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Art and Living » Art

Art

Art: Martin & Lozano Gallery

Written on: Tuesday, November 24th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

antilles

[Christopher H. Martin, “Antilles.” Image courtesy of the artist]

New West Hollywood gallery opens its doors with a showing of two cutting-edge artists

Back in September, Martin & Lozano Gallery opened its doors on Robertson Boulevard. Its inaugural show features the work of the gallery’s two namesakes, Christopher H. Martin and Kandy Lozano.

Based out of Texas, Martin has achieved international recognition for his creations. His vibrant, acrylic‐on‐acrylic abstracts fuse lush colors and movement, forming expressions of nature. He also creates inspirational, metallic filmwork of artistically enhanced images.

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Art: DJ Hall’s Home Grown Lecture at LA Art House

Written on: Friday, August 28th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Hall LA Art House

[DJ Hall addresses the audience]

Renowned artist reflects on painting and more at West Hollywood event

On Wednesday, August 19th, Beverly Boulevard’s LA Art House gallery welcomed artist DJ Hall for a lively talk and Q & A. Renowned for her hyper-realistic depictions of people (often in sunny settings) in candid and intimate moments, Hall opened up to gallery visitors about her personal artistic process.

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Art: Elements of Nature at Pepperdine’s Frederick R. Weisman Museum

Written on: Tuesday, August 25th, 2009 | Filed under: arts and living, Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Giehler

[Torben Giehler, “Mont Blanc,” 2002. Acrylic on canvas. Collection of the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation]

Exhibition showcases selections from the collection of Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation

A short drive up Pacific Coast Highway from Los Angeles is the Frederick R. Weisman Museum, part of Pepperdine University’s Center for the Arts. Removed from the hustle and bustle of the city, the museum stages a number of provocative exhibitions staged in an tranquil and intimate setting just a stone’s throw from the Pacific Ocean.

Just this last weekend, the Museum opened up its latest show, Elements of Nature: Selections from the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation. According to the museum, the exhibition gathers together works of art that reflect on how the four elements of nature have meaning in our lives.

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Art: Emma Ferreira at Frank Pictures Gallery

Written on: Tuesday, August 18th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Ferreira Lady Luck

[Emma Ferreira, “Lady Luck.” Image courtesy of the artist]

Exposure highlights new photography by Los Angeles-based artist

Opening September 13th at Bergamot Station’s Frank Pictures Gallery in Santa Monica, California is a collection of new work by painter and photographer Emma Ferreira. It’s definitely “exposure” in a couple senses of the word — this show is composed of photographic male and female nudes from her series Bare/Fever in addition to never-before-seen new works.

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Art World: Nicole Cohen: French Connection at Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Santa Monica, California

Written on: Monday, July 20th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Shoshana Wayne Nicole Cohen 1

[Installation view. Image courtesy of Shoshana Wayne Gallery]

Exhibition of video and drawings comes to Bergamot Station gallery

In 2007, the J. Paul Getty Center commissioned artist Nicole Cohen to incorporate French decorative arts from the museum’s permanent collection into an interactive video installation. What resulted was Please Be Seated, which featured replicas of several French chairs fabricated in an all-white room. Visitors could sit in them and look to an overhead screen to see the chair and their image transported to the original interior from whence the furniture would have existed, complete with prerecorded contemporary performers inhabiting the televised scenes. It was an an exercise in exploring history as well as a way of examining social mores regarding etiquette.

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Julius Shulman: 1910 - 2009

Written on: Monday, July 20th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Shulman 434

[Julius Shulman, 2008. Photo by Jim McHugh]

Remembering an icon

Last week, Julius Shulman, arguably the most talented and accomplished architectural photographer of the 20th century, passed away at the age of 98. A good friend of Art and Living, he will be sorely missed, both by those who knew him and by countless appreciators of his work worldwide.

Back in January, Art and Living was honored to be able to recognize Mr. Shulman with an Art to Life award. As part of that recognition, Art and Living ran a piece highlighting the career and accomplishments of the well-known architectural photographer. In memory of the artist, here is that piece.

Article after the jump.

