Partita II at Durden & Ray Adds Art for the Holidays

Who wouldn’t want to enjoy the works of stellar contemporary artists, have a fun and festive evening, and help support one of the most cutting-edge and globally-linked art collectives in LA? Certainly not you, right?

Artist: Nadege Monchera Baer

Partita II at Durden & Ray in DTLA’s Bendix Building this Saturday night offers you the opportunity to bid on, enter a raffle for, and simply enjoy the art of:

Lillian Abel, Kim Abeles, Mark Acetelli, Daniel Adkins, Robin Adsit, Kim Alexander, Dawn Arrowsmith, Nurit Avesar, Carlos Beltran Arechiga, Christine Morla Armstrong, Dawn Arrowsmith, Kristine Augustyn, Nadege Monchera Baer, Malado Baldwi, Marsha Effron Barron, Quinton Bemiller, Arezoo Bharthania, Jodi Bonassi, Jorin Bossen, Gary Brewer, Janine Brown, Stefan Bucher, Suzanne Budd, Gavin Bunner, Julian Bustill, Gul Cagi, Jane Callister, Debbie Carlson, Jennifer Celio, Chenhung Chen, Sijia Chen, Mika
Cho, Trine Churchill, Norman Clark, Daniel Barron Corrales, Natalie Cruz, Joe Davidson, Ismael de Anda III, Ilknur Demirkoparan, Mark Dimalanta, Glenda Dixon, Dani Dodge, Tom Dunn, Lana Duong, Martin Durazo, Cliff Eberly, Michael Emmanuel, Mitra Fabian, Marielle Farnan, Roni Feldman, Cia Foreman, Christian Franzen, Sarajo Frieden, Josh Friedman, Steven Fujimoto, Sean Michael Gallagher, Martin Gantman, Gabe Garcia, Michael

Garcia, Yvette Gellis, Lawrence Gipe, Audra Graziano, Phyllis Green, Kio
Griffith, Jenny Hager, Steve Hampton, Stephanie Han, Aska Irie, Ben Jackel,
Claire Jackel, Dion Johnson, Brian Thomas Jones, Flora Kao, Yasmin
Kazam, Kate Kelton, Shane King, Nadim Kurani, Jay Kvapil, Connie DK
Lane, David Leapman, Tidawhitney Lek, Stephen Levy, Echo Lew, Nikki
Lewis, Kevin Linehan, Susan Lizotte, Amelia Lockwood, Mela M ( Mela Marsh), Maya Mackrandilal, Alanna Marcelletti, Aline Mare, Jane Margarette, Kim Marra, Anne Martens, Javier Martinez, Lynne McDaniel, Annelie McKenzie, Amanda Mears, Kathleen Melian, Yevgeniya Mikhailik, Hagop Najarian, Hung Viet Nguyen,
Khang B. Nguyen, Sean Noyce, Labkhand Olfatmanesh, Elizabeth Orleans, Miguel Osuna, Billy Pacak, Paul Paiement, Kristopher Paos, Chris Pate, Olga Ponomarenko, Elizabeth Preger, Max Presneill, Michael Provart, Katie Queen, Mei Xian Qui, Kristopher Raos, Samuelle Richardson, Frederika Roeder, Ann Marie Rousseau, David S. Rubin, Frank Ryan, Liza Ryan, John Sollom, Annie Seaton, Sonja Schenk, Kristine Schomaker, Nike Schroeder, Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia, Steve Seleska, Rafael Serrano, Shilla Shakoori, Maccabee Shelley, Stephanie Sherwood, Dimitra Skandali, Jeffrey Sklan, Charles Snowden, Robert Soffian, David Spanbock, Curtis Stage, Kayla Sweet-Newhouse, Eric Minh Swenson, Jill Sykes,Vincent Tomczyk, Katya Usvitsky, Emily Van Horn, Melissa Walter, Ann Weber, Joan Weinzettle, Dana Weiser, Stacy Wendt, Tracy Weiss, Valerie Wilcox, Sammy Jean Wilson, Surge Witron, Steven Wolkoff, Alison Woods, and Jacob Yanes.

