Thursday, May 17, 2012 23:35

Archive for the ‘Art’ Category

Empire of Death Photo Show in San Francisco

Tuesday, May 15th, 2012
Paul Koudounaris

I opened this photo and stopped breathing. It's just sensational. This is from the Brno Ossuary located in Brno, Czech Republic. Only rediscovered in 2001 during an archaeological dig, the Brno Ossuary is 800 years old and holds the remains of some 50,000 people. It's second only to the Paris catacombs. The Brno Ossuary is currently being restored and it's not even open to the public yet. So Dr. Koudounaris' photography gives us a rare look at a world few living people have entered.

One of my favorite people, Dr. Paul Koudounaris, author of The Empire of Death: A Cultural History of Ossuaries and Charnel Houses, has a new photography exhibit coming up in San Francisco’s Articulated Gallery from June 2 to June 28.  The exhibit includes large-scale prints of photos from the book and photos from his upcoming book, Heavenly Creatures.  Heavenly Creatures continues Dr. Koudounaris’ study of ossuaries with a specific focus on seventeenth-century, jewel-encrusted skeleton relics from Switzerland and Germany.  I’m obsessed with all things bedazzled and macabre.  Needless to say, there aren’t words for how excited I am about Heavenly Creatures and I’ve been relishing every sneak peak.

Every time I look at Dr. Koudounaris’ photos of bone structures I’m transported to a different world where people had a much more active and reverential relationship with the dead.  The photos are beautiful and provocative and if you have the opportunity to see them blown up you should take it and treat your senses.

Paul Koudounaris

This skeleton, on display in Waldsassen, Germany, is one of a collection of Christian martyrs who were exhumed from the Rome catacombs in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and then dressed in ornate precious stones and robes.

Paul Koudounaris

Another ossuary in the Czech Republic, the famous Sedlec Ossuary, features the incredible bone chandelier. Incorporating at least one of every human bone, the chandelier hangs in the middle of the church.

Paul Koudounaris

Chiesa dei Morti in Urbania, Italy, has eighteen mummies on display behind the altar. Gathered by the Brotherhood of Good Death, the mummies were naturally created by a mold that sucked all the moisture out of their bodies. Disturbingly, the one on the left is thought to have been buried alive.

Paul Koudounaris

The Skull Chapel in Czermna, Poland was built in 1776 by parish priest Wacław Tomaszek and a local grave digger. I like to think the priest had piratical leanings, as a lot of the designs feature cross bone motifs.

Paul Koudounaris

This Plague Crucifix stands in a Charnel House in Leuk, Switzerland. It's gruesome, but the exaggerated lesions were actually meant to serve as a comfort to victims of skin diseases by linking them to the sufferings of Christ.

Paul Koudounaris

This mummified monk served in the Capuchin Order which took vows of poverty, charity and obedience. He stands in the Crypt of the Monastery of Santa Maria Della Concezione in Rome, Italy

Paul Koudounaris

This is the Skeleton of Saint Pancratius at the Church of Saint Nikolaus in Wil, Switzerland. His dazzling suit of armor was commissioned in 1777, to celebrate the centenary of the Saint's arrival in Wil.

Articulated Gallery is inside Loved to Death on Haight Street in San Francisco, which is a great space for any fans of the dark side of life.  If you don’t have Dr. Paul Koudounaris’ book, The Empire of Death: A Cultural History of Ossuaries and Charnel Houses, yet, you are missing out!  You can learn more about Dr. Koudounaris here.

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Ethereal Darkness Art Exhibition

Thursday, May 10th, 2012

Sculptor and show curator David Richardson poses next to his sculpture, Age of Innocence (to the left). A work by menton3 hangs ominously behind him.

Beware, darkness is extending its reach, grasping for new victims to infect. Last Friday night, Ethereal Darkness, a massive sinister group art show, opened at Opiate Gallery in Fort Collins, Colorado. The show was curated by the insanely talented sculptor David Richardson and featured the likes of Chet Zar, Krystopher Sapp, menton3, Larkin and many others.

opiate gallery

The gallery has an innovative set up with floating partitions that can be rearranged to suit each show.

Excited to see such great dark artists finding a new audience, I talked to David Richardson to find out more about the show:

Do you think there is an appetite for this type of dark art outside of the big cities such as New York and Los Angeles?

Yes. I think that humans in general like to see new and unique forms that are outside of the mundane. I feel that it’s healthy for emotions to be stirred up a bit because this can open doors to new thoughts. So many people want to embrace the “dark side” or the “unusual” but don’t quite know if it’s acceptable. I find that it is and there is a part of us all that want to dabble in these deeper and sometimes darker thoughts. “Breaking new ground”, if you can dig it.

Chet Zar, the feathered wings look like they'd be soft to the touch. I love the colors in this piece, the delicate halo and the limp hand.

EC Steiner, the teeth in the eye socket and the segmented bug legs make my skin crawl

Did you enjoy curating a group show and were there any unexpected challenges?