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Art Spotlight: Sculptor Deborah Brown

Written on: Friday, July 17th, 2009 | Filed under: Art  | 2 Chat Comments

Deborah Brown

[Deborah Brown. Image courtesy of the artist]

A Postmodernist in Fairyland

Plastic artist Deborah Brown has revealed a fresh crop of creations at her sculpture farm just outside London in St. Albans, England.  Falling somewhere between the whimsical, the quizzical, the inoffensively mocking and the slightly unsettling, Brown’s fantastic animal-vegetable, animal-human, and vegetable-human hybrids suggest figures populating a fairyland set borrowed from a mutant’s version of A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

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Art World: Topography, Light and Magic at Blue Seven Gallery, Santa Monica, California

Written on: Friday, July 17th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Farm Rake Fog

[Robert McGinley, “Farm Rake Fog.” Image courtesy of the artist/Blue Seven Gallery]

Santa Monica exhibition welcomes art lovers and environmentalists alike

Conservation landscape photographer Robert McGinley opened up an exhibition of his latest work at Blue Seven Gallery in Santa Monica on June 27. Titled Topography, Light and Magic, the exhibit explores natural landscapes through a series of strikingly beautiful images.

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The Art of Escape: Hotel Altstadt, Vienna, Austria

Written on: Thursday, July 2nd, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Hospitality, Art  | Art Chat

img_7492-434.jpg

[Otto Ernst Wiesenthal, the owner of Hotel Altstadt]

Vienna hotel makes for an exquisite, artful escape

Situated in the heart of picturesque Vienna, Hotel Altstadt provides visitors to the capital city of Austria a respite from the hustle and bustle of the busy city. Otto Ernst Wiesenthal, Art collector needed a gallery for his collection so converted an old patrican house to a boutique hotel. You can even request the room with the Bösendorfer piano. 

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Art World: Body and Language at Albertina Museum, Vienna

Written on: Wednesday, July 1st, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

jackson

[Gottfried Helnwein, “Michael Jackson, Köln,” 1988. Albertina, Wien - Dauerleihgabe von Gottfried Helnwein, Irland © VBK, Wien 2009 © Foto: Albertina, Wien - Peter Ertl]

Poignant exhibition showcases the intricacies of the human condition

Vienna’s Albertina Museum is currently showcasing an exquisite assortment of photographs exploring the human body its multitude of forms.

Whatever their artistic origins or national provenance, the artists featured in this show — Erwin Wurm, Gottfried Helnwein, Helmut Newton, Franz West, Chuck Close, John Coplans, Elke Krystufek and Marie Jo Lafontaine — focus on the body, its qualities of expression, or text and body (image) combinations in their works.

In all, there are about 80 photographic works from the holdings of the Albertina on display. Among these is Gottfried Helnwein’s image of a 1980s-era Michael Jackson, a visage which is particularly striking in the face of Jackson’s recent death.

More photos after the jump. 

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Art World: Masterworks of Modern Art from the Albertina

Written on: Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

degas

[Edgar Degas, “Two Dancers,” ca. 1905. Pastel on card. Albertina, Vienna - Batliner Collection. Photo: © Fotostudio Heinz Preute, Vaduz]

Vaunted Vienna museum stages monumental collection of 20th-century art

Right now, works from the Batliner Collection, which came to the Albertina as a permanent loan in 2007, are being shown in a monster exhibition.

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Art World: Reflections on the Electric Mirror: New Feminist Video at the Brooklyn Museum

Written on: Tuesday, June 30th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

black-out-by-cathy-begien-434.jpg

[Cathy Begien, “Black Out,” 2004. Still from video, color, sound; 5 minutes, 19 seconds. Photo: Courtesy of the artist and Winkleman Gallery

Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art stages a special exhibition featuring a new generation of feminist video artists

Currently on view at the Brooklyn museum is the exhibition Reflections on the Electric Mirror: New Feminist Video, which presents recent videos by a number of feminine video artists.

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Art World: Periwinkle Shaft at Heather James Fine Art

Written on: Monday, May 18th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

dsc_web.jpg

An installation by one of the masters of 20th-century art comes to Palm Desert

For anyone familiar with the fine art or art history, Robert Rauschenberg is a name who needs no introduction. Challenging yet relevant, Rauschenberg was one of the New York artists when New York was the undisputed heavyweight champion of the art world. His work, along with the work other notable contemporaries,  bridged the gap between Abstract Expressionism and Pop art.

