COMICS
Remarks on Color: Insouciant Indigo November's Hue
Insouciant Indigo doesn’t care. In other words, he simply does not give a rat’s ass about anything or anybody. A lifetime of ever darkening dreams has laid him low once and for all. To add insult to injury he’s never been popular with the ladies, being mostly...
GALLERY ROUNDS: Picasso Ingres: Face to Face Norton Simon Museum
The Norton Simon Museum exhibition opening on October 20 featured just two paintings: Jean-Auguste-Dominque Ingres’ Madame Moitessier (1856) and Pablo Picasso’s Woman with a Book (1932). The latter is a response to the former and, though made seventy-six years apart,...
Publication in the Age of Negation, Part VII Sex, Drugs and Bad Writing
I hadn’t sent the novel out in a while. In fact, I hadn’t sent it out in months. What was the point? Even if they loved it, they didn’t want it. At this point I was too dispirited to send the work out or describe the ensuing demoralization. But I needed to send it out...
GALLERY ROUNDS: June Edmonds Riverside Art Museum
The spirograph galaxy of Rhythmic Inquisitions, an exhibition of works by June Edmonds at the Riverside Art Museum, unmercifully hypnotizes. Expanding boundaries, this 2022 Guggenheim Fellowship Recipient injects Aretha Franklin’s Respect (1967) into Abstract...
GALLERY ROUNDS: Abe Odedina Diane Rosenstein Gallery
Abe Odedina’s “You Give Me Fever” embodies the spirit of a universal human emotion: desire. In his Los Angeles solo debut on view at Diane Rosenstein Gallery, the architect-turned-painter considers desire with a kaleidoscopic gaze, depicting deep-seated longings for...
OUTSIDE LA: THESE THINGS ARE CONNECTED The Carnegie in Covington, Kentucky
Just across the Ohio River from downtown Cincinnati is The Carnegie, a former library in Covington, Kentucky constructed in 1904 one of over 2,500 worldwide funded by Andrew Carnegie. Now a theater and exhibition space, the center serves the local and surrounding...
Publication in the Age of Negation, Part VI An Old White Male, Inconveniently Still Alive
Why even catalog these grievances? I just wanted to get a book published. The documentation of this tedious process wasn’t something that could hold much interest for the average reader, whoever that was, or any reader, if there were any left. I had wrongly assumed...
BOUNCING IN THE ARTIST’S BUBBLE, PART TWO
Click Here for Part One “Bouncing in the Artist’s Bubble" The womb of an artist’s bubble reflects one's spirit; the exoskeleton can expand with joy and contract in pain. A new project ballooned into bliss. I was having a chat at Coffee Talk in Kaimuki with friend...
Remarks on Color: Weird-Ass White October's Hue
Weird-Ass White has a secret death wish, a deep and unwavering desire to fall headlong into the arms of night with its ever-widening black mouth swallowing her alive, but being the good girl that she is, she never lets on. Instead, the world at large swallows her...
GALLERY ROUNDS: Arno Beck Nino Mier Gallery
Despite being mired in digital culture, the Bonn based artist Arno Beck makes analogue works. In his exhibition "Zen Them to Hell", he presents typewritten landscape drawings. Each of the eighteen identically sized and shaped, framed works on paper juxtapose...
GALLERY ROUNDS: Mary Kelly Vielmetter
Mary Kelly‘s show "Corpus" at Vielmetter Gallery includes thirty framed pieces which alternate between image in one frame and text in another. The name of the show, "Corpus," refers to the work being a collection of writings, yet has a double meaning built in as the...
OUTSIDE LA: Nicole Eisenman Fondation Vincent van Gogh Arles
It’s one thing to engage in a discourse about the influence of art historical movements on contemporary painters, and another still to analyze a particular artist’s specific set of influences, such as Nicole Eisenman’s robust relationship with the European...
GALLERY ROUNDS: Shirley Tse The Magic Hour
Two works by Shirley Tse, originally exhibited indoors, are remixed under the spell of wild elements in The Magic Hour's current iteration time going backward and forward. Founded in 2018 in Twentynine Palms, California by Alice Wang and Ben Tong, The Magic Hour has...
Publication in the Age of Negation, Part V A Tiresome Outpouring of Fribbling Expatiations
I don’t know how to create the impression of time passing. But it passed, weeks passed by, during which nothing much happened. The sense of futility engendered by these dealings with the literary establishment hung over other potential undertakings. There didn’t seem...
The Horse: A Performance by Chris Emile Presented by Los Angeles Nomadic Division
At the wall in the back of the space rests an altar surrounded by oyster shells, pearls, pumpkin seeds, white candles on white cloth, white gloves, a brown fedora, a box of pralines, a Precious Moments angel. An audience member approaches and places a stem of white...
OUTSIDE LA: Christina Allan at Alchemy Gallery
There’s something remarkable about standing in front of a painting that makes you squint, move, readjust your perspective and question your eyesight altogether. Christina Allan’s paintings do just that. Made with acrylic and spray paint, Allan’s compositions are crisp...
GALLERY ROUNDS: Caleb Stein ROSEGALLERY
And we’re back… back to communing for art’s sake. If you’re looking for something intimate and off the trodden path, there’s Caleb Stein’s exhibition "Down by the Hudson." It’s a focused collection of subdued, low-contrast, black-and-white photographs featuring water...