Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

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.

Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Laurie Scavo, Mock Stars, and Maria Bamford

Went to Skylight Books in Los Feliz last night for a reading of Mock Stars: Indie Comedy & the Dangerously Funny by John Wenzel, a columnist at the Denver Post. Had a great time there, and after the reading was three short sets by comics including Maria Bamford.
There was a girl there taking photos, who I saw hand a card to another woman...a bit of research (googling the phrase I lifted from her card) found out that she's Laurie Scavo, an excellent photographer of events, music, and her own subjects.
Laurie's Website Link

Monday, October 06, 2008

INDEX review published!

My review is now published online for White Hot Magazine, read it online!

Monday, September 29, 2008

Martin Kippenberger


“Put Your Freedom in the Corner, Save It for a Rainy Day” 1990

---“The Wall is a part of German History. Now that all that’s left of it is a bit on Potsdamer Platz, it no longer feels like you’re walking through a wall. History is something you need to feel. First they weren’t Nazis, then they weren’t Communists. So what were they? They pulled down the wall without asking us and smartly wiped out some German history. The wall ought to have been preserved. We don’t need excavations, like in Greece—in this country history happens at your front door. Joseph Beuys thought the wall should have been seven centimeters higher---on purely aesthatic grounds. Everybody cheered when the wall was pulled down. That’s the wrong way to handle history.” Martin Kippenberger

Image Credits;
Martin Kippenberger in Venice, Italy, 1996, © E. Semotan

Monday, September 22, 2008

Cannibal Flesh Riot tonite!!!

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

There will be a screening of Cannibal Flesh Riot! at The Little Cave bar in Highland Park, CA - Tonight, Monday Sept. 22. Forget the fact that you have to go to work the next morning. The screening starts at 9pm so you can get home plenty early for sleep. Granted, it is a small screen in a small bar with bad speakers, but what better environment for a cheesy film about whiskey guzzling/cigarello puffing ghouls. There is no cover and there will be $3 mystery beers and $5 mystery shots, leaving enough cash in your pocket to buy CFR DVDs, CDs and T-shirts. Not to mention everyone who attends will get a free CFR movie poster. So join me early (I'll be there by 8pm) for drinks and laugh to the insanity that is Cannibal Flesh Riot!.


Be Grim!
Gris Grimly

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Frances Alys @ LACMA


Francis Alÿs: Fabiola

September 7, 2008–January 4, 2009 | Ahmanson Building

Commissioned by Dia Art Foundation and curated by Lynne Cooke, Francis Alÿs: Fabiola was first installed at the Hispanic Society of America in northern Manhattan from September 2007 to April 2008. Francis Alÿs, a Belgian artist who relocated to Mexico City in the early 1990s, has assembled a significant collection of nearly identical paintings and other depictions of fourth-century Saint Fabiola over the last two decades. All of these are based on a renowned, but lost, portrait by nineteenth-century French academic painter Jean-Jacques Henner. This much-venerated image has been so assiduously copied by amateurs and professionals alike that it has become a popular icon, a phenomenon that, as the artist stated, "indicates a different criterion of what a masterwork could be." Gathered from flea markets, antique shops, and private collections throughout Europe and the Americas, Alÿs's collection offers a window onto aesthetic, sociological, and theological values over the past century and more. This exhibition will display Alÿs's group of more than three hundred Fabiola portraits, all of them copies of a lost original: most are paintings, and there are several versions in needlepoint, wood relief, and other materials as well.

All text courtesy of my contacts at LACMA, thanks friends!

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Gris Grimly Interview

Put up a short interview with Gris Grimly on the Unused Art Review blog.
Still seeking submissions for that blog and this one and for a slide show in Los Angeles, get on it peoples!
And Thanks Mr. Gris!!!