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The Art of Giving: Creating and Supporting the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center

Written on: Wednesday, May 13th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art, Foundations and Charities  | Art Chat

Freedom Center

Talking with the faces behind one of the world’s great cultural institutions

By Kathleen Joiner

On August 23, 2004, the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center opened in Cincinnati, Ohio, steps from the banks of the Ohio River, the dividing line separating slave and free states in the decades leading to the Civil War. Housing slavery era artifacts, permanent and changing exhibits—including an original slave pen, a holding place for slaves awaiting auction—the Freedom Center tells the story of slavery, America’s struggle for freedom, while serving as a safe house to foster healing and restoration.

While the museum was still a concept, a diverse core group of citizens united to raise the necessary $110 million to start the institution. The mission was clear: To reveal stories about freedom’s heroes, from the era of the Underground Railroad to contemporary times, challenging and inspiring everyone to take courageous steps for freedom today.

We talked to some of these founders and current Freedom Center supporters about why building and growing the Freedom Center is paramount. Here’s what they had to say:

John Pepper

^ John Pepper, Retired CEO of Procter & Gamble and Co-Chair of NURFC’s Board of Directors: “The youngsters are the nucleus of change,” he says. “Change cannot be made if the history is unknown.”

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Art World: …LINES… at Sherry Frumkin Gallery

Written on: Thursday, April 30th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Events, Art  | Art Chat

Simons Opening

[The crowd at the show opening]

Santa Monica exhibition showcases the work of artist Doni Silver Simons

Artist Doni Silver Simons opened an exhibition of her newest work on March 26 at Sherry Frumkin Gallery in Santa Monica. Silver Simons has built a career on the meticulous “marks” found throughout her paintings and drawings; the artist refers to her work as “doing lines,” and it is through these lines that she records the passage of moments, days, weeks and years.  Viewers often recognize a language in the work, with the marks taking on multiple meanings and interpretations.

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The Art of Collecting: Marty and Josy Collins

Written on: Monday, April 27th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Collinses

At home with a pair of art-loving connoisseurs

By Victoria Charters

“People collect for different reasons. My family and I like the whole idea of living and working in art and design,” says Marty Collins, art collector and president/CEO of Gatehouse Capital, the largest independent developer of W Hotels and condominiums and the force behind Hollywood’s posh, new W Hotel and Residences, scheduled to open later this year. “We like having it woven into the fabric of our lives.”

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Art World: Los Angeles Artist Tommy Hollenstein at Neiman Marcus of Topanga

Written on: Sunday, April 19th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

group-shot.jpg

Neiman Marcus Topanga hosts cocktail party and silent art auction for artist Tommy Hollenstein to benefit Shane’s Inspiration and Canine Companions

Neiman Marcus Topanga hosted local San Fernando Valley artist Tommy Hollenstein (www.tommyhollenstein.com) and a selection of his paintings in the store to kick off the holiday season and to raise money for Shane’s Inspiration (www.shanesinspiration.com) and Canine Companions (www.cci.org). Tommy Hollenstein survived a biking accident that left him a quadriplegic and now uses his wheelchair wheels for his paint brush. His work portrays a whimsical world of his own invention layering vibrant colors applied by tire treads to create the perception of fluid motion in static space.

cimg0051-2.jpg

[Linda Valliant of Canine Companions; Bob Lugari, vice president and general manager of Neiman Marcus Topanga; Lucy Matsumoto of Shane’s Inspiration; and artist Tommy Hollenstein]

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Events: gem at Gallery 825

Written on: Tuesday, April 14th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Events, Art  | Art Chat

Things Fall Apart 1033

[Linda Kunik, “Things Fall Apart #1033.” Courtesy of the artist/LAAA/Gallery 825]

Gala showcases developing art trends

Los Angeles Art Association hosted its annual gem benefit last Saturday, April 11 at Gallery 825. The event, widely embraced by the art community and leading collectors as a showcase of emerging art trends, featured the art of over 100 emerging, mid-career and established artists including Meeson Pae Yang, Dan Monteavaro, Julia Strickler and Steven Fujimoto. With over 200 original artworks beginning at $100, the event brought together budget-minded collectors as well as traditional connoisseurs! Getty Museum Director Michael Brand and wife Tina Brand served as the Benefit Co-Chairs and the Benefit Committee comprised many renowned cultural figures, including Harry Chandler, Howard N. Fox and Cheech Marin.

