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11 SEPTEMBER - 30 NOVEMBER

JORDI ALCARAZ
traslúcido

Exercicis de Desaparicio II (Exercises of Disappearance II), 2010, painting on cardboard and plexiglass, 67 3/8 x 87 inches

Publication Available:
JORDI ALCARAZ dibuixos
Essays by Peter Selz & Mariano Navarro
English, German, Italian, Spanish
Hardcover 144 Pages + 94 Illustrations $30

JACK RUTBERG FINE ARTS


357 N. La Brea Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90036 Telephone (323) 938-5222 www.jackrutbergfinearts.com
Mira Schor:
Paintings From The Nineties To Now
November 20, 2010 - January 9, 2011

207 W. 5th Street


Los Angeles, CA 90013

www.cb1gallery.com
213-806-7889
gallery@cb1gallery.com

Gallery Hours:
Wednesday - Sunday, noon - 6 p.m.
Thursday & Friday open until 7:30 p.m.
2010.21. 80 X 72 INCHES • MIXED MEDIA ON CANVAS

Luc Leestemaker
Songs of the Unconscious
1020 Prospect, Suite 130, La Jolla, CA 92037 • (858) 459-0836
www.madisongalleries.com
Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
January 13 - 16, 2011

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Norman Kulkin, The Gallerist, 2008


EXHIBITIONS

LOS ANGELES
Cynthia Ona Innis Betwixt, a solo show by Cynthia Ona Innis, satin, velvet and vinyl fabrics layered with
Walter Maciel Los Angeles consists of a range of materials and tech- ink and acrylic pigments while maintaining
[through Dec 18] niques that challenge notions of the divide a strong emphasis on line. The composi-
between painting and drawing. The subject tions are built up to create areas of texture
of her work continues to be influenced by that are enhanced by the reaction to light.
the cycles of nature and the investigation Different palettes in the works appropri-
of forms under transformation. Exposing a ately contradict each other to represent the
transitional pivot—a moment of exchange four seasons. Hues of hot pink and electric
as one thing becomes another—the surging orange are created with pigments on satin
biomorphic organisms suggest a physical and canvas to represent summer while
and botanical reference amidst an environ- icy white and topaz blue are made with
ment caught in flux. The markings are in- stains on vinyl and velvet to denote winter.
dicative of growth stages and changes with- The mood of fall is characterized by hues
in plant and animal life during the course of of burnt sienna, muted pink and ochre,
each season. Rather than interpreting sci- while spring is shown using areas of mint
entific investigations, the organic composi- green, opaque white and faint yellow. The
tions are loose abstractions that examine controlled areas of collage nicely balance
the implications of process and experience. the spontaneity of the poured stains with
Elements in nature change with the com- tightly rendered clusters or pod-like forms
ing of a new season and the rebirth contin- interacting in unison. From these bio-
ues each year. Innis explores the tension morphic shapes, a series of linkage begins
between sexual/reproductive, stiff/limp/ with the use of drawn lines and patterning.
buoyant, wet/dry, fresh/spent through a Some of the works are abruptly interrupted
narrative created with drawing, paint and with a separation to show a comparison of
Cynthia Ona Innis: (from top) Hub, 2010, acrylic collage. The materials include the use of application, contour and palette.
and satin on canvas; Circuit, 2010, acrylic and
satin on canvas. Courtesy of Walter Maciel.

For curator Noah David, this exhibition. of the voyeur on the indigenous people.
“Gray Day” Gray Day, should “exist like the aftermath A survey of contemporary local talent in
Robert & Tilton Culver City of a failed suicide attempt; it should repre- painting includes standout pieces by Al-
[through Dec 18] sent the line that has been blurred between lison Schulnik, Charles Karubian, Joshua
art, commerce and celebrity.” In order to Aster, Mark Dutcher and Kristin Calabrese.
“demonstrate the apathy of the present mo- James Brittingham’s acrylic and mylar wall
ment”, Davis felt it important to bring to- pieces are instantly iconic, while Bay Area
gether a large group of artists to work indi- artists Michelle Blade and Mark McKnight
vidualism in seeking a single objective, “to both contribute consistent work habits, one
create a show that is entirely gray, an ode in drawing and the other in photography.
to group shows like Tony Shafrazi’s Who’s A smashed disco ball by Daniel Desure lies
Afraid of Jasper Johns and the Metropoli- on the floor as if it has fallen ten feet to the
tan Museum of Art’s exhibition of Jasper ground, declaring the end of the party. A
Johns: Gray. Works on view range from sizeable sculpture by Michaels Hayden is
Larry Bell’s geometric drawings executed like a severed building that has been rear-
in the 1970s to Marlon Rabenreither’s film ranged to comment on contemporary ar-
stills that formally echo Bell’s current col- chitecture, and a new sculpture by Natas-
lage paintings. A slide from 2001 by Kevin cha Snellman draws directly from the gray
Galleazi displays a lottery ticket and a pho- days of Seattle. Juan Capistran’s felt floor
tograph of American women on a trip to a sculptures of a DJ mixer and speakers from
third world country, surrounded by natives the earlier part of this decade literally turn
(top) Gray Day Installation View; (bottom) PJ whom the artist has adorned with stars the volume up on Joseph Beuys’ sculptures
Risse, What, 2010, performance during Gray Day
opening reception. Photography by Tyler Jamison. on their faces to illustrate the exploitation made of the same material.