PS. There​ will be a scree​ning of Canni​bal Flesh​ Riot!​ at The Littl​e Cave bar in Highl​and Park,​ CA -​Monda​y Sept.​ 22. Forge​t the fact that you have to go to work the next morni​ng.​ The scree​ning start​s at 9pm so you can get home plent​y early​ for sleep​.​ Grant​ed,​ it is a small​ scree​n in a small​ bar with bad speak​ers,​ but what bette​r envir​onmen​t for a chees​y film about​ whisk​ey guzzl​ing/​cigar​ello puffi​ng ghoul​s.​ There​ is no cover​ and there​ will be $3 myste​ry beers​ and $5 myste​ry shots​,​ leavi​ng enoug​h cash in your pocke​t to buy CFR DVDs,​ CDs and T-​shirt​s.​ Not to menti​on every​one who atten​ds will get a free CFR movie​ poste​r.​ So join me early​ (​I'​ll be there​ by 8pm) for drink​s and laugh​ to the insan​ity that is Canni​bal Flesh​ Riot!​.​

REPOS​T PLEAS​E / RSVP
The Littl​e Cave
5922 N. Figue​roa
Los Angel​es,​ CA 90042​

Friday, September 12, 2008

Kippenberger at MoCA Grand

MOCA ORGANIZES FIRST MAJOR U.S. RETROSPECTIVE

OF INFLUENTIAL GERMAN ARTIST MARTIN KIPPENBERGER

Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective

September 21, 2008–January 5, 2009

MOCA Grand Avenue and The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA
Los Angeles—The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), presents Martin Kippenberger: The
Problem Perspective, the first major retrospective exhibition to be mounted in the United States of the work of Martin Kippenberger (1953–97). One of the most significant, relevant, and influential artists of our time, Kippenberger produced a complex and richly prolific body of work from the mid-1970s until his untimely death in 1997 at the age of 44. Organized by MOCA Senior Curator Ann Goldstein, this large-scale exhibition is a comprehensive examination of the artist’s expansive 20-year career. Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective is on view at two locations, MOCA Grand Avenue and The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA, from September 21, 2008 through January 5, 2009. The exhibition then travels to The Museum of Modern Art, New York, where it is on view from March 1 through May 11, 2009.

MEDIA PREVIEW

Friday, September 19, 2008

10am–1pm

MOCA Grand Avenue

Kippenberger’s life and work were inextricably linked in an exceptional practice that centered on the role of the artist in the culture and within the system of art. With references, subjects, and sources as wide-ranging and diverse as his production, his oeuvre examined and expanded upon that role as he also cast himself as impresario, entertainer, curator, collector, architect, and publisher. Kippenberger drew from popular culture, art, architecture, music, politics, history, and his own life—no subject was sacred. He was an exceptional appropriator—transforming, challenging, and occupying his subjects with incisive criticism, self-deprecating humor, vulnerability, and pathos.

“Martin Kippenberger’s reputation as a key figure in late 20th-century art has extended from Europe right here to Los Angeles, as his influence is felt not only by his colleagues and peers, but also by a subsequent generation of artists and students,” said MOCA Director Jeremy Strick. “With this exhibition, MOCA is very pleased to bring Kippenberger’s unique sensibility and practice to a wider audience, many of whom will be encountering his work for the first time. It is especially fitting that the first U.S. Kippenberger retrospective was organized in Los Angeles, where the artist made an enormous impact, along with many personal and professional connections, during his stay between 1989 and 1990.”

Martin Kippenberger: The Problem Perspective assembles key selections and bodies of work from 1977 to 1997—including paintings, sculptures, works on paper, installations, multiples, photographs, posters, announcement cards, and books—in order to fully represent the artist’s exceptional and cohesive oeuvre. Working with the support of Estate Martin Kippenberger, Galerie Gisela Capitain, Cologne, as well as private and institutional collections in Europe and the United States, this first American retrospective offers new insights into the accomplishments and complexities of the artist’s remarkable practice. At MOCA, the main body of the exhibition will be presented at MOCA Grand Avenue, with the presentation of additional works including the remarkable large-scale installation The Happy End of Franz Kafka’s “Amerika” (1994) at The Geffen Contemporary at MOCA. While this monumental work has been shown on a number of occasions in Europe, it has only been shown twice in the United States, most recently in 2000.

