Artist A.M. Rousseau Offers Tribute

Exploring a Lifelong Passion: Small Pieces We’ve Collected Over the Years is a tour de force of lovely art shared and curated by Southern California artist A.M. Rousseau. The works presented in an impressive single day exhibition at bG gallery November 5th, are part of a collection that she and her late husband pursuied as a part of their enduring, shared passion for art.

Their assembled collection reflects their deep committment to art and fellow artists – and to their belief in nurturing a sense of community within the art world. The tribute paid to artists is joined with another sort of tribute – that to Rousseau’s late husband Duvall Hecht.

Displaying over 50 distinctive artists, each serves as part of an engaging art tapestry that offers insight into the artists and the spirits of their collectors, as well.

According to Rousseau, the timing for this exhibition was “about community, the artist community.  I think like many of us, I have a lot of works of art that my husband and I purchased or that came to us through gifts or trading with other artists. It has been a joy to collect this work, and while it can hang in my house, after my husband passed, I had the impulse to share it with the other artists and anyone else who might be interested. ”

The single day extravaganze of art began as what she envisioned to be simply a “small fun project. Maybe I would have a dinner party and invite the artists. It daily grew larger when I realized there were over 65 pieces, and if I wanted to show the pieces I would need to find an exhibition space – which led me to bG Gallery in Santa Monica.”

As to the collection itself, Rousseau reveals that to assemble it “my husband and I looked for things we loved that fit within our budget, but we would also try to support wonderful work in shows where things otherwise did not sell. Of course, we could only ever buy small pieces, but we wanted to support artists when possible. We found many works on paper which we always meant to frame but ended up sitting in drawers for too long.” This formed part of the impetus for the show, when she says she decided it would be meaningful to have “all of them framed and put them together for an exhibition in memory of all the great times we had looking at art together and going to shows. It gave me a lot of happiness just knowing how much he would have loved this project.”

Rousseau has also assembled an inclusive, intimate catalog about the works. “The catalog was put together by myself, and I wrote the text in it. That was also a really enjoyable part of putting this show together. I loved looking closely again at many of the pieces and writing what I felt about the work.”

Despite the large scale nature of the exhibition, she relates that she has no other plans after the show regarding the works. “I don’t plan to sell anything. It might be nice to have it travel. I really would love to give it away somewhere to an organization or a place that would want it.”

Asked to select a favorite work, she stresses that “It’s hard to say what either of our favorite pieces are as really, we loved them all. It’s like having a favorite child. How could you pick?”

But that said, when pushed she relates “I have to choose the one called “Our kitchen, Peck Dr., Beverly Hills, CA.” by Virginia Sackett. As I wrote in the catalog, this is a work that was in my husband’s mothers’ possession for 50 years, and I have now owned for 30 years. I think it is an exceptional piece, and I have looked at it many times thinking about the person who created it.”  Making this piece exceptionally personal, Rousseau adds “It was made by my husband’s mother’s maid who worked in the kitchen that is portrayed in the picture. Obviously, if is possible to decipher the essence of this painting, it’s a kitchen the artist appeared to love. She was a woman whose artistic abilities were likely entirely unrecognized during her lifetime, excepting this one picture, framed by her employer, and preserved by her employer’s children, finally coming into my possession. I can’t say enough about how much I love this painting and I know my husband did too. While the talent of this artist might not have been acknowledged, I am grateful for this painting that allows us to know her.”

As both an artist herself and a collector and curator, Rousseau asserts that what she most wants readers to know about the exhibition and her view of collecting art, is this: “There is great joy in creating collections of work on very small budgets, and sharing work with the community of artists is an honor and a privilege. Supporting artists in whatever way possible can have lasting importance.”

Don’t miss seeing this lovingly collected, cherished, and well-curated exhibition. There will be an opening reception Sunday, November 5th from 4-7 p.m. at bG gallery, and Rousseau will be present to offer her own insights and experiences, as well as offering her comprehensively compiled catalog of the artworks for viewers.

bG is located at 2525 Michigan Ave., Santa Monica #12 in Bergamot Station.