Artist: Christine Morla

The one-night-only small works exhibition and fundraiser is designed to help Durden and Ray to continue its international artist exchanges which this year took viewers on a one-of-a-kind art exploration here in LA with compelling contemporary artwork from Rome, Luxemborg, Greece, Berlin, and Iceland. The result for viewers is an exploratory adventure.

Artist: Max Presneill

For this show, Los Angeles-area artists were invited to make small-sized art that represents, according to Durden and Ray member Dani Dodge, “the unification across distances through image and discourse. They are the physical remnants of experience.” The works are available for $50 each, with 100% of the proceeds benefitting Durden and Ray.

In short, the night is a holiday gift for attendees and might just help you wipe out your entire gift list besides.

The raffle will include larger artworks and experiences such as portrait sessions and studio visits. Raffle tickets are $5 each and will be available at the event. The raffle will be held at 8:30 p.m. the night of the event.

Event curators are Arezoo Bharthania, Joe Davidson, Ben Jackel, Alanna Marcelletti, David Spanbock, Curtis Stage, and Valerie Wilcox.

The evening runs from 6-9 p.m. at Durden and Ray, 1206 Maple Ave. #832 in the Bendix Building. Santa says go, and so do we.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Durden and Ray and Genie Davis

Chung-Ping Cheng: Light, Color, Beauty – All Blooms

Chung-Ping Cheng revels in light, color, and texture. Her photographic images are vibrant with all three. Her current artwork consists of primarily floral images, but Cheng wants her viewers to know that “The theme of my work, although most are flowers, is that they are not only beautiful as we see them, but that they have significance as related to life, to feminity.” In short, to Cheng, her flowers are a force of nature.

Her blossoming images feature an intense and intimate color palette that Cheng carefully selects. “It depends on the subject of the work, the palette that I choose,” she says, noting that her palette also depends on not just what the subject is, but whether it is “representational or metaphorical, somber or happy, whether the image is of something brilliant.” According to Cheng, “I think the color palette comes from my aesthetic both in the West and East.” Certainly the fluidity and the natural vibrancy of her colors reflect that universal spirit.

The riveting lushness of Cheng’s current series mark a new direction for the artist’s work. “My latest work is a new direction, more of the experience of occurrences in a cycle images impart.” If the viewer studies them long enough, they are like taking a deep dive from the minute petaled perfection of a single blossom into a hidden universe. There is a strong life-force present in her work.

Vibrating with life, highly visceral, yet delicate – both in her current floral works and in a previous rich-looking cake series, too, among others, each of Cheng’s works somehow manage to be both exuberant and graceful. She says that this combination of visual style is “intrinsic,” and that she is not sure how the composition asserts itself, it just happens for her artistically, a natural conception of the image.

Of her past “Cake” series, Cheng says that she created it in part “because I love sweets, and I think that they should bring people pleasure not only in taste but also in sight.” Her floral works she approaches as a richly pleasurable experience, but an experience that is also reverant as well. For Cheng, these flowers are jewels, sparkling with light, and revealing many prisms of natural beauty.

Living in Los Angeles has broadened both her ability to reach an appreciative audience and her own perspective; but her work process remains rooted in film rather than in the digital age so much of Los Angeles represents and embraces. There is nothing immediate about her act of creation, and she likes it that way. “Although its digital era, I still like working with a traditional camera and film. I shoot with a medium format camera and film, and print my work myself in the darkroom.”

Returning to the meaning within her current floral series, the idea of rebirth and spirituality is strong for the artist in regard to the lotus flower. She introduces these concepts seemingly effortlessly into her work. “The lotus is an iconic flower in Chinese culture. It has a meaning of purity, it’s very strong in spirituality.”

She adds that in the latest images from this series, the palette is a sunshine yellow and flame red. “The image is yellow with a little red, like a refining fire. It is thought that those colors make a person restore, confirm, strengthen and establish themselves.” The idea of a refining fire, she explains, extends to the creation of beautiful jewelry, as well as for people. That refinement is a process uses in creating fine jewelry as well, and ties into Cheng’s idea of the flower itself as a jewel.