8 C|C|A Nov/Dec 2010


EXHIBITIONS

William Eggleston: American Photogra- graphs as if a human did not take them.” William Eggleston
pher presents a rich offering of unique and Refining this idea, exhibition curator, Car- Edward Cella Los Angeles
historic prints dating from 1965 through ole Thompson, notes, “Eggleston’s color [through Dec 31]
1985 including several of Eggleston’s most images flaunt their apparent formlessness.
iconic images. Eggleston is widely recog- Although the artist acknowledges a debt to
nized as one of the most important pho- Henri Cartier- Bresson, his photographs
tographers of the 20th century owing to reject Bresson’s decisive moments.” Rep-
his innovative and unconventional ap- resenting a collaboration between Carole
proach to composition and early adoption Thompson, a private art dealer whose cli-
and mastery of color photography. Over ents include several museums, and Edward
a more than thirty-year career, the artist’s Cella Art + Architecture, the exhibition of
selection of seemingly commonplace sub- more than forty vintage photographs be-
ject matter lays bare the fleeting qualities gins with several one-of-a- kind black-and-
of human existence while offering a tender white, hand-developed photographs of the
compendium of his home, the American 1960s and also includes pristine examples
South. Designed to present insights into the of the vivid dye transfer work of the early
photographer’s working methods and phi- 1970s. To Eggleston, the richness of pho-
losophy, this exhibition runs concurrently tography stems from the unexpected and
with William Eggleston: Democratic Cam- uncontrollable, and the exhibition’s inclu-
era Photographs and Video, 1961-2008, pre- sion of the artist’s first experiments in color
sented by the Los Angeles County Museum photography, unique Chromogenic-cou-
of Art. Eggleston’s work offers epiphany- pler prints developed in the late 1960s and
like insight into the everyday. The interplay early 1970s, document his breakthrough
of opulent color and nonchalant forms in with impromptu encounters with various
Eggleston's photographs honors his sub- individuals and scenes. Comprehensive in
jects while providing an additional layer of nature yet approachable in scale, the exhibi-
meaning, turning them into stunning visu- tion features selected prints from six of the
al metaphors of an alienated world. With an artist’s influential series, including the land-
William Eggleston: (from top) Untitled (The
eye not to glorify the world in front of his mark 1976 catalogue, William Eggleston’s Red Room) Tallahatchie Country, Mississippi
(from the William Eggleston’s Guide Series), 1972,
lens, but with the intent to show things for Guide, Los Alamos project, and, for the first dye-transfer color photograph, 11.38”x17.25”;
what they really look like, Eggleston states, time in Los Angeles, offers examples from Untitled (Burning Brazier) Memphis, 1975
(printed 1981), dye-transfer color photograph,
“I think I had often wondered what other the artist’s Berlin Series. His oeuvre has pro- 12.25”x18.87”; Untitled (Man in Car), 1968,
silver gelatin print, 6” x 9.5”. © William Eggleston
things see -- if they saw like we see. And foundly influenced generations of photog-
I’ve tried to make a lot of different photo- raphers, curators, filmmakers, and writers.
Zoe Crosher
Zoe Crosher’s For Ur Eyes Only: The Un- documentation and theatricality, and indi- Charlie James Los Angeles
veiling of Michelle duBois is comprised of viduation and anonymity. The Unveiling of [through Dec 4]
images and ephemera bequeathed to the Michelle duBois opens with the final pub-
artist by confidante Michelle duBois, one lished photographs in the archive. The West
of five aliases kept by the aspiring flight at- Coast was Oklahoma-native duBois’ last
tendant who turned tricks to sustain her American port of call before setting off for
travels across the Pacific Rim in the 1970s Asia, so it is fitting that Chung King Road’s
and 1980s. She took on many different Hollywood-ized take on Chinese culture
costumed guises and kept fanatical docu- should be the place to unveil duBois’ Ori-
mentation of her many dramatic transfor- ental escapism. Crosher has fixed in on du-
mations. Until one day, she didn’t, which is Bois’ transient obsessions, making pictures
where Crosher’s project embarks. Crosher of pictures—of obfuscated faces, of repeat-
explores ongoing themes such as identity, ed shadows in dark black & white door-
travel, transience and obsolescence. She has ways, of arched backs, of backs of backs of
extensively re-photographed, scanned and photographs and backs of necks—through
re-ordered duBois’ slippery self-portraits which we are momentarily granted access
into a re-contextualized archive, thriving in into one woman’s fantastical worldview and
Zoe Crosher, The Unveiling of Michelle du Bois,
the soft spaces between fantasy and fiction, performed sexuality, framed and reframed. details from installation, 2010.

Exhibitions 9
EXHIBITIONS

Doug Aitken Doug Aitken's work draws on a variety of scope of light, architecture, cuisine, and
Regen Projects Los Angeles media genres, including but not limited to music, including performances by Aitken’s
[Nov 11 - Dec 18] photography, sculpture, books, sound, and longtime friend: indie-rock pioneer, LA
video installation; all in service to interests resident, and accomplished visual artist,
in architecture, travel, technology and how Devendra Banhart. These days, for better or
our experiences of them affect our percep- worse, Aitken must feel like something of a
tions of time, space, memory, and history. rock star himself, between the MOCA en-
Popular with LA audiences for years (he’s a gagement, and a forthcoming monograph
native), Aitken was catapulted to national from Rizzoli. If this is not enough, all of this
and international attention when his ex- going in while he’s preparing for an antici-
traordinary installation Untitled (Shopping pated show at Regen Projects. By contrast
Cart) was the hit of the 2000 Whitney Bien- with his exuberantly theatrical plans for
nial and graced its catalog cover -- a bell- MOCA, Aitken show at Regen will feature
weather for a new era of appreciation for the his newest film-based work, House, born of
contributions of LA artists on the national the more reflective strains in his aesthetic,
stage. Aitken has been commissioned to such as manipulated time-lapse, expres-
make a new piece for the MOCA Gala on sive architecture, imagined landscape, and
November 13, celebrating The Artist’s Mu- symbolic narrative. The film depicts a cou-
seum’s mammoth two-venue exhibition of ple whose built surroundings disintegrate
Doug Aitken, views of installation House, 2010. works by over 140 artists who have helped around them as they sit motionless, star-
Courtesy of Regen Projects.
define the contemporary artistic landscape ing into each other’s eyes. Aitken’s extreme
in Los Angeles. Aitken plans to transform technical skill and patient, detailed crafts-
the party into an experiential artwork. Ac- manship makes him a master of illusion,
Yigal Ozeri
cording to the artist, his work, entitled WE, and he brings the full range of his talent to
Mark Moore Santa Monica
will be a “cultural ambush,” during which bear on this ambitious, enigmatic bit of cin-
[through Dec 18]
gala guests will be immersed in a kaleido- ematic poetry. —Shana Nys Dambrot

For its final exhibition before permanently mesis and romanticism, while also offering
relocating to Culver City, Mark Moore Gal- contemporary notions of sensual feminin-
lery presents an inaugural Los Angeles solo ity. Rooted in Carl Jung's concept of anima,
exhibition of new paintings by Israeli artist, Ozeri's depictions of a revitalized connec-
Yigal Ozeri. With tinges of Pre-Raphaelite tivity to nature prompt a confrontation of
aesthetics, Ozeri, who has been widely ex- a subconscious effeminate identity, and
hibited internationally since 1988, brings reinstate the beauty of innocent authentic
Yigal Ozeri, Untitled; Lizzie in the
Snow (5), 2010, oil on paper, 42” x 60”. an ethereal and uninhibited sensibility to experience. In this body of work, Ozeri il-
his photorealistic tableaus. His portraits of lustrates unadulterated freedom through
distinctive young women in rich landscapes model Lizzie Jagger – whose lineage and
Katharina Grosse bespeak art historical underpinnings in mi- demeanor epitomize social autonomy.
Christopher Grimes
Santa Monica
[through Jan 8]
Employing an audacious palette and an plores the concept of transformation and
Katharina Grosse, detail of Untitled, 2010,
acrylic on canvas, 84.25” x 56.5”.
unconventional painting systel, Katharina the experience of memory. With each col-
Grosse is perhaps or indicating a multitude of layers, Grosse
best known for "emphasizes color over brush-work, and
her site-specific movement over statis". She looks at not
works that or- only the positive or painterly surface, but
ganically expand the negative or blank spaces that may lie be-
over architectural tween the layers of paint. By dichotomizing
spaces and en- forms, Grosse departs from the confines of
able her to create the picture plane and explores the schisms
larger-than-life that lay between. Through this fluidity of
paintings. In this form, Grosse articulates the movement of
process, she ex- time and space.