  • Genie Davis; images provided by A.M. Rousseau

Gay Summer Rick Illuminates Los Angeles – Osceola Refetoff Elegaically Depicts Climate Change

Bergamot Station in Santa Monica is presently hosting two incredible exhibitions – both on exhibit until early November.

At bG Gallery, Gay Summer Rick’s glorious color palette and precise oil painting using palette knife morphs the impressionistic form with a gauzy realism of seascape and landscape. Lighter Than Air, her latest series of richly rewarding works, glow with Southern California light. The transcendence that light creates is the force within her work, which here touches on the lyrical and metaphysical as well as the contours of the coast. “Somewhere Above” is a burst of golden sky reflecting on cloud or water, Heaven as a visual portal, perhaps. “Buoyant” gives us a woman floating on a yellow inner tube against a sun-kissed sea, an almost child-like bliss. “Cadence” offers a pale periwinkle sea suffused with bits of pink light, the pink line of the horizon or a distant shore all a-glow.

“The Golden Sun” is just that, with a small figure bobbing on a surfboard, watching a bold pink sky slowly fade. “Fly” is also a pink and gold gem, as an airplane comes into a pink LA surrounded by palms; while “Good” is a view of homecoming as seen from a plane, the grand grid of lights below an airplane window spread out against a fine canopy of Cerulean blue. “Distant Light” is a shimmery, mirage like view of distant houses, illuminated against a shoreline.

Taking a direction new to this viewer, Rick offers a series of trapeze artists, in her series “The Fliers #1-#4.” Here pale, almost abstract figures outlined in a gold/pale mustard shade reach for, connect, or glide past each other on aerial rigging. There is the quality of a dream about this work – but all her work here is dreamy – disconnected from a known reality, it suggests our ability to tenaciously, with assistance, take to the sky the artist so admires.

And speaking of sky, in “Lustre” it is difficult to tell where sea and sky meet and merge, as minute golden figures on surfboards float among the waves as if reaching for the sky itself. As with a number of the paintings here, Rick replaces here past preference for blues with pinks, ethereal, hot, or paling like cotton candy dissolving into mist. As peaceful and lush as each work here can be seen, beneath that is a vision that can only be considered emotionally transcendent. The exhibition’s final beautiful day at bG Gallery is November 4th.

Walk across Bergamot Station’s parking lot to Building Bridges Art Exchange to take in another series of ocean-centric images, but with an entirely different message and medium. Curated by Marisa Caichiolo, under the scientific auspices of Dr. Eric Larour, artists Guillermo Anselmo Vezzosi and Osceola Refetoff offer a stellar exhibition on climate change and global warming in their Summer Artists and Scientists Residency, Shifting Landscapes: Sea Level Rise in Los Angeles and Beyond.

Refetoff’s visionary photographic and projected video images compel and entrance. Producing his first video in over a decade as a large-scale projection, Sea of Change (edited with Juri Koll) offers intense and beautiful images that include drone footage from the near-North-Pole community of Svalbard, California’s Central Valley fracking operations, and images of the distressed Salton Sea, as well as NASA satellite images, and AI prompts based on Refetoff’s own infrared photographic images, projected to imagine future scenarios. The 8 minutes video is both entrancing and heartbreaking, as we contemplate the rising likelihood of planetary change. Refetoff also created his first sculpture, representing potential projected rise in sea level at Santa Monica Pier based on the future of human C02 emissions.

In the same exhibition, Vezzosi also shines with work that includes a mysteriously translucent series of some 165 transfer photographs on recycled plastic food containers in “Melted Memories,” with the photographic images collected from NASA Observatory, the National Snow and Ice Data Center and the Glacier Repeat photo project from the Glacier National Park Montana.
From his “Offerings to ask for forgiveness” series, a large wall work resembles glacial ice, and is also constructed from recycled plastic from food containers collected from trash. He relates that the “ice” is made to “ask for forgiveness for the traces of our civilization…forcing [nature] to arrive to the present.”  The exhibition closes November 4th.

