Layers Upon Layers: Four Solo Shows at The Gabba Gallery

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The four solo shows that make up Gabba Gallery’s current exhibition, “Layers,” are complex and multi-faceted. Each collection delves deep into and through their visual surfaces, presenting a multi-faceted prism through which viewers can see beyond what meets the eye.

The artists are Essi Zimm, Toshee, Nicholas Bonamy, and Joey Feldman,  and the sum of their work, when viewed together, adds yet another layer to the show.

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Essi Zimm’s work takes viewers into a land of fairy tales and spirits.

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Delving deep into the world of the Japanese supernatural creatures known as the Yokai, Zimm’s work creates a wonderous world of mysterious birds and the glowing streaks of fish.

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In “Kappa” three astonishingly life-like frogs appear ready to jump from a canvas alive with lily pad flowers, spheres, and collage elements that appear like the work of taggers across the surface.

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Like all of Zimm’s pieces in this series, she develops the backgrounds to her work first, and her representative figures second. “I figure out what story comes from that, and it’s a fairly long process, usually two to three weeks. Because of the time considerations involved in this exhibition, I tried creating the backgrounds to multiple pieces at once to develop the stories,” Zimm explains.

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“I tried to pick characters that spoke to me, or are major supernatural figures – there are hundreds to choose from,” Zimm says. “I research the fairy tales I want to talk about and paint about.”

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Toshee’s mixed media pieces share a common element with Zimm: Japanese story telling. “This collection is based on personal experiences traveling through Japan. I’ve been interested in Japanese art and architecture since I was a little boy,” he explains.

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“These pieces take elements between order and chaos to form harmony.” Toshee grew up in New York City, and was influenced by the graffiti he saw throughout the city. “My inspiration comes from that urban visual landscape, as well as techniques such as animation cel drawing and Japanese wood block prints.”

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The artist builds layers by taking on the shapes first, then “attacking the background, using several layers of resin that gives me multiple layers to build over.” His pieces have a strongly sculptural quality, as in “Himeji,” a carefully realized vision of a Japanese pagoda and impressionistic cherry blossoms, transports the viewer to another place and time, or in a single, depth-filled painting of a rose.

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Nicholas Bonamy’s collage panels depict familiar, iconic Los Angeles landscapes enlivened with vibrant colors, graphic shapes, and paint drips and splatters. Each element that Bonamy builds, from collage to paint, is a progression that pulls the viewer into a new way of seeing the City of Angels, giving it wings.

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“I try not to be afraid of messing up my detailed work. It’s apart of the same process when I mix in drops and other layers. I build the background first and then build up the foreground,” Bonamy explains.

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“I get my inspiration for locations from simply driving around. Everyone drives around. I just see things out the window that I want to take a photograph of, and then I paint that.” Once he’s decided on an image, the artist say he takes that image and thinks about what he can do with it to make it still recognizable but incorporate “crazy color.” Bonamy says he wants to make Los Angeles as beautiful as it can be. “LA is a grey city. It’s beautiful, but it’s grey because it’s sad in a way, a rat race. People’s dreams die every day here.”

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“I put the color in. I love LA, it’s home, I’m trying to paint that girl, put make up on the city,” the artist notes.

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“My paintings are impressionistic, but it’s not about brush strokes, it’s about graphic shapes and letting the paint do what it wants to do.”

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In his own words, Joey Feldman does “Character portraiture. I’m an artist, illustrator, cartoonist, all spontaneous. I don’t do any penciling. All the mistakes are part of each picture. I go straight to ink, there’s nothing pre-planned.”

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Feldman draws every day, and frequently works on a piece that represents pop culture, politics, birthdays – whatever inspires him at the moment.

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“When David Bowie died, I did a portrait of him. I made twenty four prints, twelve standard, twelve special editions that have hand-drawn elements. I donated the proceeds to the City of Hope.” From icons like Bowie and Hunter Thompson to politicians from Bernie to Trump,  Leonard Nimoy, Han Solo and Chewie, Bill Murray, and a self-portrait, the layers that Feldman exposes are emotional and intimate.

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Fairy tales, foreign lands, Los Angeles landscapes, and cultural icons – that’s a heady mix of subjects and rich territory for mining many layers of artistic vision and meaning. Check out The Gabba Gallery’s fine exhibition through April 2nd. The gallery is located at 3126 Beverly Blvd, Los Angeles.

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Sex and the City Zoo: GLAZA Informs and Entertains

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You won’t find Carrie Bradshaw hanging out at Sex and the City Zoo, but maybe she should give it a whirl, and learn about the mating habits of species besides her own.

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At Sex and the City Zoo, a charming and informative Valentine’s Weekend event at the Los Angeles Zoo, GLAZA once again shows an enormous capacity for the expansion of its educational offerings, served up with a heaping dose of fun.

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The event began with a dessert buffet and wine served in the museum’s courtyard. There were also adorable stuffed animal zoo gift baskets available to purchase to support zoo conservation efforts.

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While guests mixed and mingled, zoo staff circulated bearing a touchable Angolan Python, an ‘ooh and ahh’ worthy cute sugar glider, and a Hawaiian owl named Paula who came to Los Angeles as a stowaway on a naval ship.

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Once visiting and noshing ended, guests moved into the zoo’s comfortable auditorium for a lively talk by chief curator Beth Schaefer. Here the audience laughed, learned, and groaned over animal mating rituals.

