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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

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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

‘Cyberdine’ at Last Rites

May 2nd, 2008 by Jon Beinart

Last Rites Gallery Coming up at Paul Booth's Last Rites Gallery:

May/June 2008

Cyberdine: Fred Harper and Christopher Conte

Opening Reception: Saturday, 5/17/08, 7pm-10pm

Show runs May 17th through June 29th

Last Rites Gallery, 511 W. 33rd St, New York City 

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

Siegfried Zademack Exhibition

April 7th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Siegfried Zademack’s beinArt GalleryNews from Siegfried Zademack:

Siegfried Zademack's solo exhibition will run from April 20th until May 12th, 2008, at Kulturhof Heyerhofen. Twenty-nine paintings from four decades will be shown at the exhibition. The opening reception will be held on April the 12th.

Visit Zademack's site for his online catalogue.

Kulturhof Heyerhofen

Heerstedter Muhlenweg 13

27616 Beverstedt (near Bremen)

Germany 

Carnivora Exhibition

April 2nd, 2008 by Meg Smith

William B. Hand’s beinArt GalleryNews from Les Barany:

Carnivora - The Dark Art of Automobiles: May 3 - June 14, 2008

Grand Opening Reception: Saturday, May 3rd, 2008 at 7pm

L’Imagerie Gallery, 10555 Victory Boulevard, North Hollywood, CA 91606

L’Imagerie Gallery proudly invites you to join in celebrating its inaugural exhibition at its spacious new location with a gala star-studded grand opening reception. The LA presentation of this incredible sampling of the world’s most notorious artistic renegades coincides with the official publication release of the book. L’Imagerie will have on hand for sale the first exclusive West Coast copies of the edition, a truly significant chronicle and commentary on arguably the most critically defining icon of modern civilization.

Barany Books Website In addition to the 62 artists exhibited at Detroit’s C-POP Gallery, Carnivora book artists Eduard Anikonov, Steve Cerio, Chris Conte, Cam deLeon, Mike Diana, Brian Horton, Travis Louie, Eric Joyner, Craig LaRotonda, Shag, Greg “Stainboy” Reinel, Jeral Tidwell, Keith Weesner, and Robert Williams will join the exhibit at L’Imagerie Gallery, plus new original works are being produced for the show by Guy Aitchison, William B. Hand (above right), David Trulli, Brian Viveros and Kenneth Williams. Four excellent artists who came to our attention after the book went to press are creating new Carnivora paintings for the L’Imagerie Gallery exhibition: Ken Keirns, Chris Peters, Bart Powers and Charles Wish.

Below right: D. Hwang - GS-02 Large, 2007 - Fabricated steel


 

Carnivora Invitation

Interview with Jeremy Geddes

March 26th, 2008 by Jon Beinart

Paintings by Jeremy Geddes I recently asked Brian Sherwin of MyArtSpace.com if he could interview some of our featured artists for the beinArt.org blog. Here is Brian's interview with Jeremy Geddes. Jeremy is one of 50 artists featured in our upcoming publication entitled Metamorphosis 2.

Brian Sherwin - "Jeremy, can you tell us about your early years? What inspired you to first pick up the brush?"

Jeremy Geddes - "Damn that's hard to say, although, at least in part, it was undoubtedly to pick up the girls. I'm not sure that teenage boys do anything at all that isn't at least tangentially connected to picking up girls (or other boys)."

Brian Sherwin - "Do you have any academic training in art? Can you tell us about your early studies– be it formal or informal?"

Jeremy Geddes - "I did a BA and a postgrad degree at VCA in Melbourne, although it was useless in terms of technical training, it served more as a studio space and a way to pick up Austudy money, rather than a learning environment. I learned everything I know by myself after I left."

Brian Sherwin - "Tell us about your influences… are you influenced by any specific artists or art movements?"

Jeremy Geddes - "It's a hard one to answer, my influences are always evolving, they don't stay static. I don't adhere to any specific movements, I'm skeptical of the idea of labeled art movements, I'm not sure what it achieves."

Brian Sherwin - "Jeremy, the characters in your paintings often appear as if  they are 'boxed' in… there is a sense of claustrophobia about  them. Is that intentional?"

Jeremy Geddes - "It's intentional, many painters compose their work so the edges of the canvas are as invisible as possible. All the points of interest are contained within the middle portion of the image, the tonal and colour construction is designed to keep the eye within this space, to keep them viewing the painting for as long as possible."

"I don't really find that interesting, and I often go the other route of putting the points of interest at the edge of a piece, and creating a design that forces the eye off the edge of the canvas, I'm interested in the tension that that can create."

Brian Sherwin - "Tell us more about the motives behind your work…"

Jeremy Geddes Gallery Jeremy Geddes - "The motives for me painting have changed a little over the years, earlier, they were in a large part a sort of exasperation at the folly of my fellow monkey's, these days though I'd say they're about attempting to capture a mood, a fairly specific one, but one that I can't quite grasp internally, I'm trying to work it through in my paintings."

Brian Sherwin - "Jeremy, I understand that you are a gamer… what kind of games do you play? Are you influenced by video games or other aspects of popular culture?"

Jeremy Geddes - "I worked in game development for about 5 years, and have played them since I was a kid. Alas I'm so busy these days I don't really play them anymore. Am I influenced by popular culture? Yeah totally I'd say, although I don't really know what is popular culture and what is not. All these distinctions are pretty meaningless, there's just people creating things they think are worth creating, and some I think were, some I think weren't, the former I gravitate towards and draw off, the later I don't."

Brian Sherwin - "So what exactly are the social implications of your work? What do you strive to convey about society? What is the message that you  hope viewers obtain when they observe your art?"

Jeremy Geddes - "Conveying an explicit meaning without resorting to didactic narrative cliches is almost impossible. If you wish to have any form of subtlety in you your work, you have to accept that it comes with the cost of potential misinterpretation. Meaning for any particular viewer will only be partly informed by the painting, and predominantly informed be the viewers past experiences, and personal narrative associations formed over the course of their life. It's been my experience that viewers will see the broad outlines of a painting at first, begin to construct a narrative that fits their world view, and then selectively ignore details of the painting that conflict with this constructed narrative. So if you construct an image with a narrative, or message that conforms to standard belief, say a moral lesson, the chances that your painting will be correctly interpreted are high, but if you're attempting a dissident narrative you're going to struggle to convey that explicitly."

"If you accept this as a painter, then you realise that your ability to convey any sort of exacting message through your images is severely limited. I try to set up questions, hopefully ones that spark a cognitive dissonance in the viewer."

Brian Sherwin - "Tell us more about your process. What type of surface do you prefer to paint upon? How do you begin a painting? Do you work with sketches first?"

Art by Jeremy Geddes Jeremy Geddes - "I used to paint on board prepared with acrylic gesso, which worked fine, although I've recently switched to linen with an oil primer for larger paintings. Before I begin a painting, I generally do a lot of thinking. I don't go beyond this point until something has formed in my head which I feel compelled by. Then I play around with it, in my head and in small thumbnails. Then I collect what ever reference I need and get busy. After all the planning though, I usually end up scraping out areas of the painting, and changing them as I go. It's a time waster, but perhaps unavoidable."

Brian Sherwin - "Can you tell us about your studio practice… what are the conditions you need in order to paint– do you listen to music while working?"

Jeremy Geddes - "I work with podcasts or audio books going in the background usually, with the occasional bout of music. I generally work form around 8:30 in the morning until about 11:00 at night, and try to make it 7 days a week."

Brian Sherwin - "What are you working on at this time?"

Jeremy Geddes - "I'm beginning work on a five issue painted comic, which will probably take a little over year. After that, I have a huge backlog of paintings I want to get to."

Brian Sherwin - "Finally, do you have any advice for emerging artists?"

Jeremy Geddes - "That's a hard one. The best advice I could give, is to ask yourself, "why am I doing this?" Then try to answer it as honestly as you can, because with this knowledge you can plan a life that you'll find satisfying. If you're interested in money, you can make one series of decisions. Fame? Potentially another. If you want to simply paint what you what to paint, and couldn't care about money or fame, those choices will be different again."

Jeremy Geddes is one of 50 artists featured in our upcoming publication entitled Metamorphosis 2.