While Rick’s beauty will soothe, Reftoff’s and Vezzosi’s will jolt. Both exhibitions are profoundly lovely and of this moment.

Bergamot Bonus: on Sunday November 5th, you may want to hurry back to the same Santa Monica location. bG is presenting an exclusive one-day exhibition, curated by artist A.M. Rousseau. Titled Small Pieces We’ve Collected Over the Years, the exhibition pays tribute to the passion for art shared by A.M. Rousseau and her late husband, Duvall Hecht and their support for both artists and the thriving Los Angeles art community. There are some 67 Los Angeles area artists represented in the show, including work by Rick.

Building Bridges is located at 2525 Michigan Ave. #F2 at Bergamot in Santa Monica; bG is located at #A2.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artists and by Genie Davis

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

California Art Here We Come

In California: Now & Then, on view at bG Gallery, curator Juri Koll takes viewers on a tour de force exhibition of California culture, environment, and of course, art. Moving from the early 20th century to 2023, among the exhibiting artists are Sam Francis, Bradford Salamon, Barbara Kolo, Catherine Ruane, Hung Viet Nguyen, Charles White, Sam Francis, Lilly Fenichel, Ulysses Jenkins, Betye Saar, May Sun, Peter Alexander, Gloriane Harris, Edmund Teske, Lyn Foulkes and more than 30 more, including work by Koll himself.

Much of the art was culled from Koll’s personal collection, while others were lent to the exhibition by the artists themselves, collectors owning the works, or museum collections. To see such a mix of stellar artworks all in one salon-style presentation at bG Gallery is a kaleidoscopic experience, a mix of abstract works with the figurative.

We see seascapes and city views, faces and geometric forms, the whimsical, the magical, and the inchoate voids. Traveling through generations of work, we see the evolution of form and color, the trends and traditions, the willingness to change, each of which characterizes California itself.

Through it all, we follow the light.  One of the most fascinating finds in the exhibition is from 1904, Lockwood De Forest’s “Santa Barbara Marsh.” Suffused in gold and peach radiance, it shines like a beacon of promise, a stillness, a quiet kind of gold rush as memorable today as it was when curated. Entirely different is the abstract landscape of curator Koll’s 2023 “Käepigistus Ukraine 60,” a startlingly bright petri dish of geometric shapes seemingly swimming under an art microscope.

Gloriane Harris’ 1973 “Evening Shade” resembles a surreal moon hovering just above and just below dark periwinkle water. This is a different form of the geometric, both entirely of and transcending the period in which it was created. Evoking the same era – the quality of moving beyond the traditionally representational, reflecting the multitude of changes and restless emotion of the Vietnam years is David Alfaro Siqueiros 1972-73 color lithograph “Reclining Nude,” exuding pathos and perhaps a few bad dreams in its rhythmic brush strokes and discreet representation of body.

Beautifully current are the white lilies in Imogen Cunningham’s 1929 “Two Callas,” their fluidity and luster perfectly captured. Also cutting edge is Wynn Bullock’s 1951 gelatin silver print, “Child in the Forest,” a lush and surreal look at a child lying face down in a fecund fern-filled grove of trees. In aches with a sense of loss and wonder, a fairy tale and a cautionary tale both at once. There’s light here, too, shafting down between the trees, still and silvery. From the same year comes Hans Burkhardt’s “Untitled,” conjoins rectangles and squares dominated in golden yellows.

Sea views have always drawn me as a viewer, and there are plentiful examples here. Hank Pitcher’s 2005 “Solstice Swell at Government Point” offers lavenders and blues in a rising wave infused with a white, opalescent light. Osceola Refetoff’s radiant pink archival pigment print, created this year, is an alchemic look at “Tiny Island, Antarctica.” Hung Viet Ngyuen’s “Sacred Landscape III #18” is a fanta-sea if you will, a small 2017 oil on board work that is magical in its vibrating brush strokes, featuring both the edge of a sea or lake and a rushing river descending from dark mountains. Ruth Weisberg’s 2005 “Darkship,” a monochromatic monoprint gives viewers a ship loosed upon dark waves.