Indeed, It was a pleasure to help my fellow artists. I have been traveling and exhibiting professionally for 3 years now. In this time, I’ve had the opportunity to come into contact with all of these amazing artists. A chance to talk, share ideas, and just shoot the shit. This communication is very import to me and a somewhat enlightening experience. In life there is always “unexpected challenges” but to be honest, I thrive on this. A challenge is just a way to get to the next level.

Trëz Orb, these gritty images have a great sculptural quality about them. Though deathly, they seem bursting with life right out of the frame. And I love the monochromatic tones.

Gina Uhlenbrock, the fear is palpable!

Larkin and Tim Roosen, these pieces are well matched in menacing tone and disturbing expressions.

Why do you think so many renowned artists participated in the show?

In this time I have spoken of, I’ve asked many of these artists if they would be willing to do a show in Colorado. I feel like honesty and respect for one another is the key. All these artists involved have a level of respect and admiration for one another and in this we share a common ground. As a sculptor, I really enjoy the 2-D aspect of painting so I’ve tried to match sculptures to painting and vise versa. This way of exhibiting is a fresh and diverse way to keep things interesting.

Tatomir, wow, there's so much great stuff going on in this piece. It makes me nostalgic for the illustrated fairy tales and fantasies I used to devour as a kid. It even reminds me of Lewis Carroll's Jabberwocky and the monsters in Bosch's paintings. I love the acorn light, the look of the forest and the pointy-teethed serpents.

Shahla Rosa, what a breathtaking piece!

Was opening night a success? What was the public response like?

The opening was a great success. Hundreds of people came out to celebrate and commence in this creative process. The crowd was very open and accepting of the work. I heard people say ” this show is very weird” and I also heard ” wow, this is amazing”. In the end, I can say emotions were sparked and the vibe was intense.

Delphyne Veyrat D'Urbet, love the blood red and the curled up fetus inside the womb bubble.

Congratulations to all of the artists involved!  Thank you so much to David Richardson for keeping me apprised of the goings on in Colorado and for answering my questions.  Photos courtesy of David Richardson as well.  I wish I could have seen this show in person!  To see more photos from Ethereal Darkness, check out this Facebook album.

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Gothic Lolita Meet-up at the Brewery Art Walk and Let’s Play Dead Dolls

Tuesday, April 3rd, 2012

Gothic Lolitas at the Brewery Art Walk

Sunday, April 1, I joined a bevy of living dolls at the Brewery Art Walk.  Brought together by our love of Gothic Lolita fashion and all things pretty, we spent the afternoon exploring diverse gallery spaces at the Brewery Art Complex.

The sprawling colony in downtown Los Angeles formed in spaces that were previously used by the Eastside and Pabst Blue Ribbon breweries and an Edison power station.  More than 500 artists have studios in the industrial buildings.  Many of them live there in the studio lofts. Twice a year the Brewery opens to the public and thousands of people visit.

I was a little disappointed in the overall level of the art on display.  Much of it felt amateurish and unpolished.  Obviously I prefer a darker aesthetic, but I appreciate a wide range of art and few of the galleries held my interest.  There were a few standout showcases throughout the day.  I really just enjoyed being out with other Gothic Lolitas and talking to them about their creative projects and style preferences.

Our Gothic Lolita group stood out and provoked interest from curious onlookers.  You would think we were seeking that sort of attention wearing our frocks in a public space, but that’s really not the point of what we’re doing.  It does get tiring explaining that we’re not performers and simply enjoy our fashion choices.  I guess I take for granted the nonchalance my frilly black dresses are met with amongst most of the galleries and clubs I go to.  It’s been awhile since I’ve had to deal with lots of questions (even at times when my mouth is full and I’m in no mood.  You all know I’m not the most social.)  Luckily the vast majority of people who approached us were complimentary and enjoyed the eye candy.

I enjoy the reactions of the very young girls who seem especially interested in our dresses.  The style didn’t exist when I was a child, but I bet many of the little girls who encounter us now will be influenced by the feminine, innocent look in the future.

clown

Dahlia Jane with a giant creepy clown. Dahlia is wearing an Alice and the Pirates skirt acquired on the recent San Francisco trip at the Baby the Stars Shine Bright New People boutique.

Mikey Stubbs

Piñata Maldita by Mikey Stubbs. The sign read, "I've always felt bad for the cute piñata animal. Little kids with a baseball bat cheerfully beating it into oblivion. It always seemed so horrible and unfair." Well this piñata isn't going to take it.

Lolitas looking at 3-d underwater photography of wrecks taken on diving expeditions.

horror dolls

Let's Play Dead dolls

I was utterly charmed by Let’s Play Dead studio.  Remarkably deathly and grim dolls filled every surface space.  Each doll is an original, one of a kind piece created by Ryan Patterson.  Freakish, ghastly and oozing with personality and blood, the dolls look like they’ve been through a playroom war.  And I imagine them getting into scads of mischief when the lights are out.

Let's Play Dead doll vase

Dahlia Jane with a Let's Play Dead doll vase

 

This was my favorite doll in the gallery. I love her noose swing and the monochromatic, ghostly tone of the piece.

