Monday, July 18, 2011

July 17 - Gallery Visits

China Art ObjectsHonor FraserHonor FraserHonor FraserHonor FraserHonor Fraser
Honor FraserHonor FraserLAXARTLAXARTLAXARTCherry & Martin
Cherry & MartinCherry & MartinBlum & PoeBlum & PoeFrancois GhebalyFrancios Ghebaly
China Art ObjectsChina Art ObjectsChina Art ObjectsChina Art ObjectChina Art ObjectJancar Gallery

July 17 - Gallery Visits, a set on Flickr.

Via Flickr:
Images from the exhibits at: Honor Fraser, LAXART, Cherry & Martin, Blum & Poe, Francois Ghebaly Gallery, China Art Objects and Jancar Gallery.

This photos were taken by iPhone so I apologize of the low quality of them.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Paris Photo 2011


How I would love to go to Paris this fall...


A selection of 111 French and international galleries from some 30 countries will present the best of 19th century, modern and contemporary photography in the heart of the French capital. To complete this panorama of worldwide photography, a selection of 16 publishers and international specialized bookstores will have a dedicated space in the fair.

Paris Photo will celebrate African photography from Bamako to Cape Town, unveiling the creative wealth of historic and contemporary African artists.
These exciting developments put forward the new energy that Paris Photo is displaying by reinventing itself.
Los Angeles gallery M+B will be there with Matthew Brandt, Mike Brodie, Sam Falls, Matthew Porter, and Alex Prager. Congrats to owner/director Benjamin Trigano.


Sunday, June 5, 2011

Hiroshima: Ground Zero 1945 | International Center of Photography



Hiroshima: Ground Zero 1945 | International Center of Photography

I am constantly impressed with the exhibitions at ICP. This has got to be one of the most eerie group of photographs ever shown. In Brian Sholis' review for art agenda, he offers the best explanation of 'photograms' created by the atomic blast. Here is the paragraph from that review:
The most complex and haunting photographs in the show, however, depict "flash burns." In one image, the shadow of a valve used to seal off a pipe is projected onto the metal surface of the container to which it is attached. Visual habit leads viewers to believe that this is the effect of a sunny day. The caption belies this commonsense response: "'Shadow' of a hand valve wheel on the painted wall of a gas storage tank; radiant heat instantly burned paint where the heat rays were not obstructed." In effect, the nuclear blast—its "bluish white glare"—turned some objects in Hiroshima into light-sensitive surfaces, resulting in what might technically if uneasily be called photograms. I say uneasily because of another, altogether sadder image also included in the show. Here we see the surface of a road, on which an arrow is chalked and labeled "direction of blast." Once again the caption, its neutral language betraying the photograph's scientific purpose, redirects our understanding of the image: "Flash-burn on asphalt on bridge 20, 3,500 feet south from [air zero]. Shadow was cast by a man." Two small circles marked in chalk indicate the placement of the man's feet; one is slightly in front of the other, as if he were mid-stride. The "shadow," this photogram-within-a-photograph, is likely the only extant evidence that someone died on that spot.
Here is a video about the show:

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Elliott Erwitt: Personal Best | International Center of Photography


I was familiar with Elliot Erwitt's work by sight, but not particularly by name. This weekend, my friend Christopher and I went to Bergamot Station where, at Peter Fetterman Gallery there is a display (not exactly an exhibition) of his work. I recommend a visit to the gallery if you are not able to see the show in NY.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Benefit Breakdown

There are a number of excellent benefits coming up in support of Los Angeles non-profits and artist-run spaces. I hope to see you at all of the following events...


