Black is Back – at Loft at Liz’s

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With the stunning group show Black, at Loft at Liz’s through March 26th, the color glows, shines, and spills texture. Curated by gallery owner Liz Gordon, the exhibition reveals the ways in which this color is not just one rich, dark shade, but an entire palette of blackness, nuanced and thought-provoking.

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Like the spill of ink or a shimmering backdrop to stars, there is a wonderfully vast feeling to the work on display; in fact there is so much wonderful art that it spreads beyond the main gallery into a small section of Liz’s Antique Hardware store on the floor below.

This is the black of coffee, of night, of puddles, of lightless woods, of just-about-morning, of rain storms with thick clouds, of those perfect cocktail party dresses, of contrast – with pops of gold, red, and white. It is ice caves and moonless midnights, the bottom of a well, the ash from a fire.

You won’t know just how black and how varied black can be until you take in this show.

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Kelly Berg’s  sculptural wall art uses shards of mirror and plexiglass creating shining, physically and emotionally sharp works that remind one of chunks of hail, ice, or broken glass stabbing through the blackness; Berg also offers additional sculptural pieces which weave in color that reference the fashion industry, shoes and purses.

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Carlos Grasso’s mixed media works are a fascinating study in textural contrast, as are the volcanic, molten, obsidian-like works of Jeff Iorillo.

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Michael Hayden’s encaustics fall into a different sphere, layered, with  a golden, horizon-like light weaving in gold leaf and salvage.

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Veda B. Kaya creates swirling, abstract images in white and orange on her oil and acrylic works, patterns that evoke snowflakes and shimmer with both surface and hidden light.

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Andy Moses, also working in oil and acrylic, gives viewers large scale works with black backgrounds against which hypnotic white and blue patterns seem to move, slowly, to the viewers eye, as if they were ice flows.

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Lindsey Noble makes a pointed reference to the energy devoured by the cryptocurrency industry in her series of ribbed and webbed works, and in taking on that industry also evokes some of its shadowy, dark, deep beneath the ground “mining.”

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Miguel Osuna offers stunning textures, and in “Difficult Pleasure,” a rose pattern within his midnight black works.

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This is dizzying, fabric-like, highly textured work you could sink inside.

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Red and white faces and bodies pop like vampires or creatures born in darkness within Stefano Panichi’s large scale black backgrounds.

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And then there are the seductive and sinuous sculptural limbs created by Camilla Taylor. Cast from stoneware, lino-cut, ceramics and pewter, these are powerful pieces, haunting, dismembered, burnt, scarred, redeemed.

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This is a poetic and beautiful show, one that somehow, almost magically, carries the viewer deep within the heart of blackness, making viewers forget – or realize the fallacy of – the monochromatic color scheme.

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Above, Liz Gordon, curator and gallerist.

Black is back indeed – riven with passion – or perhaps it never left. It’s bold, it’s big, it’s gotta be seen.

Loft at Liz’s is located at 453 S. La Brea in mid-city.

  • Genie Davis; Photos by Genie Davis; additional photos: Carlos Grasso and Michael Hayden

 

 

Kim Kimbro: Magical Realism in Briar Rose or The Faerie’s Revenge

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The delicate beauty of Kim Kimbro’s work is never to be taken for granted.

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Her stunning depictions of creatures large and small: birds, polar bears, deer, horses – have, in this exhibition, just closed at Los Angeles Art Association, moved her intensely realistic yet undoubtedly magical and emphatic work to new subjects: humans.

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These particular humans are poised on a cusp of discovery, children approaching puberty, adolescents clinging to childhood and innocence and a pure belief in magic by a linear thread.

They are all soul, with backgrounds a delicate, luminous wash of color, in most cases indistinct. The central image of these children outgrowing childhood – yet retaining its beauty and freshness – remains the focus, both realistic and impressionistic, a web of color and light radiating from rosy skin and just out of sight.

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Whether swaddled in the cocoon of a down coat like an emerging butterfly; or shyly profiled in a gauzy dress with other dresses hanging in the background – choices, so many choices ahead – these beautiful, magical creatures, sleeping beauties about to emerge into the full, raw bloom of life, are memorably lovely and graceful.

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And yet, not quite among us, yet. Hiding an eye in a visual hide and seek with the viewer; floating against a sunrise-pink, suspended, sleeping, adrift; both considering and considered —  these images are magnetically potent.

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Kimbro’s work is finely attuned to both nature and the spirit – if there is a difference between the two, and the artist’s work infers that there may not be.

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It is life itself that she is celebrating, and the magic that makes it real.

Her work is a joy to see.

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Above, the artist with her own family of graceful, growing children.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Genie Davis

 

 

4Play: Sex in a Series at Actors Company

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Through March 17th at the Actors Company in West Hollywood, the immersive experience of 4Play: Sex in a Series is not to be missed.

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This bittersweet comedy/drama traces the relationship ups and downs of three couples: two gay men struggling to say the word “love;” two lesbian women, one of whom has just “discovered” she likes women, and has now fallen in love; and one heterosexual couple – the male half of which is casting and producing and performing a play, whose lines we see rewritten, and whose production performance also in seen. Into this lively mix on stage we have a note-taking assistant director/narrator; a vibrant musical performance, and the arrival of an all-too-knowing kid-sister.

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Stage is loosely said: we were excited to see the concept, which premiered on Valentine’s Day, took place on the primarily imagined set, on a series of riders and on the main floor among the audience members. A series of tables and stools are set up in the center of the room, which doubles as bar and disco and restaurant for the performers as well as seating for the audience; other audience seating is set up on benches along one wall. It’s exciting to be so intimately involved in the production – and the characters’ lives. During a climactic dinner party, hors d’oeuvres and drinks were handed to members of the audience.

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In short, this is truly theater as experience; but in no way does that experiential nature diminish the sharpness of writing, performance, and direction.

The acting is terrific, featuring Ariana Anderson, Graham Brown, Bevin Bru, Eve Danzeisen, Zoe Simpson Dean, Marian Frizelle, Dustyn Gulledge, Lara Helena, Kailin Large, Zoquera Milburn, Cameron J. Oro, Christi Pedigo, Krisin Racicot, Kelsey Risher, Robert Walters, and Dan Wilson. Presented by the new York theater ensemble trip, the play had hit runs in NYC and in Chicago before coming here. The smart, savvy, funny, and perfectly paced, edgy dialog was written by Graham Brown (who also directs) with Nathan Faudree and Lisa Roth.

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Touching, heartfelt, and exuberant, this is the story of love in the city, with sex just the excuse love needs to get under your skin.

4PLAY: SEX IN A SERIES  at The Actor’s Company located at 916 A North Formosa Avenue in Los Angeles; performances run Thursdays and Saturdays. For reservations, call (800) 838-3006 or visit http://www.theactorscompanyla.com/

Fire in Diversity: Charisse Abellana Blazes Her Own Way

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The thick paint and vibrant colors of Charisse Abellana’s palette knife work burn with her passion for art and for life.  Fire in Diversity, Abellana’s solo show at the Latino Art Museum in Pomona,  opening March 10th, offers a wide variety of the artist’s lush, rich works.

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Abellana primarily paints images of nature, flowers that are fecund and bursting with beauty. The petals feel touchable and tactile, the blooms seem to plunge from the canvas, aching to break free of the surface that constrains them.

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The artist also offers still-life images that are restrained and measured, yet vibrate with the same seductive color palette and textured paint that make the viewer imagine the scenes mutating into action. It is as if Abellana had created a film and “paused” the image, and viewers could at any moment expect the artist to press “play” once again.

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It is this compelling quality of motion, in the light that illuminates her blossoms, in the poised perfection of her fruits and plates and tea cups -that elevate the artist’s work with passion.

Abellana is nothing if not passionate, and exuberant.

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“Life is upon us today and our tomorrow is born from our now…let us make …an indelible mark…my indelible mark is my art,” she enthuses.

She is also a keen observer of the world around her, the colors that flicker in nature, the shadows and shifts.

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“Perception is everything. Perception is how an individual sees one’s self as good or bad, kind or evil, a victim or a survivor, a success or a failure,” she notes.

As a first generation immigrant with a Filipino and Spanish heritage, Abellana is driven to excel in the present and preserve the richness of her past. The artist first taught herself to draw by tracing the imprint of her father’s fashion drawings at age 4; always fiercely driven, she’s painted professionally since 2002,  and in the past two years renewed her commitment to her art, through which she expresses her most personal emotions.

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She posits the question “How could a flower or a pear be a picture of past pain, past struggle?” and answers herself with “…it is that thick palette knife stroke of the boldest colors of paint that is the expression of … fire!”

Abellana’s glowing, fully realized floral depictions exude life, which for the artist means that her works are intense, freeing, and rebellious.  She believes that an artist needs both passion and pain to create. She’s chosen to be bold and free, she says, where others would hold back.

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Working with a palette knife is an intrinsic part of her process, one in which “you never know if the next stroke will make or break a painting.”

She says she loves working with a knife – one gets the impression that she loves the challenge, the decisiveness, and the boldness of her technique. She was moved to adapt knife work after traveling in Peru and observing the techniques of a working artist there.

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Abellana says each knife stroke can have an unexpected result, and that sense of surprise and wonder is one that she embraces. “There is always that moment of emotional upheaval every time I put a stroke.”

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Working in oils, her layered knife technique creates a kind of sculptural and dimensional element to her images. She paints the sides of her canvases, creating a complete art work from all angles. The artist works by painting wet on wet with her oils. And as to her colors: she’s trained to mix her own, and can imagine any rainbow of combinations and translate her vision to the canvas via her fast flying knife, her elegant thrusts shaping images that offer delight, dreaminess, and yes, fire.

Catch the warm glow for yourself March 10th, when Abellana’s solo show reception takes place from 4 to 9 p.m. Curated by Dulce Stein, the exhibition runs through March 30th,  and is on display at the museum’s Grand Salon West.

The Latino Art Museum is located at 281 S. Thomas St., Suites 104 and 105 in Pomona. The exhibition is a part of the 14th annual Women International Show.

Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist