Contemporary Art
Saturday, March 13th, 2010
SHOW+TELL -- March 13th! from This is What We Imagine on Vimeo.
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SHOW+TELL -- March 13th! from This is What We Imagine on Vimeo.
It’s easy to get jealous in Los Angeles. Most everyone came here from somewhere, even if it was here, to try and create art of some sort, to go behind the curtain of media-making in an attempt to toss in a pinch of their own individual ingredients. The result is an endless stream of Facebook invitations, familiar postcards on coffee shop pin-boards, and a daunting sense that others’ ingredients—some friends, some enemies, some people who just got to town—are taking over the stew.
But if there’s anything I learned in college—a smaller, but similar stew—it’s that the work of my peers, in analysis or collaboration, is often the best teacher out there. And it’s precisely because you are jealous, because you can view their creative process as a mirror of your own. You can say, “Huh, this person is no genius, they’re practically an idiot, but they made this choice. I never thought about doing that. Maybe I too can make that choice, only better.” It’s creative capitalism, but the only way it works is when you’re actively supporting one another.
This seems to be motto of the Los Angeles-based art collective, This Is What We Imagine (TIWWI, or Teewee), a group of young video, film, photography, and design makers—many of whom I went to school with—that are exhibiting their latest projects tonight, Saturday night, at the Echo Park Rec Center. Beginning at 9:00 PM, the program, called “Show and Tell.” boasts the premiere of two recent collaborative efforts: “Weekend of Wonderment 6” and “Remember When.” If you haven’t heard of the first five installments of the “Weekend of Wonderment” campaign, it’s comprised of about four or five projects, all made within the time-span of two days and with the help of anybody and everybody available. “Remember When,” also the product of many (as opposed to few), is a new comic web-series about a group of friends who try to recreate the lost memories of their amnesia-begotten buddy.
TIWWI’s “Show and Tell” begins tonight, Saturday, 9:00 PM, at the Echo Park Rec Center, located at 1161 Logan Street in Echo Park. Tickets are $12. Full, open bar. For more information, please visit www.tiwwi.com.
Tags: Collaboration, Echo Park, Echo Park Rec Center, Emerson College, Remember When, Show and Tell, This is What We Imagine, Weekend of Wonderment, WIWWI
Posted in Art, Bring Your Flask, Contemporary Art, Exhibitions, Festival, Film, Food and Drink, Low Brow, Mixed media, Music, Neighborhoods, Painting, Performance, Save + Misbehave, Silverlake/Los Feliz, The Social Scene, Video Art No Comments »
Wednesday, March 10th, 2010
The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens and LACMA are both about to come into a little bit of an inheritance. The private collection of Sidney and Frances Lasker Brody, which is filled to the brim with enviable works, will go up for auction at Christie’s in May. According to the LA Times’ Culture Monster, The Huntington is set to get a share of the upcoming sale, while LACMA will be the lucky recipient of a 12-by-11-foot mural that the Brody’s commissioned from Matisse. Go back. Read that again. They commissioned a mural, called “La Garde,” from Matisse.
The Brody’s served on both museum boards and their collection and their house are both points of pride for art and architecture lovers in Los Angeles. Christie’s has estimated that the sale will garner $150 million especially considering that they’ll be auctioning off works by Picasso, Giacometti, Braque, and Degas.
Click here, or here, to read more about it. Wonder if we can afford anything up for auction!
Tags: Christie's auction, Huntington Library, LACMA, Sidney and Frances Lasker Brody
Posted in Art, Bring Your Flask, Contemporary Art, High Brow, Neighborhoods, Old School, Painting, Personalities, Photography, The Social Scene No Comments »
Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

I recently found myself sitting on a couch in a dark room inside the Robert Zemeckis Center for Digital Arts at USC watching a play-test of a brand-new interactive video game. I use the term ‘interactive,’ because it was less like your typical Nintendo or PlayStation proceeding, and more akin to one of those ‘choose your own adventure’ movies, only digitalized, intricately detailed, and not a little influenced by the likes of Spielberg or Christopher Nolan. The game takes place in a slightly futuristic society, and at one point, the protagonist, a detective, is sitting in his beat-down, windowless office going over clues, when he puts on a pair of special sunglasses. These sunglasses allow him, and by proxy, us, the audience, to perceive his spacial environment as a pristine mountain-top, or a Redwood forest. The effect is novel, and provokes a round of ‘wouldn’t-that-be-cool’ comments from anybody who’s watching, yet it also brings up an interesting, modern phenomenon. I call it the ‘it’s not to you’ syndrome, and it works like this: you’re sitting in a beat-down, windowless office, but…it’s not to you.
