Welcome Winged Things: Bird at Muzeumm

Benefiting the Audubon Center at Debs Park, winged creativity soared around the opening of BIRD this past Saturday at MuzeuMM, in a show curated by Mishelle Moross, left, that included works by artist Lena Moross, right, her mother.

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Many of the artists created works especially for the show, whose theme, naturally enough, is birds. Contributing artists include:

Noah Saterstrom, Eve Wood, Lena Wolek, Joe Wolek, Anna Stump,Cherie Benner Davis, Cynthia Minet, Greg Rose, Siobhan McClure, Lena Moross, Becky Stafford, Collin Stafford, Bibi Davidson, Christian Kasperovitz, Lori Pond, Eva Ryan, Sam Smith, Malka Nedivi, Sylviana Gallini, and Sabina Rose Derick.

Anna stump

According to curator Mishelle Moross,  the show’s inspiration came from artist Anna Stump.  Stump relates “Artist Lena Moross saw my ‘Bird Terrarium’ paintings at the Brewery Artwalk last fall, which inspired her and curator Mishelle to produce a bird-themed exhibition at Muzeumm.” Stump’s work, above, creates a three-dimensional impression of birds barely contained, freedom and constraint, and a pull to motion.

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Artist Malka Nedivi, above, gives viewers a wild and wonderful mythological bird. A painter, sculptor, and collage artist, Nedivi says that all of her work is inspired by her mother, and both her parents’ previously unknown past as Holocaust survivors. Nedivi’s work uses a great deal of wood and fabric.

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Collin and Becky Stafford’s monumental bird costume above also appeared in a video installation accompanying it. See the video at:  https://vimeo.com/album/3660210

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The rich, warm colors of Bibi Davidson’s works, above heightened the whimsical, fairy-tale quality of the artist’s contributions to the show.

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Born in Tel Aviv, Davidson creates not just compelling color, but an entire world with recurring characters, amusing narratives, and mysterious glimpses of the interlocking worlds of childhood wonder and adult insight.

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Curator Mishelle Moross contributed her own piece to the exhibition, the towering gold Birdhouse, above.

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Eva Ryan’s riveting and haunting pieces above are examples of the artist’s blissful obsession with birds. In many cases, birds appear as a stand-in for human longing, emotion, and self-recognition in Ryan’s work.

Below, Lena Wolek’s exquisitely detailed ceramic installation City Bird- in Life, can be disassembled for purchase, with each stunning cup a steal at $40 each.

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Lena Moross created the pieces below solely for this exhibition, inspired by her own somewhat chaotic feelings about being a young grandmother as well as a wife, mother, and artist. “I sometimes feel like a headless burning chicken, so that is what I created in my art for this show.” She was also inspired by the twinned ideas of birds and rebirth from Russian folk tales and the writings of Vladimir Nabokov, she attests. F23C7859

Below, curator Mishelle Moross with her mother, artist Lena Moross, looking not in the least like a headless chicken.

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Lena Moross took us on a tour of her studio adjacent to the gallery, for a look at a new series of works. Here, the influence of bird imagery still stands – there is the feeling that the woman could, if only she had wings, fly from the wall.F23C7864

Lena Moross with her vibrant birds.F23C7866

A darker look at creatures of flight rises from Lori Pond’s photograph of a taxidermied bird. Pond uses both the camera itself and her post-processing tools to paint a full range of images and emotions through color, light, movement, and texture.F23C7868

Above, Cynthia Minet’s soaring eagles dance. Below, the work of Noah Saterstrom, which creates its own avian mythology.

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Artist Eve Wood, below, is an inveterate bird lover, and her birds appear to share space with their humans through grace.F23C7872

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Below, Cherie Benner Davis stands beside painting she created for the show. “It was nice to have someone give me an assignment and I could get creative with it,” Davis says. Primarily an oil painter who combines flat abstraction with highly representational imagery, Davis’s bright birds appear to be in conversation with the viewer. F23C7884 The show runs through January 31st, and 40% of the exhibition’s proceeds will be donated to the Audubon Society at Debs Park. Go to support flights of all kinds – from that of feathered friends to the flights of fancy and wonder depicted in this terrific gallery.

