Yes, Curate This 2, Too

F23C8688

Always a treat, the group shows at The Gabba Gallery seem to pulse with more excitement every time. Curate This Part Deaux is no exception, with art -works created by some of Los Angeles’ top curators. Featuring something for virtually every artistic taste, the show takes viewers through a panopoly of vibrant, quintessentially LA art. There was a look and feel to the show that could absolutely only happen in SoCal, and only at Gabba, and only if including the work of artists whose taste aesthetics have been sharply honed as curators.

Below, book designer, collage and mixed-media artist David Brady pulls viewers into an astonishing visual quilt with his “Esperanza.”

F23C8693

Highly detailed, frieze-like sculptural paintings by Nathan Cartwright tell detailed, fantastical stories. Cartwright is an LA-based mixed media artist and founder/curator of The Hive Gallery and Studios in DTLA. Feel the buzz.

F23C8695

F23C8698

Dicapria’s glowing mixed media mandala’s are crafted from gummy bears and resin in a light box. Her back story: she travels the U.S. in a 1971 bus.

F23C8700

Mitchelito Orquiola was born in the Philipines, and resides in LA. His self-taught works create a mosaic of color and line.F23C8702

So what could be more a part of the City of Angeles than Kristine Schomaker’s beautiful little convertible? The Ideal Sex (The Little Pink Corvette) drives us into the SoCal sunset on a road dotted with the sign posts of gender roles, power, and the healing community of art itself. Schomaker also runs Shoebox PR, promoting art and artists throughout the Southland.F23C8703

Baby, you can drive Schomaker’s other cool ride, too.

F23C8708

Photographer Osceola Refetoff’s ethereal, sun-drenched desert and urban visions haunt and inspire. The artist takes viewers down a road not just less traveled, but one most people have never experienced before.

F23C8709

F23C8711

Below, the delicate, precise images photographed by Shana Nys Dambrot reflect an intimate thoughtfulness. Dambrot recently curated the stellar Painting by Scott Trimble, Photography by Osceola Refetoff show at Chungking Studios in Chinatown.

F23C8712

Ted Meyer’s beautiful acryllic “Woman Napping with Cat,” holds all the golden light, curves, and angles, of a Hollywood summer, kissed with expressionist flavor. Meyer is currently curating Scar Stories at Muzeumm.

F23C8714

 

Performance and installation artist Dani Dodge creates compelling, often autobiographical and catharctic works. As a former journalist and war correspondent, she tells stories that vibrate with humanity. Collage, assemblage, and video are components of her works, below.

F23C8716

Up close, these layered fragments of wallpaper compel viewers to look beneath the surface layers of life itself.

F23C8717

Phil Santos co-curates Gabba Gallery with Jason Ostro. His beautifully detailed watercolor pencil rendering of Pasadena City Hall transports the image to something that could exist in Venice or Paris. Santos is currently at work on a triptych mural for Angel City Brewery. F23C8718

Gabba Gallery owner, director, and co-curator Jason Ostro contributed this brilliantly blue, intrinsically floral, and kaleidoscopic piece to the exhibition.

F23C8720

Below, Juri Koll’s mixed media paper on board evoke water, light, and an unheard aural component in their patterns and colors. Koll is founder, director, and often curator at The Venice Institute of Contemporary Art, and the producer of the Fine Arts Film Festival.F23C8724

Venice artist Mark Satterlee is a self-taught traditional and digital artist working primarily in fiberglass and pigmented resin. His work below uses an assemblage of Poloroid portraits.F23C8725

Skye Amber Sweet’s pink fish float off the canvas. Love, kindness, and self-expression are the driving forces of her emotional and emotive art.

F23C8730

Daniel Rolnik curated at the self-owned Daniel Rolnik Gallery, and recently hosted one of the most enjoyable booths at the LA Art Fair,  the “Kilduff’s Bakery” art installation.  Below, some of Rolnik’s cheerful, fun, and vibrant work. F23C8732

Even at the end of the night, Gabba drew appreciative viewers.