10 C|C|A Nov/Dec 2010


EXHIBITIONS

In her new series of biomorphic sculptures, whaling narrative, displayed in a replicated Laurie Hassold & Jocelyn Marsh
Laurie Hassold creates a tension between section of the lighthouse. The artworks are Bert Green Los Angeles
art and science, mind and body, as well jewel-like miniatures made from precious [Nov 10 - Dec 24]
as beauty and horror; these ornamental, metals and wood. [The gallery will also be
bone-like structures are the future fossils presented a trio of additional exhibits. Los
of creatures that have gathered themselves Angeles Loteria By Aardvark Letterpress is a
together from the aftermath of human oc- limited edition of prints of 18 artst's works,
cupation. Meanwhile, Jocelyn Marsh  has based on the Mexican game of chance. In
created an installation called The Penweath- the Project Windows, Jerico Woggons' Four
er House, a whaling lighthouse founded in Seasons is a four-part installation that will
1712 by Archibald Penweather. In 1820, the change with each season, including custom
whale-ship Essex was struck by an 85-foot shapes and flourescent paint. Finally, in
bull sperm whale and sunk. This instal- thte Project Window Annex, an installation
lation is an account of the tragic tide that project, The Man With Anal Eyes, by Brian
ebbed and flowed through the Penweather Poor and Elizabeth McGraph presents an
House. The artworks are three dimensional, animatronic sculpture on the streetscape of
sculptural objects depicting scenes of this our urban environment.

Alexa Gerrity’s solo exhibition, entitled US Weekly, reflect common superficial


The Venus Effect, is a phenomenon in the projections and assumptions made about
psychology of perception named after Southern California, from celebrity beach
various paintings of Venus gazing into a towels to invented Malibu sunsets.  For the (top) Laurie Hassold, The Things You Left Be-
mirror, such as Titian’s Venus with a Mir- first time ever an artist will transform The hind, 2010, wire, tape, glue, resin clay, jewelry,
toys, acrylic, and oil paint , 9”x11”x8”. (bottom)
ror. The viewer assumes that Venus is ad- Company bathroom into a sanctuary space Jocelyn Marsh, detail of Chasing the Dragon,
2010, mixed media, 38”x32”x20”.
miring her own reflection, but since the with a series of personal affirmations in the
viewer sees her face in the mirror, Venus piece titled True Potential. By repeating the Alexa Gerrity
is actually looking at the reflection of the statements into the mirror, the viewer is in- The Company Los Angeles
viewer.  The single-channel video, Marked vited to unlock her true potential through [through Dec 11]
by Mercury, explores this relationship with repetition. Meanwhile, the single-channel
the gaze. The myth of Narcissus is directly video,  Forever Young, is the result of a
concerned with an element of human ex- professional casting call, in which Ger-
perience. Narcissus mistook his own reflec- rity searched for Los Angeles actresses that
tion in the water for another perso, and this shared the artist's physical attributes. The
seductive doubling numbed his percep- audition of these doppelgangers becomes
tions until he became the servomechanism strained, loses touch with reality, and the
of his own extended or repeated image. In gaze of the camera/artist and the gaze of
addition, a selection of new paintings, in- the actress become intertwined, feverish
spired from the pages of OK magazine and and hallucinatory. Alexa Gerrity, The Venus Effect (part of Marked
by Mercury installation), 2010, single-channel
video, 5 min. Courtesy of The Company.

In easel-sized canvases, Greta Waller con- lit by artificial light. The ice, in the process
tinues her investigation of the still life as of changing states (melting into water),  Greta Waller
an exposition of painting's temporal char- evokes the artist's iconographic prac- Maloney Los Angeles
acter; a struggle to harness the ceaseless tice:  The paintings carry out this Apollo- [Nov 6 - Dec 18]
motion or changing state of objects in the nian task; penetrating the stasis of the im-
world. With a tightly-focused haste to the age on canvas by presenting objects that
painterly surfaces, Waller's figurative works —in being seen—are experienced as having
are almost puritanical in their doubts and potential energy; for instance, melting or
convictions about the experience of see- burning. The recurrence of subjects allud-
ing as it is evoked in painting. In a recent ing to staples or necessities—blocks of ice
group of works, Waller's stark palette de- or cuts of meat, each with their ephemeral
fines hovering, closeup perspectives on textural behaviors—are paid a perverse at-
large, irregular blocks of ice melting in tention in these sparsely populated paint-
unassuming, periwinkle-trimmed dishes; ings, as if luxuries in a context of scarcity.  Greta Waller, Melting Monument,
2010,oil on canvas, 18”x24”.

Exhibitions 11
EXHIBITIONS

“Standard Deviation” Standard Deviation, a group exhibition, cu- er than formulating standards in which the
See Line West Hollywood rated by Jenny Le and Janet Levy represents works should derive. Jenny Le is an avid art
[Nov 18 - Jan 7] merging of the two idiosyncratic worlds. connoisseur and director of Opening Cer-
As its title suggests, the exhibition marks a emony in Los Angeles. Janet Levy, founder
shift or split away from the norm. In this de- and director of See Line, brings brings years
parture and escape from the expectation of of curatorial, gallery and marketing experi-
models regarded as the common value, the ence to her success in promoting significant
works selected showcase a collective that projects by prominent contemporary art-
reaches away from any typical curation for- ists. The show features work by Alex Arti-
mula. Standard Deviation assembles estab- gas, Reggie Casagrande, Taska Cleveland,
lished artists alongside  fashion designers, Sam Combellick, Zoe Crosher, Sean Daly,
photographers, directors, and architects in Jen DeNike, Christopher Haun, Patrick
such media as sculpture, installation, pho- Holeck, Seth Kaufman, Karen Lofgren,Sean
tography, and works on paper. Offering the Brian McDonald, Lesley Moon, Rachael
Rachael Neubauer, installation detail.
viewer an opportunity to look at a variety of Neubauer, Brooks Salzwedel, Natascha
distinctive works interacting together rath- Snellman, Andre Vippolis, and Jason Yates.

