Play and Perfection at The Makery

There are two terrific exhibitions currently exuding the spirit of play and perfection that inhabits the artist-run The Makery Gallery in DTLA.

Closing the 24th, Playtime is a brilliant and fun group show inaugurating the gallery’s new basement-level space, Sub Terra. It’s an exuberant and delightful show about – fun. When was the last time you enjoyed seeing inventively creative toys, ruminations on the purpose of play, and expression of pure joy?

 

From Heather Lowe’s dazzling, spinning holographic merri-go-round to a few holes of crazy cool golf transported from Mojaveland Mini Golf in 29 Palms with the two represented holes created by Anna Stump and Joe Alvarez, there’s something to make just about everyone smile. And admire the inventiveness and power inherent in play.

From Manuel Bracmonte’s “Technicolor Childhood” to Cathy Immordino’s make-your-own-diorama,  Lauren Mendelsohn Bass’s vibrate game of checkers…

…Monica Rickler Marks wonderful write-your-own-message colorful clothes line, and Tom Lasley’s mannequin boy and assemblage signs, this exhibition is tribute to vibrant colors and whimsy, and serves as a sweet testament to imagination.

Above, a glorious wall sculpture by Susanne Hannon

In the upstairs gallery, on view until March 30th, Betty Brown and Eva Montealegre have curated the dynamic Fuerte! which vibrates with texture, color, and the tactile. Brown and Montealegre grouped together a rich panoply of West Coast-based, multi-cultural women artists. Exhibiting artists include Adeola Davies-Aiyeloja, Roxane Berger, Dellis Frank, Susanne Hannon, Debbie Korbel, Eva Montealegre, Richelle Rich, Leigh Salgado, Hiroko Yoshimoto, and Linda Vallejo.

Among the many standouts are Vallejo’s stunning, large-scale wall sculpture “Golden Earring;” Korbel’s purple hued free-standing sculptural pup, “Baby;” and the lacey insouciance and intricate delicacy of Salgado’s intimate and sensual hand-cut acrylic and paper works.

Frank’s vibrant mixed media found art and textile wall sculptures; and Rich’s astonishing depiction of lushness in “It’s All for You,” also dazzle. Montealegre’s dreamily deep oil paintings, and Davies-Aiyeloja’s acrylic works speak to us of other worlds and magic.

Each artist’s work is as immersive as it is full of spirit-elevating punch. Fuerte translates roughly to strong and sharp, and the images here live up to the title.

A note on The Makery: the gallery consistently offers fresh, unique, and inventive exhibitions. If you haven’t spent the time in this Little Tokyo-adjacent space as yet, you owe it yourself and the art in Los Angeles, to pay a visit. The space also offers rental creative space and a range of membership levels; founding and resident artists Dave Lovejoy, Cathi Milligan, Cathy Immordino, and Richard Chow have shaped a special place.

  • Genie Davis; photos by Genie Davis

Watercolor Magic at TAG

Contemporary watercolor art is on full display during the The Shelley Lazarus Award for Excellence in Watercolor Exhibition now at TAG, The Artists Gallery.

Featuring 30 beautifully wrought paintings chosen by jurors Shelley Lazarus and Sally Lamb from more than 160 submissions made by artists throughout the U.S., the works on display are immersively lovely. Each is a unique example of a delicate, rich, and varied classic medium.

From evocative portraiture to impessionistic street scenes…

From realistic cityscape to desert oasis landscape…

…The exhibition exudes the detail and beauty of a medium that dances on the edge of the ethereal.

This 2nd annual juried exhibition honors both the artists exhibited and Shelley Lazarus, a current and Founding Member of TAG since 1993.

Both a watercolor artist and instructor, Shelley Lazarus is based in LA, with her work represented throughout the U.S. and abroad. She herself is a recent first prize winner at the Santa Monica Mountain Celebration, and the Oklahoma National Watercolor Investment Award, and is a member of the Watercolor Honor Society and a signature member of the Oklahoma National Watercolor Society.