Don’t get me wrong, this syndrome is hardly new or original, although it is intensifying in our digital age. And one person who’s exploring this intensification is artist Jeffrey Wells with his newest exhibit Seeing While Seeing at the Bergamont Station Arts Center, a part of the Santa Monica Museum of Art. Wells attempts to recreate the optical illusions of everyday life—the after-image of an exit sign, the undulating intersection of two vertical walls that meet at a right-angle—using video projections. Thus the viewer is left questioning whether or not an illusion is physical or digital. Both are percepts, separate from what some would call “objective reality,” but only one is an intentionally manipulated percept.
What Wells—along with the interactive video game, to a certain extent—may be attempting to illustrate is the danger of the ‘it’s not to you’ syndrome. Because how do you really know what is? Or who’s presenting what to you, for that matter? And as the line between what is and what is to you gets smaller and smaller, what becomes of you?
Jeffrey Wells’s Seeing While Seeing is on view until April 17th at Project Room 1 in the Bergamont Station Arts Center, a part of the Santa Monica Museum of Arts. Bergamont Station is located at 2525 Michigan Ave, Building G-1. For more information, please call (310) 586-6488, or visit www.smmoa.org.
Tags: Bergamont Station Arts Center, Christopher Nolan, interactive media, Jeffrey Wells, Nintendo, optical illusion, PlayStation, Robert Zemeckis Center For Digital Arts, Santa Monica Museum of Art, Seeing While Seeing, Spielberg, USC
Posted in Art, Conceptual, Contemporary Art, Exhibitions, Galleries, High Brow, Installation, Mixed media, Museums, Neighborhoods, Santa Monica, Save + Misbehave, Video Art 1 Comment »
Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010
Ever wonder what happened to Ed Templeton? That professional skateboarder turned internationally renowned artist, photographer, D.I.Y. innovator, entrepreneur, ‘Beautiful Loser,’ and book publisher? Well if you haven’t, then Ed Templeton has.
His eclectic career as both a skater and an artist has always seemed to be about his own relationship to time and motion. In his famous photography book, Teenage Smokers, for instance, each medium to close-up image of a young person with a cigarette has the feeling of personal impermanence, like a flash-memory of a kid you might have seen at the mall once when you were nine.
Templeton, especially in his most recent work, seems to be obsessed with these fragile, ephemeral moments, and what they might mean. His 2008 book, Deformer, which took him 11 years to complete, examines his youth growing up in the ultra-conservative suburban “incubator” of Orange County, using childhood letters, notes, photographs, sketches, and paintings to tell his story with as much physical accuracy as possible—even if it’s all long gone.
His latest photography show, The Seconds Pass, at the Roberts and Tilton Gallery in Culver City once again has Templeton on the move. These thirty-some separate collages of pictures, mostly all taken from the vantage point of a moving vehicle, attempt to capture exactly where he’s been these last few years, so as not to miss a passing second.
Ed Templeton’s The Seconds Pass can be viewed at the Roberts and Tilton Gallery in Culver City until April 3. Roberts and Tilton is located at 5801 Washinton Blvd. For more information, please call (323) 549-0223, or visit www.robertsandtilton.com.
Tags: Beautiful Losers, Culver City, D.I.Y., Deformer, Ed Templeton, photography, Roberts and Tilton, Skateboarding, Teenage Smokers, The Seconds Pass
Posted in Art, Books, Contemporary Art, Culver City, Exhibitions, Galleries, Low Brow, Neighborhoods, Old School, Personalities, Photography, Save + Misbehave, West LA No Comments »
Sunday, February 28th, 2010
When most people think of portraiture, images of aristocracy adorned in their finest medieval robes atop a crackling grand fireplace in some remote European castle probably come to mind. When I mention that I focused on 18th-19th Century portraiture in college, people look as if they’re about to fall asleep before I can finish the sentence. But this past Saturday, I attended a lecture at Pasadena’s Norton Simon Museum presented by John Klein, Associate Professor from Washington University in St. Louis, that reminded me of the magnetism and presence of portraits. In his lecture, “Matisse, Picasso and Beyond: How Portraiture Survived Modernism,” he examined the means by which the art of human representation prevailed through an era defined by its antipathy to historical convention. Through the study of modernist masters like Picasso, Matisse and Giacometti, Klein arrives at a universal truth: human beings will always and forever be obsessed with themselves, others, and how others perceive them.
“Damn Portraits!” began Professor Klein, quoting Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres—an abrupt and honest exclamation that served as a perfect prelude to the difficult battle that portraiture was doomed to fight once the modern age descended on a timeless artistic tradition. Ingres, like many artists of his time, despised portraiture.
He often complained that the overwhelming number of commissions from high society kept him from focusing on “more important” subject matter. In the 19th Century, it seemed as if the only demographic that had an affinity for portraiture was the social elite. When the 20th Century began, many creative figures decried the art form’s declining relevance. Portraiture posed a series of difficult questions for the artist: How does one capture the complexity of human identity? How can an inner quality be expressed outwardly? How can a still representation do justice to a personality trait that is defined by its movement? Modernism, says Klein, provided the platform that was so desperately needed: a movement that joined portraiture with the abstraction of the avant-garde.
Through an array of examples, Klein revealed how artists like Picasso and Matisse were uninterested with the centrality of the sitter, which historically would have been fundamental. In works like Girl with Green Eyes (1908), Matisse blended his sitters into a decorative pattern where no single component of the painting could dominate. Picasso’s Gertrude Stein (1906), on the other hand, showcases both the artist and the sitter, serving as a visual statement of the height and legitimacy of both Stein’s and Picasso’s careers. Klein taught the audience that through the execution of her face, as was common with many of Picasso’s portraits, the artist imposed a mask-like quality that hardly resembled Stein’s genuine appearance. The primitivization of her face is a symbolic and telling mark of the beginning of an important aesthetic shift.
After the First World War, artists became increasingly cynical of humanistic values, and rapid advances in photographic technology threatened representational portraiture. Expressive abstraction began to take hold, providing the artist with infinite ways to communicate power, status and legitimacy—and the line between art and vulgarity became harder to define. Marcus Harvey’s Myra (1995) is an example of how modern portraiture could become a PR dream come true. Harvey’s portrait of Myra Hindley, a woman convicted of murdering multiple innocent child victims, is comprised of tiny flesh colored hands, hands meant to represent those of the children that she murdered.
Portraiture’s many levels of expression, as in Myra, have the potential for endless symbolism and emotion. I could feel the tension in the lecture hall when Myra came on screen, and I could see that the man next to me was trying to conceal his goose bumps.
Professor Klein’s lecture was most certainly a personal highlight of my many years of studying and appreciating portraiture. Regardless of one’s knowledge of art, he was able to communicate his subject with admirable passion and vigor. Professor Klein carried the double-barreled theme of portraiture and its modernist survival from the turn of the 20th Century through the fall of Saddam Hussein. It was quite frankly one of the most fun Saturdays I’ve had in a while, and I don’t think I was alone. The jam-packed lecture hall’s enthusiastic applause was proof enough that nobody was falling asleep before Klein could finish his sentences.
-By Brittany Krasner
The Norton Simon’s calendar of educational lectures will certainly expand your art related intellectual repertoire. For more information on upcoming lectures, please visit their website.