Barnaby Whitfield at 31GRAND

March 14th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Barnaby Whitfield’s Gallery Press Release from Barnaby Whitfield:

31GRAND is pleased to announce Barnaby Whitfield’s third solo exhibition with the gallery.

Barnaby Whitfield, "Little Deaths, All The Same", March 20 - April 19, 2008, Reception: Thursday, March 20, 7-9pm, front gallery

In what he views as the final installment in a trilogy for 31GRAND; Whitfield’s Episode VI has the Ewoks drunk and randy with no sense of the impending tragedy, as water licks at their treetop climbing toes (except in Barnaby’s world the Ewoks are more likely to be Abraham Lincoln clones.) Narratives woven through the last two shows crash and burn, then intertwine again to take on new life in this boisterous suite of pastel paintings.  Barnaby Whitfield considers his works on paper, paintings, as defined in this beloved and oft cited quote from the Pastel Society Of America “Generally, the ground is toned paper - if the ground is covered completely with pastel, the work is considered a Pastel Painting; a Pastel Sketch shows much of the ground. When protected by fixative and glass, pastel is the most permanent of all media, for it never cracks, darkens or yellows.” However he requests you do not ask him to quote it at the artist’s reception.

From lovingly using his art dealer to anthropomorphize the ‘Bird Flu’ to finding fictional passion with Hernan Bas on a men seeking men website, we continue to get amusing and rather untrustworthy glimpses into Whitfield’s experience in the art world. And besides an over all theme the artist states as “sexualizing the environmental crisis within the context of American politics” we also see the end to Barnaby’s quest for his real parents (Whitfield was one of those children that always suspected they were adopted even though they knew quite well they were not), and a startling turn of events in his ongoing Clonie series (a character created when the momentarily impoverished artist decided to sell nudes on eBay inadvertently gaining the attention of 31GRAND and being welcomed into the fold). 

31GRAND Website Never one to ignore a good bandwagon, this show is rife with imagery of Mother Nature’s rapidly declining health. It all comes to a questionably hopeful end in the piece “Wild! Woman! On The Water! (My Imaginary Friend She’s Just Pretend)” featuring Barnaby (in toddler form) and his Mother, Clonie, (along with Sarah Jessica Parker as Lil Orphan Annie) riding out the flooding from "Al Gore’s global warming" in search of dry land and greener pastures. 

Above Right, Barnaby Whitfield, Fit To Burst (Heather Stephens As The Bird Flu), 2007, Pastel On Paper, 28.5 x 36" 

31GRAND is pleased to announce a group exhibition curated by Barnaby Whitfield.

“Warm, Red, Salt And Wet” curated by Barnaby Whitfield

Artists: Zea Barker, Amelia Biewald, George Boorujy, Jennifer Coates, Amir H. Fallah, Debra Hampton, Erik Lindman, Michael Pope, Christian Sampson, Allison Schulnik, Jason Weatherspoon (below right, Jason Weatherspoon, Nefrotittyafrodite, 2003, ceramic, auto paint, 35 x 29 x 34")

March 20 - April 19, 2008, Reception: Thursday, March 20, 7-9pm, back gallery

What started off as a conceptualized "links" page from the artist’s website was elevated to what Whitfield states is an "exciting dialogue" amongst this group of artists (along with himself) that roam from watercolor to ceramic, from bleach on velvet to film and more. The show’s title, in the long standing tradition of numerous 31GRAND group exhibitions, is a song lyric. This time it is from The Hidden Camera’s "The Man That I Am With My Man"; a line that the agoraphobic synesthete Whitfield claims is not only sexual in nature but makes him "see an American flag every time I hear it."


31GRAND
, 143 Ludlow St. New York, NY 10002, 212.228.0901, hours: Tues. - Sat. 12-7pm 

Last Rites Gallery - Opening Exhibition

March 10th, 2008 by Meg Smith

Last Rites Gallery WebsiteLast Rites Gallery's very first show, entitled "Transgression" will be running from April the 5th to April the 28th, 2008. The Grand Opening Reception will be on April the 5th, 7pm - 11pm.

