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Meg Smith's Archive

Laurie Lipton at Strychnin

June 1st, 2008 by Meg Smith

Laurie Lipton\'s beinArt Gallery'The Sleep of Reason'

Works by Laurie Lipton, inspired by Francisco de Goya

June 20th until July 13th

Opening June 20th, 7-11pm - Meet the artist

Open Thursday - Sunday, 1pm - 6pm

Strychnin Gallery, Boxhagener Str. 36 - 10245, Berlin

“Goya saw the horrors of conflict being enacted around him on the streets where he lived. I saw the recent war in Iraq in the comfort of my own bedroom contained in a neat, recently dusted TV set. Killing and humanities' atrocities have become removed and sanitized in the 21st century. Even the bloody bombing of Guernika can be made into art that fits on to a nice coffee mug. While I sip my coffee and eat my meals I can watch incredibly terrible things happening around the world on the news, complete with computer graphics and commercial interruptions. Is this not strange?”  - Laurie Lipton

'Love Bite' (right) by Laurie Lipton was inspired by Goya's painting 'Saturn devouring his Son'

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Kris Wlodarski Exhibition

May 28th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Kris Wlodarskis beinArt GalleryNews from Kris Wlordarski:

"Modern Images of Saints" - paintings by Kris Wlodarski

Showing from the 2nd until the 16th of June, 2008

Chelsea Library Gallery, 1st Floor

Chelsea Old Town Hall

Kings Rd, London

"Kris Wlodarski's series "Modern Images of Saints" places the relationship between the individual and the body at its epicentre: by reflecting upon the dynamics connecting transgression and taboo, the artist attempts to describe the isolation of those people who have chosen a sort of modern approach to ascetism in a quest for coming to terms with their identity.

"Wlodarski's paintings indeed look at the tradition of the 'still life' and approach mutated and mutilated bodies to create a composition of flesh, metal and body marks.The saints - in the artist's understanding - are bruised, pierced and scarred. Ascetism becomes a journey pointing towards the viscera, a quest that sees isolation and suffering as two of its key elements: to know oneself means first and foremost to attempt at reinventing one's body." -Albert Hofer

Chris Mars Monograph

May 22nd, 2008 by Meg Smith

Chris Mars\' beinArt GalleryPress Release:

Chris Mars Publishing and Billy Shire Fine Arts Press are proud to announce the June release of 'Tolerance,' the debut monograph by artist and former musician Chris Mars. Tolerance (160 pages, apx. 12×10") is a green and fair-trade book featuring more than 150 paintings and numerous essays by the artist.

Rock star, recluse, brother, activist. Artist. Chris Mars, darling of the Low-Brow movement and Juxtapoz regular. His work graces the haloed halls of museums throughout America and is tattooed on calves and biceps throughout the world. Tolerance, the long-awaited collection of his work.   

In the beginning…

Chris Mars was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1961 to parents Constance and Leroy Mars. He is the youngest of seven children. Mars's eldest brother Joe suffered a so-called Nervous Breakdown in 1966 and was institutionalized at St. Cloud Mental Hospital. The impact of that event, along with Joe's life-long struggle with Schizophrenia, set the groundwork for a life's mission of championing society's downtrodden and outcast.

In the middle…

Chris Mars was a founding member of the seminal Indy/Punk band The Replacements. Mars left shortly before the band's early 90s demise, and went on to record four critically acclaimed solo albums. Though out his years as a musician, Mars was always drawing, painting. Pastels on paper.  Ink on napkins. A suitcase filled with pencils and sketchbooks. Always. Calling him.    

All leading up to…

Chris Mars beinArt Gallery Mars' technical control is breathtaking. His Social Expressionist paintings contain the meticulous detail of Salvador Dali, the political incisiveness of Otto Dix, and the emotional gut-punch of Francis Bacon. His work has been exhibited in numerous museums including The American Visionary Art Museum, The Minneapolis Institute of Arts, The Weisman Art Museum, The Longview Museum of Art, The Erie Art Museum, The Tweed, The Steensland and the Minnesota History Center, among others. Several of these institutions and others hold work in their permanent collection. Exhibitions at The Laguna Art Museum, Mesa Contemporary Arts, The Phipps Center for the Arts, Erie and Longview are scheduled through 2010.   

