Monday Nights at MoMA feat. Prefuse 73

MoMA lobby
MoMA Lobby

Tonight I attended MoMA’s Monday Nights series. DJ/Musician Prefuse 73 filled the halls with some good beats…there was a very long line for wine, and the museum exhibits all stayed open until 8:45 pm. I took a bunch of shots of the work, check them out. And the current special exhibit, Leon Ferrari and Mira Schendel’s Tangled Alphabets was incredible. divine. absolutely loved it. a sea of words, typography, metal, handwritten chaos, a beautiful mess. I couldn’t photograph it, but if you can, go see it.

Also found other gems throughout the museum that I was able to photograph. all in my flickr ‘museum trips’ set.

Andre Thomkins
Andre Thomkins. Untitled (detail). 1965. Lackskin (enamel) on paper.

John Waters at Marianne Boesky Gallery

John Waters Exhibit
work by © John Waters. Courtesy of Marianne Boesky Gallery.

This weekend I got to check out the John Waters exhibit at Marianne Boesky Gallery. John Waters utilizes his extensive film knowledge as well as digging up some classic imagery, and adds his own satirical and witty spin to this new batch of photographs and sculptures. I found myself cracking a smile and chuckling a lot throughout my visit. I did expect more controversial work, since that’s what I associate him with… So this was fairly tame in that aspect. But the juxtaposition of subtle pop culture references and today’s heightened social taboos prepose, evoke, make for some interesting thoughts and conversation.

More of photos from this exhibit here. Thanks to Marianne Boesky Gallery for letting me document the show.

John Waters Exhibit
work by © John Waters. Courtesy of Marianne Boesky Gallery.

Marianne Boesky Gallery
509 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011
t. 212-680-9889 f. 212-680-9897
Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10am – 6pm

Nigel Cooke at Andrea Rosen Gallery


Blind Snake 2. 2009. Oil on linen, backed with sail cloth
Photo: Todd White

Today I got to experience Nigel Cooke’s work for the first time. His very large, yet relatively empty paintings are filled with invoking ones emotion. Upon entering Andrea Rosen Gallery, one is greeted by Cooke’s Blind Snake. A lone, long, ready to strike snake painted with such finesse and subtle color pallete. So fragile with execution, yet such a powerful symbol…My favorite painting of the series. Inside the main gallery space, is a series of large paintings and sculptures. His work reminds me of a surreal dream. I found myself hovering inside these worlds and could almost feel the wind blowing while studying 1989 and his feeling of surrender in Heavy Beret. All the paintings felt like a journey into someone’s inner struggles, their unconscious… I felt an unvisited and unwanted ugliness in his figures yet was brought back into its beauty by their delicacy through his brushwork and technique.

This exhibit will be up until May 30, 2009.
visit www.rosengallery.com or more info.

All images are © Nigel Cooke
All images are courtesy of Andrea Rosen Gallery, New York.


Heavy Beret. 2009. Oil on linen
Photo: Todd White

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1989. 2009. Oil on Linen, backed with sail cloth
Photo: Todd White

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Experience. 2009. Oil on Linen
Photo: Todd White

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Big Predecessor. 2009. Patinated bronze with paint.
Photo: Jeremy Lawson

latest works by Maria Cristina Romero

Venezuelan artist Maria Cristina Romero has been working on her latest series of paintings and sculptures. In her paintings, she’s been experimenting with texture by using fabrics and actual keys as well as bold colors, thick brushwork and strong shapes. I find her bronze sculptures just beautiful. Click at the photo below to see a selection of them.

recent works by Ma.Cristina Romero
© art by ma. cristina romero

Work to Do – 112 greene st. studio

WORK TO DO exhibit

Royce Bannon & the Endless Love Crew have put together a pretty incredible show at the 112 greene st. studio. 50 artists took over the floor, walls, ceilings and doused them with art. what a treat to see all these talented street artists in one space. my buddy alex from Mighty Tanaka gave me a tour of the studio and the work, which was a real plus. he’s going to help me caption the show on my flickr set…(’cause i have an awful memory). But wanted to thank him for being a great host.

This show has been extended and will be up ’til May 1st. You should swing by and immerse yourself in some street art culture. I left inspired.

WORK TO DO exhibit

thecombinenyc.com/
Mighty Tanaka

Ryan McGinness Works – Deitch

Ryan McGinness Works

Swung by Deitch gallery to see Ryan McGinness exhibit. what a space. his work fills it nicely with great amount of color, intricate paintings and complicated sculptures. eye sensory overload….in a good way. take a look for yourself, it’s worth it.

The exhibit runs from March 07, 2009 — April 18, 2009
18 Wooster Street, New York.

from deitch.com –
…McGinness merges several of the most important directions in contemporary painting. His work combines all-over composition, inspired by Jackson Pollock and the mechanical silkscreen process inspired by Andy Warhol. The work also fuses naturalistic and contemporary pop culture references. His imagery derives form a broad range of sources: from dreams and hallucinations to song lyrics and fragments of art history. There is a push and pull between content and form, and between literal meaning and intuitive feeling. McGinness’s paintings represent his own mental landscape. His compositions reflect the infinite, ever-flowing continuum of the universe.

I took some photos as well.