Certainly each of Cheng’s images are jewel-like: a prism of perfection that radiates both beauty and strength. Dive in.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist

Salvage at The Lounge Theater: As Poignantly Perfect as a Country Song

Salvage will make you laugh, cry, and want to sing along – just like the best country song you can remember, performed in a spare, alt-country, achingly bone-deep style.

At the Lounge Theatre in Hollywood through December 15th, this four character play takes place in a riveting 90 minute block, in a single-setting, with no intermission.

The barroom set is authentic, and the four-character-cast turns in perfect performances; three are also terrific musical performers whose vocals are heartbreaking and perfect.

With a book by by Tim Alderson, and music and lyrics by Alderson, Mark Heard, Pat Terry, and Randy VanWarmer, the story spins on a familiar wheel that is no less compelling from one finding it recognizable.

Directed by Damian D. Lewis, the play is a richly felt story of a love triangle gone bad, a “bad boy” who regrets his past, young love, sacrifice, and the devouring faith and fury of dreams.

The cast consists of the David Atkinson as the edgy, broken, aging “Preacher;” Christopher Fordinal as young Harley, Nina Herzon as Harley’s dulcet-voiced wife; and Leonard Earl Howze as barkeep Johnson. All are stellar.

Without revealing the lovely twists and turns of the play, suffice to say young, idealistic singer/songwriter Harley is about to pawn his guitar to help support his wife and coming child, when he spots a bar where a musical idol died.

Entering the place, he engages in conversation with the surly bartender and the angry, talented, drunken musician regaling noone with his broken-hearted songs.

Harley’s young pregnant wife shows up with her own connection to the place; histories unfold, faith and love and rage spool out in complex, stirring threads.

The songs are not just musical interludes, they propel the story forward and grab you by the throat and heart.

Salvage is what theater should be: intense, emotional, and evoking a connection with the audience; a sacred bond of feeling, one that can be carried out of the theater and into the heart.

Go get yourself a ticket, and bring a tissue – guys, too.

For tickets call 323-960-7712 or purchase online at  www.Onstage411.com/Salvage

The Lounge Theatre is located at 6201 Santa Monica Blvd.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by The Lounge Theatre

Jen Snoeyink Has Hope in Trees

 

Snoeyink_GettyTreeSm

With her Hope Trees exhibition upcoming at Geo Gallery in Glendale, Jen Snoeyink has a fresh forum for her wide-ranging, spiritually kind, and vividly lovely artwork, which she refers to as an “emotional response to social and environmental issues, from the devastation of wildfires to the joy of chickens.”

YellowDrawing

While her work is often oriented to nature, this accomplished, multi-medium artist says she choses her color, texture and material based on the message she wants to impart, always “with the intention of lifting viewers’ spirits and raising awareness.”

Snoeyink_TreeWrapping2

Her current work and upcoming exhibition builds on her past work. “How could it not?” she asks. “I have repeatedly been fascinated with texture, color, environment and nature. My previous work as a scenic artist, faux-finish artist, and mural painter have honed my painting skills. The subject of my artwork has stayed within themes relating to nature and emotional responses.”

ClimateChangeSolution

Moving from her previous residence in New York to Los Angeles has affected her work, Snoeyink notes. “Most of the content is about living in California.  My latest work in particular focuses on wildfires and using recycled mediums to further environmental awareness.”

Snoeyink_HopeTreesBurbankHigh

The inspiration for her involvement with the community, her commitment to informing and to creating art related to climate change starts with the fact that “I am a child of the 70s. ‘Give a Hoot, Don’t Pollute,’ ‘Smokey the Bear,’ and the energy crisis started my awareness of the environment, and the effects of the human population.” She asserts that she grew up with the strong believe that “We have a responsibility as citizens and stewards of this earth to do what we can to respect and preserve it. Back in the 70s there was a drive to reduce pollution, and look what we were able to do,” she enthuses. “Smog emissions were reduced, as well as pollution and other taxing environmental issues. This came from a community that cared and demanded change. We are in a similar situation now with climate change, and there are things that we as individual citizens can do about it.” She adds “And I as an artist feel a responsibility to use art as a tool to help bring community together.”