Saturday April 30, 2011 7 pm – 10 pm
Santa Monica Museum of Art
INCOGNITO 2011
Tickets starting at $100

SMMOA
Bergamot Station G1
2525 Michigan Ave.
Santa Monica, CA 90404
http://smmoa.org/index.php/exhibitions/details/245
Contact 310.586.6488 x116 or email incognito@smmoa.org



Sunday May 1, 2011 2 pm – 8 pm
workSPACE
workSPACE Art Sale
FREE

Workspace
2601 Pasadena Ave
Los Angeles, CA 90031
http://workspacela.tumblr.com/
Inquiries or to purchase work: info@workspace2601.com



Sunday May 1, 2011 3 pm – 7 pm
Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery
Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery's Benefit Auction
Tickets starting at $25

LA Municipal Art Gallery at Barnsdall
4800 Hollywood Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90027
http://www.lamag.org/
Contact Meg Madison | meg@megmadison.com | 213.393.9333



Thursday May 5, 2011 8 pm – 12 am
LAND
LAND Art Auction & Benefit Party
Tickets starting at $75

Palihouse
8465 Holloway Drive
West Hollywood, CA 90069
http://www.nomadicdivision.org/auction/default.html
Contact Allison Gorsuch at allison@nomadicdivision.org



Saturday May 7, 2011 5 pm – 7 pm
Outpost for Contemporary Art
Breaking New Ground: A Tribute to Julie Deamer
Tickets starting at $20

neutraVDL Research House
2300 Silverlake Blvd
Los Angeles, CA
http://www.outpost-art.org/specialevents_soon.php
RSVP rsvp@outpost-art.org



Thursday May 12, 2011 6:30 pm – 9 pm
Rema Hort Mann Foundation
The Los Angeles Initiative
Tickets starting at $20

Honor Fraser Gallery
2622 S La Cienega Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90034
http://www.rhmfoundation.org/la2011/index.html
Contact Quang Bao, rhmfoundation@gmail.com or 212.966.8444




Wednesday, May 18, 2011 7 pm – 10:30 pm
The HeArt Project
19TH ANNUAL EVENING OF ART
Tickets starting at $150

Hollywood Media Arts Academy
1140 North Citrus Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90038
http://www.theheartproject.org/eveningofart.html
Contact Alma Villegas at (323) 465-1404 x234




Thursday May 19, 2011 7 pm – 10:30 pm
LACE
LACE Benefit Art Auction 2011
Tickets starting at $50

LA Mart
1933 South Broadway
Los Angeles 90007
http://www.welcometolace.org/events/view/lace-benefit-art-auction-2011/
Contact LACE at 323.957.1777 ext. 17

Sunday, April 17, 2011

Kehinde Wiley at Roberts & Tilton



Kehinde Wiley at Roberts & Tilton
The World Stage: Israel
April 9 - May 28, 2011

In placing his 'everyday hero' in such grandiose compositions, Kehinde Wiley's paintings become a mixture of appropriation, photorealism, pastiche, subversion, and even homage. It is not possible for me to identify the countless references to historical masterworks in his paintings, but Titian and other Venetian Renaissance painters should immediately come to mind. I have problems with the work in that they are so seductive and so beautifully rendered that I sometimes lose sight of the subjects of the work - I am too distracted to realize that these men probably live in utterly abject conditions. He provides an escape in his recent talk at the National Museum of the American Indian when he said, "Sometimes I almost feel guilty with what I’ve created."

Sometimes, I almost feel guilty liking them.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Florian Maier-Aichen at Blum & Poe


Florian Maier-Aichen at Blum & Poe
April 9 - May 14, 2011

You know what you are looking at is NOT real. Not real, in the sense that you could not stand at a particular point on this earth, raise your camera to your eye and see what Florian Maier-Aichen saw through his lens when he took these photographs. These places — these lakes, these snow-lined streets, these starry horizons — do not exist. The works are printed at such a gorgeous scale as to reveal themselves in their detail. It's true what the press release says, "The exhibition is poised at a sea change, with the artist's hybrid works fully resolved into gestural and handmade pictures." In a large work (in Gallery 3) depicting a bright blue night sky through silhouetted trees in a forest (detail below), the stars are scribbles on a vast background. The artist's hand is craftily revealed in gestures throughout the show. The inability to discern exactly where most of these gestures are is a testament to his impressive skill.



Florian Maier-Aichen, Untitled (detail), 2011
C-print, 86 x 61 1/2 inches framed