Ryan McGinness Works

jacques labouchere

Listen to ‘Esperanza’ Demo * Listen to ‘Song for Anne’ Demo

As long as I’ve known Jacques, he’s been playing his guitar and writing music…and that’s since freshman year in high school….(man, time flies)… And here is is today, rockin’ the Gothenburg music scene, living the dream and loving it. It’s nice to know that people you meet throughout life are doing what they love.


photo by Wphoto.se

I remember Jacques having great taste in music. I still have some of the mixtapes he made back in ’93, which included music by radiohead, the beatles, dinosaur Jr., talking heads, morrissey… His tapes are still floating around in my sisters vw and I still listen to them today.

Jacques songs are sweet, upbeat and rich with melodies. I would love to see his band live. They are finishing up his latest record and will be playing festivals soon (hopefully by spring) . For more songs, info on his upcoming album and shows go to his myspace music page.

jacques labouchere
photo by © Lupo Lupo

ps: One of the things I feel make a band stand out are their posters and flyers. Here are 2 examples of them, done by Jacques’ good friend Hanna. She is a multi-talented girl, with a band of her own, as well as being an artist and photographer. love her work.

art by © Lupo Lupo

If you are ever in Gothenburg, swing by and show your support. Hej da!

NYC Subway + MoMA

what a great ideaaaaaaa… Museums/Galleries should do this everywhere and more often. The MoMA is advertising solely at the Brooklyn subway stop of Atlantic Pacific until March 15th. This is not just an ordinary ad… this is a complete take over and i LOVE it. check out the cool website and take some photos if you happen to be there.

http://atlanticpacific.moma.org/

From the website:In a gift to the city’s subway riders, MoMA takes over Brooklyn’s Atlantic Avenue/Pacific Street subway station, filling the station with reproductions of over 50 works of art in the MoMA collection. 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, walk through the station to see images of works by Pablo Picasso, Vincent van Gogh, Charles Eames, Cindy Sherman, Andy Warhol, and many other great artists, filmmakers, and designers.


photo by baxterjeff

the almighty cezanne

MET - Cezanne
Paul Cezanne’s The Card Players

Paul Cezanne has always been one of my main influences in painting. He’s caught my eye since young. His style and technique are poetic and effortless… the rich brushwork, luscious color… I truly love his work.

NPR.org has done a little piece on him and the people he has influenced, which you should listen to.

The Philadelphia Museum of Art as an exhibit from 2/26 to 5/17 ’09. Click here for more info.

MET - Cezanne
detail of a Cezanne still life

jeff peters

j_peters_endure_sinner_endure_72dpi
© Jeff Peters

Jeff and I met 10 years ago on a sunny day in Southern California. We both attended LCAD, formerly known as the Art Institute of Southern California. Those days were pretty amazing I might add. A small wooden school a mile away from the pacific ocean, in a small town filled with galleries & art festivals, we had classes outside or on the cliffs overlooking the endless water… I remember visiting Jeff’s studio, drinking wine, talking, laughing… good times back then, I miss those carefree art school years…sigh.

Anywho, Jeff Peters is talented. Very. Beautiful oil paintings. Very delicate and fragile, his detail intricate and brushwork mastered. Jeff is completely dedicated to his work. He has kept a theme of nature throughout the years, but lately his work has picked up bolder colors and he’s ventured into depicting animals in rather unpredictable situations. I’m a fan.

Jeff Peters will be showing at Peter Blake Gallery in Laguna Beach, CA., February 5th, from 6-9pm. More info here.

For more of Jeff’s work please visit peterblakegallery.com.

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© Jeff Peters

ryder e. robison

I had the opportunity to set up a little interview with my friend Ryder who has been rocking the art scene in NY lately. I hope you enjoy some of his thoughts and take a look at his work, which I find dramatic, clever and very interesting.

Jeremiah_LoRes

How long have you been doing art?
– I’ve been drawing and making artwork since I can remember. One of my earliest memories would be of drawing naked woman on the sidewalk in chalk after stealing Playboy magazines. My sister was pretty pissed off about that. I was about 5 years old. I’ve always been making something. I went to two different art schools, one on an illustration scholarship, the other just to figure out what else I could do. And I’m still working on that one. Still trying to see what’s next.

What/who inspires you to create it?
– I find New York very inspiring. Since my first trip here with my old band years ago I found it strangely comforting here. I find a lot of inspiration in the libraries through researching old myths and superstitions about the explanations multiple cultures put behind different things, especially in the natural world. It’s really intriguing how one object can undergo such drastic reasoning of why it exists and how it should be feared or worshipped.

What inspires you in your everyday?
– It almost always changes. But my walk to my studio from my apartment is nice and I’ll listen to music and get very driven. Conversations from the night before. The people I’m surrounded by. Other artists, designers and my fiancé. People may not have to say anything in particular at all, it’s just their energy that can be very telling. The levels of ambition we each have to accomplish something substantial versus being apathetic.

What medium do you consider most exciting or would you LOVE to master?
– I would love to master sculpture. I keep envisioning the paintings I do in three dimensional form and then some form of light splitting them open. I’ve begun work on a few new things and I’m happy with the progress. I like the idea of being able to walk around the entirety of a piece…

what IS art/music to you?
– The same thing it is to you I would imagine: very personal.

Comb-WEB

find more of ryder’s artwork at www.pantherattack.com.

My Opening in San Francisco

Opening at Project One

I’ve been working hard for this opening for the past few months. Here are some pics of the big night. I will be updating my website with all the new work very soon.

Show stays up until Saturday Jan 24th. There will be a closing party starting at 8. Come by if you can!

Project One is on 251 Rhode Island St., San Francisco.