Co-juror Sally Lamb is well-known for her celestially radiant depictions of the Southern California landscape. She is one of six founding members of TAG. Santa Monica-based Lamb is the recipient of the Aimee Bourdieu Award for Watercolor from Women’s Painters West, and has work at major museums and galleries throughout Southern California.

TAG itself has reason to celebrate this splendid new exhibition: the gallery is now entering its 31st year as an artist founded and operated non-profit arts cooperative.

Don’t miss the lush variety of work on display in this splendid selection of watercolors running through March 29th. There will be a reception and awards ceremony on Saturday, March 16 from 5:00 to 8:00 p.m. Lazarus will be on hand to present three cash awards and six Awards of Excellence. Light refreshments will be served.

TAG is located at 5458 Wilshire Blvd. in mid-city, just across the street from and east of LACMA.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the exhibition

Earth & Ember – An Exciting Mini-Survey at CSULA

Southern California in the 1950s- 1960s was ground zero for what became a revolution in ceramics, moving clay away from a strictly functional or decorative medium towards experimental, abstracted sculptural forms that pushed clay from a craft designation to a fine art one. At the helm of this mainly macho movement was the energetic, charismatic Peter Voulkos, who came to ceramics accidentally, after being required to take a ceramic course for his painting degree. Reluctant at first, he immediately fell passionately in love with the versatile, malleable material that is clay. As a popular teacher at Otis, he treated his students as colleagues, threw out any curriculum and encouraged individuality from students John Mason, Ken Price and Ron Nagle – who got rejected from the program but was hired as an assistant anyway, and created a hotbed of artistic activity.

Earth & Ember brings together iconic work by many of the luminaries who contributed to this fertile time in ceramic history and whose work is in the canon. More importantly, this exhibition is really a paean to the teaching artists of the University of California at Berkeley and UCLA, University of Southern California, Otis College of Art and Design, and Chouinard Art Institute.

The show is also tribute to the homegrown ceramics program of California State University, Los Angeles whose alumni’s works are included in the exhibition. It’s a story of affinity and inspiration, starting with Pablo Picasso, who in 1947 began working in clay and created more than 3,500 painted ceramic objects profoundly influencing Peter Voulkos himself.

Picasso’s 1948 ceramic plate “Head Of Faun” (Courtesy of Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation), which is the centerpiece of this exhibit, is a lovely oval platter with Picasso’s hallmark jaunty and expressive line. The plate is embedded in a frame as if it were a painting, playing once more with the blurring of two and three dimensions. Nearby is one of Voulkos’s glazed porcelain plates from 1973, where he characteristically pokes holes and leaves imprints on the wet clay, clearly announcing that this is not a functional plate. John Mason, who at one time designed dinnerware but who is primarily known for his large-scale ceramic sculptures, is represented by a gorgeous series of slab plates, each with a unique geometric edge. The series of “Untitled Relief Plates, #183-186” (2008), seems to reference color field painting and shaped canvases of the 1960s-70s.

Beatrice Wood was one of the few women admitted into the all-boys club and her lusterware vessel “Dancing Ladies” (1982) is intentionally paired with Randall Bruce, who generously loaned the Wood piece from his private collection. Bruce’s “Double Bucket” from 2006 is a combination of wheel thrown and hand-built pieces, lovingly glazed with a metallic glaze. These two works are in conversation about form, function, and mystery. The pairing of Peter Shire’s meticulous whimsical, low-fire, hand- built sculptures alongside Roger Herman’s large scale, wobbly, abstract-expressionist vessels and table, are brilliant. Where Shire uses an underglaze pencil to carefully draw on the flat slab teapot piece entitled “Fallen Idol” (2005), Herman pours and brushes glazes on his vessels “Frog” (2023) and “Untitled” (2020), allowing the glazes to coagulate, run and even flake off. Shire is a multidisciplinary artist whose ceramics and furniture all incorporate the bright colors, jazzy patterns, and geometric shapes of the Italian design group Memphis. Herman, most well known as a neo-expressionist painter before turning to ceramics uses this technique to charming effect.

