Trio of Delights at KP Projects

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What is one gallery with an incredible fan following, one worth braving the crowds on opening night to view stunning exhibitions? That would be KP Projects, and as an extra incentive, upstairs is the smaller and equally well curated Launch.

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Above, Edward Walton Wilcox creates spooky, light drenched abstracts that resemble chandeliers or crowns lit with candles. Melting, thrumming with color, and with a dimensional aspect that makes the work seem to leap off the wall, Wilcox creates a memorable signature look in this exhibition, Haunted.

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The Rube-Goldberg contraptions and fascinating visual play of Wendy Marvel & Mark Rosen’s Momentoscope led viewers into a miniature wonderland of animated magic. Combining marvels of engineering and steam punk design with a richly voluptuous landscape of images is no mean feat.

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Hope Kroll’s delicate, disembodied visuals in her Looks Good on Paper created the perfect contrast, with images as layered and connected, as ritualistic and divine as they are surreal homages to life itself.

We are offering up this review a tad late, post closing, but just in time for a new opening at the gallery, on Saturday October 8th. Surely you’ll want to join us in exploring these works:

TRAVIS LOUIE – VIEWS FROM A NETHERWORLD (MAIN GALLERY)

SALLY DENG – WOMEN WORK (SQUARE GALLERY)

and don’t forget to check out the always innovative and exciting works one floor above, at Launch. Both galleries are located mid-city at 170 S. La Brea Ave.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke

 

Groundspace Explores Fantastic Feminist Figuration

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Above: artists and curators at Groundspace.

Closing with an artist talk on October 8th, Fantastic Feminist Figuration offers the stellar work of seven SoCal artists, all female, all unique in their perspective on women, humankind, and yes, figures. Be sure to catch this beautiful show, well-curated by Betty Brown and Wendy Sherman at Groundspace in DTLA.

The artists: Jodi Bonassi, Bibi Davidson, Enzia Farrell, Laura Larson, Deirdre Sullivan-Beeman, Tslil Tsemet, and Lauren YS weave a tapestry of often magical properties, depicting women, children, animal muses and familiars, the feminine as a force both powerful and persuasive.

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Jodi Bonassi’s complex, incredibly riveting universe of characters spill from their canvasses. “I’ve been working ten hours a day, for two days at a time not sleeping for months now creating these pieces,” Bonassi relates. “The smaller pieces I used my sketches. Each person depicted is not just one photo reference, it is a mixture of people, and some live sketching, some photography. My pieces are all about the experience, the communal exhcnage that happens with people,” she explains. “They’re about the convesrations that happen and the stories people tell you. Paintings are a free hand stream of consciousness.”

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In “Monkey Business,” Bonassi represents “the inner work of how people are communicating” with her charming depictions of friends in the art community.

In “Small Ones,” Bonassi bases her work on a real life encounter with children eating ice cream. She asked their parents permission to include them in a photograph on which she based her work. “There were in real life questionable guys on the corner, the homeless. I integrated that with the children. With alien scared monkeys and a clown with a knife, with animals that look violent and represent people.”

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In her “Edge of the World,” the animal/human imagery blends together, creating both loving and fearsome analogies to the precarious state of our present environment. In this large, oceanic-themed painting, Bonassi expresses her “feelings that come from our current election, from bitory, from being led down a river of uncertainty. Women are on the crossroads, on the edge of the world.”

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Bibi Davidson’s bright and bold colors stand out in her signature style, presenting her own frequent persona, The Girl in paintings with razor sharp looks and plenty of passion. Owls, rabbits, women – each are totemic figures, icons in a way. Davidson says her work depicts this sentiment “It’s so hard to be a woman, but thank God I am a woman and not a man.”

Enzia Ferrel’s paintings take Edgar Allan Poe and turn the stories into feminist fantasies, surreal and riveting, with animal friends passing into an ethereal other-world, and imparting their spirits here.

The bronze sculptures of Laura Larson depict animal figures at a funeral. Their beloved, perhaps human, has passed on and yet remains as a kind of counterpart to Ferrel’s take on the afterlife, to comfort. Perfectly shaped, the pieces are weighty and charming at the same time.

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Tslil Tsemet’s work features snakes, breasts, cats, and sunlight – icon-like images that serve as totems against the vicissitudes of modern life.

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Dierdre Sullivan-Beeman dreamy aesthetic binds humans and animals in her paintings crafted in “14th century oil and tempera mixed technique. I play off feminine innocence, and mix realistic ideology,” she asserts.

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Her “Zebra Girl” is a very female take on Greek centaurs. Her “Balloon Girl” is, she says, “about dharma, the path… as opposed to karma.” Style and subject fuse into a mix of classic style and colors with a modern and subversive aesthetic.

Lauren YS’s watercolor, acrylic, and ink pieces have a dark underbelly poised on the edge of the magical, with skeletons and witch-like women taking viewers into yet another aspect of magic, dark and rich. There’s an interestingly surreal, fairy-tale like look to her work.

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Regardless of the differences in their works, each of these artists presents a strong female sensibility, a connectedness to earth, light, darkness, magic, fate, roads traveled and those not taken, friendship, connection and alienation. In short: the humane experience embraced by the feminine divine.

