Jo Hormuth @ Gallery Kusseneers, Antwerp
"Anymore"
28.1.2011 - 12.3.2011
Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago. Show all posts
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Sunday, January 10, 2010
Believe the hype: Otero is on the rise
By Lauren Viera, Tribune reporter
January 8, 2010
Sometimes, hype is all we have to go on.
I first learned about a voracious young painter named Angel Otero last spring, shortly after he received his master of fine arts degree from the School of the Art Institute. Even then I was late to the party: At 27, the Puerto Rico native had already reached milestones that most artists rarely allow themselves to dream about.
For starters, in February, several of Otero's works were exhibited at Spain's major international fair of contemporary art (ARCO), represented by the very hip, Canary Islands-based Leyendecker Gallery. On the first day of that fair, every last one of Otero's paintings sold. Weeks earlier, at the Circa '09 international art fair in Puerto Rico, same thing: All paintings sold, all on the first day.
By summer, Otero was on a roll. He received the Leonore Annenberg Fellowship Fund in the Performing and Visual Arts, a prestigious grant awarded by invitation to just one visual artist annually, in the generous sum of six figures to be invested over two years.
One of his works was selected for inclusion in the Museum of Contemporary Art's "Constellations" exhibit, on view last summer and fall alongside major paintings by Andy Warhol, Rene Magritte and Francis Bacon, among others. The icing? In October, Otero was chosen as the honored guest artist at the Art Institute's annual big-ticket fundraiser, BareWalls, adding his name to an elite list that includes Ed Paschke and Cynthia Rowley.
That was last year, Otero's fourth living in the States. He moved to Chicago in 2005 on a scholarship to the School of the Art Institute after growing up in Bayamón, Puerto Rico, a small city best known for its pork rinds. He was raised by his grandmother in a household he's said was devoid of books and paintings.
"What I could consider art around me back then was the stuff that shocked me or affected me," said Otero via telephone from his Brooklyn studio, which he set up in the fall with his Annenberg fellowship funds. "[My] work is about these sorts of memories, or confronted memories … to find some sort of interesting conversation between what is abstraction, material process and memory. There's abstraction, there's paint and then there's all these things together."
Somewhere between Otero's brain and his paintbrush, his interpreted memories become three-dimensional. What finds its way onto the canvas (often painted black, to start) are bright, textural spurts clinging to the surface. The resulting paintings are bizarre, but not off-putting. What could easily appear crude and clumsy, like an amateur experimenting with new materials, instead is laced with meaningful detail in the least likely places.
In a solo show at Kavi Gupta Gallery, Otero's "The Golden Vase" (2009) is abstract, for sure — the flowers in the vase are splotches of peeling, colored acrylics; the table on which it sits is a web of silicone squirted into a grid resembling rattan furniture. But there's very little irony. The vase has depth, and it's obvious that this thing — this object — was foremost in Otero's mind when he was painting it. As Otero explained, when you're raised middle-class, as he was, household possessions present an interesting aesthetic.
He clarified: "If they need a countertop, the high-class people have the budget for granite; the poor person just needs a slab of wood. And then the middle-class person has contact paper that looks like granite, and it's perfect. I like that; I grew up around that. I have found my way to navigate through all these memories and objects, through the stuff of my family, and also confront them with these ambitions of painting."
"Untitled (golden bowl)" (2009) is more controlled than "The Golden Vase." The bowl itself is nearly invisible, but lining the surrounding canvas is an immaculate system of tiny squares — blobs, really. It's gold-leaf, deconstructed.
Gold is everywhere in Otero's work. He attributes it to "weird kitsch" objects present in middle-class families, and the best example we've seen is his "Winners" (2009) installation at Kavi Gupta Gallery: three tiers of trophies covered with gold oil-paint, crusted up into Otero's signature flecks. Underneath those scabs of paint, you can just barely make out a guy frozen in a bowling stance, or a dude popping a wheelie on his motorcycle. The top trophy is the largest, and it's so thick with paint, the figure is diminished to a vague, marshmallow-y silhouette.