F23C8735

Below, another piece by Gabba’s co-curator Phil Santos. His classic dog portraits are much sought after by collectors. F23C8742

Artist Radhika Hersey creates stunning art fantasies  based on meditation, dreams, and folklore. Her spiritually magical paintings are closely aligned with her curatorial works at Temple of Visions and the Do Art Foundation,among other venues.F23C8747

Ever versatile, Phil Santos dishes up a plate of mixed media zombie spaghetti.

F23C8749

Curate This 2 runs until February 28th. The Gabba Gallery is located at 3126 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles.

F23C8751Genie Davis; all photos by Jack Burke

Metro Dreams at Gabba Gallery

F23C8026

A powerful opening last weekend at Gabba Gallery brought the exhibition Metro Dreams to the LA art scene through January 30th. Four very different, very riveting artists gave viewers their own dreams, dreams intrinsically tied to the state of the nation, self-image, and inclusiveness. Both artistically and politically important, each of the very different works of these artists form four pieces of a coherent and fascinating whole.

F23C8024

Above, Moncho1929, whose murals dot LA, works on a smaller scale here, but with a scope of meaning just as large. Using images of freedom and restraint, with colors that delicately highlight his subjects, his pieces illuminate the duality of movement and restriction.

F23C8014

“I was doing these pieces about motion and constraint, and the narrative started changing. I felt like I was having my own discussion with the works, someone looking at the pieces can also have their own conversation with the series, with the journey. They evolved from color and movement into a social, political commentary. I enjoyed that,” Moncho1929  explains.

F23C8054

Above, Hero describes his works, whose visceral realism touches on some of the same themes of freedom and limits as Moncho1929. Hero says “When I was putting this show together, the word I had in my mind was ‘inheritance.’ I thought that the next generation is inheriting a lot of social structures, and I wanted to express that, and what they might mean.”

F23C8040

Above, Hero’s take on the NSA spying on our own citizens. “There’s a slapstick element to it, that someone would actually be listening in on a tin can conversation,” he notes.

F23C8041

“The girl with the flower basket, the image here is what’s been handed down, and what continues to be handed down and grown,” Hero states.

F23C8064

His mix of realistic, natural and normal images with weighty subjects and more abstract backgrounds reflects his personal influences. “I have influences from Jackson Pollock to Norman Rockwell.”

F23C8020

“Fixed,” above, is made with Aerosol on prescription pads and sealed with resin. The medium is, Hero says, a combination between acrylic house paint and spray paint. The subject takes on today’s social and political environment. “Lady Liberty and these prescription pads. I found the pads on eBay, it was easy to get them. The piece shows how easy it is today in this country to be medicated and anesthetized.”

Below, artist Vakseen’s works reveal another all-too-easy capability – to strip away natural imperfections and create plastic images. His work, like Hero’s, also exhibits many influences, including surrealism, cubism, and glossy high fashion.

F23C8037

“My work revolves around idolizations of beauty. We life in surreal times, where images displayed in print and media are supposed to be trustable but are usually cosmetically enhanced and photo-shopped. We’re teaching our youth, our women, our culture, that you’re not good enough the way you were born,” he notes.

F23C8038

F23C8015

“After awhile everyone starts to look alike, like a cookie cutter image. In my work, I create a perfect look, I’m like a plastic surgeon. At the end of the day, I want to question the way we look at beauty in our society.” Vakseen notes that at one time he weighed a hundred pounds more than his current weight. “I connect to these ideas of perfection.”

F23C8016

Amy Smith shares Vakseen’s ideas of the importance of being yourself – unique and empowered. “I want to be empowering and create something rustproof, something that when you see it, you will be inspired.”

F23C8049

“The words I choose to print in these collages are meant to be a good reminder about how powerful you are as a person,” she says.

F23C8046

“These pieces are mixed media, using collage, stencil, and acrylics. The collage material comes from old magazines,” Smith explains.

F23C8044

F23C8031

F23C8034

 

“I try to inclusive,” Smith adds. “My friends are all ethnicities, I try to bring that diversity to my work. I want to make stuff for everyone, for men and women.”F23C8029

Smith’s art, like that of Hero, Vakseen, and Moncho1929 is all about seeing the world, and life, through new eyes. Come take a look.

Gabba Gallery is located at 3126 Beverly Blvd. in Los Angeles.

  • Genie Davis; All Photos by Jack Burke