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

Layers of Metaphor and Imagery: The Art of Karin Skiba

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Artist Karin Siba offers sensual, deeply resonant images – landscapes, the female face – all are vivid with color, and alive within and through layers. This deeply resonating work feels immediate, vital, and elegaic at the same time. It takes a vivid moment and captures that moment’s emotion.

Skiba says her work reflects an ongoing process of art, one that “evolves as I do, involving layering metaphor and imagery much like all of contemporary life.  It changes and flexes and reflects what I am experiencing as an artist in the world. It is my interpretation of the life I am living. “

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She says “I love fashion photography and it inspires me to make my own fictional portraits of women.  Sometimes I use a photo as a base to do a drawing that turns into a mixed media work. The result is a surprise to me depending on how the work grows and changes under my brush and scissors.” According to the artist “Using a variety of material – old paintings and drawings, magazine clippings, photos – all make for a rich collage of color and shape.  I think fashion is an art form in itself and a great resource of information.”

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“My ‘ecofictional’ landscapes and trees come from my experience with nature, and they usually involve my own photos layered in to give different realities to the finished work.  Architecture is fascinating and makes its way into the work as well,” Skiba explains, adding that photographing areas that have meaning for her and including them in her work adds yet another dimension.

FEATHER TREE 1 Karin Skiba watercolor and mixed media on paper

Each of her works truly grabs the viewer with color, motion, and with its range of material, all of which fits together like the cohesive pieces of a glowing puzzle: photography, prints, painting, drawing.

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She frequently depicts female faces in both her mixed-media work and paintings. To the viewer, her images are both beautiful and mysterious; these faces are lovely yet internal; dream-like.

Many of her paintings feature shades of the color blue taking the place of skin tones. This feels very natural even graceful, and adds to an aura both alluring and enigmatic.

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“I have an instinctual way of working with color. For quite a few years now, I reach for blue to begin a work.  It is comforting to me visually and works well with other colors,” she explains. “I love color in general and playing it against itself or a pure white background. I have a strong design background and making beautiful combinations of color is a natural.”

This intrinsic sense of color has shaped her work regardless of format throughout her work as an artist. In fact, the progression in her art over time has been reflected more in medium than in meaning, Skiba asserts.

LADDERS #2 FOREST MOON 2019 Karin Skiba watercolor and photo collage on paper 22x30

“When I had a retrospective four years ago, I had no idea if the work from all those years would be cohesive,” she laughs. “But when we installed all the pieces covering 40 years, it was great. My style and color sense flowed! My work has changed in format, since I began with soft sculpture I dyed and sewed, then went on to cut out painted wood pieces. These went on to include words, then writing into the paint, then a switch to colored pencil then back to painting.” 

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As to her attraction to photographic images, she says “Photography has been present for many years in my art.  I finally realized my father influenced me in a large way. He was a professional photographer and my favorite memories are watching him work in his darkroom.” She remarks that “Photos inspire me, and I am inspired by my own photos as well. So you will see some reference to photography as a medium on the pieces. Now I am obsessed with paper. Painting on it and cutting it, layering it, is what I am working with.”

Texture is certainly a strong part of all her work; her use of different textures and overlapping images shapes the experience of her art.

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Artist Karin Skiba, above

Having made a move to the high desert also affects her work – its colors, style, and space. She reports that “Living in Joshua Tree has given me the chance to have more time in a great private studio space.  That in itself is giving me freedom to explore more than ever. The art community is lively and I associate with artists more easily since we are all in a reachable area. You can really see here, it is not smoggy, there is a big sky. It seems to open you up to yourself.”

That openness is also visible in her work, which seems ever more expansive, in terms of both subject and approach.

JU JU JUNIPER Karin Skiba mixed media collage on paper

For an upcoming solo show, HABITAT,  her works involve “the concept of habitat or environs, whether residential or emotional. I am planning on using work I have created about Detroit, my home town, that illustrates photos I took there of downtown religious and residential architecture,” Skiba says. “Ohter work reflects the desert and the symboloism it generates.”