MuzeuMM is located at 4817 West Adams Blvd. in Los Angeles, and is open from 11-5 M/F or by appointment on the weekend. Contact Name: Mishelle Moross, curator at 323-979-3136. www.muzeumm.com

  • Genie Davis; ALL PHOTOS – Jack Burke; Anna Stump courtesy of ShoeboxPR

Bibi Davidson: The Color Red

 

Artist Bibi Davidson in her studio
Artist Bibi Davidson in her studio

Red. The color of flames, winter sunsets in LA, Valentine’s hearts, brake lights burning on the freeways at rush hour. And the ruby richness of artist Bibi Davidson, whose favorite color is red. Her entire palette is vibrant, pulling viewers into her intriguingly whimsical world.

Born in Tel Aviv, Israel, Los Angeles artist Bibi Davidson creates not just compelling color, but an entire world with recurring characters, amusing narratives, and insightful if mysterious glimpses of the interlocking worlds of childhood wonder and adult insight. Davidson says she wants her viewers to see the humor in life, humor necessary to existence, or “we would all die of sorrow.” Her paintings absolutely provide amusing and charming views of the world, as if seen through the eyes of a supremely wise child, as sensitive as she is brilliant.

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“I probably started my ‘career being an artist’ when I was 4 years old, looking at an illustration of a girl on a book cover and trying to draw it myself,” Davidson relates. “I was extremely shy and socially odd, and through my paintings I could tell my stories, express my opinions, and let my imagination go free.”

While her talent has grown exponentially since those days, her free-roaming imagination seems not to have changed. Also unchanged: her unique perspective on the mysteries, fears, and joys of youth, and her ability to portray them in paintings that are the visual equivalent of a graphic novel or an evocative poem.

Bibi A fish out of water

“I really want to tell people how I feel and think, hurt and long, what happened to me in the past and what is happening now. I paint my stories as a writer tells his stories, and I would like to share my tales with people so they can relate them to their own life events,” she asserts. “We are all people, we go through similar feelings, we hurt and laugh the same.”

Not only does each painting tell a story, each painting is a metaphor for something deeper that grows from within the story, something primal, intimate, and pure.

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“Growing up was not an easy task for me. I couldn’t wait to become an adult. My art was my only quiet place to hide,” she says. It was difficult for Davidson to keep her passion for creating art burning brightly. “As in many households, I was supposed to be practical, get married and have kids, and maybe be an accountant. But one is born to a certain talent or passion which is in his or her genes, past life, or the influences of the environment.” And for Davidson, that talent was her art.

She remained true to her gifts, focusing on her repeated character of “the girl,” who represents the artist herself. “For years I’d been doodling a character on every piece of paper I had. Suddenly I realized that this character was the subject of my art, and this became the ‘Stories of my Life’ series. She represents me, and sometimes she comes in other forms, like the bunny or a bird that shows up in my paintings,” Davidson notes. “My girl’s stories are my diaries, my dreams, my fears, my memories from the past and the future. Although a lot of my stories come from a painful place, I try to look at the heartaches and pains with a sense of humor.”

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Along with representing the character of her girl, Davidson is drawn to color. Particularly the color red. “Colors always have been a strong stimulation for me, certain colors, like red, make me breathe easier and focus better. My hair is red, my house is red and the colors on the walls of my house are the colors that I use in my paintings,” she attests. “I love the color red.”

Currently, Davidson’s work is evolving, with her girl image and stories moving from 2D paintings into 3D sculptures and mixed media. “That’s the approach I am going to present in my solo show in October at The Los Angeles Art Association Gallery 825,” she reports. Davidson’s work will also be included in the group show coming up this Saturday and running through January 31st at MUZEUMM in downtown Los Angeles.