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The male octopus disguises itself as a female in order to go undetected and avoid being devoured; bees sometimes have sex mid-air, bower birds woo their mates by building elaborate bowers that include found objects from car keys to soda straws. Male ostriches are supremely helpful with incubating eggs and watching over babies, and also engage in elaborate mating dances. And, well may they dance: most male birds do not have penises – the theory being such an appendage would adversely affect flight dynamics. But ostriches do, and also ducks. Ah, but ducks – well. Apparently most duck sexual behavior is not consensual, and male ducks lose their genitalia after they mate – growing a new one prior to each mating period. Um. Yes. That will teach them.

From learning about the great apes interest in oral copulation to the zoo’s success story for reproduction in endangered species like prong horn antelope and condors, this was a highly entertaining and memorable evening. Attendees could also opt to extend it with an elegant dinner set up on zoo grounds following the talk.

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We say: stay alert to other special occasion zoo events: from the holiday festival of Zoo Lights to new children’s programs that allow kids to pet a hippo, and fascinating presentations like these – there’s plenty that’s new and fun to do at the zoo. Yes, the rhymes are intentional.

So…how about those ducks?

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  • Genie Davis; All Photos by Jack Burke

 

 

 

Daniel Rolnik Gallery: New Space, Same Cool Face

 

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“I call my crazy face my Semitic super hero,” gallery owner Daniel Rolnik says, of his self-created signage.

Owner Daniel Rolnick celebrates his gallery opening with his father, right.
Owner Daniel Rolnik celebrates his gallery opening with his father, right.

Rolnik is back. After moving from a previous space just across the street from Santa Monica pier, Rolnik has found a new home at 2675 S. La Cienega in Culver City. Located near galleries such as Blum & Poe, Rolnik offers a fresh and fun-loving approach to art that is also ultimately affordable.

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“We are the only gallery in the Culver City arts district where you can just go in and buy some art and walk out again casually. I wanted this place to be a roadside attraction,” Rolnik asserts.

He also describes his bright and cheerful place as part of an “epic war against white walls.”

Rolnick with artist Kat Philbin
Rolnik with artist Kat Philbin

Opening the new space are shows by Kat Philbin and Listen04. U.K. artist Listen04’s “Child’s Play,” below, is a colorful, nihilistic, and subversive riff on cartoon characters.

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Sharply satiric sculptural pieces from Listen04 are also on hand.

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Above, not your ordinary toy soldiers form “The New Terracotta Army” from Listen04.

Philbin’s “Codswallop,” below, creates illustrations for “a book that doesn’t exist,” according to the Missouri-born artist.

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“The story is of a girl who falls in a puddle and is transported to a wonderland under water. It’s drawn in ink and watercolors.”

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Philbin says she wanted to take her art in a lighter, brighter direction, and her carefully rendered, whimsical pieces offer a wry twist on fairy-tale fare.

Also on display:  cool and inexpensive ways to add to your art collection from Turtle Wayne, Tripper Dungan,

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Nature Connects: Spring Lego Art at South Coast Botanical Garden

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Lego artist Sean Kenney’s Nature connects sculptures are made from Lego building bricks – and a vivid imagination. His brilliant birds, bison, flowers, bees, and butterflies dot the grounds of the South Coast Botanic Garden on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.

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Add in that this is the perfect time of year to view a bevy of blossoming flowers and trees, this is really an exhibition that’s not to be missed.

The Lego art appeals on a variety of different levels. For kids, and young-at-heart adults, it’s just plain fun. It’s also quite wonderful sculpture made with a fascinating medium. Haven’t you always wondered if you could make ART from LEGO bricks? And settled instead for a tottering tower, or reading the instructions to assemble a specific by the numbers figure? But always you’ve wondered…or at least I have, whether those bricks couldn’t be made into art. And here it is.

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There’s a true sense of innocence and awe surrounding the pieces. The glorious butterfly and large scale hummingbird that greet visitors at the start of the exhibit are charming, but walk further for the truly inspiring pieces.

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The bison and calf located in Sakura Meadow are exquisitely rendered: you can see the shadows of light shifting over their Lego “fur.”

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I loved the straight-from-Beatrix-Potter storybooks feel of the rabbit & fox in mid-chase in the Discovery Garden promenade, and the goldfinches with bird feeder in the Zoo garden. There’s a surprising amount of nuance in the pieces, and their installation at specific spots in the gardens feel carefully curated, too. The Victoria waterplatters, one with a frog, and which I would refer to as lily pads, are well served in a more remote area of the park; coming upon them they feel organic to the setting.

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A map provided by the garden indicates where the seventeen sculptures are to be found, or visitors can take a fifty-minute walking tour of the exhibit led by docents.

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As much as I love the art behind these clever pieces, let’s not forget that this exhibit is simply a whole lot of fun, and is sure to draw more visitors to the garden than would come to simply sniff the flowers or see coral trees, cherry blossoms, and jade trees in bloom.

The garden itself is an experience to be savored: small enough to attract local families with small kids, and with enough quiet corners to provide a meditative respite for weary adults.

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Nature Connects will be on display through May 8th; with hours daily from 9-5. The garden is located at 26300 Crenshaw Blvd. in Palos Verdes, just a short jaunt up the hill from the city of Torrance and the 405 freeway off-ramp. 12804814_10207717353879044_1243658362081424712_n

  • Genie Davis; photos Genie Davis and Cheryl Henderson