Ryan Patterson

Let's Play Dead artist Ryan Patterson with Susana. Susana made her adorable plaid dress and even wore red contacts to coordinate the whole ensemble. Too cute!

For more information about Let’s Play Dead dolls, visit Ryan’s website. For more information about future events at the Brewery, visit their website.  Thanks to Susana for inviting me to the event and to all the lovely ladies who welcomed me into the group.

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Camille Rose Garcia’s Snow White

Saturday, March 17th, 2012
Snow White

Both the dust jacket and the hard cover for Camille Rose Garcia's Snow White are gorgeous.

A new edition of The Brothers Grimm fairytale, Snow White, illustrated by one of my favorite artists, Camille Rose Garcia, was released a couple of weeks ago.  Camille Rose Garcia is an exceptional pop surrealist who creates lush, dreamy images and her interpretation is fairytale heaven.

The tone is dead-on.  Every page captures the magic and thrill of the original story which pits a narcissistic evil queen against an innocent princess.  Bent on destroying her rival, the Queen takes many measures to kill Snow White from ordering a hunter to slay her to slyly offering her poisoned goods.  Snow White’s only allies are the animals in the forest and the miner dwarves, but ultimately her shining beauty and sweetness save her life.  Camille captures the radiance of the naive young girl and the horror of the Queen’s machinations with exquisite brilliance.

Like her 2010 illustrated version of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Camille took the book as an opportunity to illustrate aspects of the story that haven’t been depicted in other classic versions.  For instance, in the Disney version, the Queen falls off a cliff and is crushed to death by a rock.  In the Grimm tale, the Queen is fitted with red-hot iron shoes and forced to dance to death at Snow White’s wedding feast.  Camille depicts the Queen’s final agonizing moments in a swirl of molten reds.

A difference between the Grimm tale and the Disney version which I found surprisingly dark, is the way Snow White comes back to life.  In the cartoon, she is awakened by a loving kiss.  But in the Grimm tale, the Prince sees the still beautiful, but dead girl and asks the dwarves if he can have her.  She is awakened by a jolt to her glass coffin which dislodges the poisoned apple from her throat.  It’s creepy that the Prince is so enamored by her corpse that he feels he cannot live a day without looking upon it.

Evil Queen Snow White

Camille's Queen is particularly loathsome. Sneering and practically oozing toxicity, her green hued skin, sharp edges and striped beehive offer a striking contrast to the wide-eyed fair princess. I love the oozing face in the magic mirror.

Snow White book

Every page is well-thought out, rich with color, and feminine flourishes.

On Thursday, March 16, Camille signed books at the Michael Kohn Gallery in Los Angeles. I waited in a winding line for about three quarters of an hour, but I could not have been more thrilled to meet one of my artistic idols. Surrounded by the original illustrations from the book, Camille sat behind a table that had a pile of red apples. She was gracious and friendly.

I asked Camille if any of the characters in the book were particularly challenging and she told me that the dwarves were the most difficult. She loves the 1937 Walt Disney interpretation, and she had trouble separating her own ideas of how the dwarves should look from the iconic film characters.

Snow White

An original illustration from the book on display at Michael Kohn Gallery. Snow White flees the Hunter and the Evil Queen.

the dwarves Snow White

An original illustration of the dwarves, on display at Michael Kohn Gallery

Snow White signing

Camille Rose Garcia and Dahlia Jane

book signing

I'm so thrilled that Camille Rose Garcia signed my copy of Snow White!

Camille combines mediums such as ink, watercolor and colored pencil to achieve her vibrant dreamscapes. You can watch Camille working on the illustrations in this charming You Tube video:
YouTube Preview Image

Snow White is available on Amazon for $10.19. For more information on Camille Rose Garcia, visit her website.  Camille’s original watercolor illustrations will remain on display at the Michael Kohn Gallery in Los Angeles through April 14.

*I received a copy of this book from the publisher, but was under no obligation to post a good review.

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March 2012 Art Autopsy Live Art Event at Hyaena Gallery

Thursday, March 15th, 2012
Hyaena Gallery Art Autopsy

Tatomir live painting at the second Art Autopsy event

Last night was Hyaena Gallery’s second Art Autopsy. Once a month, the Burbank dark art space invites artists to set up around the gallery and create.  And it’s free and open to the public so it’s an incredible chance to hover over artists’ shoulders and pepper them with questions.

I had a blast at the first Art Autopsy event last month and I was so excited to go back.  This month’s featured artists included host, painter and musician (of System Syn, God Module, & Imperative Reaction), Clint Carney, my beastly friend Tatomir, sculptor Matt Levin and acrylic painter Mike Fisher.

Word must have gotten out about the nurturing atmosphere because several other artists joined the spread with their supplies.  Budding painter Atom Strange returned and shared a table this month with his brother Jake.  Robert Morales and Jacob Wohlmuth bent over their warped surrealist drawings.  And Nicole Sixx and Cousin Matt created an impromptu drawing station.

There weren’t quite as many non-artists hanging out as there were last month, but the room was buzzing with playful, creative energy.  It’s cool to see artists asking each other about their mediums and techniques and it must be a privilege to work in a room with so much talent.

Personally, it’s a treat to observe and be able to socialize with creative people.  I don’t have a lot of those friend things, and Hyaena Gallery has been a rare sanctuary in the storm.  It’s a place where I feel comfortable being myself, with my twisted sense of humor and dark sensibilities.   I always find inspiration and comfort in the macabre art that covers every inch of the space.  And I’ve actually connected with many of the artists and regulars.  Okay, enough of that sappy sentiment stuff.  I still want to chain my favorites to the wall in my closet and anticipate their filing of restraining orders against me any day now, so don’t worry about that.

Hyaena Gallery Art Autopsy

Tatomir messaged me the explanation for his piece as he found it, hours after its creation, in his sleep last night. "Cerbom Valachorum" is "A hairy, herbivore, creature with a deer head and human body, that roams the South Carpathian forests. With it’s green eyes, looking through the magic triangle of fire he turns any lost soul into the “grass of the beast” that is believed undo any cure and unlock any lock." His mind is so incredible, I love it!

Hyaena Gallery Art Autopsy

Matt Levin methodically works on each of his grotesque polymer clay sculptures. This one is female. Her legs have astonishing muscle definition and connective sinews. She's contorted in an unnatural limbo. Matt plans to add a big vagina on the crease of her spine.

sculpture

This is the completed piece Matthew Levin was sculpting at last month's Art Autopsy. Pretty sick!

Art Autopsy Hyaena Gallery

Mike Fisher created this magical feast of bloodshot eyeballs and gnarly dentistry.

hyaena gallery art autopsy

Painter Mike Fisher stretches and considers his accelerated acrylic painting. I'm digging his Big Daddy Roth t-shirt.

From left, Cint's wife Heidi, Jenna Valentine and gallery owner Bill Shafer

Atom Strange

Atom Strange (left) and his brother Jake painting. Both have played with Clint in System Syn and they're currently working on their own electronic music project. Last month, Atom was working on his second ever painting. Now he's creating his fourth and he's trying a smaller, detailed piece, which he is finding more challenging than larger canvases. Jake has not been painting for very long either, but he draws a lot. He showed me his sketchbook and it was full of creepy, figural forms.

Hyaena Gallery Art Autopsy

Bill Shafer took this picture of Nicole Sixx drawing at some counter space. There were so many artists this month that the Gallery ran out of chairs and workspace.

Hyaena Gallery Art Autopsy

Nicole Sixx took this picture of Cousin Matt and his drawing

Hyaena Gallery Art Autopsy

Robert Morales and Jacob Wohlmuth drawing. Both do surreal, stream of consciousness drawings where body parts, animal forms and patterns flow together. They're weird and wonderful.

Art Autopsy Hyaena Gallery

Robert Morales combines mechanical pencil and ink

Hyaena Gallery Art Autopsy

Amazingly, Clint created both of these acrylic paintings throughout the evening. The one on the left is so cute.

I’ve had an amazing time at both Art Autopsy events and I look forward to watching the party grow.  The next Art Autopsy is scheduled for the evening of April 11.  For more information, visit Hyaena Gallery’s website.

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LALUZAPALOOZA: La Luz de Jesus’ 2012 Juried Group Show

Friday, March 2nd, 2012

"The Storyteller" is one of three pieces by oil painter Derek Harrison in the show. I really love this painting. It reminds me of a vintage horror paperback cover. The reflection and shading are really well done. $1,200

LALUZAPALOOZA, La Luz de Jesus’ 26th annual juried group exhibition opens tonight.  The show has no theme and features work from over 100 emerging artists.  An unbelievable 9,000 artists submitted pieces for consideration for the show (I do not envy the people at the gallery at all for having to narrow that deluge down).  All of the provocative styles, genres and subjects the gallery is known for are represented.

Unsurprisingly, I’m most enamored with the darker, more macabre pieces on view.  The show includes a few artists I know such as Jennifer Jelenski, JAW Cooper, Jeremy Cross, Bruce Eichelberger, Steven Daily, Scott Holloway and José Rodolfo Loaiza Ontiveros, but most of the artists are completely new to me.  It’s exciting just looking through the previews for fresh talent.

Oil painter Laura Buss has four pieces in the show including "Learning to Count" above. She's currently working on a series of portraits of mummies called Bundles. $1,700

Matt Couper's intriguing work is inspired by Baroque devotional art. "Dead End," above, is one of five of his pieces in the show. $400

"Ghost Box," by Michael Ramstead is quietly beautiful. It's one of three oil paintings he has in the show and it has already sold.

I'm consistently awed by artist Bruce Eichelberger's wood-burnings. He has three pieces in this show including "Guitar 1," above. The details are mind-boggling and gorgeous. $1,600

Monster artist and animator Mike Sosnowski has three pieces in the show including "Spider Guy" above. The fine hairs give me the creeps. Ick! $200.

I really like the emaciated, bare-bones, yet theatrical feel of this piece. It's a real departure from the colorful, childlike illustrations Chinese artist Hui Tan is known for. "The Show Window of Halloween," gouache and ink on watercolor paper, is one of three pieces she has in the show and has already sold.

"Stella" by Nas Oh is a disturbing acrylic on wood painting. I like the composition and the graphic realism. It's chilling and it's already sold.

Artist Sandra Yagi is inspired by natural and science illustrations as well as traditional religious iconography. Her work is both macabre and oddly clinical. She has two pieces in the show including "The Nest," above, which is oil on panel. $2,400

Congratulations to everyone involved in the show!  I hope to see more from many of you in the future.  LALUZAPALOOZA will be on view at the gallery from March 2 through April 1. The public opening starts tonight at 8pm.  For more information or to see the rest of the previews from the show, visit La Luz de Jesus’ website.

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Sacrilege Group Art Show at Congregation Gallery

Monday, February 20th, 2012
Congregation Gallery

A selection of profane artworks shown in Sacrilege. The large central piece, Obris Non Sufficit by Cam Rackam, shows Baphomet. Baphomet is an imagined pagan deity often confused with Satan. In reality it represents the duality of nature: dark and light, male and female, heaven and hell. Written on its arms are the latin words Solve and Coagulate.

Sacrilege, the desecration, profanation, misuse or theft of something sacred is the theme of a group art show currently on display at Congregation Gallery in Los Angeles.  I attended the opening on Saturday night along with a slew of other deliberate blasphemers.

One of the show’s central pieces, a large monochromatic painting by Cam Rackam entitled Obris Non Sufficit, depicts Baphomet.  Illustrations of Baphomet, including Cam’s, incorporate the words “Solve” and “Coagulate” written on each arm.   The translation of the Latin words are dissolve and congeal and they characterize an alchemical concept about breaking something down into its base elements, cleansing it of impurities and reassembling it into something more valuable.  This can be applied to metals or knowledge.  In the case of this group art show, artists deconstructed traditional religious iconography, cleansed it of its hypocrisy and dishonesty, and rebuilt it to reflect their own experience with organized religion.

You could tell artists had a lot of fun visually railing against aspects of religion and other things held sacred to our culture such as patriotism.  Everyone at the opening was in good spirits considering we’re all probably damned to Hell.

Birth of the Beast by Chris the Creep is my favorite piece I've seen from the Creep thus far. I love the vaginally suggestive composition, the mother's red eyes and the umbilical cord attached to the beast. The painting is available for $500.

Congregation Gallery

Keri and her husband Chris the Creep talking to Tatomir

Denunciation by Tatomir Pitariu is bursting with symbolism including the vile rot spilling out of the inverted Christ figure's torso. The nail in his hand has a star of David carved on top and the words "Made in China" along the side. The Christ figure covers the flaming sun god and pagan pentagram. The painting is available for $466.

Congregation Gallery

Works by Chris Peters, John Charles, Chris the Creep, Tatomir, Jean Paul Miller, Jacob Cass, Don Farrell, Mary J. Sheridan, Kat Gun and Derek Harrison

Congregation Gallery

Artist John Charles

Congregation Gallery

This Jesus is a Cunt t-shirt was perfectly on theme.

Congregation Gallery

Three line works by Liv Rainey Smith and two pieces by Colm McCarthy

False Prophet

False Prophet by Tony Cupstid available for $1100

Congregation Gallery

Pieces by Corey Urlacher, Scott Holloway, David Lozeau, and Jethaniel Peterka

In addition to the art, the Sacrilege opening included very special performances by puppeteer to the stars, Scott Land. Probably best known for his work on the 2004 film, Team America, Scott designs, constructs and performs with one of a kind marionettes. Each marionette takes approximately four months to build. His performances breathe remarkable life into the puppets.

Scott’s show opened with a very shady, trench-coat-adorned flasher who lurked around the room to the Pink Panther theme song.  He paused in front of members of the captive audience to reveal his light-up genitalia (the twinkling lights around his penis flashed when he opened his coat, so he really was a flasher).

The second number was surprisingly touching.  A tender clown blows up a balloon and takes flight (yes the marionette actually blows up the balloon!) until the balloon pops and he falls down to earth.  The contrast between the amusing flasher and the vulnerable clown was night and day and speaks to Scott’s artistry.

I was incredibly charmed by Scott’s show.  It was such a treat!  Watch his dancing skeletons, the final number of the night, tap their way into your heart in the video I took below:

YouTube Preview Image

Visit my YouTube channel to see videos of the perverted Flasher and the sad Clown.  For more information about Scott’s remarkable marionettes, visit his website.

Congregation Gallery

Dahlia Jane with the skeleton marionettes. I could have watched these little guys all night.

Congregation Gallery

Artists Jean Paul Miller and Matt Levin

Lamb of God

I love this painting. The colors and compositions are beautiful and the freak lamb is awesome. Lamb of God by Steve Rodgers available for $750

Last Eucharist

Gorgeous! Last Eucharist by Jel Ena

Congregation Gallery

Artist and Gallery Curator Cam Rackam and Dahlia Jane

To see previews of the rest of the pieces in the show, or for more information, visit Congregation Gallery’s website.

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Seventh World Premiere Illustration

Friday, January 27th, 2012

david tough

I got the most incredible birthday present yesterday from my good friend, oil painter David Gough.  The stunning oil painting he created of Dahlia Jane and familiar, little Audrey dog, is too perfect.  I can’t stop staring at it.  Anyone looking at this painting can see that I’m a writer of evil intent.  The inclusion of a pen and journal, the shadowy raven and memento mori skull is reminiscent of the iconology of medieval paintings.  And I do believe anyone looking at the painting would fall under the subject’s spell.  David is so thoughtful, he even gave Audrey chopsticks which represent her fevered love for thai food (sort of an inside joke for any who have encountered Miss Audrey and watched her scarf down some pad see ew).  I’m so touched by this remarkable gift!

To see more of David Gough’s breathtaking art, visit his website.

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Conjoined 2 in 3d Art Show

Tuesday, January 24th, 2012
Copro Nason Gallery

The opening of Conjoined 2 at Copro Nason Gallery

Saturday night I attended the opening of Conjoined 2 in 3d at Copro Nason Gallery in Santa Monica.  The large group show was curated by dark artist Chet Zar and includes an impressive roster of sculptors, mixed media assemblage builders, toy makers and a few painters.  Ranging from classically inspired to contemporary surrealism to pop art, the theme seemed to be skin crawling grotesqueness with many pieces eliciting cries of thrilling disgust.  It was as much a display of mad scientist constructed monstrosities as a group art show.

The opening was a mad house!  A thick crush of people massed around all of the art and it felt oppressively claustrophobic.  But when you navigated your way through the crowd you were rewarded with some extreme weirdness.

Here's a handsome devil. I failed to note who did this gnarly piece, and it isn't up on Copro's website yet. But it definitely disgusted me and I had to resist touching to see if the material oozed.

The Fast Supper

Close-up of part of The Fast Supper by Jason Hite. This piece is mixed media and electric and really, really unappetizing. It brings to mind Jabba the Hut and the Matrix and makes me squirm. So appetizing.

Humpty Something by Chet Zar is oil on canvas. Humpty Dumpty is freaky with his squirmy spider legs, wrinkles, creases and folds. The translucent ghost is eerie and beautiful. I love love love the custom frame with skull corners.

skull frame

A close-up of the frame for Chet Zar's Humpty Something

Lustmord

I like Lustmord by Tas Limur a lot. My favorite part is the incredible frame covered in crushed animal bone fragments. The repurposed material gives the frame a gorgeous texture and color.

David Richardson

An Age of Innocence by David Richardson is cast bronze with a black granite base. David Richardson is a master of metal and this piece is outstanding. Details like the pajama fabric texture and the protruding spine around the back really give the piece a forlorn, demented character.

Chow Monstro

Chow Monstro by Johnny Chow is a prefabbed plastic doll with skull, glass eye and meat cleaver. This just makes me smile. I love the juxtapositions at play.

Angelus Domini (top) by Craig La Rotunda is a beautiful modern reliquary. The grotesque sculpture by Simon Lee is a monstrous creature covered in human privates and sinewy arms. The back is covered in saggy breasts and another face. Shivers!

Neil Winn

Lil Devil by Neil Winn is cheeky and seductively naughty. He's like a gremlin devil.

La Llarona

La Llorona: Mother of Tears by Black Mass is a mixed media piece with hauntingly beautiful resin dripping eyes.

The Lookout by David Simon 1/3 scale bronze feels heavy with pain and sadness. She has no arms to cover her nakedness.

Dahlia Jane, Joanne Augustine, Dan Harding and Tatomir outside Copro Nason

Conjoined 2 can be seen at Copro Nason through February 11.  For more information or to see previews of most of the work, visit their website.

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Bloodworks HIV portraits by Wayne Martin Belger

Saturday, January 21st, 2012
Bloodworks

Wayne Martin Belger adjusting Untouchable, the camera he built to shoot a geographic comparison of people suffering from HIV.

Bloodworks is a series of portraits conceived by artist Wayne Martin Belger to reflect on the realities of HIV thirty years after the disease surfaced.

The project was inspired by Wayne’s best friend David, who is HIV positive.  Diagnosed about 18 years ago, David’s case is unusual because he is a male infected through sex with a female.  He felt a sense of separateness from other HIV positive people because he wasn’t part of the homosexual community.  He even kept his status from Wayne throughout years of climbing trips, finally disclosing it before a surfing expedition in a dangerously rocky area.  Wayne felt compelled to explore the stigma HIV positive people feel burdened with.

Untouchable HIV Bloodworks

Untouchable is a pinhole camera made from Aluminum, Copper, Titanium, Acrylic and HIV positive blood.

The camera Wayne created for the project is named Untouchable, after the Dalits in India.  Wayne draws a parallel between these Indian people who are arbitrarily considered polluted, and people around the world infected with HIV.

HIV is a blood disease, a virus that attacks specific blood cells which make up the immune system.  Since blood is such an integral part of the subject, Wayne incorporated it into the camera.  Untouchable is the only camera in the world that circulates human blood.  The blood was donated by his HIV positive friend David.

Like all of Wayne’s cameras, Untouchable is a pinhole camera.  Pinhole cameras work by allowing light to enter through a tiny circular hole into an otherwise lightproof container with some kind of film at the back.  They do not have a lens.  Untouchable was built out of aluminum, copper, titanium and acrylic.  Blood pumps through the chambers and between two pieces of acrylic thousands of an inch apart that work as a red filter in front of the pinhole.  The blood, which is treated with heparin sulfate to prevent coagulation, tones the film.  It is replaced about every nine months.  A picture of David, taken by the camera that holds his blood, is displayed on the back of the camera now.

The images produced by Untouchable are ghostly, misty and luminescent with a red glow.  The red is highly saturated and vital.  The photos capture a feeling of a heart beating and draw the viewer in to make out the features of the individual.

bloodworks HIV

A photo produced by Untouchable for Bloodworks.

I was first introduced to Wayne and one of his cameras, Yama, at Beyond Eden last October. Yama, named for the Tibetan God of Death, was created from the skull of a 500 year old Tibetan monk. The skull actually holds two cameras, side by side, through the eye sockets, to produce simultaneous exposures that can be projected to view what Yama saw in 3d. Yama has two purposes, to take pictures of people affected by the Tibetan exodus and people posing as modern interpretations of ancient deities.

Each of Wayne’s thirteen pinhole cameras were made for and from the subject they shoot. Untouchable incorporates HIV positive blood and shoots photos of HIV positive people. Yama was crafted from a 500 year old Tibetan skull and captures people affected by the Tibetan exodus. Another camera, Sons of Abraham (9/11) was constructed from a solid block of Aircraft Aluminum. Incredibly, it’s inlayed with a piece of an 1860s Bible, a 1960 Koran and a Hebrew prayer book from 1880. Light passes through a piece of metal support beam salvaged from the South Tower of the World Trade Center. The camera captures black and white images of Imams, Priests and Rabbis holding their Koran, Bible or Torah in front of their Mosque, Church or Synagogue. The theme of these works is “within darkness comes light.” Wayne hopes to conclude the series with one color image taken in Jerusalem featuring an Imam, Priest and Rabbi with their respective texts.

Each concept was the springboard from which Wayne constructed his cameras. He machines and assembles every part by hand, without blueprints or computers. When he begins the painstaking process he has no idea if the finished product will work the way he envisions. But it all allows him to physically connect to the subject matter.  And because the cameras are as much a statement as the photographic prints, all of his installations display them side by side.

Wayne does describe himself as anal. When he had finished building Untouchable, he asked a friend who was a phlebotomist to draw some of his blood so he could test the camera.  While the needle was in his arm, he started to feel dizzy and actually passed out.  But his friend continued to draw the blood.  She knew that Wayne would be less forgiving if he didn’t get the quantity of blood he needed because she stopped to take care of him. Even in the studio, he has to be coaxed to break and take refreshment.  And he spends months processing the images in the darkroom before he is satisfied with a final print.  These obsessive qualities imbue his work with a powerful energy.

Dahlia Jane

Dahlia Jane with Yama, crafted from a 500 year old Tibetan monk skull. Coolest camera ever.

Wayne’s friend Lisa Derrick noted my enthrallment with Yama at Beyond Eden, and was kind enough to extend an invitation to me to watch Wayne shoot with Untouchable last Sunday.  Few invitations could prompt the excitement and honor I felt as this one to watch this creative and thoughtful artist work.

The shoot took place at artist Shawn Barber’s tattoo studio, Memoirs, in West Hollywood.

I was profoundly moved by the experience.  In the six hours I was there, ten complete strangers to the artist came in and shared one of the most intimate and difficult details about their life.  The models included vocal activists such as Thelma James, Michael Kearns, and David L. Kelly as well as people who are less public about their status.  The first model I met, Sandrine, a mother who has turned her life around after an arrest for drugs and prostitution revealed she was infected, hasn’t even told her father yet.  Just that day the ten models represented several decades, races and sexual orientation. As different as they were, they are in their situation because of choices they made, choices any of us could make on any day, that changed their lives for ever. They put their trust in Wayne that their stories would be portrayed with dignity.  I can’t imagine anything more courageous.

Wayne Martin Belger Bloodworks

Sandrine is a mother, a former drug addict and former prostitute who got a confirmed HIV positive diagnosis in 2009.

In addition to myself and Wayne and each model, several people came in and out including Lisa Derrick, Shawn Barber, a friend of Lisa’s, a journalist from LGBT/POV, and art publicist Lee Joseph.  We were all snapping photos.  As I stood in the studio, listening to the loud and intrusive beeps, clicks and shutter sounds of the digital cameras and smart phones capturing the moment, the silent pinhole camera seemed much more elegant.