Included among the many series and bodies of work represented will be selections from the following:
the renowned self-portraits that Kippenberger produced throughout his career in all media; the Lieber Maler, male mir (Dear Painter, Paint for Me) painting series of the early 1980s; the Die I.N.P. Bilder (Is Not Embarrassing Pictures), Preis Bilder (Prize Pictures), and No Problem painting series of the 1980s (including the 1986 work The Problem Perspective. You are not the problem, it's the problem maker in your head, which serves as the title of the exhibition); a reunion of key works from his breakthrough 1987 exhibition of sculpture Peter. Die russische Stellung (Peter. The Russian Position); the “drunken” lanterns and other important sculptures of the late 1980s and 1990s; and the two later series Das Floss der Medusa (The Raft of Medusa) and Jacqueline: The Paintings Pablo Couldn’t Paint Anymore. The exhibition will also prominently feature numerous examples of the Hotel drawings and other works on paper; photographic works; and selections from the artist’s prolific production of printed matter, including books, editions, multiples, and large-scale presentations of his exhibition posters and announcement cards—all of which are central to Kippenberger’s oeuvre.

As exhibition curator Ann Goldstein writes in her catalogue essay: “…Kippenberger challenged and re-envisioned the role of an artist. His was an unsettling presence, breaching the boundaries that reinforce conventions and decorum in order to articulate and objectify the connections and relationships between an individual and their culture… He leaves an exhaustive and challenging oeuvre, a few lifetimes of work in just twenty years, with numerous trails of associations that will take many years and many exhibitions to unfold. It is a most problematic practice—and that is its great gift.”

Thanks to Misty in Elizabeth Hinckley's office for the text and for helping me every time I call her about a show!

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Index pt. 1




Some photos from Index. A little blurry but will be getting some official/nice ones sent to me. And will be putting some more up later or updating this post.

Monday, August 18, 2008

Opening at Geffen Contemporary MoCA




INDEX: CONCEPTUALISM IN CALIFORNIA FROM THE PERMANENT COLLECTION

LINK
Opening Sunday August 24th, 11AM-6PM, $5
08.24.08 - 12.15.08



Index: Conceptualism in California from the Permanent Collection draws upon MOCA’s substantial holdings of works by artists who have lived and worked in California and have contributed to the international lexicon of conceptual art. Curated by MOCA Curator Philipp Kaiser and Curatorial Assistant and Project Coordinator Corrina Peipon, the exhibition surveys the evolution of conceptual and post-studio practices by highlighting significant individual works alongside multiple works by artists in the collection. Acknowledging California artists’ particular contributions to defining and expanding art historical notions of conceptual art, the scope of this exhibition reaches from the proto-conceptual disciplines of artists Wallace Berman and Bruce Conner to the groundbreaking work produced during the mid-1960s, ‘70s, and into the ‘80s by artists John Baldessari, Chris Burden, Guy de Cointet, David Ireland, David Lamelas, and Alexis Smith, among others.




In recognition of the undeniable legacy of this period in California art, this exhibition also presents post-conceptual explorations by artists that were influenced by the preceding generations. Building upon the dialogue initiated by their mentors, artists Cindy Bernard, Andrea Fraser, Mike Kelley, Mathias Poledna, Stephen Prina, Pae White, and Christopher Williams continually redefine the boundaries of their various mediums and subjects through rigorous scrutiny and serious, though often humorous, analysis.




Saturday, August 16, 2008

Tonite in LA, NeckFace opening


NECKFACE
“CANNIBAL CARNIVAL”
NEW IMAGE ART GALLERY
7908 Santa Monica Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90046
www.newimageartgallery.com

Opening Reception Aug.16th, 7-10pm
Show runs Aug. 16th – Sept. 20, 2008

Thursday, August 14, 2008

LA Downtown Art Walk Today!

Downtown Art Walk
The Second Thursday of Every Month in Downtown Los Angeles

Thursday, August 14 2008

12pm - 9 pm • Free Admission

The cool thing about this; Both MoCAs are free from 5-8, next time I'm going there at 5. Marlene Dumas was the show at the non-Geffen one, and yes I still don't believe the hype. And the permanent collection was closed for reinstallation, I'll be going back soon.
Saw Nancy Popp at Phantom Galleries, which was great. And a few other good shows like Robert Reynolds'
"From Babylon to Baghdad"

Downtown Art Walk

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