Curator’s Talk/Closing Reception on Saturday, October 8 from 4-6 p.m.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Jack Burke

 

Disruptively Tasty Blueberry Toast at the Echo Theater

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We had a sense of what to expect from Mary Laws’ Blueberry Toast, at the Echo Theater through October 29th. Laws, after all, is a writer for the incredibly dark, subversive, yet exceedingly well-written Preacher on AMC. Comic-book based characters and taste for the very morbid are a highlight of her work on that show – and morbid events and humor are also a keynote of Blueberry Toast.

The four character play also has a bit of a comic-book sensibility, with its candy-colored suburban set, it’s broadly drawn characters who are certainly not the cheerful mom, dad, and two kids contingent they appear when first on-stage.

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Directed by Dustin Wills,  the play is as scabrous as it is hilarious, the tale of disgruntled Walt (Albert Dayan), a middle school poetry teacher; his long-suffering and deeply angry wife, Barb (Jacqueline Wright), and their two children, Jack (Michael Sturgis) and Jill (Alexandra Freeman), who are hell-bent on performing a bizarre play within the play for their parental audience.

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The action gets started when Barb offers to make the likely having-an-affair and anxious to get on with it Walt breakfast. He says blueberry toast, she makes it, he says he meant blueberry pancakes, and a power struggle ensues with drastic and bloody results.

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Splaying their vitriol everywhere they can, the adults make love, war, and twisted commentary their compulsions; the kids are clearly twisted in their own way from their exposure to mama and papa’s war.

Fresh and crazy, shocking and idiosyncratic, Blueberry Toast entertains in a vibrantly depraved fashion, encouraging the audience to immerse themselves in a world all the more bleak for its sunshiny set and seemingly comfortable middle class home.

 

Both brutal and highly amusing, this is one piece of toast audiences will enjoy crunching, while delighting in the fact that whatever dysfunction they may have in their own home lives, it ain’t nothing like this.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the Echo Theater.

After It Happened – Invertigo Dance Theatre Thrills

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Los Angeles contemporary dance company Invertigo Dance Theatre is awe-inspiring. With sinuous movements that seem to defy gravity and the human body, an enthralling flow of dance and a testament to the human spirit ignites audiences in After It Happened.

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Choreographed and directed by artistic director Laura Karlin, the beautiful, poignant story of the aftermath of a natural disaster is a vibrant and involving 90 minute performance that’s truly a must-see. Playing at the newly re-opened Ford Theaters on Cahuenga September 30th only,  After It Happened will also be performed in Santa Barbara October 22 and 23 and is well worth the drive.  We saw the dress rehearsal tonight, and were as blown away as if a hurricane or tidal wave had carried us.

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Originally sold out when performed in 2014 (see photo directly above), the production chronicles what occurs in a community as it rebuilds following an unspecified natural disaster. The community is near the sea – awash in blue light, with fishing, boating, and triumphant performer/waves appearing at certain points in the production.

Even during light-heartened moments there is a tinge of deep seated sorrow underpinning the often-ecstatic choreography, as this isolated community turns to its own members for the strength to rise again.

Artistic director Karlin wrote the story as well as creating the dances through which its told – in what she describes as “an intensely collaborative” effort.

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The piece opens with the occurrence of the disaster, moves through clean-up, disaster-porn tourism, robbery out of hunger, the rise – and fall – of dictatorship, rebuilding, illness, and the memories nearly lost in the terrible destruction of a place that was once home. Ending with a spirit of renewal and rebirth for the devastated community, the performance is nothing if not redemptive; both story and choreography are transformative.

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This is the second piece I’ve seen from Invertigo, the first being last year’s relationship story,  Reeling. Like Reeling, the production is an incredibly intense, truly jaw-dropping spectacle of human movement, one that wrings emotion from viewers and serves up inspiration to compensate. To create the living sculptural art that are these dancers bodies is no small feat, to infuse this performance art of the highest order with such heartfelt, political and emotional substance is rare indeed.

But above all, Invertigo offers pure pleasure: through modern, eclectic dance, contemporary live music and song, imaginative costumes and set design. As a side note,  John Burton, the company’s set designer worked with the community at large and CAFAM in the creation of collaborative set pieces such as a tree that grows and blossoms in the back of the stage.

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And beyond the wonder that Invertigo shapes, there is the fact that the company supports such terrific causes. Invertigo offers engagement programs such as Invert/ED youth education and Dancing Through Parkinson’s. “We believe in empowering people through the creative process ,and the idea that dance is for everybody and every body,” Karlin has said.

As to After It Happened, the performance is an experience – of heart and soul, mind and body. The compact, rehabilitated Ford amphitheater setting adds to the vibrance of the production, but frankly it could be performed in a parking lot and lose none of its wonder.

Fan of performance art? Dance? Fine music? Subtle but seductive stage design? Then hurry to the Ford Theaters or plan a late October drive north to Santa Barbara – you won’t want to miss the visceral impact and adrenaline-rich excitement of After It Happened – get there before, not after, the show.

  • Genie Davis; Photos: Invertigo and Genie Davis