“Dark Entries”
Galerie Anais Santa Monica
Dark Entries, a group exhibition featur- Brion Gysin and William S. Burroughs,
[Nov 13 - Dec 30]
ing six Los Angeles-based artists use of the Cassidy’s approach expands and collapses
portrait in various forms as their point of space and makes the human morph with
departure, subverting and destabilizing the the inanimate resulting in tableaux that
genre. They investigate internal and exter- are at once familiar and inscrutable. In
nal realms, the psychological and the physi- Sarah Cromarty’s Dark Step, a lone figure
cal, presence and absence, the psychic and in an urban landscape walks away from the
the real. The works of the artists are char- viewer, going into a portal beyond, mov-
acterized by a concern with memory, both ing from the familiar to the otherworldly.
personal and collective, often triggered by The surface, built up from painted layers
pop-culture references. Drawing upon a of sculptural materials, subvert pictorial
variety of fragmented narratives and ap- space, giving the work a compositional dy-
propriated source material, the images exist namism and dimensionality, resulting ulti-
in a peculiar disjointed or dislocated space, mately in a profound sense of absence. Llyn
invoking a sense of strangeness, unease and Foulkes has made a career of subverting the
mystery. Influenced by illustrated medical portrait, destabilizing pictorial and com-
texts from the 1950’s and 60’s, Jim Shaw cre- positional space and confounding viewers’
ates paintings populated by shirtless "men traditional pictorial expectations, while
in pain" who exist in a highly abstract space harshly critiquing contemporary consum-
and exhibit physical and psychic pain in er culture. In Foulkes diminutive Mous-
their contorted gestures. Building up layers chwitz, a monstrous portrait fuses with the
of imagery from inkjet prints of cakes fea- immediately identifiable cartoon features
tured in mid-century homemakers’ maga- of Mickey Mouse, the subject virtually ob-
zines, expressionistic gestural brushwork, scured in a mummified mask-like state.
the Surrealist technique of decalcomania, Works from Dani Tull’s series Stone People,
and contrasting carefully rendered detail, the only photo-based work in Dark Entries,
the works display Shaw’s ongoing inter- obscures the subject’s identity and speaks
est in revealing the emotional and psychic of “morphic resonance.” Referring to the
depth of the individual within the formal basis of memory in nature and to telepathic
confines of the portrait. Similarly, Scott interconnections between organisms and
Marvel Cassidy’s paintings draw upon pop collective memories, “morphic resonance,”
culture, particularly mid 20th century illus- as Tull notes, manifests what Jung called
tration, to address underlying and hidden the Collective Unconscious within our spe-
(from top) Llyn Foulkes, Mouschwitz, 2006,
acrylic on photograph on board, 10”x10”. Jim psychological and aesthetic developments cies. Finally, Derek Albeck’s “self portraits”
Shaw, Cake (Ethan) [rotated counter-clockwise
90 degrees], 2010, oil on digital inkjet print, 37.5” drawn from the personal and familial. are highly abstracted objects of personal
x 47.25”. Dani Tull, Stone Woman 1, 2010,
archival pigment print, 22”x24”.
Loosely based on the cut-up method of memory and identity, using flannel motifs.

12 C|C|A Nov/Dec 2010


EXHIBITIONS

It's Mostly About Me and Much Less About Dan. Black holes, gumball machines, and Carol Es
You,  a solo exhibition of new mixed me- what appear to be misfit toys as haphazard George Billis Los Angeles
dia work by Los Angeles artist, Carol Es, characters crudely drawn, create a dark, yet [through Dec 31]
is a new series of work that includes oil on light-hearted comic aesthetic that is seem-
canvas and linen mixed with paper and em- ingly as dichotomous as the artist. [Also
broidery, as well as drawings on paper and available at the exhibition are a limited
handmade dolls. Carol Es uses an amalga- limited number Scribbles in a Sandstorm,
mation of characters from her family and a hardcover, hand-bound, no-expenses-
her apparel industry background to evoke spared artists' book published by Chance
abstracted, childlike narratives that drip in Press. It contains a removable spine, en-
color and tattered threads to tell personal, abling the accordion-folded text block to
visual stories. Paintings with paper gar- unfold and display a 40" color-printed pan- Carol Es, Machine, 2010, oil, paper, pencil
ment patterns and their scrap surround orama. On the flipside is an instant Carol Es and embroidery on canvas, 40”x60”.

cartooned family members, and a new art collection, including several prints and a
non-descript animal appropriately named bound-in excerpt from Carol’s sketchbook.
Christine Frerichs
Kaycee Olsen Los Angeles
On Recognition, a solo exhibition of new velops through repetitive interactions with [through Dec 18]
work by Los Angeles-based artist Christine one's environment and past experiences. In
Frerichs, marks the artist's first solo exhibi- the case of these paintings, the marks that
tion and presents a series of paintings and reveal themselves on the surface, also func-
drawings demonstrating  her  ongoing in- tion in partially concealing the previous
terest in repetition and memory.  In these layers beneath, simultaneously “showing
works, she playfully examines the process one's face” and hiding one's past. Her work
of recognition or “knowing again”, by ex- often calls up this relationship between ob-
tracting the visually and emotionally potent stacle and desire—layers of interrupting
aspects of a memory—a person's flesh tone, patterns, smudged or blurred faces—and
the lavender sweater her mother wore, the the emotional responses associated with
particular green color of the grass in Bryant it, from longing or loss to humor and plea-
Park, New York. Using color, composition, sure. These ideas of memory and emotion
texture, and form, she then systematically materialize in the six-by-six foot painting, Christine Frerichs, The Approach,
reconstructs these memories with layers of Two Figures in a Landscape. One figure is 2010, oil on canvas, 18”x18”

interlocking paint, resulting in expressively represented by shifting shades of repeat-


psychological portraits. Frerichs developed ing purple hatches, each color shift noting
this language of pattern and portraiture a different day Frerichs attempted to match
through the consideration of repetition, as a particular purple sweater from memory. Larry Mullins
well the function of repetitive behaviors and Through distinct formal means, the works Blythe Projects Los Angeles
their psychological relevance. A structural of On Recognition  reveal  Frerichs'  candid [through Dec 21]
similarity exists between the construction engagement with the process of recalling,
of the paintings and the way the psyche de- resolving and revising memory. 