Thomas Muller’s “a smoke-filled room” from 2017 is a witty conceptual text- based piece, cracked and peeling, and alluding to power brokers who meet in back rooms. The phrase originated in 1920 to describe the process in the Republican National convention nominating Warren G. Harding for president. And of course, clay is also fired – though hopefully not in a smoke -filled room, though the process of Raku firing relies on smoke to create beautiful and accidental surface effects.

The variety and complexity of the techniques exhibited here is staggering, from wheel thrown to slab construction, slip cast assemblages and a combination of wheel thrown and hand-built: the clay and glazes range from secret formulas to commercial ready-made glazes to automotive paint and the clay bodies from low fire to high fire to locally harvested clay. There are too many outstanding pieces, too many compelling ideas explored here to discuss them all.

It’s a great chance to see a wide variety of approaches and works from the intimate to the grand in scale. This is a mini survey show and like a delightful appetizer leaves the viewer wanting more.

Earth and Ember: Ceramic Exhibition
January 22- February 22, 2024
Ronald H. Silverman Fine Arts Gallery
Cal State LA

  • Nancy Kay Turner; photos: Nancy Kay Turner and as provided by the gallery 

 

Exploring the Spiritual Realm at Wonzimer

Curated by Khang B. Nguyen, the just-closed exhibition at Wonzimer Gallery invited viewers to enter a new world of the mystical, spiritual and metaphysical with the exhibition.

A wide range of work from the sculptural to painted images shape an exhibit that looks both ethereal and mysterious. The sculptural work above from Sandeep Mukherjee (pictured with gallerist Alaia Parhezi) serves as an entry portal into a new space and time. Using a retired dancer as his subject, Mukherjee molded his glowingly otherworldly, fossil-like images from light aluminum.

Curator Khang B. Nguyen offers meditative paintings that are layered and complex as in his dimensionally fascinating work below. His sharp use of dimension is at play throughout the curation as well.

Other exhibiting artists include Russell Crotty, Tomory Dodge, Sharon Ellis, Nancy Evans, Lia Halloran, Charles Long, Linn Meyers, Patti Oleon, Lisa Wedgeworth, and Marcus Zuniga.

Summoning the spirit of 13th century Zen master Eihei Dogen, the art is a transformative experience, one that questions and embodies notions of time, space, and spirit, adding in compelling ideas about time and self, consciousness and a realm beyond it. This is a thoughtful and compelling exhibition thematically, with unique and often trippy art works that defy category.

Lia Halloran’s oil on wood spirals evokes an expanding universe…

Marcus Zuniga’s “Chuparosa” is multi-dimentional wall art that fractures and multiplies vision using reflective glass, acrylic, and aluminum.

Charles Long’s surreal and wonderful aluminum sculpture “Endinglessness,” dazzles with shapes rooted in fantasy and dusted with holographic glitter.

Linn Meyers’ large-scale acrylic on linen provides a blissful port of entry to a rift between rock and sky on the gallery’s back wall; while Russell Crotty’s suspended fiber glass sphere “Milky Way Over Hull Mountain,” below, shapes a hypnotic journey into the sky, one that is well-paired with Patti Oleon’s “Blue Circle Lobby.”

Melting with moonlight, Nancy Evans “untitled” acrylic on canvas, below, is a study in motion caught in stillness.

 

Each artist’s work gives out a meaningful vibration of art and spirit, in which the viewer’s “time being” can, at least for a moment, pause and refresh. If you missed entering this beautiful exhibition in person, the exhibition is available for viewing online in 3D on the Wonzimer website.

  • Genie Davis; photos by Genie Davis