Tags: Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, Marcus Harvey's Myra, Matisse Picasso and Beyond: How Portraiture Survived Modernism, Norton Simon Museum, portraiture throughout the ages, Professor John Klein
Posted in Art, Contemporary Art, Exhibitions, High Brow, Museums, Old School, Painting, Pasadena, Personalities, Photography No Comments »
Wednesday, February 24th, 2010
From George Washington on the Delaware, to Huck Finn on the Mississippi, to Katrina on the Gulf, rivers make up an integral part of the geographical, historical, cultural, political, and artistic landscape of the America we know. And Los Angeles is no exception. Yes it’s true that for the good part of the year, the L.A. River remains hopelessly barren, and provides a better bike path to Long Beach than it does a waterway. But if you’ve ever actually step foot into that mighty concrete divider of our city, then you’d know it’s every bit as organic and symbolic as any other great river. Whether it’s the plastic bag trees, the graffiti-worn banks, or the garbage disposal current, one would be hard-pressed to not find the same beauty that Mark Twain once described in his memoir, Life on the Mississippi, as “…a wonderful book…which told its mind to me without reserve, delivering its most cherished secrets as clearly as if it had uttered them with a voice.”
On show until July 3rd at the Pasadena Museum of California Art, the collective exhibition entitled The Ulysses Guide to the Los Angeles River (UGLAR for short) also uses the metaphor of a book, only this one screams its secrets. Consisting of a wide range of contemporary, LA-based artists, this unique assortment of paintings, sculptures, photographs, and illustrations all converge like tributaries into one central theme: the Los Angeles River.
One oil painting called “Confluence” by Tyson Dolan portrays the intersection of two concrete canals, meeting and opening into the space of the viewer. The colors are muted, almost foggy, and with the installed background sounds of dripping water and distant train bells echoing throughout the room, one gets the distinct feeling of being alone and drifting through Dolan’s industrial river-basin.
Another piece, up-and-comer Rob Sato’s “Land Admiral Lefebvre’s Fleet Makes Sail”, takes a more surreal, maximalist route. This multi-medium, ‘Where’s Waldo’ mash-up depicts an elaborate, farcical, eighteenth-century showdown between the Blue-Coats and the Reds on the battlefield of the Los Angeles River. There’s of course no water for the huge wooden ships, so the implied Admiral Lefebvre sails upon his own ocean, with hundreds of tiny minions carrying the actual waves themselves. Not to be ignored in this spectacle are Sato’s frequent dips into brash absurdity: slave-like giants, a monstrous fish-man-beast riding a whale like an Avatar pterodactyl, and if you look hard enough, a modern car wreck upon the bridge over the river.
The biggest work on show, however, is a mural completed by all the contributing artists. It’s title is “The River Experiment,” and it speaks to the theme of the collection, which is one of evolution, or perhaps more accurately, mutation. Because The Ulysses Guide to the Los Angeles River – to complete Mark Twain’s quote – “[is] not a book to be read once and thrown aside, for it had a new story to tell every day.”
The Ulysses Guide to the Los Angeles River runs until July 3rd at the Pasadena Museum of California Art. For more information, please visit pmcaonline.org, or call (626) 568-3665.
Tags: George Washington, Huck Finn, Life on the Mississippi, Los Angeles River, Mark Twain, Mississippi River, Pasadena, Pasadena Museum of California Art, Rivers, Rob Sato, The Ulysses Guide to the Los Angeles River, Tyson Dolan
Posted in Art, Conceptual, Contemporary Art, Exhibitions, High Brow, Installation, Mixed media, Museums, Old School, Painting, Pasadena, Personalities, Photography No Comments »
Friday, February 19th, 2010
What do you get when you showcase the brightest and boldest of Angeleno performance artists? GUTTED. Gutted is the only word to describe Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions’ encompassing performance art-based program, which includes live performance, texts, and objects speaking of, from, and to the body.
GUTTED is Saturday, February 20 at 7:00pm, LACE. Click here for more info.
The exhibition Actions, Conversations, and Intersections at the Los Angeles Municipal Gallery in Barnsdall Art Park continues to add new participatory projects to its roster. This weekend, roll up your sleeves and join artists Edward Pine Stevens and Joseph Stuckleman with their installation Make Objects Make Marks or BikeHaus as they bike through Los Angeles as part of Cloud Lines and Chemospheres.
Check out the rest of this weekend’s programming here.
Newly purchased by Quentin Tarantino, the New Beverly Cinema is continuing its program of repertory cinema. Ferris Bueller’s Day Off and Election will play back-to-back not only once, but twice this Saturday because it is oh so nice. Save Ferris! Pick Flick!