Snoeyink_Amazon_AssemblageSm

According to Snoeyink, she works in as many diverse mediums as she does because she simply loves diversity. Whetehr fire art, assemblage or painting and drawing, certain elements carry through each of the mediums she employs. “Using different mediums is like using different tools. Sometimes I prefer fiber, and other times paint or drawing.  When I studied set design, one of the things I learned was that material helps create the intended environment around the story that you tell,” she says. “Wall treatments and decor do the same in homes as do materials in art. I am fortunate in that I have the choice of mediums with which I enjoy working, depending on the message I want to convey. ”

The artist explains her use of materials, and why different techniques work to create different meanings within her work. “For me, the materials are generally used like this:  drawing is for emotive line, paint provides textural brushstrokes, glazes and color, fibers – tactile texture, and land art – when something just can’t fit on a wall and environment is key.” In addition “I use assemblage when I want to create a feeling or looking at something as an outsider. The elements carried through? Texture and color, and the need to communicate through the medium of the artwork.”

Snoeyink_HopeTreeWoolseyFire

Snoeyink has worked on a variety of public projects. “The Hope Trees projects have been the most meaningful to me, both the wildfire inspired Land Art and the positivity and hope for Burbank schools at the start of the school year. ”

She says her that her vibrant and beautiful Hope Trees are an outgrowth of the current socio-political climate. “I have been drawn to fiber arts in tumultuous times in my life.  After 9/11, I found great comfort in relearning how to knit. The process of the repetition, the texture of the yarn, and the creation of something new was mindfully comforting.” Snoeyink conceptualized the Hope Trees project after the  LaTuna fire ravaged the hillside near her home.

Snoeyink_LaTuna Fire

“It was an awesomely frightening experience that was magnified by the resulting blackened landscape.  I yearned for some form of life, some color and some love to adorn the charred hillside. The hill that had been such a bounty of life had appeared to be devastated.” And so the idea of the Hope Trees evolved for the artist. “I started wrapping branches with colorful yarn and scraps of fabric. Not only was the process itself very mindful, but so was the intention of selecting the fibers, wrapping and gifting it to the branch as a wish to the landscape, and to those affected by the fire and the burn locations.”

The trees came into action when the Woolsey Fire hit the next year.

“I wrapped a few more branches, and brought these makeshift trees to the burned locations. Nature photographer Kerry Perkins assisted me with the project by expertly documenting the resulting Land Art. We have also done temporary installations at the Saddle Ridge and Getty burn areas, and Burbank schools for the first day of school.” She sites the meainging and purpose of the work as “Hope even in devastation, especially when community comes together.  Nature is unbounded.”

Snoeyink_Smores3

The lovely chickens and roosters that take up a portion of Snoeyink’s painterly work are strikingly cool images. She makes these birds graceful and even refined, capturing how alive and sweet they are. But why chickens as opposed to any other winged creature?

Snoeyink_jumpingchicken

“A few years ago my daughter came home from school with a freshly hatched little chick which she treasured and cared for as attentively as if it were a puppy. At the time I didn’t think much of chickens, but I eventually started to think about them differently. The chick would coo with affection, and my daughter had made a new ‘friend.’ We eventually got a few more chickens, and over the last few years we have learned how fun, quirky, and filled with personality they are.”

While her portraits of friendly fowl reflect their individuality and joyful spirit, each of her varied works reflect that sense of life, its sanctity, love – and hope.

Snoeyink_SaddleridgeHopeTreeMoon

Feel this encompassing warmth amid the branches of Snoeyink’s Hope Trees. 

Geo Gallery is located at 1545 Victory Blvd. in Glendale, and runs Dec. 14 through January 2nd. The exhibition should make a “hopeful” start to the holiday season and New Year.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist