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Tag: ochi projects
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Ten More to Remember — or simply bring to Los Angeles
Postscript to the 2021 Artillery Top TenAs I wrote to preface ARTILLERY’s 2021 “Top Ten” compilation, there could have easily been a parallel list of 10 or more shows and exhibitions approaching the level of the ten I selected. At one time, the magazine designated a few “honorable mentions,” usually, as I recall, footnoted in fine print. (There are only so many pages, after all; space limitations are a real thing.) This, too, was originally going to be appended to the “Top Ten” list; but after some discussion with my editor, it became clear this might not be quite enough—especially considering a number of important out-of-town shows that (especially in view of a ‘travel hesitancy’ no doubt corresponding to some extent with the far more pernicious ‘vaccine hesitancy’) demand to be brought to California.
Lynn Hershman Leeson, “Seduction” (1985) Lynn Hershman Leeson: Twisted
curated by Margot Norton
New Museum – New York
June 30, – October 3, 2021In some respects this slightly constricted retrospective brought Hershman Leeson’s work full circle—having presented Hershman’s Electronic Diaries as encoded into a strip of synthetic DNA, and personalized antibodies created in conjunction with the pharmaceutical company, Novartis. But I sometimes wonder if there is any way to do justice to the full scope of Hershman Leeson’s work without institutional commitment on the scale of an entire museum (possibly more than one institution). This is a plea to L.A.’s MOCA to commit the resources necessary to bring an expanded version of this show (see, the ZKM/Center for Art and Media’s Civic Radar) to the museum(s). If they need help, they might look up Amelia Jones (who led a terrific conversation with the artist by Zoom in conjunction with the exhibition) who may have an idea or two to move this forward—see that original Top Ten again.
Lynn Hershman Leeson, Electronic Diaries (1984-2019) Alice Pelton, The Voice (1930) Another World: The Transcendental Painting Group
Group exhibition curated by Michael Duncan
(Emil Bisttram, Ed Garman, Robert Gribbroek, Raymond Jonson, Lawrence Harris, William Lumpkins, Agnes Pelton, Florence Miller Pierce, Horace Pierce, Dane Rudhyar, Stuart Walker)
Albuquerque Museum – Albuquerque, New Mexico
June 26, – September 26, 2021Fortunately, I don’t have to beg anyone to bring this show to L.A.—it lands at LACMA at the end of 2022 (to run well into 2023). The operative word here is transcendental—in both material and spiritual senses. The work here ranges loosely from the surreal and symbolist to biomorphic and geometric abstraction to non-objective painting, with some emphasis on a concept of light and space that seems borne out of the American Southwest—yet in its most outstanding examples distilled to a purity and intensity that seems illuminated to an astral dimension. Duncan’s brilliant show promises to make the L.A.’s next winter solstice the most radiant day of the year.
Clarence Holbrook Carter, “Following” (1973) Clarence Holbrook Carter – American Surrealist
Various Small Fires – Los Angeles
January 23, – February 27, 2021Readers will notice that there is something of a blur amongst several of these exhibitions (really almost all of them—but with particular emphasis to a radically transmuted or transformed and ultimately transcendent vision of physical and cosmic dimensions, of consciousness itself. Carter’s work seems to ‘land’ somewhere between Pelton and De Chirico—and birth and death—but with an intensity that could summon Lovecraft’s Cthulhu out of the cosmic void.
Make-Shift Future – installation view, Regen Projects Make-Shift Future
Group show curated by Elliott Hundley
(Kevin Beasley, Elaine Cameron-Weir, rafa esparza, Max Hooper Schneider, Eric N. Mack, Alicia Piller, Eric-Paul Riege, Kandis Williams)
Regen Projects
March 27, – May 22, 2021A truly spectacular show of masterpiece assemblage work by eight artists at the top of their game. ‘Every picture tells a story’ and each of these works deliver a world—“disquieting and uncanny situations” in Hundley’s words—looking to “massage loose the underpinnings of our attachments to contemporary mythologies … and reveal … so many blind spots.” They do—and ‘I can see clearly now….’
Ohan Breiding, installation view of ceramics and drawings (2020), from “Playing Submarine,” Ochi Projects Ohan [formerly Johanna] Breiding: Playing Submarine
Ochi Projects
February 6, – March 20, 2021Breiding’s work defies categorization both technically and conceptually—personal on an almost tactile level yet seemingly borne out of a collective unconscious, but all leading to a kind of personal confrontation with both self and community. They are an artist to watch.
Tom Allen, “The Song” (2021) Tom Allen: The Song
Chris Sharp Gallery
October 30, – December 4, 2021A spare show of five flower ‘portraits’—but they more than made good on the promise conveyed by the show’s title. The sheer chromatic vibrancy alone shook the gallery floor to ceiling in a range that went from schoolboy-treble to the Queen’s Throat. But beyond the chromatic effulgence, Allen cultivates and seems to pry something further from his captive specimens—a mystery or romance innate to the thing itself—taking the viewer (and conceivably the artist himself) by surprise.
Hans Holbein the Younger, “Lady with Squirrel and Starling” (portrait Anne Lovell?), oil on panel (ca.1526-28) Holbein: Capturing Character in the Renaissance
curated by Anne T. Woollett, Austėja Mackelaitė, and John T. McQuillen
Getty Center
October 19, 2021 – January 9, 2022Beyond the ‘flattening’ of history that seems an inevitable side effect of accelerating technological change, seismic social and political disruption, and environmental degradation, I was not surprised that this breathtaking exhibition drew so many contemporary artists here. Portraiture stops history short, faceting and dissecting character across culture and the electrically reactive skeins continuously woven between subject and artist. A ‘world-wide web’ indeed—and not so flat after all.
