Alice Esposito Focuses on Connection

As photographic artist Alice Esposito’s work evolves, she is focusing on evocative portraiture and scene. Noting that connection has always been an important element of her photography, she says that she rarely photographs her subjects without having a conversation with them first.

“I want to understand the person I’m about to photograph, their mannerisms, their posture, their passion, their happiness and their sadness,” she says.

As has been the case for many of us, the pandemic changed many of the ways in which she connected to people. “Being immune compromised, I had to isolate myself for almost two years, and my photography paid the price for this lack of connection.  Once I was able to pick up my camera again, I noticed that my photographic process changed with me… I decided to dig dipper into my fears and the sense of solitude, nostalgia and belonging, and the result were darker images.”

Esposito also decided to simplify her photographic techinque, now utilizing only a single light and less equipment, creating work that was more about ambience and mood.

“When you understand the soul, the essence of a person, it becomes easy to capture their attitude and presence with the camera, and the absence of light instead of the abundance gave me the perfect set up to do so,” she relates.

The artist is currently working on two different projects, one a research documentary concerning religious rituals and the other focusing on reflections.

Travel and experiencing a variety of cultures are both intrinsic parts of her research documentary projects. “I am only going to bring my Rolleiflex film camera with me. I intend to minimize my equipment as much as possible and try to remain anonymous. This camera gives me the perfect tool do to so.”

She eschews a current photographic approach that utilizes big cameras, lenses, and flashes, as well as social media hype.

“Shooting with the Rolleiflex forces me to look down as if I’m bowing or praying and therefore paying my respect to the people in front of me,” she says, something that should work well for her in regard to her religious subject. “People will always be the center of my work, but I’m trying to remain in the shadows and let the photograph speak for itself.”

Her second project, Reflections, will be realized in part through creating a small, dark, and private portrait studio. “The idea is always for me to disappear and let the subject feel relaxed enough to engage with atmosphere and create their comfort zone, instead of me trying to to do it as in the past. I give the person in front of me full freedom of expression, no forced pose, just the freedom to act.”

Esposito is simplifying her work overall, with one camera, one light, and one set up. Her goal is to let her subjects dictate and play in the studio or whatever location she and they choose. “They will be the actors and I’ll be the audience following their process, observing and experience their journey, and how they connect to the environment surrounding them.” She says she is looking forward to seeing how this new approach will change her photography and her world view.

She attests that she wants her photography to be “polite and respectful, not abraisive or forceful.  I want to be a silent observer, and let the world show me the beauty of it instead of forcing my view on others.”

While acknowledging her presence will always be a part of the images she creates she wants to “feel surprised and be there to catch the moment.”  Her artistic expression is focused on meeting and working with others who have experienced a journey similar to her own and reaching beyond her own comfort zones to use different media in new locations. She attests that she is not “trying to force myself to have ideas or create specific projects. I’m letting my emotion and my passions dictate the next step.”

Esposito herself, above

This is a new approach for Esposito. According to the artist, “Usually I need to be able to control every aspect of my work. I’m always extremely organized in every aspect of my work in every detail. Now,  I’m trying to let it go and be more spontaneous and let others and the world surprise me.”

  • Genie Davis; images provided by the artist

Design This For Some Holiday Cheer

If you’re looking for something a bit more mellow than spiked egg nog for the holidays – or to chill with on a bright New Year’s night, THC Design may have just what you’re looking for.  As a premium cannabis cultivator, THC Design offers estate grown, single-sourced flower for a wide variety of brands. Environmentally aware, the company utilizes advanced cultivation practices and techniques to achieve self-sustainable operation and renewable energy resources. Using integrated pest management, water reclamation techniques, LED lighting, and renewable energy, THC Design’s goal is to be the first company to be carbon-neutral and climate positive in the indoor cannabis industry.

Of course, the products themselves are just as carefully curated as the growing process and the company’s environmental awareness. Committed to the science behind cannabis, THC Design is working to identify the roles of not only THC and CBD but  the dozens of other therapeutic compounds in cannabis, developing plants that provide a premium product and can more accurately treat disease and ailments. Shifting away from THC percentages to a more balanced and intuitive view of the ways different cannabis chemotypes affect different people, the company is committed to helping people thrive – not just mellow out.

Among the company’s offered cannibis products are indica strains, recommended for relaxation, pain management, inflammation, and anxiety relief. The effects are relaxing and sedative, and include signature strains such as the Garlic Cocktail, a cross of GMO and Mimosa strains offering “earthy notes of clove, anise and orange-tangerine-citrus finish.”

The company cites this strain as “perfect…for pain relief and inflmmation without the typical sedative qualities of most indica-dominant strains” for a relaxing but not sleep-inducing chill experience. Another signature cultivator is Confidential OG, an Indica cross of LA Confidential x OG Bubba Kush. With δ-Limonene, β-Caryophyllene, and Linalool as its dominant terpenes. Citrus notes meet classic Kush dankess and a potency level of 30-36% THC, making it an excellent choice to alleviate symptoms of anxiety, depression, inflammation, and acute pain.