New Baggage, an exhibition of paintings the care and devotion a Baptist preacher
by Los Angeles-based artist, Larry Mul- might lavish on a Sunday sermon. Layer
lins. New Baggage celebrates Mullins’s re- upon layer, words pop and fade. Colors
turn from a 6-year journey into the depths brighten and dim to create a commingling
of his human-ness and art practice. This of sweet high notes and low throaty growls.
exhibition reflects a deeper, more ambi- These paintings pulse and hum with the
tious personalized painted ‘architecture’ artist’s faith in his countless small deci-
for Mullins. Working under the influence sions…tiny paintings within the painting.
of his southern upbringing, a passion for Of the work, curator, Christopher French,
letterform and the raw, poignant lyrics writes, “What makes this work singular is
of John Lennon, Lou Reed and John Lee the boldness with which it fuses image and
Larry Mullins ‘She’s OK’, 2007-2010, oil, spray
Hooker, Mullins’s work is painted with all text into an emblematic abstraction.” paint, alkyd resin on paper on panel, 44” x 36”.

Exhibitions 13
EXHIBITIONS

“Densities: Line Becoming Beacon Arts continues its Critics-as-Cu- ated with Northern California (such as that
Shape, Shape Becoming Object” rators series with Densities: Line Becoming of William T. Wiley and other Funk artists),
Beacon Arts Los Angeles Shape, Shape Becoming Object curated by New York (Jackson Pollock, for example),
[Dec 10 - Jan 30] respected art writer Peter Frank. The exhi- or Europe (the elaborate painted images
bition features works in a range of media of CoBrA artists such as Pierre Alechin-
by artists Philippa Blair, Ran Harari, Tom sky and Asger Jorn fit with this, as do Sur-
Jenkins, Joel King, John White, and Jae realist automatists such as Joan Miro and
Hwa Yoo, all with a sensibility that favors Andre Masson). In fact, this approach can
visual complexity driven by a profusion of be found in “high” and “folk” art alike the
active linear forms. Densities: Line Becom- world over, and half the artists in Densities
ing Shape, Shape Becoming Object brings come originally from the Eastern Hemi-
together six established and mid-career sphere. The artists work in oil and acrylic,
artists who work in various media and in wood and ink, collage and photo media. As
different styles but with a shared sensibil- curator Peter Frank says about his show,
ity. That sensibility favors visual complexity "Life is complex, and life in Southern Cali-
Jae Hwa Yoo, Wind City, 2010, acrylic on driven by a profusion of active linear forms. fornia, genial as it may be, is especially
canvas. Photo courtesy of the artist.
The artworks themselves can be called ab- complex. In their art these six artists have
stract, but still brim with references to the manifested both the intricacy of their own
Justin Cole
observed world. All the artists live or have minds and of the elaborate social and topo-
Pepin Moore Los Angeles
worked in Southern California, but their logical environment they share with us. You
[through Dec 5]
aesthetic is as reminiscent of work associ- can almost see your house from here.”

In his first solo exhibition, Historical Im- American music from the 60s and 70s, Cole
pulse, Justin Cole examines the culture of addresses the complexities of these cultural
Los Angeles and its place within the Amer- histories using drawing, photography, and
icas. Born in Detroit, Cole now lives and music to discuss the historical impact of
works in Los Angeles. His holds a bachelor the ever-changing cultural landscape of Los
degree from the Maryland Institute Col- Angeles and the United States. Cole’s work
lege of Art in Baltimore and an MFA from has been exhibited at galleries throughout
UCLA. He is also a founding member of Los Angeles and San Francisco, as well as
the performance group Ojo. With influ- the Centre Pour l’Art et le Culture, Aix-en-
ences ranging from Pre-Columbian art to Provence. Pepin Moore represents him.

39NOW unites thirty-nine exceptional ist has created a new piece of work based
Justin Cole, The Power of the lightjet,
2010, 16”x20”, edition of 5 +1AP. artists, from the emerging to the well-es- on the circumstances of the here and now.
tablished, living and around Los Angeles. The term "now" is a conceptual in and of it-
Curated by Sophia Louisa, 39NOW is a self. The moment passes and soon becomes
“39 Now”
conceptual exhibition wherein each art- "then". Capturing the moment through art
den contemporary
West Hollywood specifically created with the perception of
[Nov 17 - Dec 17] now, through the talents of these artists—
all of whom are women—is the basis of the
(below) Laurie Hassold, detail view of Trying
Not to Tell, 2010, mixed media. 29”x30”x7”. exhibition. Initially inspired by Judy Chi-
(right) Marnie Weber, Freeing The Stallion,
2010, archival pigment print, 23.5”x29.5”. cago's The Dinner Party (1974-79), wherein
thirty-nine artists collaborated on one piece,
Louisa brings together the same number of
artists to create an individual piece within
the same time period (June-Sept 2010) to
explore what is happening now, whether on
a personal or public level. Collectively, each
artist explores the elements of empower-
ment, strenght, fear, independence, and the
ability to keep moving forward.

14 C|C|A Nov/Dec 2010


EXHIBITIONS

SAN FRANCISCO
Yamamoto Masao’s new exhibition will same time, the prints stand-alone visually, Yamamoto Masao
draw from his earlier series, A Box of Ku each delicate object a cause for rumination, Robert Koch San Francisco
and Nakazora, as well as the work from his and a trigger that encourages the viewers [through Dec 24]
most recent series, Kawa=Flow. Yamamoto to draw on their own memories and sub-
is inspired by the Japanese philosophy of conscious. While the images are simple
Zen, and the belief that meditation and the and observational, their suggestive nature
pursuit of beauty play an essential role in is what gives them power. In his newest se-
the development of human beings. Yama- ries, Kawa=Flow, Yamamoto explores “the
moto’s philosophical and spiritual roots world where we are and the world where we
contribute to his distinctive photographic go in the future.” The images in this series
style, in which the ordinary is revealed as are a reflection on nature and the relation-
something extraordinary. Yamamoto’s ear- ship between the world and self. Evocative
lier photographs are delicate small-scale of harmony and contentment, they reflect
prints that have been toned, stained, torn, Yamamoto’s philosophy that respect and
rubbed and creased. The suggestion of the humility toward the universe is achieved by
Masao, Nakazora #1174, 2004, 4.94”x4.87”.
antique encourages a meditation on time uncovering quietude in oneself, a process
and memory, a meditative quality that be- found only through nature itself. Similar to
comes magnified in a gallery installation. his earlier work, Kawa=Flow reveals the or-
Yamamoto displays the prints as a collection dinary as something contemplative, as the John Yoyogi
of harmonious, relational objects, adhered images aide in the development of the hu- Jack Fischer San Francisco
unframed to the wall in groups, which form man mind and spirit. Yamamoto finds that [through Dec 4]
a visual language based upon the group- the “idea that the photographs are looked at
ings of small details and moments. At the with affection gives them meaning.

