Can You Fear and Adore Flowers? Artist Susan Melly Provides Answers in New Work at LAAA

   In a way, who isn’t afraid, just a little bit, of flowers? We may fear their incredible fragility, of losing them to an all-too-quick death, to knowing their perfection is ephemeral and their beauty so temporary – an aching reminder of our own mortality.
   However, for artist Susan Melly in her new Emerging Fear of Flowers now at LAAA ‘s Gallery 825 in West Hollywood, her emerging fear was something different, risen from over two years of COVID-19 pandemic isolation. During that time period, Melly’s husband brought her a weekly bouquet of flowers from an open air market. As her own statement informs viewers “As my anxiety blossomed, my art making changed and became more abstract and colorful to ward off my dark feelings. Each work is embedded with a hint of humor – and the number 19 – as an homage to coping mechanisms, even as familiar sources of comfort counterintuitively transform into a strange beauty that is tinged with the edge of the unknown.”
   After about a year of receiving the flowers, despite the loving intention of bringing beauty and romance to her life, she began to ask hereslf if she would be “condemned” to receiving the flowers every single Friday for the rest of her life, indicating that the pandemic would never end. The blossoms blossomed – into increased anxiety, alleviated through her art. As viewers we can witness this progression in her new body of work, and revel in its layers, as fragile-seeming as flowers themselves.
   The works of course make use of Melly’s signature use of vintage tissue paper dress patterns, something that she terms an “integral part of my practice and personal history…” As a mixed media artist, the LA-based Melly creates work that includes paintings, assemblage-based sculptures, and installations. In this latest body of work, there is a powerful new energy as these flowers morph with the artist, spin discs on an old Victrola record player, weep, rail in anger, whine in frustration, sing, and seethe.  Do flowers mourn their entrapment in bouquets? Do they discuss day to day travails as they grow in the garden, rage and wish to curse those who pick them? While we may never know, here Melly certainly posits that they might.
   Within the primarily paint and mixed media on canvas works are a variety of sculptural pieces.  While some stand alone, a vintage sewing machine, a male figure bearing flowers, “Hanging Out,” is a wall scupture. It emerges like a being encased in and protruding from the wall itself,  a partial mannequin entrapped despite a glowing heart and uterus at its center, sheathed and layered with the dress patterns.
   The titular “Emerging Fear of Flowers” is a colorful mix of the tissue patterns, acrylic, and art paper on canvas.  While a hand holds a cocktail glass in the right corner, center stage is an alien looking three pronged flower that seems to have grown eyes, and one prong is looking and leaning and reaching ominously toward that hand. The viewer can’t help but think of Little Shop of Horrors and Audrey, that musical’s violently sentient plant.  It is a large work, vibrant with indigo and burgandy; the human hand, however, is so white it could easily belong to a person confined from the sunlight in which these flowers gained a robust if menacing vitality.
   Melly’s “Cut Stems” also makes use of the tissue dress patterns combined with acrylic.  These highly geometric flowers have sharp edged like wind mills and are exhibiting just emerging facial features.
   With “Enter Covid,”  what’s blossoming here appears to be the shape of COVID itself, entering via a kind of conduit into an abstract human vessel.  Layers of white on white recall bandages, sheets, and fog, as if a ghostly landscape now enveloped us all.

   Quoting Charles Baudelaire with the title “Evil Comes up Softly Like a Flower,” Melly uses acrylic, charcoal, and dress patterns to make one of the most ominous, yet still amusing, paintings in this series. Here, flowers have teeth and raging faces.

But they are comfortably more relatable in “Dandelion Wine,” in which a dandelion tears out its seeds in frustration.

And we can feel intense empathy for the sad blooms in works such as “Un-Still Life,” in which a lavendar, daisy-like flower has thorns and weeps purple blooded tears.

   In another work, the artist herself melds or morphs into a flower, a pale periwinkle and peacefully meditative one, in “Portrait of the Artist as a Young Lotus.” Surrounded by a geometric abstract patterns, the figure is part statue, part flower, absorbed fully in the act of blooming, yet trapped in stillness.

   Perhaps, we can hope that our time in pandemic shut down can allow us to achieve a similarly mesmerized state. Viewing Melly’s delicate, lovely, and unsettling works may just have that effect.
   Melly’s work is beautifully paired with the light-based blend of Richard Slechta’s photography and art, Incompressible Flow; Chris Madens’ glowy dimensional assemblies, The Covid Kiss; and a group show, Felicitious,  an all-media compilation depicting the current zeitgeist.
   The exhibition is on view through June 24th. Gallery 825 is located at 825 N. La Cienega.  Melly is offering curated visits; the gallery is also open by appointment at other times, reach out at gallery825@laaa.org.
Genie Davis – images provided by the artist

Feminist Variations at Loft at Liz’s: Female Philosophy in Art

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F23C0319Co-curated by Shana Nys Dambrot and Susan Melly, Feminist Variations at Loft at Liz’s through September 19th, expresses feminist issues without rancor. Nys Dambrot and Melly are second and third from the right, above, joining exhibition artists and gallery owner Liz Gordon.

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Works by Annie Terrazzo, Lauren Kasmer, Victor Wilde, Peter Walker, Susan Melly, and Carol Sears present relationships to diverse aspects of feminism in political, social, and philosophical terms. The female body, its physicality and it’s evocation in myth and allegory, is the subject of this highly poetic and vibrant exhibition. This is feminism as a life force, as a woven – in some cases, through items of clothing, literally – design in the pattern of life.

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Above,  artist Victor Wilde serves up stellar pancakes at the show’s opening August 27th, and creates the clothing-based artwork below.

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Co-curator Shana Nys Dambrot explains the exhibition’s genesis. “About a year ago I met Susan Melly. She was in a critic group in which it was noted to her that her work presented a feminist critique that wasn’t a complaint. Her work was engaged with the issues without anger. We talked about that, and worked on the idea together, and really rallied around  the idea of how the female body takes up space in the world, from fashions and wearables to negative space in abstract composition, as we brought other artists into the exhibition.”

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Susan Melly adds: “I had a discussion on a piece of mine with art critic and curator Peter Frank during a critique, in which I was telling him I always considered myself a feminist, but in a way in which differences between men and women should be acknowledged, but without complaint. That became the theme of the show.”

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Melly, whose work includes materials such as the paper-thin dress patterns her mother kept,  poses with some of her work above.

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“We were looking for artists whose work spoke to that idea. They did not have to be female. Of the six artists in the show, two of us are men.”

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Peter Walker’s beautifully detailed works here are created from graphite on paper. “I have been interested in exploring identity, the casual associations especially in a metropolis, where most of our sensations are fleeting and temporary. These pieces explore our chance encounters and how we identify ourselves as part of that random chance encounter.”

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Walker was trained as a painter, but with these works wanted to emphasize the ephemeral. “Pencil on paper felt more fragile, which was what I wanted to convey for a message, the fragility of these relationships,” he relates.

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Lauren Kasmer’s background is in photography. She’s the daughter of a clothing designer who only recently decided that fabric and photography belonged together in her work.

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“I usually work as an installation artist. Photos and video and live elements here at the opening all depict people wearing my clothes. There are many commonalities in clothing, in art. I’m sharing these commonalities, not the differences between men and women.”

Working in a wide range of mediums, the artists in this exhibition create a body of work that deals in contrasts and fluid relationships, on change and sameness, on awareness of the Venus/Mars differences, the bond of humanity, and the shared knowledge of the world that men and women experience – together.

Loft at Liz’s is located at 453 S. La Brea, Los Angeles.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke

 

Loft at Liz’s: Divergent Voices

What a show and what a great space. If you haven’t been to the warm, well lit, Loft at Liz’s, the gallery’s salon-type vibe will win you over. Divergent Voices ran only a single week with an opening November 7th, but all of the artists’ works were profoundly affecting, and art lovers – or just simply anyone in search of a visually stimulating good time, would do well to seek them out individually.

Hosted by artist Susan Melly, who found the venue for her art critique group, and featuring the work of twelve artists including Stefanie Bauer, Melanie Newcombe, Cameron McIntyre, Andree B. CarterRin ColabucciGill MillerMargaret OuchidaPeter WalkerGina Yu, Shula Singer Arbel, and Lucie Hinden, as well as Melly’s own, the idea for the show originated with the idea to compile a show featuring high-end, quality art work.

Andre Carter’s delicate work featured beading and stitching that seemed linked to Native American crafts woven by a lost tribe.

Peter Walker’s graphite on paper drawings were beautifully realized, stunningly  hyper-realistic fine art.

Margaret Ouchida’s shadow boxes, below, danced with energy, miniaturized, perfect scenes that pulled viewers into their tiny, detailed framework. Each piece contains a minute, almost hidden toad. Find the talisman.

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Below, Melanie Newcombe’s astonishing mesh sculptures are graceful, floating, dancers in the sea, mermaids on land, nymphs whose flesh has silvered. Based on clay figures that she creates, she uses a rudimentary wooden armature on which to build her ethereal mesh figures.