Our sampler tried both pre-roll and flower from the Sativa strains, considered excellent for symptoms of depression, stress, fatigue, loss of appetite, and pain relief and well as enhancing creativity. The strain sampled was Crescendo, smooth and mellow, mentally activating rather than intoxicating. Providing a bright lemony finish with an earthy, spicy pine taste befitting the holiday season, the strain offers a THC level of between 30-35%. Among the other Sativa strains availabe are Orange Creamsicle, Gelatti Cake, and Lime Slurps.

Prefer a mix of sativa and indica effects? Hybrid cannabis products include strains such as Purple Punch and Wedding Cake. Hybrids are often able to promote feelings of contentment and happiness for relaxation and contentment; and, one of the more beneficial hybrid strain effects is an increase in creativity.

 

With over 150 different strains in their genetic library, THC Design truly provides high quality flower available as pre-rolls, eighth jars, and buds. The company is the proud recipient of two High Times Cannabis Cups, and voted Best Pre Roll in California by Weedmaps and LA Weekly, also winning multiple Farmers Cup awards. They have a menu of five permanent strains, and regularly rotate through limited edition drops as well.

Overall assessment: THC Design offers beautifully packaged, carefully cultivated cannabis and provides recommendations for strains based on user needs. The company offers products locally through a range of distributors in the SoCal area, including Greenwolf in Los Feliz, New Age Care Center in South Los Angeles, Sweet Flower in the Arts District, and Dr. Greenthumb in Lincoln Heights among other locations. Their products are also available through many delivery services from Long Beach to West LA to Central California and Sacramento. Delivery was fast, efficient, and friendly to our location in the South Bay.

Happy Holidays – and mellow ones, too.

  • Genie Davis; images provided by THC Design

 

Uli Boege – The Retrospective of a True Original

One of the most inventive and original exhibitions in LA is up through January 6th at Loft at Liz’s in mid-city. Entelechies: The Art of Uli Boege is wide ranging in medium and visionary in context, as he explores the relationship between humans and nature, civilization itself, and the role playing by women in family life and culture.

Boege’s retrospective explores a vast range of mediums from stained glass to paintings, from collage to inkblot and an utterly unique form of terrazzo art, above. The art exhibited stretches from 1960 to 2020, and as mysteriously wonderful as much of the work is, its message is clean, powerful and persuasive.

“Whatever we do in life, to get a perfect result, is to collaborate with nature on a 50/50 level,” Boege says, noting that from our political ills to climate change and horrors of war, our lack of cooperation with nurturing earth, the earth mother, the female aspect of all nature, is creating the chaos all too visible in the world. He asserts that “this contempt for everything female and nature morphed in a symbiotic denial of our shared reality, smothered by war, addiction, and consumption…”

But there’s a way to put humankind on the right track, Boege asserts. One of the potential therapeutic tools that the artist suggests is creating figurative inkblot paintings, a technique which he has mastered on an epic scale in his Amazonas series. Boege insists that we are “all artists by nature….every inkblot painting is a yin yang masterpiece,” one that allows creators to experience the sensation of “giving birth to a real person,” which will “reconnect us to our long lost and denied love for ourselves.”

While creating work designed to reintroduce us to our spiritual selves – and inviting men to celebrate rather than deny what Boege views as the importance of the female, the artist also strongly condemns the negative institutions of right-wing politics, the hierarchy of the Catholic church, and the corruption of nationalism.

Weighty as these subjects sound, in Boege’s masterful grasp, they become playful and joyous, his way of making dark profundity transform itself into the light. Visually, he sees himself as “the legitimate continuation of Jackson Pollock…we are both action painters, with the difference that I add a narrative…”

For the viewer, this translates into fifty years of evolutionary work in which each differing medium used by Boege takes one into a new artistic chapter, all with an underlying theme that celebrates life, of which the female is an intrinsic core element of life’s creation.

Boege is undoubtedly influenced deeply by his fraught upbringing during World War II, witnessing first-hand the destruction of Dresden. His early years were marked by the inhumanity of men, an impression he carries with him to this day, and which he carried through studies in France to art exhibitions in NYC in the 60s. It was there that he created well-received collage art, while working as the first graphic design director for Essence magazine.

Upon moving to LA, he began working in his unusual form of terrazzo that utilizes plastic as its base, creating a smooth surface that is at once both liquid and deep.

Boege has also made vibrant stained glass lights featuring lush images of nature.

But today, his focus is on his inkblot paintings, in which Boege draws half of a figurative image, then folds the canvas he has painted on to create a second half through a natural process. He is drawn to not knowing what the final result will be, but says he is assured by nature itself, as well as the result of his creative process, that the paintings will be, in their own way, perfect.

The medium in short, to quote Marshall McLuhan, is the message. In his large-scale inkblot on canvas, “Election Night,” he uses red, blue, and black ink to create an image of “mom,” undoubtedly mother earth herself, on a crucifix, while both blue and red factions wave flags at her feet, as if celebrating her demise.

In “Two Me,” inkblot acrylic on canvas, two images of a beautiful young woman mirror each other in an expression of wonder, with a yin-yang symbol suspended between them.