Now:

Mars hopes his work causes the viewer to question the nature of evaluation and labels, be it by investigating the meaning of beauty, or by casting aside the exclusion of the meek, the forgotten, or the enemy. Like many artists, Mars seeks to know Truth.  In his canvases are villains and angels, though one's initial demarcation may, as in life, prove false.

Tolerance features over 150 paintings, printed in accordance with the artist's social conscience. Says Mars: "It's a 'green' book. Published using vegetable-based inks, on recycled, bleach-free paper. It was not made by slaves, the printing costs do not sponsor State tyranny, no child's hands will have sewn the binding. It's green and it's fair-trade.  It took a while to make that happen. I think I'm as proud of that as I am of the work inside it."

Tolerance will be released in June, and will be followed by an exhibit and signing at Billy Shire Fine Arts (Los Angeles) in September. 

 Above Right - 'Tolerence' Cover

Below Right - 'A Soother for Dwayne' by Chris Mars

Fantastic Realism Retrospective

May 20th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Ernst Fuchs beinArt GalleryFrom the 20th of May until the 14th of September, 2008, the Belvedere is showing a retrospective of six great masters of Fantastic Realism -  Arik Brauer, Ernst Fuchs (right), Rudolf Hausner, Wolfgang Hutter, Helmut Leherb and Anton Lehmden.

Open daily, 10am - 6pm

Wednesday, 10am - 9pm

Lower Belvedere

Rennweg 6

1030 Vienna

Scott G. Brooks at Long View Gallery

May 10th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Scott G. Brooks\' beinArt GalleryPress release from Scott G. Brooks:

"Under The Skin" - New paintings by Scott G. Brooks

May 10, 2008 - June 7, 2008

Opening Reception: May 10, 5-8pm

A preview of the show is now online at Long View Gallery.

"Under the Skin" is the largest exhibit of work by Scott G. Brooks to date.

These new paintings and drawings of his wide-eyed progeny are meticulously detailed, heightening the allure of their quirky narratives. Highlighted against a backdrop of social, sexual, and psychological themes, the details only reveal themselves after several viewings and close study–with new meanings developing at every glance.

The premiere of a short film exploring Brooks' creative process as he prepared for Under the Skin will be shown during the opening reception. This is the most recent film in Brandon Bloch's series showcasing Washington DC artists.

Long View Gallery, 1302 9th St NW, Washington, DC 20001

Amanda Sage and NoMe Edonna

May 8th, 2008 by Meg Smith

 Madusalon presents:

"Extensions"

A Celebration of Beauty, Style and Absurdity

Featuring a new series of portraits by NoMe Edonna and Amanda Sage.

Opening reception: Saturday, May 17th - 7pm - Midnight

Show runs May 13th - July 6th, 2008

Madusalon, San Francisco, California

Chet Zar in Santa Monica and London

May 1st, 2008 by Meg Smith

Chet Zar’s beinArt GalleryNews from Chet Zar:

"We Are The Shadows"

CoproNason Gallery

Opening Reception: Saturday, May 10th, 2008 (8pm - 11pm)

May 10th, 2008 - May 31st, 2008

2525 Michigan Avenue T5. Santa Monica, CA 90404

"Ugly American"

Strychnin Gallery London

Opening Reception: Friday, June 13th, 2008

65 Hanbury Street, London E1 5JP

Robert Venosa at MicroCoSM Gallery

April 28th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Robert Venosa’s beinArt GalleryMicroCoSM Gallery Press Release: 

Fantastic Realism: Works By Robert Venosa

May 16 - June 18

Opening Reception: Friday, May 16, 6.30pm - 8pm

Exhibited worldwide, Venosa's art is included in major collections, including those of noted museums, rock stars and European aristocracy.

"Bravo Venosa! Dali is pleased to see spiritual madness painted with such a fine technique." - Salvador Dali

MicroCoSM Gallery

542 W27th St.

4th Floor

New York

NY 1000

Tue - Sat, 11am - 5pm

Right: 'Castor' - Robert Venosa - Oil on Canvas - 28 x 39 inches

Review: Barany’s ‘Carnivora’

April 27th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Barany Books‘Carnivora: The Dark Art of Automobiles’ from Barany Books

 Themed art books can be a tough sell: where do they fit on the bookshelf? When more than one artist is represented, it gets hard to determine the best way to market such an animal: exploit the better known names? play up the variety? promise a new and unexpected treatment of a certain aspect of art? provide a unique insight into the 'post-romodern' life that we all inhabit?