The exhibition will include collages that mix with watercolor and drawing.  It opens November 2nd at the historic 29 Palms Art Gallery, originally an adobe home built for Western pulp fiction author Tom Hopkins, located at the Oasis of Mara in Twentynine Palms, next to the Joshua Tree National Park Headquarters. Well worth a drive: enjoy the desert landscape and the internal landscapes of Skiba’s art.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by Karin Skiba

Nurit Avesar: An Abstract Blossoming at Beyond Baroque

At Beyond Baroque through July 28th, Nurit Avesar’s In Your World, gets into your heart.

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The astonishing show is somewhat of a departure for Avesar, who says her work is usually personal in nature.  She describes this current body of work is as being about global warming, and work that addresses universal issues.

“Instead of painting from memory or internal sensibility, I used photos from the news as referances and read a lot about scientific predictions regarding global warming and environmental changes. The current political situation has affected my work a lot, especially the illogical denial of scientific evidence, the clear lack of leadership and greed that influence politicies, and the refusal to address crisises that we are already experiencing, such as fires, floods and devastating storms.” Avesar adds that she finds painting a way to deal with her frustration and anxiety about the looming changes the world faces. “The work is more somber than earlier work and has urgency to it. I hope that by displaying this body of work, it will help create a platform for a larger audience, and bring up the unpleasant conversation about global warming without turning into a personal attack.”

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Avesar’s work has a lustrous and rich quality that draws viewers into a seemingly liquid, motion-filled space. There is a grace and fluidity to her images that transcends the canvas on which she works.

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“My new large work is mostly on unstretched canvas, rather than painted on a stretched canvas. It is presented in less formal way. I find it to be more effective because it is more organic. Also, I have introduced some new materials, such as plastic, and wood branches because of their relation to the subject of the environment.”

 Avesar says she’d like viewers to engage in a coversation about the environment from seeing her work, and on what we as individuals can do to assist the planet. “During the artist talk, people came up with ideas about what we can do to help improve the environment, such as planting gardens, trees, and demanding changes from our elected leaders, especially local ones. I hope that an exhibition like In Your World can bring about the necessary conversation regarding changes in public and political attitude,” Avesar attests.

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The artist says she would like keep  creating work about this subject. “I believe that global warming is the biggest issue we are facing. The need to change our energy sources is immense and will bring political struggle. Not addressing it, aside of the ecological and environmental disaster, will bring about wars, large scale migration, and sufferings. In future exhibitions, I would like to include installations as well.” The textural aspects of this new work adds to the resonance of it; future installations would be even more immersive in nature.

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Her color palette glows and is lush and dense; vivid without being harsh. Avesar says she recently went through several changes which are reflected in her palette. “I moved to the city, and I am affected by the political environment. Those changes are most likely affecting my palette and texture. Also, the subject matter of fires and floods changes my palette.”

The visceral, beautiful work creates a sense of the fraility of our world and it’s resilliance – if art can save us, it can save the world itself. Start with a look a this artist’s layered work.

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Beyond Baroque is located at 681 Venice Blvd., open by appointment and Friday and Saturday, 3-9 and Sunday, 2-5. Free parking. There will be a closing event on Saturday July 27th from 4-6 at the gallery; don’t miss this beautiful and resonant show.

Steve Shriver and Candice Gawne at SoLA: Guest Post from Peter Frank


OBSERVATION(S): STEVE SHRIVER AND CANDICE GAWNE

Guest Post by Peter Frank

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Above: Peter Frank with Steve Shriver

Art is not just about seeing, it is about observing. Whether the artist’s eye is turned outward towards the world or inward towards the self, the art arises from the phenomena, glorious and mundane, that present themselves to attentive vision. Even non-objective or conceptual art begins with a note of some kind, visual or not, that triggers passage down an experiential and expressive path. It may seem obvious that more traditionally pictorial art results from, even seeks to “capture,” observation. But the nature of that observation, allowed its subjectivity, can prove as elusive as it is rich.

That is to ask, is there mystery as well as revelation in the painting of Steve Shriver and Candice Gawne? What is left unseen but still sensed? The two painters are about as far apart stylistically and spiritually as two artists can get (at least within the context of two-dimensional representation). Their modes of observation are polar opposites, Gawne’s a register of the seen-world, a voyage through space and light, while Shriver’s is a fantastical rhapsody on the internal and the external — indeed, on the interplay of personhood and specific location with many stylizing, and culturally self-conscious, tropes.  