Artists include: John Abrahamson, Shawn Barber, Jon Beinart, Rachel Bess, Matthew Bone, Paul Booth, Patrick Byers, Vincent Castiglia, Colin Christian, Christopher Conte, Daniel Martin Diaz, HR Giger, Naoto Hattori, William B Hand, Fred Harper, Nikko Hurtado, Michael Hussar, John John Jesse, Stephen Kasner, Kevin Llewellen, Fabrice Lavollay, Laurie Lipton, Travis Louie, Jesse Pepper, Karl Persson, Dan Quintana, Celeste Rapone, JL Robbins, David Stoupakis, Heidi Taillerfer, Brian Viveros, Chet Zar

Last Rites Gallery owner, Paul Booth, and director Genevive Zacconi are both accomplished artists. Booth is widely considered to be a master of the art form of tattoo and is also known for his macabre oil paintings. Genevive Zacconi is best known for her oil paintings and her credits include roles as an illustrator, art director, graphic designer, and art instructor.

Transgression ArtistsLast Rites Gallery 

New York City

April 5th - 28th, 2008

511 W 33rd St

3rd Fl

NYC

The New Mythology Group Show

March 1st, 2008 by Jon Beinart

Nathan Spoor’s Gallery'The New Mythology' Group Show at Dorothy Circus Gallery.

A survey of paintings from modern masters of the visionary and narrative realm.

April 30 - May 30, 2008.

Featuring new paintings from Nathan Spoor, Lola, Travis Louie, Dan May, Michael Page, Naoto Hattori, Colin Johnson, Kevin Peterson, Chris Ryniak, Ken Keirns & Joe Vaux.

Full-colour exhibition catalog / curated by Nathan Spoor

Dorothy Circus Gallery

Via Nuoro, 17 00182 Roma

+39 06 7021179

Group Show at Mondo Bizzarro

February 26th, 2008 by Jon Beinart

Chris Mars’s PaintingsBily Shire Fine Arts Group Show at Mondo Bizzarro Gallery.

March 1 - April 3, 2008.

Including works by Chris Mars (right), Liz McGrath, Scott G. Brooks, Daniel Martin Diaz, Glenn Barr, Scott Musgrove, Ana Bagayan, Gary Taxali, Shag, Bob Dob & Nathan Ota.

Via Reggio Emilia 32 c/d 00198 Roma, Italy.

Tel: 06 44247451.

Visions in The Mischtechnik Seminar

February 15th, 2008 by Tim Anderson

Caruana & Holden SeminarCome spend three weeks in a 14th century village, learning Old Masters' techniques from a new generation of Visionary artists. Experience communal living in Torri Superiore, an eco-village in the foot-Alps of the Italian Riviera, just two steps from Ernst Fuchs' home atelier and the  Torri Superiore is a labyrinthine village of spiraling stairs and narrow passages, built from the local limestone in 1300. In this cozy and creative atmosphere, students will develop two original works: one following the classical Mischtechnik employed by Ernst Fuchs, and the other following a modern variation developed by the teachers and employed in their latest paintings.

Laurence Caruana and Maura Holden will lead the seminar together, setting up their easels and painting alongside the students…. Visionary methods and materials, practical tips and secrets of the craft - all will be demonstrated and applied hands on. You will learn how to make fine lines, apply smooth glazes, eliminate brush strokes and paint details like eyes, hair, jewels and halo's. The teachers wish to guide their students with intuition, humor and understanding, knowing that these techniques are not easy, and require much patience and skill. For more information and to register.

The Seminar will take place from July 12th - August 3rd, 2008. 

Please visit: Maura Holden's site or Laurence Caruana's site.

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Metamorphosis Art Book - 50 Surreal, Fantastic and Visionary Artists

Jon Beinart founded The beinArt Surreal Art Collective & beinArt Publishing (Metamorphosis) in 2006. beinArt.org was designed and is maintained by Leo Plaw. All artists have granted permission to be featured on this website. All art herein is copyrighted and may not be reproduced without the express permission of the respective artists. beinArt.org represents contemporary artists who lean towards: Fantastic Realism, Surrealism, Symbolism, Pop Surrealism, Lowbrow, Psychedelic, Visionary, Esoteric, Erotic & Macabre Art.