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Susan Melly’s own work is equally charged. Melly’s work is all about the feminine, and female objectification. Offering up images about identity, sexuality, power, and industrial machines. The artist was inspired by a discovery of dress patterns and industrial-age sewing machines that were a part of her mother’s estate.

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“She represents the nurturing aspect of woman,” Melly says of her figure below, part of a new body of work.

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Below, Lucie Hinden’s Best Laid Plans series riffs on the idea of architectural blue prints, and creates images that feel like a patchwork quilt, or a landscape viewed from a seat on an airplane.

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Below,  Shuler Singer Arbel creates a world of color prisms,  painted images that resemble mosaics, or pebbles from a rainbow.  Geometric landscapes, patterns of water droplets…

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The show was packed with brilliant, unique, stand-out pieces, a full-house crowd, and a delicious buffet, too, with food as diverse as the art, from quinoa salad to lemon bars. What better party than a celebration of art? In short: a great night whose “Divergent Voices” rang out loud and clear – follow these artists, visit their unique perspectives now, and in years to come.

Author with Susan Melly, right
Author with Susan Melly, right
  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke

Award Winner: Susan Melly

Susan Melly with Scott Canty - Taking First Place at
Susan Melly with Scott Canty – Taking First Place at “Art Fusion” – Photo by Jack Burke

The dynamic artist Susan Melly is hot off two award wins: she took first place at Gallery H at Phantom Galleries “Art Fusion” exhibition, for “Window Dressing,” a work that is an intrinsic part of her “Mother Machine” series; and she received honorable mention at LA Artcore for her piece “Fertile Crescent.”

Melly’s work is all about the feminine, and female objectification. This is not a hearts and flower world. Rather it’s all about identity, sexuality, power, and yes, industrial machines. The artist was inspired by a discovery of dress patterns and industrial-age sewing machines that were a part of her mother’s estate. Her recent work combines tissue paper dress patterns into images that explore both real and symbolic relationships between women and industry. She uses loosely drawn, even impressionistic images on top of the precise and detailed pattern designs. The clothing industry itself, with its fashion designs and women’s clothing styles, as well as the act of creating fashion through sewing, and the sewing industry itself, are her subjects. Melly uses the history, politics, and literal shapes of that industry to explore a variety of metaphors for a changing society. Antique industrial sewing machines with their attractive, even artistic external decorations symbolize Melly’s strong mother: in her work they’re powerful yet beautiful, tough, yet outwardly decorous. These machines and their continued ability to function decades later is a rich and impressive metaphor for the strength of the women who operated them.

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Her piece “Fits Her to a Tea” uses a female mannequin’s bust covered with these precise dress pattern cutouts. The patterns are adorned with impressionistic colored art paper collages and embroidery – including a tea cup – and the inclusion of actual tea bags and a tea set.

This piece is a collaboration with another 825 Gallery artist,  Chuka Susan Chesney. The Gallery randomly assigned pairs of artists to collaborate, with often dazzling results. Here, the colorful collages and  stitching Chesney created serve as a strong counterpoint to Melly’s work.

This mixed media piece is wonderfully evocative, of the practical woman who uses those tea bags, the rich interior life she holds – the drawings – and the measured, designed, and carefully restricted borders of her life as revealed by the dress pattern cut outs.

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In “Tension Adjustment,” this stunning painting features a beautiful woman curled up in an almost-fetal position inside the dominant image of a sewing machine.

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“Fertile Crescent” neatly combines a woman who could be an Egyptian Princess overlaying most of a mannequin’s face, with a crescent of dress pattern slashing a curve across her visage. Her neck, body, and the arm that holds her head and torso aloft, are covered with the tissue paper dress patterns.

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Part of the solo show “Mother Machine” held at Gallery 825 in April 2015, Melly’s mixed media paintings and sculptures shape the female form with the same provocative mixture of ornate embellishments as on the old-fashioned industrial sewing machines, as well as imbuing them with those machines’ strength. The vintage mannequins themselves provide a certain gravitas, and the dress patterns present an interesting dichotomy. The fragile tissue paper evokes male notions of female delicacy, while the rigidity of the lines and construction suggests a binding up of the female spirit. By drawing on these patterns, adorning them in a variety of ways, Melly appears to be opening a whole new world of expression for these figures, while still celebrating their strength and durability.

In 2015, along with her award winning exhibition at Phantom Galleries H and LA Art Core, and her solo show at Gallery 825, Melly has shown at Palm Springs’ Gallery 446, Las Laguna Gallery, in Laguna Beach, and the Foundry Art Center in St. Charles, Missouri among other locations.

  • Genie Davis