Otero likens his thick layers of paint to layers in a cake, adding them one at a time until he has a finished piece. They're created by coating mirrors with oil paint, playing with colors as he goes. Once they're dry, they're scraped off in whole sheets. The resulting layers are so thick and textural, many critics (including this one) have at first mistaken them for fabric.
The back room at Kavi Gupta Gallery features these uber-textural works exclusively. Here there are no golden bowls or vases on tables — just layer upon layer of color and texture, oil and tar poured onto canvas, piece by piece.
"I don't want to be so direct," Otero said of his layering process. "That's why all these things have paint on top of them in different techniques, in order to find that effect."
On the heels of the Kavi Gupta Gallery show, more of Otero's new work will be exhibited in a solo show Jan. 23 at the Chicago Cultural Center. It's a heck of a way to kick off a new year.
I asked the young painter if he felt differently since graduating and receiving so many honors.
"To be honest," he said, "the only thing that has changed is the responsibility that takes over me. I have this weird abstract pressure to work more, and I'm trying to do the best I can, but I swear to God I'm still floating in the air. I swear I still can't believe it sometimes."
Angel Otero at Kavi Gupta Gallery, 835 W. Washington Blvd., 312-432-0708; kavigupta.com. Through Jan. 30.
"Touch with Your Eyes: Recent Works by Angel Otero,"
at Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington St., Sidney R. Yates Gallery, 312-744-2947; chicagoculturalcenter.org.
Opens Jan. 23; gallery talk with the artist Jan. 28.
lviera@tribune.com
Copyright © 2010, Chicago Tribune
January 8, 2010
Sometimes, hype is all we have to go on.
I first learned about a voracious young painter named Angel Otero last spring, shortly after he received his master of fine arts degree from the School of the Art Institute. Even then I was late to the party: At 27, the Puerto Rico native had already reached milestones that most artists rarely allow themselves to dream about.
For starters, in February, several of Otero's works were exhibited at Spain's major international fair of contemporary art (ARCO), represented by the very hip, Canary Islands-based Leyendecker Gallery. On the first day of that fair, every last one of Otero's paintings sold. Weeks earlier, at the Circa '09 international art fair in Puerto Rico, same thing: All paintings sold, all on the first day.
By summer, Otero was on a roll. He received the Leonore Annenberg Fellowship Fund in the Performing and Visual Arts, a prestigious grant awarded by invitation to just one visual artist annually, in the generous sum of six figures to be invested over two years.
One of his works was selected for inclusion in the Museum of Contemporary Art's "Constellations" exhibit, on view last summer and fall alongside major paintings by Andy Warhol, Rene Magritte and Francis Bacon, among others. The icing? In October, Otero was chosen as the honored guest artist at the Art Institute's annual big-ticket fundraiser, BareWalls, adding his name to an elite list that includes Ed Paschke and Cynthia Rowley.
That was last year, Otero's fourth living in the States. He moved to Chicago in 2005 on a scholarship to the School of the Art Institute after growing up in Bayamón, Puerto Rico, a small city best known for its pork rinds. He was raised by his grandmother in a household he's said was devoid of books and paintings.
"What I could consider art around me back then was the stuff that shocked me or affected me," said Otero via telephone from his Brooklyn studio, which he set up in the fall with his Annenberg fellowship funds. "[My] work is about these sorts of memories, or confronted memories … to find some sort of interesting conversation between what is abstraction, material process and memory. There's abstraction, there's paint and then there's all these things together."
Somewhere between Otero's brain and his paintbrush, his interpreted memories become three-dimensional. What finds its way onto the canvas (often painted black, to start) are bright, textural spurts clinging to the surface. The resulting paintings are bizarre, but not off-putting. What could easily appear crude and clumsy, like an amateur experimenting with new materials, instead is laced with meaningful detail in the least likely places.
In a solo show at Kavi Gupta Gallery, Otero's "The Golden Vase" (2009) is abstract, for sure — the flowers in the vase are splotches of peeling, colored acrylics; the table on which it sits is a web of silicone squirted into a grid resembling rattan furniture. But there's very little irony. The vase has depth, and it's obvious that this thing — this object — was foremost in Otero's mind when he was painting it. As Otero explained, when you're raised middle-class, as he was, household possessions present an interesting aesthetic.
He clarified: "If they need a countertop, the high-class people have the budget for granite; the poor person just needs a slab of wood. And then the middle-class person has contact paper that looks like granite, and it's perfect. I like that; I grew up around that. I have found my way to navigate through all these memories and objects, through the stuff of my family, and also confront them with these ambitions of painting."
"Untitled (golden bowl)" (2009) is more controlled than "The Golden Vase." The bowl itself is nearly invisible, but lining the surrounding canvas is an immaculate system of tiny squares — blobs, really. It's gold-leaf, deconstructed.
Gold is everywhere in Otero's work. He attributes it to "weird kitsch" objects present in middle-class families, and the best example we've seen is his "Winners" (2009) installation at Kavi Gupta Gallery: three tiers of trophies covered with gold oil-paint, crusted up into Otero's signature flecks. Underneath those scabs of paint, you can just barely make out a guy frozen in a bowling stance, or a dude popping a wheelie on his motorcycle. The top trophy is the largest, and it's so thick with paint, the figure is diminished to a vague, marshmallow-y silhouette.
Otero likens his thick layers of paint to layers in a cake, adding them one at a time until he has a finished piece. They're created by coating mirrors with oil paint, playing with colors as he goes. Once they're dry, they're scraped off in whole sheets. The resulting layers are so thick and textural, many critics (including this one) have at first mistaken them for fabric.
The back room at Kavi Gupta Gallery features these uber-textural works exclusively. Here there are no golden bowls or vases on tables — just layer upon layer of color and texture, oil and tar poured onto canvas, piece by piece.
"I don't want to be so direct," Otero said of his layering process. "That's why all these things have paint on top of them in different techniques, in order to find that effect."
On the heels of the Kavi Gupta Gallery show, more of Otero's new work will be exhibited in a solo show Jan. 23 at the Chicago Cultural Center. It's a heck of a way to kick off a new year.
I asked the young painter if he felt differently since graduating and receiving so many honors.
"To be honest," he said, "the only thing that has changed is the responsibility that takes over me. I have this weird abstract pressure to work more, and I'm trying to do the best I can, but I swear to God I'm still floating in the air. I swear I still can't believe it sometimes."
Angel Otero at Kavi Gupta Gallery, 835 W. Washington Blvd., 312-432-0708; kavigupta.com. Through Jan. 30.
"Touch with Your Eyes: Recent Works by Angel Otero,"
at Chicago Cultural Center, 78 E. Washington St., Sidney R. Yates Gallery, 312-744-2947; chicagoculturalcenter.org.
Opens Jan. 23; gallery talk with the artist Jan. 28.
lviera@tribune.com
Copyright © 2010, Chicago Tribune
Labels:
abstraction,
art theory,
Chicago,
drawing,
painting
Sunday, October 25, 2009
Sunday, September 13, 2009
Zak Prekop & Jon Pestoni

Lisa Cooley is pleased to present a two-person exhibition of abstract paintings by two artists, Jon Pestoni, from Los Angeles, and Zak Prekop, from Chicago. The exhibition runs from September 11 until October 18, with a reception for the artists on Sunday, September 13, from 6 until 8 pm.
The paintings of Jon Pestoni and Zak Prekop have clear affinities – their separate practices arise from a conceptual foundation, but are executed with intellectual playfulness, subtlety, lightness and lyricism. Both artists are highly aware of art historical precedent and yet aim for the discovery of unique forms. Both bodies of work deliver formal investigations with a critical edge.
Neither figurative, nor purely abstract, Jon Pestoni’s paintings are imbued with an experiential quality. They highlight paint application, materiality, rich color schemes, and occasionally, blunt, aggressive brushwork. His work is explicit and avoids visual pretense in a direct, immediate way. Scale and color shift subtly from work to work, revealing the internal logic of Pestoni’s practice and contextualizing each individual painting.