Alice Neel, “The Family” (John Gruen, Jane Wilson & Julia), oil on canvas (1970) Alice Neel: People Come First
curated by Kelly Baum and Randall Griffey
The Metropolitan Museum of Art
March 22, – August 1, 2021More portraiture, and even more irony—absurd to ask if the world needs it or why; we’re all (clearly) going there, and here’s why. People may or may not “come first.” (I disagree with Neel’s fundamental motivating principle.) But Neel connects with what connects us—whether (com)posed or seemingly caught between movements or a characteristic gesture, we see and hear the dialogue—questions, more than assertions, of ‘self’. It’s not who we are; it’s how we are. The painting provides us with an open-ended ‘why?’—and so there we are. (The show will travel to California this year, but not Los Angeles.)
Sonia Gomes: When the Sun Rises In Blue
Blum & Poe
November 6, – December 18, 2021As noted above, it’s hard to say whether ‘people come first’—but their stories can be compelling; and encountering this Brazilian artist’s work in an American exhibition space for the first time, it was astonishing to see and feel a powerful narrative sense wedded to a formal command of material and space that made me think of John Outterbridge’s assemblage work (also Senga Nengudi) as if distilled through the formal syntax of Anthony Caro. The materials—textiles and fabric remnants, driftwood, heirloom fragments—are collected close to home (she is based in São Paulo), but her meticulous workmanship and brilliantly composed and articulated form have a cumulative power that seems capable of transporting us to another dimension.
No—you didn’t miscount. There are only nine more here. But we’re already well into 2022—and did you really need any more?
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Pick of the Week: Anna Valdez
Ochi ProjectsSince moving out of my hometown, I have amassed a small trove of Polaroid photos documenting the clutter in all my living spaces. I’d always liked the idea of keeping pocket-sized time capsules of the things I used to own and person I used to be in those places. Walking into Anna Valdez’s exhibition My Own Private Arcadia at Ochi Projects, I immediately knew that this impulse to document our environments and ephemera was something we shared.
At first glance, the subjects of Valdez’s richly hued paintings seem like curated collections of found objects, the canvasses crowded with patterned fabrics, conch shells, houseplants, art books, and decorative vases. But closer inspection reveals that, altogether, these items of personal significance conjure narratives about the artist’s own domestic life and serve as autobiographical records of her human impact on places and things.
Valdez’s mastery of painting across genres is abundantly evident in the way she reinvents and honors its lineage. She gives a nod to the Dutch still life tradition by incorporating cultural objects and animal skulls, symbolic reminders of contemporary life and mortality. Across paintings, ceramics, and one sweeping mural, Valdez boldly commands a hyper saturated spectrum of colors and creates compositions that are endlessly stimulating without being overwhelming.
Certain objects take on multiplicities of meaning, too, and seem to coexist in parallel realities — such as the same flowerpot or red bandana being depicted several times in different mediums and varying levels of realism. Valdez thus blurs the line between representation and abstraction and reminds us à la Magritte that the image of an object is not the object itself.
Although Valdez offers a generous peek into her sacred arcadia, there is also the uncanny feeling of absence and lack of human intervention in her representative spaces, leaving me wondering who or what might be hovering just out of the artist’s gaze, remaining forever unknown to the viewer.
I could never fully explain why I so dutifully photographed all my living spaces, chalking it up to my sentimental nature for years, until Valdez showed me why she does it. She recognizes that the objects of our surroundings — the trinkets strewn across tables, the books we dog-ear and re-read, the views from our windows — have the capacity to outlive us and tell stories about who we were in those bygone moments.
Ochi Projects
3301 W. Washington Blvd
Los Angeles, CA 90019
Thru Dec. 18th, 2021 -
GALLERY ROUNDS: Hana Ward
Ochi ProjectsOchi Projects’ current exhibition, “an exit from this room and others like it,” features the latest painting and ceramic work of artist Hana Ward. In this show (all works 2021) both objects and paintings reflect on themes of time and isolation; feelings we are all too familiar with this past year. However, Ward takes these somewhat somber sentiments, and through luscious colors, illustrative marks and whimsical compositions, depicts scenes of power and potential.
Hana Ward, that drinking-wine-kind-of-thinking, oil on canvas, 2021 The show is made up mainly of paintings of Black female figures existing alone in wistful, reflective states. Rather than seeming to abide existentially in limbo though, Ward’s figures appear purposeful, even hopeful. Most of the paintings the women are in domestic settings as in that drinking-wine-kind-of-thinking, where a woman sits alone with a glass of wine at a dining room table. The illuminated figure appears in contemplation and the window behind her reveals an ethereal moonlit landscape. Although she exists alone in the confines of the dining room, the glow of the moon hints at the beauty and mystical world just beyond the window. In an exit from this room and others like it, a woman stands in the foreground of a room with a red painted floor extending behind her. The focal point leads to an open door, emitting a warm yellow glow that she looks toward hopefully.
Hana Ward, ima koso (now is the time), ceramic, glaze, clock, 2021 Themes of domesticity and time are further explored through the handcrafted ceramic wall pieces that are also a strong component of Ward’s practice. Clocks and vessels of sculpted faces are inter-dispersed throughout the other paintings, directly referencing concepts of time and space with titles such as ima koso (now is the time) where hands of a clock extend from the forehead of the woman they rest on—portraying how time is on the forefront of the mind.
In a year seeming to have no measure, Ward encapsulates this concept in reflection and celebration and looks towards the future. An exit from this room and others like it, reminds us that this moment will hold its mark for each of us, yet progression is in constant forward motion.
Hana Ward: an exit from this room and others like it
at Ochi Projects
March 27 – May 8, 2021Images courtesy of Ochi Projects.