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Thursday, April 19, 2012

LOOKING GLASS, Analog Salon


Tomorrow, 20 April, is the opening of LOOKING GLASS, a fascinating show under the MOPLA banner (Month of Photography LA, my third year exhibiting in or curating a show for MOPLA).

This year, LOOKING GLASS is an exhibition curated by noted art writer, contributor, Shana Nys Dambrot and looking at imagery that skirts between the real and the imagination or surreal. It is to be held at Analog Salon in Culver City, in a truly terrific building that is part of the complex designed by noted architect Eric Owen Moss.

Shana's Curatorial Statement:

LOOKING GLASS: Curator's Statement

For LOOKING GLASS I’ve assembled a dozen photographers whose work is in various ways made in a collaboration between the imagination and the world -- to explore ways that the camera is an expressive, fantastical, imaginative and pliable medium as well as form of document that contains evidence of external reality.

Everyone knows that a painter, for example, starts with a blank canvas and piles of pigment and that whether they makes landscape, portrait, or abstract images based in whole, in part, or not at all on external phenomenon, that the thing they make is entirely created from “nothing” or, put another way, from pure “imagination” -- whereas photography by definition involves negotiating with the external world not of your making. So how does a photographer achieve the same kind of emotional depth and psychological complexity, even approaching altered states of consciousness and perception, mediated through a “machine” -- that is the question.

Viggo Mortensen once told me that he doesn’t work in a studio, preferring the stumbled-upon world of circumstance for his subjects because, “Things are weird enough already.” For Sara Jane Boyers, her pictures of Detroit conflate present-day documentation with personal deep-buried memory. Johnny Cubert White is a self-described flaneur, a walker of the city streets, a man looking for the marvelous and unpredictable surprises that shifting urban vistas of reflection and juxtaposition offer up. Gary Baseman, though better known as a painter, also makes photographs which signal a welcome fantasy to intrude upon reality. Lawren Alice uses illusion and beauty to co-mingle the human body with abstract patterns of nature producing a hybrid that is more than its sums (and she’s a big Lewis Carroll fan). Sam Comen has the kind of brain that cannot help but to see patterns and fractal logic in all manner of scenes urban and rural and the accidental, narrative still lifes that are all around us.

Marjan Vayghan abstracts by choice and proximity, using the symbolism encoded in architectural elements to express certain essential truths about humanity’s yearning for freedom. Emily Bradley documents the proliferation of street-art installations around LA, with a practiced eye for taking the ambient architectural surroundings into account -- as the artists themselves intend the work to be encountered and experienced. Suzanne Adelman’s images use the everyday world as a starting point for an examination of what and how the mind obscures in our own perceptions. Jody Zellen distills elements of pattern, pixel and text into reductive compositions that uncover the hidden order behind what we take for granted as we move through the world. Mark Schumacher photographs the abstract wax paintings of Scott Elgart, creating a whole new kind of image with a forceful poetry and ambiguous depiction. Jennifer Vanderpool treats her own mixed media sculpture as a terrain to be documented in the best tradition of psychologically fraught landscape photography.

All of these artists have found unique ways to turn the looking-glass that is the camera lens into a mirror of their own inner lives, even as it reflects a perfect view of the world on the other side.

-Shana Nys Dambrot, Guest Curator ( http://sndx.net/ )


For this show, I will be exhibiting for the first time two of my images from my ongoing DETROIT DEFINITION project.

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Opening in Western Australia


Opening this week in Freemantle, Western Australia as part of the biennial festival of photography, FOTO FREO/FRINGE is the exhibition DIVERGENCE, a group show of work from photographers from all over the world and one in which I, together with photographer Martin Cox, have created a complementary set of photographs - WEST COAST.WEST COAST - relating our own West Coast work and interests to that of Fremantle, the port town of Perth where FOTO FREO is held.

We would have very much liked to attend but our photographs will have to do and we are looking forward to installation shots of this exhibition, located in the terrific Midland Atelier, one of Western Australia's signature warehouse/creative spaces, and put together with FORM a major non-profit for developing creativity in WA.

From DIVERGENCE: "In partnership with FotoFreo, FORM presents Divergence: Photographs from Elsewhere, a monumental showcase of contemporary photography by over sixty artists based in fifteen countries, as part of the FotoFreo Open Exhibition Program. The project will transform the Midland Railway Workshops into a panorama of images that demonstrate photography’s unique ability to communicate across cultures, connect diverse people, create debate and stir emotion. A dynamic multimedia event will launch this month long photographic showcase on Wednesday 14 March."

FOTOFREO is part of the Asia Pacific PhotoForum, "a collaborative group of photography festivals in the Asia-Pacific region that aims to promote photography and photographic art...."

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Catching Up

Nothing posted on "Aloud" since the New Year but busy on my other blogs and in real life.

In January, I was honored to create a "flip book" and documentary photograph of the incredible centenarian, Tyrus Wong, to exhibit at the Getty sponsored Pacific Standard Time (PST) exhibition at the Vincent Price ArtMuseum in Los Angeles, 'ROUND THE CLOCK: CHINESE AMERICAN ARTISTS WORKING IN LA. This is a beautiful exhibition curated by my friend and incredible independent curator, Sonia Mak. A photograph of mine is also in the exhibition catalogue.
Late January: gathering experiences and imagery for my annual Chinese Lunar New Year Greeting, The Year of the Water Dragon


And to make January (my birthday month) even more exciting: news on that day - while wandering yet another of the incredible ArtFairs in LA in January - that the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) has proposed acquiring one of my photographs, Ming's Cafe, from the FINDING CHINATOWN long-term project! More on this at my FINDING CHINATOWN blog.



February: In Group Exhibition at Morono Kiang Gallery, downtown Los Angeles. Images of the '80s, a fun re-exploration for me at a time of my life when I was switching careers and starting a family which resulted in closing my wet darkroom and my life in B&W. From the show: FARAWAY, SO CLOSE


Soon to open in mid-March in Fremantle, Western Australia, a group exhibition showcasing some work of mine on the LA Harbor in the FOTOFREO Biennial, one of the noted photography festivals of the AsianPacific rim. The show, DIVERGENCE, at FOTOFREO/FRINGE in Fremantle, W. Australia, opening 17 March. Reception: the 14th sponsored by FORM at the Midland Atelier.


One image from my work to be exhibited (along with that of fellow photographer, Martin Cox):


On to more news as several projects are taking shape for the Spring!

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Art-filled January

Los Angeles in January is filled with art fairs. Added to the mix this year is the Getty's Pacific Standard Time with a new wave of openings for the Winter months, including the Getty PST-sponsored 'ROUND THE CLOCK: FIVE CHINESE AMERICAN ARTISTS WORKING IN LA, at the Vincent Price Art Museum. I have a small documentary photograph of the amazing artist, illustrator, animator Tyrus Wong,

Saturday, December 31, 2011

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas Day 2011


The beach is beautiful. The weather magnificent with views throughout the basin. Friends abound. It is good to be home today with the way - and weather - in which we Southern Californians understand the holiday.