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Shriver’s painting over the past two years all stems from a near-fatal accident he suffered while bicycling. On one level the elaborate, icon-like images — and the finely wrought frames and other accoutrements bedecking them — are a simple declaration of thanks to whatever force allowed Shriver not only to survive but to heal back into the artist he had been before. Except that, after such trauma, he couldn’t quite be the artist he was before. Pop irony was not appropriate for an extended (indeed ongoing) reflection on death, but the more exaggerated, yet more sincere, stylizations of lowbrow figuration were. In particular, the culture of the road, a motif central to the mythos of southern California as maintained by its inhabitants, figures in Shriver’s work as an imagined realm as well as a specific site (that site supposedly but not necessarily the location of the accident).

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These images are at once violent and elegant, poised and calamitous, mocking and marveling. Having been there, Shriver knows how elaborate the complexities of personal disaster can be, in its moment no less than in its aftermath. Shriver’s is the PTSD not of the long-term sufferer, but of the ambushed, of the man all of a sudden knocked out of his comfortable life trajectory. These pictures are not exercises in self-pity. (If anything, more than a few of them are self-parodying.) They are not gore tests or macho poses of fury or nonchalance. They are declarations of a lesson learned and they brim with the humility of someone given his body and his life back. With a grandiosity born of relief and amazement they pay homage to the traditions of heraldry as well as to car customizing, mural painting as well as portrait and still life painting, political art as well as religious art. But, florid and dramatic as they can get, their energy seems to come from within and gather what’s out there — and to react from within a once-broken body to the mystery of life. Having observed his own dying, Shriver now observes his own living.

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Gawne is awed less by such metaphysical apprehension than by its purely optical manifestation. She has become enthralled by light itself, its ability to hover seemingly in the eye, the contradictory conditions it sets up that at once shatter and build objects and surfaces, mass and movement. Gawne celebrates light — or, if you would, color — for its own sake the way Monet and Seurat and Balla did a century or more ago, as a radiant force that embraces, formulates, and pulverizes the observed world. Gawne regards the seen world not simply as the result of invisible sub-atomic particles in motion, in compliance with the concepts of quantum energy, but as the embodiment of that motion, a dynamic ongoing demonstration of the buzz at the heart of the universe, a buzz that is observable. Perhaps, her work posits, art’s purpose is to make the invisible visible — even as the eye admits its own myriad shortcomings.

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Gawne brings the sub-observable universe to observable levels by giving the eye, that most inefficient of human organs, the opportunity to indulge itself. Whatever it wants to see amidst the flood of light, Gawne allows, even encourages, it to see. Rich in detail as her intimately scaled paintings are, they allow the eye to rest on blank passages as well as articulated, open fields of color as well as intricate chiaroscuro, stretches of abstraction containing, commingling, or separating figures and objects and portals and spaces so that we read her pictures as human and, at the same time, painterly events. Refraction is the steady state here: Gawne suspends her moments at a crucial point of observation, that point where the eye passes rapidly from dark to light or vice versa and shifts temporarily into a state of sun-white blindness or “visual purple.”

19" x 15" framed encaustic
19″ x 15″ framed encaustic

What Candice Gawne does looks hardly at all like what Steve Shriver does. Both paint, both reference the human figure, both fundamentally rely on concentrated observation to derive the images they depict. But, as noted, each does so to an end entirely foreign to the other. Gawne looks outward, Shriver in. And, notably, Gawne addresses space with light while Shriver addresses time — a fateful moment and its lasting effect — with graphic symbology. Still, both artists rely on deep, abiding observation, manifesting what they see and know with deep conviction, and without resort to the literal. That avoidance of the merely seen, and that conviction about the subjectivity of vision, create a mystery where our eyes can see what they normally don’t — or can’t.

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Steve Shriver, gallerist Peggy Silvert Zask, Candice Gawne

  • Peter Frank; images provided by SoLA