carmine – Lena Moross at MuzeuMM

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Above, opening night at MuzeuMM – For the Love of Carmine

We’ve written about Lena Moross’  before, the passionate artist originally from St. Petersberg who has brought classical training and an impressionistic style to her now very-LA work. Running through July 11 at MuzeuMM, Moross’ large scale watercolor portraits in “For the Love of Carmine,” details Carmine, a transgender man that the artist met 5 years ago on a Hollywood street.

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Roses, wine, the delicate grace of an intensely female subject inside a bulky male body – these are the images Moross has captured with a magical bent. her paintings are sensuous, voluptuous, depicting a man/cocoon housing his female/butterfly.

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Moross says “Old European cities have areas where children play in the dirt and sometimes discover things like a rhinestone, or piece of foil, a remanent of something years or maybe even centuries past. They were treasures I would gather that I discovered. Even though they were found in dirt, after cleaning and loving these things, bringing them to light, each would reveal beauty and stories again and again. So for me, Carmine initially was one of these precious beautiful found rhinestones.”

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Carmine himself, above, in red.

She found her subject beautiful, and has created beautiful works about him. “Ultimately, it’s my decision what is beautiful or not.”

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Trust us – she made a profoundly lovely choice, here.

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Above, musicians Ketchup Soup, entertained the opening night crowd.

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Above and below, center, MuzeuMM founder Mishelle Moross; with below left artist Francisco Alvarado.

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MuzeuMM is located at 4817 West Adams Boulevard Los Angeles, CA 90016

  • Genie Davis; all photos by Jack Burke

Lena Moross: For the Love of Carmine

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Born in St. Petersberg, Russia, artist Lena Moross is a true force in the Los Angeles art scene. With the characteristic vibrance she shows in so much of her lush work, she’s tackling a trenchant subject: what being transgender really means. In her upcoming solo exhibition, For the Love of Carmine, opening June 11th at MuzeuMM, Moross creates a social narrative.

Her beautifully colorful, finely detailed, impressionistic watercolor work is used here to create an immersive experience of what it’s like to grow up as a transgender male in the early post-war years. Her large-scale paintings demand repeat viewings: the very feminine, voluptuous curves and her emphasis on fluid strokes and shapes create a richly fertile landscape to explore what it’s like to be a woman inside a man’s body. A staged video is also included in the exhibit, which creates a deep dialog between the subject of her works here, Carmine, and the artist herself, as an untold narrative spills forth.

Lena Moross with Carmine, Carmine in Repose
Above, Carmine Messina with the artist, Lena Moross

The artist was captivated by the real Carmine Messina, whom she met on a Hollywood street corner three years ago. Tall, heavy-set, and middle-aged, Messina was heavily made up and dressed in a woman’s black coat, fishnet stockings, mid-calf boots and sporting a long, jet-black wig. Moross was struck by Carmine’s gentle demeanor and his obliviousness to the effect he was causing. The artist introduced herself and began a conversation that led to recorded conversations, videos, photographs, paintings, and sketches. Using these resources, she set about exploring, through her art, the ordeal of being transgender in the late 1940s, born into a middle class San Fernando Valley family.

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Her revealing, sensual paintings tell a long hidden story, one that exposes and gently honors what had been concealed and riddled with shame. While social change is slowly creating a space for transgendered people, their long hidden stories can be difficult to reveal and depict. Moross tells Messina’s story with dignity, humor, and a translucent grace, qualities which are representative of all of Moross’ recent work.

Her pieces have a dream-like, almost floating quality, their fluid lines and the incorporation of floral images and colors making her work as intense as it is delicate.

Lena Moross, Carmine after Degas

In this exhibition, Messina, clad in a simple aqua smock, poses in feminine grace, shy and almost transcending his girth; or Moross positions him nude, with a jubilant, blooming bouquet of red roses masking his genitalia.

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Whether raising a glass of ruby wine, reclining against the coiled cocoon of a red quilt, or performing opera in a yellow tunic, the figure that Moross captures is at once bulky and beautiful, poised and awkward, always fluid and feminine. She casts what it means to be a woman – that particular state of grace, longing, and sensuous shape, in a fresh light.

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Moross fuses male and female, form and the softest of function. You can almost feel the draped cloths, smell and touch the soft rose petals. It’s no surprise the Moross is skilled at this kind of fusion. Moving from Russia to the U.S., she studied classical art at the State Academy of Art in Russia. In America, she studied at the Pasadena Art Center College of Design as a student of Peter Lyashkov, earned her master’s at Cal-Arts, and was a student of John Baldessari and John Borofsky.

Her fine art skills and her wonderfully interpretive, fantastical bent have meshed just as surely and resiliently as her international heritage has fused with a strong, brash sense of American freedom.

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In For the Love of Carmine, Moross expresses freedom, repression, fantasy, joy, and a spirit that longs to break loose from its confines. A truly masterful solo show, by an artist who is taking flight with story and shape.

MuzeuMM
4817 W Adams Blvd, Los Angeles, CA
Opening reception June 11, 7-11pm

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Shoebox PR

A Feminist Perspective: a fun and fabulous feminist perspective at Muzeumm

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A beautiful array of art by men and women who share their feminist perspectives fills Muzeumm through this Sunday. A Feminist Perspective offers sculpture, mixed media, paintings, and most of all a witty, transcendent series of artworks.

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Curator’s Kristine Schomaker and Baha Danesh present a vibrant feminist dialogue stressing equality for all. Featured artists present works that deal with concepts of race, class, culture, politics, social commentary and representation of women.

Participating artists include:

Austin Young
Baha Danesh
Bibi Davidson
Bill Pacak
Cathi Milligan
Chenhung Chen
Ching Ching Cheng
Daena Title
Deidre Sullivan-Beema
Diane Williams
Emilie Carroll
Gianni Arone
Irma Barbosa
Jenifer Yeuroukis
Keenan Chapan
Kelly Thompson
Kimberly Morris
Kristine Schomaker
Lena Moross
Morgan Green
Poline Shooshani
Sheli Silverio
Shula Singer Arbel
Victoria Sebanz
Virginia Broersma

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We were especially taken by the gorgeous coiled metal wires of Chenhung Chen’s cocoon-like sculpture…

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Bibi Davidson’s vibrant paintings, with their clean, glowing style and succinct message – It’s None of Your Business indeed…

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Lena Moross’ lush and imperssionistic painting of Ms. Davidson, glowing with color.

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The video installation by co-curator and artist Schomaker, “The Paper Doll Test,” offers a compelling, compassionate take on body image.

According to Schomaker, “The is the 2nd year in a row that Baha Danesh and I have curated A Feminist Perspective. It initially started with a space and a vision,” she notes.

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“We were very lucky last year to be able to use a wonderful large space at the Montalban Theatre and this year, even luckier to have Muzeumm host the event. We created the exhibition because we wanted to be part of the conversation on Feminism today,” she explains. “We wanted to show that there is not just one single idea of Feminism, but many perspectives from men, women and the LGBT community. While Feminism focuses on women, it carries a much broader idea of equality for all.”

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Above, the work of Diane Williams, below, Shula Singer Arbel.

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Missed the opening?

Shoebox PR and We Choose Art host the closing reception this Sunday, June 5th at MUZEUMM and add in a Feminist pizza party and poetry readings by the WOMEN group. Tasty.

Muzeumm is located at 4817 W Adams Blvd, Los Angeles, CA 90016. Closing reception runs 4 to 6 p.m.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Genie Davis, Shoebox PR

 

 

 

 

Abstract Never Is: Muzeumm

 

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Abstract Never Is, an exhibition of both contemporary and historical abstract photography is a vibrant collaboration between The Venice Institute of Contemporary Art (ViCA) and MuzeuMM that expands on a smaller scale exhibition displayed at Photo LA in January.

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Co-curated by ViCA’s Juri Koll and MuzeuMM’s Mishelle Moross, the works are visually rich and emotionally evocative.  Above, Koll with some of his own haunting images, which shimmer with shadows and shapes.

“Abstract photography is harder to create than an abstract painting,” Koll attests. “You’re limited by the lens in front of your face. But you can’t deny the viability and the emotion of a photograph.”

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Above, Osceola Refetoff’s abstract take on the lights of trucks on a highway conjure the highway, the allure of an almost ephemeral destination, and a jeweled blur of light. Below, Refetoff with journalist Christopher Langley, his partner on the project High & Dry,  an ongoing representational project documenting California’s deserts and the people who live there.

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Above right, co-curator Mishelle Moross.

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Above, artist Diane Holland with her richly colored yet ghostly images. The artist says “I use electrotransfer, otherwise known as color Xerography, and Cibachrome photography to convey the relationship between human beings and the technological they create.”

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Artists Lena Moross and Bibi Davidson enjoy opening night.

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Above, ripples that could water struck by sunset in a stunning work by Sasha vom Dorp.  The artist says of his works, above and below, “These are photographs of sound encountering light as seen through the medium of water.”

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The immediacy of a photograph is somewhat of a myth, and never is that more fully the case than with abstract photography. To create photographic art requires not just a given moment, but preparation for that moment, the dance of both immediacy and planning.

 

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The work of Edmund Teske, above, was an early inspiration to co-curator and exhibitor Koll. “He taught me to be an artist,” Koll explains.

Along with Teske, other artists on display include Fatemeh Burnes, Sasha vom Dorp, Kio Griffith, Diane Holland, Suda House, Juri Koll, KuBO, Maria Larsson, Lawrie Margrave, Stefanie Nafé, Kirk Pedersen, Osceola Refetoff, and Lisa Rosel, among others.

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Above, Fatemeh Burres draws viewers into an explosive universe.

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Above Kubo Hkla’s shimmering gestational pieces.

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Above, Lisa Rosel takes on familiar and iconic LA scenes in a complex and fresh vision of lines and space.

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Above, haunting, light-filled images culled from Union Station by Osceola Refetoff.

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Above, ghostly and deep, caves and orifices – Fatemeh Burres.

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An astonishing collection of fine photographic art that is as varied as it is representative of abstract technique, this is a “don’t miss” show that makes viewers think as well as enjoy. Discerning meaning is just a portion of the pleasure here: meaning is mutable, images are themselves profound.

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Genie Davis with artist Sonja Schenk.

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Above, Bibi Davidson

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Above, Loren Philip, Diane Holland, Jodi Bonassi.

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Above, artists Jodi Bonassi and Osceola Refetoff with Gary Brewer.

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Above, artist Diane Holland (left), Brooke Mason, Peter Frank, Susanna Schulten

MuzeuMM is located at 4817 W. Adams Blvd. Los Angeles