John Yoyogi Fortes’ paintings have been wall. All of his pieces in this exhibit beckon
exhibited in California, Nevada, Chicago, closer examination. On the humorous side,
New York and Norway and are represented although with deeper reference, is a comic
in numerous private collections and muse- collection of smoking monkeys painted on
ums. In his new show, Parallel Boondocks, discarded paint can lids arranged in clus-
Fortes works with a term—“boondocks”— ters like hanging fruit. Hidden within the
believed to have originated in the Philip- works of this exhibition, Fortes continues
pines by American soldiers in the early to address issues of identity through his
20th century, derived from the Tagalog quirky sense of humor and a raw painterly
word “bundock,” or mountain. Fortes’ use aesthetic. [Fortes’s work will be included in
of boondocks in the title of his exhibition the IA&A rov-
is a reference to his Filipino roots, but also ing exhibition,
his distance and isolation from it. Parallel Infinite Mirror;
Boondock is for Fortes, a play on his strad- Images of Am-
dling the line between two cultures seem- erican Identity,
ingly running parallel to each other, while opening in Jan-
attempting to find a place where they meet uary 2011 at
through his artwork. The centerpiece of Syracuse Univ-
this exhibit is a 7 foot by 10 foot horizontal ersity in NY.]
painting, Runt, which explores notions that
John Yoyogi Fortes:
surround male sexuality. Fortes’ paintings (right) Runt, 2010,
mixed media on can-
include a broad range of technique from vas, 84” x 120”.
the dense layering of imagery, material (above) Art Is Evil,
2010, Mixed medium
and content to smaller works that appear on canvas, 18 .5” x
14.5”. © John Yoyogi
to be fragments literally excavated from a Fortes 2010.

Exhibitions 15
EXHIBITIONS

Leonard Breger This retrospective of works by Leonard and contoured paintings that the artist con-
Sandra Lee San Francisco Breger, one of the Bay Area’s most colorful, tinues to create today. His paintings are fan-
[through Nov 27] creative personalities, is a special, end of the ciful, almost psychedelic recreations of his
year event. It will feature a range of works personal impressions of the world, ranging
from the 90-year old Breger’s prolific and from the commonplace moments of every-
varied artistic history, ranging from earlier day life to homages of radical cultural icons.
drawings and paintings to the distinctive Breger’s previous shows include solo exhi-
and boldly colored shaped Masonite can- bitions at the Palace of the Legion of Honor,
vases for which the artist is renowned. Bre- the de Young Museum and, most recently,
ger points to a dramatic aesthetic epiphany at the Marin Museum of Contemporary
realized during a 1966 trip to the caves at Art in July 2009. The artist has worked in
Lascaux, France and Altamira, Spain where the San Francisco Bay Area for over 5 de-
he viewed prehistoric art that were organi- cades, teaching at institutions such as the
cally contiguous to their environment. This University of California and San Francisco
point marks the break between his use of State University. He continues to be active
rectangular canvases to the individually cut in his community.

Incidental Objects is an exhibition exploring of his body.  His snowball drawings created
the conceptual process of British installation while in California for a permanent com-
Leonard Breger: (top) Homage: Whitman/
Ginsberg, acrylic on panel, 48” X 64”;
artist Andy Goldsworthy.   Though popu- mission at the Runnymede Sculpture Park
(bottom) Hang On, acrylic on panel, 47″x64″ larly known for his ephemeral pieces that feature the remnants of snowballs collected
disappear over time, Goldsworthy has dedi- from his California travels.  Left to melt on
cated a large percentage of his focus toward large sheets of paper, these snowballs leave
the completion of over 120 commissioned, abstract traces of earth pigments and wa-
Andy Goldsworthy permanent installations over the past 25 ter.  These preparatory sketches and experi-
Haines San Francisco years.  For the artist, these permanent and mental works highlight the artist’s careful
[through Dec 24] temporary works function symbiotically, consideration of place, paying close atten-
with temporary or experimental works of- tion to the qualities of a given site, from
Andy Goldsworthy: (directly below) Stacked
branch, boulder, spire, Woody Creek, Colo- ten aiding in the development or realization its topography and materials to its history.
rado, August 2006, unique Ilfochrome print,
15.5”x15.5”. (bottom of page) Elm sticks joined of these commissions.  Goldsworthy’s new The artist emphasizes that his permanent
with mud laid over the following day with
elm leaves, November 18, 2002, two unique
exhibition highlights some of these “inci- installations allow for opportunities to ex-
Ilfochrome prints, Mount/each: 29.5” x 29.5”. dental” works, providing a rare view into perience the tactical, place-based nature
the conceptual nature of the artist’s process.   of his work in person, while his ephemeral
  Works in the exhibition include proposal works can only be viewed through pho-
drawings for several permanent commis- tographic documentation and the artist’s
sions, including Spire  (a recently complet- written descriptions.   In the works, the
ed work in the Presidio Park of San Fran- artist’s hand and the materiality of place is
cisco), Wood Line  (a forthcoming work to ever-present, illuminating the artist’s pro-
be completed in the Presidio) and  Stone cess of manipulation and experimentation.
River  (at Stanford University).   These al- [This exhibition opens in tandem with the
ternative proposals elucidate the complexi- recent publication by The National Gal-
ties of the artist’s practice. The exhibition lery of  The Andy Goldsworthy Project, the
presents a wide range of media, including only monograph featuring fully illustrated
a video work docu- documentation of his commissioned instal-
menting the cre- lations from 1984 to 2008 – more than 120
ation of two  Rain works that span three continents - as well as
Shadows, in which significant scholarly writing on the artist’s
the artist lies on oeuvre. It will be available at the gallery.] 
the ground dur-
ing two subsequent
rainstorms, eventu-
ally revealing dry
C alifornia
ContemporaryART
forms in the shape www.californiacontemporaryart.net

16 C|C|A Nov/Dec 2010


EXHIBITIONS

German artist Joachim Bandau presents by fine pigments. Alternating a process of Joachim Bandau &
Black and Red, new watercolors and lac- painting, then drying, the new works form Cornelia Schulz
quer wall sculpture, and Bandau belongs a rhythmic syntax, moving from light to Patricia Sweetow San Francisco
to a protean group of German artists, along dark, and edge to edge. The dynamic brush- [through Dec 18]
with Gerhard Richter, Joseph Beuys, and work may have a vortex within the format
Imi Knoebel, who came out of the Kuns- of the paper, then layer upon layer begin
takademie Düsseldorf in 1961. Beginning it’s ascent, or descent off the edge. Some of
in the late 70’s, Bandau created steel and the nine watercolors on view were begun
lead sculpture which were anchored to the ten years earlier, with their resolution in
ground by sheer weight, then eventually 2010. At the same time, Cornelia Schulz
pushed underground. Moving into the 80’s, will present a new series of small format
Bandau synthesized his political and social paintings, which continue her exploration
commentaries in linear, geometric shapes, of shape, material and color. For over 46
one such, a series of lead spiked sculptures years, Schulz has honed her skills in small
titled Field of Tears that today are in the abstract paintings of complex shape and
Ludwig Museum collections of Cologne color, utilizing independent supports that
and Aachen. In 1983, Bandau began mak- are joined as the painting develops. Inti-
ing large format watercolors that arose mate in scale, Schulz’s paintings are poured,
from his densely hatched sculptor’s draw- brushed, inked, washed, and sanded until a
ings. Measuring several inches, or feet, the complex juncture of form and surface ex-
watercolors resonate the lines of his sculp- plode with color and texture. Offering an (top) Joachim Bandau, detail of Untitled (KR 1),
2010, watercolor on paper, 30” x 22 inches” (bot-
ture, a slow precise brushstroke of various elaborate visual puzzle, Schulz uses a vari- tom) Cornelia Schulz, Guest Appearance, 2010,
oil / acrylic / alkyd resin, 23 x 18 inches
widths and density, layered on heavy deck- ety of media to seductive effect; oil, oil al-
led paper, using Japanese brushes. The veil kyd, acrylic, wax and ink aid her continued
of pigments form a slow volume outlined exploration of non-objective painting. Mads Lynnerup
Baer Ridgway San Francisco
[through Dec 4]
New York-based artist Mads Lynnerup he uses to price various objects he comes
works in a variety of media often creating across on his way, including an abandoned
humorous and poignant works based on mattress, a tipped over plant and a dis-
observations he makes of his immediate carded television. Now Firing, It's a Sign,
environment. His new exhibition, The En- and Build More Luxury Condoms are titles
tire Exhibition Will Be Worn, is comprised of Lynnerup's recent silk-screens on paper
of Lynnerup's recent sculptures, silk-screen referring to the recession and financial cri-
prints and videos. Taking his inspiration sis. In using these slogans, Lynnerup is not Mads Lynnerup, Take A Day For Yourself, 2009,
3 DVDs, 12 minutes, Edition of 5
from everyday life, Lynnerup's work com- only focusing the viewer on national and
ments on and draws attention to situations international economic woes, but also re-
Ed Moses
that might otherwise be overlooked in the flecting on how similar words can have op-
Brian Gross San Francisco
day to day. In the video Untitled (Everything posite meanings, for example 'hiring and
[through Dec 23]
has a price), Lynnerup takes a walk in his firing.' This play on words and an interest
neighborhood while keeping the camera in humor continue to be an important part
focused on a grocery pricing gun, which to Lynnerup's artwork.

While renowned Los Angeles painter Ed Anima Kracker, exotic fauna such as zebras,
Moses is known for his innovative, non-ob- tigers, and giraffes overlap and converge,
jective abstractions, the works in this exhibi- like zoological quilts. Many animals sport
tion explore pattern and figuration through their own patterns of stripes and spots,
fabric stencils, animal motifs, and face-like adding another layer of complexity to the
forms. Entitled wic wack, this collection of designs. In some areas, patches of floral lace
textile-like paintngs can be a shock to those seem to cut through the canvas in dissolv-
who identify Moses as a purely abstract ing—or solidifying—forms. Many elements
painter. Large, vivid compositions feature seem to vacillate between foreground and
mysterious offset patterns and silhouettes background, creating strong optical tension
of paired “talking heads.” In works such as and a fluctuating sense of space. Ed Moses, Anam-Krackel, 2009, 60”×48”.

Exhibitions 17
FINE ABSTRACT ART
BY

N ATA L I E G R AY

Photo by Vinson Corbo


represented by...

T H E
HAPPENING
G A L L E R Y
M A R I N A D E L R E Y

4047 Lincoln Blvd middle: WALL STREET 48x72


Marina del Rey CA 90292 above: a section of
310 305 ARTS (2787) EYE CANDY 36x60
www.TheHappeningGallery.com
WHAT HAPPENS TO THE CANS
WHEN THE GRAFFITI’S ALL DONE?

represented by...

T H E
HAPPENING
G A L L E R Y
M A R I N A D E L R E Y
middle: 200 CANS - SOLD
4047 Lincoln Blvd
above: CAN BOUQUET Marina del Rey CA 90292
as seen in 310 305 ARTS (2787)
The Hotel Erwin www.TheHappeningGallery.com
Venice CA
EXHIBITIONS
ARTISTS

Christine Binns

IN HER OWN WORDS: An Interview

A relative newcomer to the art world, myself up to such a large audience could ACA: So, that’s when it all started!
Christine Binns has experienced fabalous possibly burst the amazing bubble I've CB: Yes. (laughing)
success over the last four years. We sat been living in the last several years since I ACA: Did you go to school for art or
down with Binns to learn more about her began showing and selling my work. I've train with anyone?
work, her artistic method, and her recent truly had an amazing amount of positive CB: I’m self taught. Money was an is-
move to Los Angeles. feedback and I guess I accredit that, in sue growing up, and I never dreamt I
part, to the small amount of people that could actually be an artist. It took me a
California Contemporart Art: Thanks have been in my bubble with me. good couple of years to get comfortable
for joining us today. As you’ve sold more ACA: Tell us a little more about your with saying I was an artist. I completely
work, how has all of this addtional expo- artistic journey. How did it begin? admire those that went to school or have
sure affected you? CB: I’ve been an artist my entire life. had the opportunity to train with great
Christine Binns: Honestly, it makes It was in my blood before I picked up my artists, but I am also grateful for the lack
me a little nervous. I feel like opening first crayon and ate it! of influence in my work also.