“Home Sweet Home” on the other hand, gives us a figure behind bars, clutching them, mouth open and angry, while “Sadu,” is a solemn forceful being, balancing two globes, one in each hand.

The reverent “Amazonia with Infant” speaks for itself, an elegant woman holding her baby safely in her hands.

 

And the gestational red and black inkblot “Vetruvian Wombman alias Brunhilde” is reminiscent in design and title of course of Leonardo Da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man.”

 

The exhibition is filled with these impressive, enormous canvasses, with the most impressive of all the sculptural creation from them, a multi-sided panoply of ink blot beings displayed in the center of the main gallery. Off to the side are several of the luminous stained-glass art lamps Boege has created and vibrant lush depictions of nature that are sensually shaped and potent.

The project room contains a series of the artist’s jewel-like terrazzo art works – he has also made furniture from his terrazzo materials In “Girl Riding A Hoop,” the figure is a lovely sea green, the hoop itself a mesmerizing spiral. This piece, and the body of Boege’s terrazzo wall sculptures, recall both ancient Greek and Roman artworks and the Art Deco era of the 1920s. The artist’s work here utilizes terrazzo, marble, turquoise, and carnival glass.

The exhibition also features a variety of paintings, and in a briefer tribute to his earliest fine art, there are fluid examples of the artist’s collages, delicate in line and gracefully nuanced, and also recalling Art Deco styling.

As curator Monique Birault says, “Uli is an inventor. He can’t just be a ‘maker’ repeating or copying processes, he creates his own language and invents new ways of shaping his art – it’s his way of giving birth.”

She adds that “Uli’s voice is that of one of the few artists left alive and producing art born under Germany’s falling bombs. I became committed to helping him bring his vision to life in this exhibit before we no longer have access to him and other voices of his time and experience. He wants to teach others to carry on what he has developed. That is a gift, one that opens a creative door, even after the exhibition ends.”

The show runs through January 6th; Loft at Liz’s will be closed from December 24 until January 2nd, so do mark your calendars for the final week of this inventive exhibition.

  • Genie Davis; photos by Genie Davis and provided by Monique Birault

 

Carols By Candlelight – Pacific Chorale Offers Stunning Music and Setting

Held at Our Lady Queen of Angels in Newport Beach, the Pacific Chorale’s performance of Carols By Candlelight was the perfect embodiment of all that is beautiful about this holiday season.

Under the skilled guidance of artistic director and conductor Robert Istad and assistant conductor Kibsaim Escarcega, the twenty-four members of the Chorale presented a lovely, moving, and ambitious program that did not disappoint. Musical accompaniment by Jung-A Lee on the church’s magnificent organ and David Clemensen on piano were both perfect.

The 75-minute concert began with the Chorale positioned in the church center and side aisles, with the prelude “In dulci jubilo” and a medley of “Away in the Manger,” before moving to the performance space in the front of the altar.  From start to finish, the voices soared and spun their acoustic magic.

Live Performance

With the enormous organ pipes and soaring church ceiling as a backdrop, the chorale proceeded through a wonderfully varied set that included several musical choices that allowed audience sing-along on certain verses, including “The First Nowell” and “Silent Night.”

Live Performance

Among the many highlights were a delightful version of the traditional Scottish folk melody “Auld Lang Syne (1788),” featuring mezzo-soprano Emily Border, and a fabulously moving, serene piece Taylor Scott Davis’ “Solstice (2020)” followed by the haunting “Come Healing,” featuring sopranos Rebecca Hasquet and Joslyn Sarshad, mezzo-soprano Denean R. Dyson, and David Clemensen on piano.

The concluding “Dona Nobis Pacem,” featuring mezzo-soprano Stephanie Shepson and baritone Matthew Kellaway was truly memorable, soaring, emotional, and profound. The audience was appropriately reverent when listening to such a graceful rendition of a lustrous work.

While singling out these beautiful works, that is not to give short shrift to the rest of the fine program that included the joy of watching the entire program by candlelight; several works accompanied by Chorale members on guitar; and a bevy of musical works that also included Herbert Howells’ “A Spotless Rose,” a moving arrangement of “Angels We Have Heard On High” by Benjamin Harlan, Nico Muhly’s “Magnificat from First Service,” and Peter Phillips’ “Christmas motet O Beatum et Sacrosanctum Diem.” The entire program was a true delight to hear and see. The Chorale is both beautifully voiced and exudes palpable joy when performing the music.

Coming up this coming Monday the 18th, you have another quite different chance to see the Chorale perform this time a family-friendly program, Tis the Season! at Costa Mesa’s Segerstrom Center for the Arts. Joining the choir for this performance will be the Southern California Children’s Chorus, members of Pacific Symphony, and The Man in Red himself, Santa Claus.

Carols By Candlight was an enormously uplifting and joyous evening of great music and visual beauty. Be sure to add this annual event to your must-do list in the future, and take in the Pacifc Chorale’s rich vocal oeuvre whenever and wherever you’re able.

  • Genie Davis; photos in gallery, Genie Davis; images throughout the story provided Courtesy of Pacific Chorale