The Matthew Broderick double feature starts at 3:20 and 7:30 at the New Beverly Cinema. Click here for more info.
Tags: Actions Conversations and Intersections, Barnsdall Art Park, Edward Pine Stevens, GUTTED, Joseph Stuckleman, LACE, Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, Los Angeles Municipal Gallery, Make Objects Make Marks, New Beverly Cinema, performance art, Quentin, Quentin Tarantino
Posted in Contemporary Art, Film, Galleries, Hollywood, Mixed media, Performance, Silverlake/Los Feliz No Comments »
Tuesday, February 16th, 2010

Rachel Whiteread, Study for Village - 1st, 2004
It is fascinating to see a sculptor’s preliminary study of his or her work. Especially if the artwork has been created, it is a glimpse into the ever evolving nature of the creative process. These type of drawings are like a secondary, kid sister manifestation of the artist’s idea.

Rachel Whiteread, House, 1993
Speaking of sculptors, Rachel Whiteread, one of the British Young Artists, is well-known for her encompassing sculptures that depict negative space. For an example, the work House is a concrete cast of a house’s inside. It is as if someone had poured concrete through the chimney, filled up the interior space of the house, and then cracked the roof and walls away with a huge chisel. But before the sculpture, there were the drawings.
The Hammer Museum presents the first museum retrospective of Whiteread’s drawings and other preliminary work. And the drawings are coupled with objects that Whiteread found and sought inspiration from for her artistic practice.
This show will make you want to dust of your black book to get drawing again.
Rachel Whiteread Drawings closes April 25th, 2010. For more information, please click here.
Tags: creative process, drawings, Hammer Museum, House, Rachel Whiteread, sketches, YBA, Young British Artists
Posted in Contemporary Art, Exhibitions, Installation, Mixed media, West LA No Comments »
Friday, February 12th, 2010

Imagine it; it is year 4708. It turns out that hovercrafts are passé and robots serve you breakfast in bed. See, the future isn’t too bad.
If you follow the lunar calendar, you know that year 4708 starts a little sooner. Actually, Chinese New Year has joined forces with Valentine’s Day and the New Year will start this Sunday. Time flies when you are following the lunar calendar!
And you’ll like this one; it is the Year of the Tiger. The tiger is one of the most powerful, but also most sensitive animal on the Chinese zodiac, just like someone else I know, you ol’ lug.
Giant Robot is taking it upon themselves to ring in the Chinese New Year in style. And by style, we mean with lots of art. They have coordinated a group show titled Year of the Tiger, which features illustrations, works on canvas, prints, drawings, watercolors, and sculptures by dozens of artists. In short, all of your art fantasies will come true. But we must warn you, champagne is not included.
The Year of the Tiger opens this Saturday, February 13. The opening reception is 6:30 – 10pm at GR2 (2062 Sawtelle Boulevard). Please click here for more information.
Image: Jeni Yang, Dumpling Cub
Tags: 4708, Chinese, Giant Robot, group show, lunar calendar, new year, Valentine's Day, Year of the Tiger
Posted in Bring Your Flask, Contemporary Art, West LA No Comments »
Tuesday, February 9th, 2010
We need to talk.
That phrase is probably the worst promise of punishment anyone could say. It likely means you messed up big time at the company holiday party as you sang karaoke until the wee morning hours.
But it is even worse when you hear it from your significant other. We know; you don’t need to hear that from us.
Well, beware; the Culture Club L.A. needs to talk to you. But rest assured that it won’t concern your wild-child lifestyle. Instead, the Culture Club L.A. has coordinated an art panel/town hall event to talk about the state of the ever evolving Los Angeles art world. With guests Dean Valentine and Sara Watson, Marc Richards will moderate this discussion and audience participation.
You can bring up what’s on your mind in regards to art in LA, starting with: why is that chair in front of the Pacific Design Center so huge and can you sit on it?
Let’s Talk Art is this Wednesday, February 10th at Angles Gallery (2754 La Cienega Blvd.). Admittance is $10 and will benefit LAXART. Click here for more info.
Posted in Contemporary Art, Culver City No Comments »