Also compelling are cityscapes such as Gay Summer Rich’s mix of headlights, lit high rise windows, and the iconic neon of the El Rey theater in her 2023 “Ready For a Night Out – El Rey.” Her carefully rendered oil on canvas, created entirely with palette knife is somehow both impressionistic and realistic at the same time, and again, the light. And, it’s also about the light – red swirling clouds above what could either be a sprawling city of dotted lights or a massive airport runway – in Peter Alexander’s 1992 “The Locus,” a surreal and absorbing mix of ink and acrylic on paper.

There could be nothing more bursting with light than May Sun’s 2023 “Datura (Yellow) Offering,” a diptych of acrylic on two wood panels featuring both a brilliant lily held high and the chartreuse like wave of land against with three farmworkers in yellow straw hats work, framed against a fierce orange sky. Diminutive but also exuding a burning orange is Ralph Allen Massey’s “Eight,” the letters casting deep shadows in the foreground against that sun on fire.

And what happens if you stand too long in the sun? The clean, stylized look of Barbara Carrasco’s sweet “Burnt Girl,” a child whose sunscreen application was sadly lacking.

There are sculptural works as well, such as Stuart Rapeport’s 2015 “Minimal Brush,” a bronze artist’s proof that resembles a magician’s wand. The sculptural stand-out in the exhibition is Sonja Schenk’s 2023 “Light for the Sun,” a floor work that combines California sandstone with stripes of 24K gold, an homage to the rich veins struck in the Gold Rush, and again, the light, the light that draws so many California transplants and dreamers, artists and writers. Comprised of three separate pieces it is a glorious work, positioned as if calling to the vast array of wall art surrounding it. Very different is the mysterious, even ominous “Studio in Dorking,” Gordon Wagner’s 1974 mixed media box, that include legs clad in hoof-like shoes and no upper half to the body attached to them. Cosimo Cavallaro’s mysterious “Black Arrow,” a 2023 work in stainless steel, absorbs and reflects the light – the antithesis to Schenk’s piece. There is also Timothy Washington’s sparkly “Many Faces, One Race” from 2019.

Some included works were startling for being so far from the same artist’s current oeuvre. This includes Catherine Ruane’s 1974 “Untitled,” her delicacy and precision of line remains the same, but this muted and intimate abstract is quite different from her charcoal and graphite roses, oak and Joshua Trees created in more recent years. Speaking of abstracts, there are a wide range to view:  Larry Bell’s  1988 “Untitled,” a black orb depicted in profile against a white background, a bit reminiscent of a black hole or nuclear blast, or perhaps the emptiness of Reagan-era politics. Then there is the dancing, music-evoking 1957 “Color Sinfony,” from Oskar Fischinger; Emil Bisttram’s 1950 “Abstract,” of a plant and a beehive, everything a fluid supple motion of line; and Sam Francis’ 1976 monochrome “Untitled,” which resembles sail boats buffeted by sea spray. Max Presneil’s vibrant 2020 “MiT #149” radiates pink, red, and chartreuse persisting despite a black hole at the center left, indicative of how many felt during that year. The surreal is well represented, too, including a 2018 work by Robert Nelson, “Self-Fulfilling Prophecy.”

Bradford J. Salamon’s 2023 “Silver Spoon” gives the viewer a gold and white striped dessert confection one can almost taste, dancing in elegant light that glistens off the eponymous spoon. Its intimacy is placed comfortingly near another source of the intimate, the powerful and intimidating 2023 “Self Portrait,” from Don Bachardy,  streaks of white light representing facial lines and shadows.

And while there are many other worthy works in the exhibition, perhaps it’s best to close with Barbara Kolo’s 2023 “Escape Into Amber,” with both the title and the minute Pointillism of her approach drawing the viewer into a vibrating flower of gold, orange, purple and red, almost as if the corona of the California sun were waiting to pull both artist and viewer deep among these unfolding petals.

The exhibition is on display at bG Gallery through August 15th. bG is located in Bergamot Station at 2525 Michigan Ave. #A2 in Santa Monica. Don’t miss.

  • Genie Davis; photos: by Genie Davis and as provided by curator

10th Annual Spectrum Gestalt Kicks Off Summer at bG Gallery

 

It’s the 10th Annual Spectrum Gestalt and we arrive at Bergamot Station and watch as guests spill out of bG Gallery with an energy and crowd that is just as colorful as the exhibition. Many of the attending artists are dressed in their respective color palette and I am no exception.  Joined by my two young boys, I made certain to have a serious talk before entry. You know, the Do Not Touch Anything talk, matched with the No Running in the Gallery talk. My intent eyes linger affirmingly on the littlest, spunkiest of the duo and is followed by a required “Yes, Mom,” before we proceed. We work our way through the crowd and into the gallery and are immediately hit with powerful waves of color. I look to my 10-year-old and find him wide-eyed, jaw ajar. We pause and allow the chromaticity to settle in.

The exhibition is arranged in a classic salon style that flows in the respective sequence of each hue in the rainbow. It’s almost impossible not take a step back and look at the installation in its wholeness. Each band of color is refracted with a range of art styles and media that take the viewer on an electromagnetic & multi-dimensional journey. From visually captivating paintings and detailed drawings to tactile works of embroidery and sculpture to photographic feats that all bode their own greatness, yet meet the viewer’s eye on a level playing field— gestalt indeed.

Spectrum Gestalt was the exhibition that initiated bG’s inception at Bergamot Station Arts Center 10 years ago. Gallerist, Om Bleicher, shares that although they had a location on Ocean Avenue in Santa Monica and another in La Brea, when a space at Bergamot presented itself for a one-month pop-up, the opportunity to make a big splash in this creative hub was one not to be missed. Bleicher aimed to activate the space by involving as many talented artists as possible, knowing that the scale of people taking part would amplify and even permeate bG’s presence. The timeline to prep for such a show was short. So much so, that artists were asked to make their own art labels in the color of their work. But it all came together and the scale of people that attended the launch of Spectrum Gestalt energized bG in a new and exciting way, and a sense of place here at Bergamot was born. To be nestled amongst over a dozen fine art galleries that gather both artists and collectors from around the globe was undeniably alluring, and the one-month pop-up subsequently turned into a permanent lease signed & roots were formed. Now, 10 years later, this flagship exhibition serves as an annual reminder of bG’s beginnings at Bergamot.

Chromatecton #5, Sung-Hee Son

This year’s exhibition was heavily reliant on the curatorial direction of Sung-Hee Son, who is an artist her own right. While the unification of impact was achieved, there was a rhythm found in the grounding consistencies presented. Whether through the color wave itself, or the fact that several artists had multiple pieces throughout the exhibition, there was opportunity for the viewer to seek out congruencies that offered an overall fusion.

An Act of Hypnosis, Michelle Kingdom

Established artists such as Michelle Kingdom showcase narrative embroideries in keeping with her recent bodies of work, while emerging and student artists like Trevor Coopersmith shared a handful of playful ceramic wall-hung sculptures sprinkled throughout.

Linkage, Trever Coopersmith

Houlihan, Tamara Tolkin

I found myself absolutely enthralled with both the painted and threaded lips of artist, Tamara Tolkin.  Pretty in pink, the toothy pout of one piece is acrylic on canvas and another is a textile dream of wool, cotton, and linen that speaks to my inner (and let’s be real, outer) appreciation for detailed, yet playful precision.

Laffy Lemon, Isabella

Fig and Water Drop, Paul Art Lee

Windows and Doors 1,  Angela Kent.

No matter what color you find yourself among, the subconscious intuitively stirs. And although my work hangs along the wall of black, I find myself smiling at all the yellow.

Catch your favorite pantones at the closing reception this Saturday,  July 1st 5 – 7 P.M., before all the colors in the rainbow are wrapped up and hauled out until next June.

bG Gallery 2525 Michigan Avenue, #A2, Santa Monica, CA 90404 | Gallery hours Wed-Sun 12 – 5 P.M.

Written by Aimee Mandala; photos by Aimee Mandala, Paul Art Lee, Zoe Silverman