'Carnivora: The Dark Art of Automobiles'
on the new imprint Barany Books (more on that in a moment), does a very fine job of covering all the bases. The layout and design are flawless, and decidedly clever; it will appeal to the aesthetics of the visually inclined, as well as to the gearheads out there (which, apparently, has a great deal of cross-pollination). The look of the book is impressive: the cover is eye-catching and has a list of all contributors printed on the back. The sheer scope of the book - stated purpose of which is to explore our societal obsessive love and loathing with the modern chariot on a variety of fronts - is incredible, featuring not just masters of the recent past, such as H.R. Giger and Robert Williams, but also an amazing list of other established - as well as up and coming - artists between pieces of prose ruminating on the way cars have impacted everyday life.

Some of those ways, as the title implies, are not for the faint of heart…

Barany Books The book is a companion piece to the C-Pop Gallery exhibit in Detroit of the same name, now moving on to Los Angeles, to L'Imagerie Gallery. Les Barany (the editor, and Giger's agent for some time now) has done a fine job in bringing together over 100 different artists and writers (and their perspectives) and creating a coherent, cohesive whole. A wide swath of different styles and techniques are represented: a cursory flip through the tome reveals cartoon, literature, photo-montage, sculpture, mixed-media, acrylic and oil painting and digital imaging, to name just a few. While some pieces work better than others, there is more than enough material to satisfy even the most discerning palette, be it a preference for modern, edgy, surreal imagery, dark landscapes or bizarre machine/human juxtapositions. There is a smattering of eroticism, but only a few true nudes; the sexual elements (perhaps wisely) are left more to the imagination - in the guise of some very good written memoirs - rather than presented in purely graphic terms.

 
Exceptional written works abound, and will ultimately change from person to person (or, for some folk, moment to moment), but a few are worth pointing out. Notable remembrances are on display from William Levy (intense and poignant), William F. Nolan (historical and wide-ranging), Steven Cerio (concise and quirky; he also contributed an interesting illustration), Rick Manore (thought-provoking), Carlo McCormick (pensive and introspective) and Daphne Graham (grueling and sad). Harlan Ellison is also accounted for, with his excellent short classic Along the Scenic Route.

 
Barany BooksThe imagery, though, is where this volume shines, and there is no disappointing; it delivers on the questions postulated in the first paragraph of this review, and then some. Standouts include, in random order: Gregory Brotherton, Marshall Arisman, Zdzislaw Beksinski (middle right), D. Hwang, H.R. Giger (below right), Jason D'Aquino, Coop, Andre Lassen, Tanino Liberatore, Stanley Mouse, Robert Williams, J.K.Potter, Winston Smith, J.U. Abrahamson, Tomi Ungerer, Vincent Castiglia, Demetrios Vakras, Hugo Schuhmacher and Chet Zar. Remember, this is just the tip of a very large iceberg, but a helpful mini-biography section in the back places the contributors in good context, as well as offering the casual reader insight into their personalities, via the inclusion of their personal vehicles (or lack thereof!).

Overall, Carnivora has tremendous impact: whether the interest is cars, modern life, sexuality, death, consumerism, anecdotes about personal experiences or just awesome art, it’s hard to put down, and impossible to go wrong.


Jason V Brock

Joshua Liner Gallery Opening

April 15th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Heidi Taillefer’s beinArt Gallery Joshua Liner Gallery's Inaugural Group Exhibition, "Locked and Loaded", is now open. The show runs from the 12th of April through until the 5th of May. The exhibition features artwork by Shawn Barber, Crash One, Mike Davis, Ron English, Jeremy Fish, Blaine Fontana, Futura, Robert Hardgrave, Naoto Hattori, Kenji Hirata, Zach Johnsen, Jessica Joslin, Josh Keyes, Koralie, Kris Kuksi, David Choong Lee, Travis Louie, Tomokazu Matsuyama, Chris Mendoza, Aiko Nakagawa, Pat Rocha, Greg "Craola" Simkins, Damon Soule, Stash, Heidi Taillefer, Ben Tour, Mark Dean Veca, and Oliver Vernon.

A selection of work from the exhibition is now available to view online.

Joshua Liner Gallery, 548 W. 28th Street, Suite 334, New York NY 10001