What else is Davidson up to? “I’d like to create my girl as a mural on a large building. I would like her to be a familiar face.”

Whether her character appears as a mural or not, certainly big things are ahead for the artist, who works out of a studio in the Beacon Arts Building in Inglewood. She is also actively involved in the Ten Women Co-Op Gallery, as well as exhibiting throughout the Los Angeles area, from Pasadena to Long Beach.

“I love my studio, I love to be among the other artists there. My studio now is filled with paintings and mesh, wires and hardware and pieces of wood, it’s ready for a lot of creative adventures,” she notes.

Davidson paints in oil on gessoed and sanded wood panels, drawing-in her compositions, then applying bright base colors.

Bibi Me and Me

In “Me and Me,” two images of the artist’s red-haired girl hold hands, wading in a green sea. The duality of feeling that the twinned girls represent evoke the inner and outer images we project in life.

Bibi what

 

Her “What?” features an emerald eyed cat looking quite sanguine as the girl peers into a brick wall exposed beneath the plaster. A dozen or more eyes hover over her. What do they and she see? What is exposed, stripped away, revealed? The piece is a literal and figurative mystery of self-observation.

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And in “Naughty Cat,” the girl holds the legs of a cat as big or bigger than she, while a fantasy of fish dance between them. The surrealistic landscape – perhaps reminiscent of Magritte – is one aspect of this piece, but as with many of Davidson’s works, it is also grounded in reality. The naughty cat could be a pet after goldfish, or it could be another aspect of the girl’s personality.

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Along with her autobiographical and metaphorical “girl” paintings, Davidson is also an exceptionally accomplished contemporary portrait painter, each beautifully detailed portrait filled with the same vibrancy of color that is her signature.

For a taste of Davidson’s work, visit the group show starting Saturday, January 9th from 6 to 10 pm at MUZEUMM 4817 W. Adams Blvd, Los Angeles, California 90016.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke and artist’s website

Eva Ryan: Portrait of a Mixed-Media Artist and Existentialist

Eva Ryan High Fructose

If it has wings, self-taught mixed media artist Eva Ryan makes it soar. Her intricately detailed and thoroughly alive works, created primarily in graphite and ink, pose existential questions about existence, society, and morality within these pieces. Exhibiting nationally and locally, Ryan is currently a resident artist at the HUD Gallery in Ventura, California, with a solo show approaching in 2016 at the Buenaventura Art Gallery also in Ventura. Coming up January 9th, Ryan is participating in the group exhibition Bird, an art show at the Los Angeles exhibition space MUZEUMM, benefitting the Los Angeles Audubon Center at Debs Park.

Recent shows in Los Angeles, St. Paul, Portland, and Ventura featured works from her most recent series, Birds. In many cases, birds appear as a stand-in for human longing, emotion, and self-recognition in Ryan’s work.

Ryan has been working for over ten years, her creativity given birth by her art loving, talented musician/cinematographer father, who according to Ryan was also an alcoholic, a situation that naturally created considerable anxiety and stress for the artist as a child. Reading between the lines she now so intimately, minutely, draws, her father’s own belief in personal redemption through art was passed on to Ryan. “He instilled within me that …creating could save my life one day, if I ever needed it to,” she says.

Eva Ryan Brain on Fire

Inspired by the book Brain on Fire by Susannah Cahlan, Ryan’s “Brain on Fire” features a wind-up bird with a vividly realistic look, pulling on a ring – which is attached to a string, linked to a human brain. Delicately detailed and rendered, with the words “the pull” repeated in small block print several times at the bottom and top of the piece, the overall impression is of urgency. The artist appears to ask what shiny thing the viewer pursues, what prize of love, creativity, success, or fear creates the pull in his or her mind.

Eva Ryan They Broke

Ryan’s piece “They Broke,” depicts an open-beaked bird and a pair of broken glasses. Created with pen and ink on watercolor paper, the artist’s deceptively simple description, “I used to have broken glasses,” conveys an almost universal truth. Who has not had something break in their lives – a relationship, an object, a dream? The bird’s open beak suggests this feathered creature is singing its own tale of loss and redemption. The idea that the artist “used to have” instead of “currently has” broken glasses leads the viewer down a personal redemptive path.

Eva Ryan supine

One bird that cannot take flight is the face-up dead pigeon in “Supine,” one of the artist’s older pieces in this series. This drawing, created with pen, ink, and clippings from newspaper obituaries on watercolor paper is nailed and mounted on wood with epoxy resin. The idea behind “Supine,” recalls the meaning of the word itself, of a being lying face-up. Here the question seems to be raised as to what we see when we look up at the sky. Mind as empty as a bird no longer capable of flight? Longing for heights not achieved or long past?

Eva Ryan High Fructose

Her “High Fructose” pen and ink work is pressed between glass, framed within a vintage window. An expansion of an earlier drawing the artist re-discovered, the piece features brilliant blue birds imprinted on an apple and a pear, with a mason jar of brushes, textured yellow patterned wallpaper, and a bounty of cherries tossed on a table. These are the things that are sweet to the artist, perhaps – fruit, the birds whose images she cherishes, those walls, her art.

Eva Ryan Strange Fruit

Of course it’s not all winged things that make Ryan’s work fly. “Strange Fruit,” is a graphite on bristol drawing that literally depicts unusual fruit on a thorny branch. Perhaps everything comes at a cost, such as plucking the sweet from a nest of sharp thorns.

Eva Ryan Mess

“This Mess is a Place,” took Ryan 2 years to finish, an intensely detailed graphite, pen, and paint marker piece that features the bust of a voluptuous, topless woman whose eye make-up streaks down her face in her tears. A halo of skulls surrounds her, and behind her, strange flowers bloom. From between her bare breasts blooms a visible heart made of thread and suckled by bees. The question in viewers minds may be as to whether this deeply drawn piece represents a saint, an icon, or an ordinary woman who is extraordinary just for existing in a world where death may seem to triumph, in a world that makes her weep even as her heart is pulsing with life.

Ryan’s intimately drawn work is an outgrowth of her own self-teaching. “I had to put the time into teaching myself how to truthfully observe an object,” she notes.

The artist works in series which have a main idea behind them that serves as a commonality within that series, but birds remain her main subjects throughout her current work. She says that each of her drawings has its own concept, however, and that the pieces evolve daily while she shapes them, or as she explains her process, as she births an idea and allows it to take hold and “run away.”

The reason she lets these ideas metaphorically and literally take flight is to get in touch with herself and connect to others, Ryan explains. She says she draws primarily for herself, and for her father, who passed away at age 53, when she herself was just 17. “Every time I sit at my drafting table he is the first thing that pops in my head, if only for a second,” Ryan explains.

Eva Ryan new work blue birds

Ryan is currently working on a stunning drawing illuminated as if from within by glowing watercolors, including vividly colored images of two blue birds. The birds seem like the embodiment of the bluebirds of happiness, while a woman’s eyes observe the birds, a background of moths, and a heart. The image of the heart touches on Ryan’s earlier work, “Brain on Fire.” Both include a dangling ring, here labeled “pull here.” This piece appears to be a perfect continuation of Ryan’s visual and emotional themes. The heart, the birds – connection, purpose, freedom, love – and the moths? If we can’t be birds, perhaps moth wings can draw us, however briefly, to the light.

To see more of Ryan’s illuminating work, join her and other talented artists at MUZEUMM for the Bird exhibition at 4817 W. Adams in Los Angeles, opening January 9th, and check out her website at http://www.evaart.gallery/

  • Genie Davis; Photos: artist