20 C|C|A Nov/Dec 2010


EXHIBITIONS
ARTISTS

Christine Binns

(opposite page) Ride the Wave, 24”x36” (this page, clock-


wise by bottom left) Between Heaven and Hell, There’s
Us, 24”x30”; Beautiful Chaos, 24”x24”; Lake of Dreams,
24”x36”; Manifesting the Power Within, 36”x48”.

still is to me, I have sold about 70 paint- painting I created. I feel my paintings are
ings all over the United States and as far an expression of emotion during experi-
as China, London and Dubai. I have to be ences I have had or others that share their
so grateful to have this blessing, it truly stories with me. I feel very blessed to have
ACA: Where did you grow up? blows my mind! that kind of reaction, it's what drives me.
CB: I was actually born in the biggest ACA: In what medium do you work? ACA: Where do you hope to see your-
little state in the Union, Rhode Island. CB: Currently and for the last several self in five years?
I moved to Belleville, Illinois with my years, it’s been abstract paintings, acrylic CB: In terms of my art? (ACA nods.)
mom and two sisters from age 9 until I and mixed media on canvas, although I I see myself going more international.
was 23. I was restless with small town liv- am interested in any and every form of I would like to have a reputable and re-
ing and decided to move to Las Vegas to creating. I look forward to one day work- spected gallery representing me so that I
continue a career in the Casino Industry. ing with glass and metal as well. am left only to create and live. The busi-
I was a casino dealer for 13 years and ACA: How would you describe your ness part of this is so contradicting to my
then a supervisor for 4 years at the Wynn technique? person, I'll be happy when it's someone
Resort before resigning in '09. CB: I primarily only use my hands and else's job to care for that part of it!"
ACA: And now you’ve made the move spatulas to create. I really love the feel of ACA: Any final thoughts?
to L.A. How has that worked out? the paint on my hands and massaging it CB: Just to say thank you and hope
CB: It’s been amazing! I had never into the canvas. that anyone reading this realizes that
been part of an actual art community be- ACA: And how would you describe when you do something you’re passion-
fore, it’s been so embracing and inspiring! your work in general? ate about, life is great! I’m proof of that.
I currently reside in West Hollywood and CB: Others seem to do a much better
find tons of inspiration just walking the job in describing it, but I’ll try. My paint-
streets. The concentration of people here ings have been described as powerful, full
is overwhelming, in a good way for me.” of emotion, inspiring and also soothing. Christine Binns’ collection is available for
ACA: When did you begin showing I have people tell me that they have felt viewing at Studio 900, 900 E 4th Street,
your work and how has the art market a sense of strength, power and/or under- by appointment or during the L.A. Down-
treated you? standing when looking at my work. It's town Art Walk, which takes place every
CB: I only began showing and selling pretty miraculous to have some literally second Thursday of the month. For more
my work in 2007. As unbelievable as it is brought to tears when they are viewing a information, visit christinebinns.com.

Artists 21
Santa Monica Civic Auditorium
January 20 - 23, 2011

www.artla.net

original artwork, Norman Kulkin


EXHIBITIONS
ARTISTS

Natalie Gray
IN HER OWN WORDS
On Comparisons to Pollock and Her Artistic Journey

S ome people who actually knew Jackson Pollock and his wife, Lee From when I was a kid, my back-
Krasner, have come into the gallery and hailed, “Surely, you are Jack- ground was in custom work. I was sell-
ing my work internationally from age 15
son Pollock’s daughter.” A 95-year-old artist, who used to restore paint- and had bought my third house from my
ings for Krasner, sat in my studio just staring at the drop cloth on my floor. artwork by the time I was 25. I worked
As he pondered it, he said, “This is just like Pollock’s studio,” He then drew so hard. I collapsed several times from
his attention to a diptych of mine called Blu Ray. He stared at it for a few exhaustion and even wound up in hos-
pital in Toronto. I would paint seven days
minutes, then said, “You have the same depth as Pollock.” Then he leaned a week and had six people taking orders
in, as though telling a big secret, and said, “But, you know, he used to for custom paintings. I was essentially a
drink a lot. Your lines are more controlled.” I had goose bumps for days! painting robot! And then, 10 years ago, I

24 C|C|A Nov/Dec 2010


EXHIBITIONS
ARTISTS

Natalie Gray

sort of fell apart. I had just completed the Sistine Chapel Mural. (It took me 520 hours
while Michelangelo needed 520 days. But I had Starbucks.). I had all these paints and
supplies left over from the mural. I just started smashing paint around and stabbing
the canvas with brushes. I was terribly miserable, so I shut myself in my apartment
for 30 days and produced 44 abstract canvases. I'd never even painted abstract before;

“Surely, you are Jackson Pollock’s daughter.”


I thought it was for people who couldn't draw. I was totally ignorant of its power. I
painted in this trance-like state, and it was really as though something had taken over
me and I was chanelling this force—like a Ouiji board, but with brushes.
For a year I didn't show anyone the pieces, lest they know how messed up I had felt
while creating them. But then my shyness about them slipped away as trusted friends
would enthuse "Oh, I love that one!" Next thing I knew I had a solo exhibit at Edgemar
Center for the Arts and was discovered by an enormous interna-
tional investor. He flew out to see my exhibit. I'd never been so
nervous in my life, my hand, the one that has the steadiness of a
steel pipe when I track a line, was shaking like a leaf. He looked
at my work for sixty seconds and said, 'We're sending you a con-
tract. You're the next Jackson Pollock. I hope you like to travel."
Oddly, I had been completely unfamiliar with Pollock's work
and only knew he had been the subject of a movie. It was all very
strange for me. Now, I own my own gallery and so much work
has sold I can hardly keep up. When collectors come in who tru-
ly love Pollock, it's like they're in a candy store. They just stand
there saying they can't believe it's not his work.
My work recently replaced the Hammer Museum Exhibit at
FOX Studios and just as the last piece went up, Richard Belzer (an
avid collector) got out of the elevator, saw my painting Wall Street
and exclaimed in disbelief, "Fox did not buy a Pollock?!"Given
that Rupert Murdoch has spent tens of millions on single pieces
of art, I guess that was not a silly question.
Some of my well-known or esteemed collectors include Chel-
sea Handler, Ted Harbert (CEO Comcast), and John Smith (CEO
BBC Worldwide, who owns my You have a dribble and also com-
missioned a portrait which was shipped to London). Just last
week, high profile plastic surgeon Dr. Grant Stevens purchased a
piece for the lobby of his practice in Marina del Rey. A lovely lady
named Barbara Greenberg has no less than seven of my works
for her penthouse apt, essentially her own Natalie Gray gallery!
When Santa Monica Place has its grand opening recently, I was
invited to design and paint a mannequin for their Mannequin
Collective. I was in good company, among mannequins submit-
ted by Cirque du Soleil and The Geffen Playhouse.
I opened The Happening Gallery in March 2010 as a great
place for both artists and art lovers alike. Like other projects in
my life, it’s been a tremendous amount of work, but it's been great.

For more information about Natalie Gray and The Happening


Gallery, visit thehappeninggallery.com.

Artists 25
“ABSTRACTIONS: 1990 TO 2010”
PAINTINGS BY HUGO ANDERSON

AVALANCHE OIL ON CANVAS 60X48” 2004

EMIL NELSON GALLERY


2864 COLORADO AVE
SANTA MONICA, CA 90404
310-266-9904

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