In certain works, wide, dragged brushstrokes create thick horizontal bands across prepared grounds. Pestoni sometimes contrasts these severe strokes with small, lyrical surface marks and lines, adding yet another layer to the work. Such contrasting moves address the heavy ground beneath and imbue the painting with a decorative but opposing tension.
Pestoni’s work plays with ideas of negation. The artist might seem to deny the viewer access to the “interior” of the work, but in fact he is playing with the trope of deriving pleasure from inaccessibility, thereby amplifying awareness of the work’s materiality and nuance. Pestoni pushes the act of building up and breaking down, painting something in and painting something out, unifying this practice into a single picture. In short, much of the activity in these paintings is the work of erasing the work. By investigating disappearances, the paintings become evidence of a process and saturated with visual and indexical meaning.
Collage and pencil drawing spark the composition of Zak Prekop’s oil paintings. The artist uses these two non-painting mediums to create the nuanced structures, the destabilized geometry, the rambling, gestural creases and the shallow, color-filled ridges that characterize the surface of his paintings.
This approach yields a range of pictures, some of which are more about drawing, others more about painting. Some pictures combine both ideas, emulating collage to create an illusion of torn paper within the underpainting. Other incongruities are evident - torn paper and quick marks suggest immediacy, but Prekop’s creamy paint application and subdued palette evoke a contemplative, slow reading. His layers of color range from translucent to opaque, but always retain a striking luminosity.
Prekop’s paintings are notable for their levels of refinement, interiority and sincerity. Even in his larger canvases, the artist conjures an intimate experience for the viewer. Diagetic, almost invisible marks reveal themselves only when viewed at certain angles while the quality of the artist’s lines feel introspective and meandering. Reinvesting seriousness and the personal into tropes of abstraction, Prekop creates a new form of subdued and cerebral non-representational painting.
Jon Pestoni lives and works in Los Angeles. He received his BA in Art from UC Berkeley in 1992 and his MFA from UCLA in 1996. His paintings were included in The White Columns New York Annual 2008, curated by Jay Sanders. His work has also been exhibited in New York at Leo Koenig Inc and Marianne Boesky Gallery as well as at Galerie Parisa Kind in Frankfurt, Germany. Since 2005 he has lectured in Studio Art at UC Irvine, UCLA and UC Riverside. Upcoming exhibitions include a two-person show with Shane Campbell Gallery in Chicago.
Zak Prekop lives and works in Chicago, where he also received his MFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2008. He is currently studying at the Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende Künste, Städelschule in Frankfurt, Germany. He has recently exhibited at Shane Campbell Gallery in Chicago and Roger Björkholmen Galleri, Stockholm, Sweden.
The gallery is located at 34 Orchard Street between Hester and Canal in the Lower East Side of New York City. The closest subway is the East Broadway stop of the F line. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Sunday, from noon to 6 pm. For more information or images, please email the gallery at frontdesk@lisa-cooley.com or call 212-680-0564.
Labels:
abstraction,
art theory,
Chicago,
drawing,
Los Angeles,
painting,
SAIC
Tuesday, August 04, 2009
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Tuesday, March 03, 2009
Wednesday, November 26, 2008
Monday, November 24, 2008
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Zak Prekop

Zak Prekop
November 22 - January 17, 2009
Opening Saturday, November 22
6 - 8 pm
Shane Campbell Gallery
1431 West Chicago Avenue
Chicago Illinois 60622
312.226.2223
shanecampbellgallery.com
Labels:
abstraction,
art theory,
Chicago,
painting,
SAIC
Thursday, November 13, 2008
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Fluers de Guerre
Friday, October 31, 2008
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
John Phillips

Of course JP is in my top 10
I told him once that he was my favorite painter, he was a little down that day as I remember but I really meant it all the same. I should tell him again.
Labels:
abstraction,
art theory,
Chicago,
John Phillips,
painting,
SAIC
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Sunday, September 28, 2008
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