Wayne Martin Belger Bloodworks

Actor and activist Michael Kearns has devoted much of his life to facilitating discussion about HIV. He was the first Hollywood actor to open up about his status and co-founded Artists Confronting AIDS, which is responsible for the longest running AIDS benefit, STAGE.

As each model took his or her place in front of a black backdrop, Wayne would make sure he or she was comfortable and then say “Exposed” to let them know that the camera was creating the image.  I heard the word over and over and it began to take on a different meaning for me as symbolic of their public gesture.

Since the light has to pass through the blood, a lot of light and a long exposure, generally about a minute and a half, are needed to produce a clear image.  During that time the models have to stay as still as possible, though rapid blinks are too quick to be perceived.  I became aware of just how long a minute and a half can feel when I held eye contact with the model Greg during one of his exposures.  I’d met Greg only a few minutes before in the studio.  Looking into his eyes, I felt vulnerable and extra self-aware.  I wanted to send positive, encouraging, even warm loving energy to Greg and that, along with the pressure to stay very still to the point where I was  almost holding my breath, made the minute and a half feel eternal.

Bloodworks HIV

Greg and I held eye contact during one of the exposures and I realized how long a minute and a half feels when you are asked to hold still.

The energy in the room shifted with each model.  Since the exposures are long, the model has time to think, which can cause powerful emotions to bubble up.  At one point I stepped out for a few minutes.  When I crept back in I felt a heaviness in the studio and realized model Sam Page, a tan and golden haired physical trainer, was crying.  I found Sam’s description of the experience in an article Lisa Derrick wrote on LAFIGA:

“I had to stand still for about two minutes for each shot (he took four) because of the exposure time of the lens.” Sam wrote.  ”While standing there, I stared into the wood floor — and somehow, made out the reflection of my mom’s face looking back at me. Tears began to stream as I thought about all of those who have died—and how important these images will be in telling our stories about the stigma that still exists between the HIV negative and the HIV positive gays. It was truly one of the most moving experiences of my life, when time literally stood still, and I cried, seemingly on cue.”

Models Harriet and Isabella had an almost opposite reaction.  The only models shot as a pair that day, this HIV positive mother and daughter made the studio glow with their golden, vivacious spirit.  The rest of us in the studio were trying not to laugh when the intwined pair suddenly got the giggles during an exposure.

“It really charges me,” Wayne said about the energy and spirit of the participating models.

Wayne Martin Belger Bloodworks

Harriet and Isabella

In 2010, Wayne did several public shoots at the Urban Institute of Contemporary Art in Grand Rapids, MI.  Wayne was touched by the amazing response in a conservative area where few were open about their status.  Surrounded by hundreds of onlookers, his subjects included a director of a prestigious hospital and a soccer mom and her son.  He still gets letters from people who were moved by the project.  The exposure of such integrated members of the community opened up a dialogue about the disease.

So far, in addition to Los Angeles and Grand Rapids, Wayne has also taken images for Bloodworks in Tucson and San Francisco.  He also has shoots planned in Portland, Orlando and New York City.  And in the spring he’s going to various African destinations including Ethiopia, Liberia, Uganda, Sierra Leone, and the Congo.  He will stay with African families whose members are all HIV positive.  While most HIV positive people in America have access to medication that manages their condition, Africa is still very much in crisis.  In Sierra Leone in particular, there is an AIDS highway of infected people trying to leave the country because they can’t get medicine.  No one wants to harbor these diseased refugees and many of them drop dead on the walk.  Wayne hopes that his project will contrast the face of this disease in different geographical areas.

Wayne Martin Belger

Bloodworks will be fully unveiled, filling four walls from floor to ceiling, at a December 2012 group show called Talismans at the Royal Ontario Museum in Montreal, Canada alongside the Third Eye, Yama and Heart cameras and photos.  Other artists participating in the group show include Joel Peter Witkin, Steven Gregory, Marc Quinn, Robert Krasnow, WhiteFeather, Francois Robert, Weiki Somers, Charles LeDray, Rosamond Purcell and Mark Prent.

Wayne does sell his cameras and prints to collectors, but each camera is one of a kind, and most prints come in a limited edition of less than ten.  Collectors of the cameras must allow Belger to borrow them to continue a series, but they do get copies of each new print.

In addition to Yama, Wayne has another skull camera named Third Eye, which was designed to study the beauty of decay.  Wayne plans to build one more skull camera to complete the trilogy.  The last one will include three human skulls, from a man, a woman and a child, placed back to back to give the camera a 360 degree view.  The man’s skull will be adorned with cut precious stones and metals and a stone from Mars as a bindi.  The woman’s with hundreds of pearls and a Moon stone bindi.  And the child’s with uncut precious stones and a piece of ancient meteorite as the bindi.

For more information on Wayne and his cameras, visit his website, Boy of Blue Industries, or his Facebook page.  Thank you very much to Lisa Derrick who reached out to me and invited me to witness art history in the making.  Thank you to Shawn Barber for welcoming me into his studio, the models for their openness and Wayne for patiently answering questions and tolerating my hovering.  It was an experience I won’t soon forget and I look forward to seeing the finished images from this shoot in particular.

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