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Art World: Sotheby’s Loan Exhibition from the Collection of Steven and Alexandra Cohen

Written on: Tuesday, April 14th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

women-de-kooning2.jpg

[Willem De Kooning, “Woman III,” 1952-53. Oil on canvas]

Heralded Collection makes showing at Sotheby’s New York from April 2-14, 2009

A loan exhibition from the collection of Steven and Alexandra Cohen closes out its run today at Sotheby’s in New York. Entitled Women, the exhibition focused on one area of the Cohen’s collection: works depicting female subjects. This remarkable assemblage of twenty masterpieces ranges from Edvard Munch’s Madonna and Pablo Picasso’s Le Repos to Willem de Kooning’s Women III and Andy Warhol’s Turquoise Marilyn, and it includes paintings, sculpture, works on paper and photographs by the most influential artists of the modern era. The collection has never before been exhibited to the public.

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Art World: Dennis Hopper at the Harwood Museum of Art in Taos, New Mexico

Written on: Monday, March 16th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Entertainment, Art  | Art Chat

Hopper and others

[Left to right: Ronald Davis, Ron Cooper, Robert Dean Stockwell, Dennis Hopper, and Larry Bell]

Actor and artist Dennis Hopper curates two exhibitions to honor long-time Taos friendshipsand to mark the 40th anniversary of Easy Rider

Dennis Hopper first set foot (or wheels, as the case may be) in Taos, New Mexico in 1968 while directing one of the 60s’ most powerfully iconic visions, Easy Rider, a film that looked so real, felt so raw, and sounded so good it helped define a social movement—and, some may say, the way a nation saw itself.

For the next 15 years, Hopper pretty much made Taos home, taking up residence at the Mabel Dodge Luhan house, continuing Mabel’s tradition of hosting the best, brightest, and surely the most off-beat of his generation.

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Art World: The Curator’s Take on The Art of Blake Edwards

Written on: Friday, March 13th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Entertainment, Art  | Art Chat

Edwards

[Blake Edwards at the opening of his PDC exhibition]

The Art of Blake Edwards: A Retrospective of Sculpture and Paintings 1969 - 2008

By Gail Feingarten Oppenheimer, Curator

Everybody has always known Blake Edwards as a successful writer, producer, and director of film, but very few people knew about his secret passion for painting and sculpting. I have known him for 35 years and had no idea how many paintings he had created and stored while also making successful films. I knew he had about ten paintings stashed in the closets but, through the years, that number grew to hundreds. His art has even ventured into three dimensions; in 1983, when Blake was doing a movie about a sculptor, he started creating the sculpture himself. The quality of the art is so extraordinary.

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The Art of Photography: Michael Childers

Written on: Tuesday, March 10th, 2009 | Filed under: Art  | Art Chat

Childers

An elegant, doe-eyed Natalie Wood sitting strong and confident in a shoulder pad-imbued dress; artist David Hockney afloat in a boat amid a placid English lake; sculptor Robert Graham in the studio awash in the stains of pliable clay; a self-absorbed Andy Warhol curled up in a massive fur; punk-poet Henry Rollins reading a Wall Street Journal on fire. These are only some of the legendary images that graced the Palm Springs Art Museum’s walls during celebrated Hollywood photographer Michael Childers’ 2003 career retrospective.

The show represented a bygone era when Childers, knee deep in the entertainment industry lifestyle and alongside his director-partner John Schlesinger, was able to turn his intimate relationships with cultural icons and his inimitable ability to yell ”Fabulous, yes!” into breathtaking images. These were the days when, as an Interview magazine photographer, he captured the essence, rebellion and freedom of rock and film stardom. Over the ensuing decades, Childers’ career began to shift.

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Art World: Old Masters Make Contemporary History

Written on: Monday, March 9th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Flight into Egypt

[Jacopo Bassano (Jacopo da Ponte), “The Flight into Egypt,” c. 1544–45. Oil on canvas. Norton Simon Art Foundation]

Two powerhouse museums create an unprecedented loan program

By Diane Dunne

On view at the New York’s Frick Collection through May 10th are five 16th- and 17th-century masterpieces, none of which have, in over thirty years, left their home at Pasadena’s Norton Simon Museum, an institution noted for seldom lending works of art from its collection.

The five featured paintings were specifically selected by the Frick’s Associate Director and Peter Jay Sharp Chief Curator Colin B. Bailey as iconic examples from the important California museum, and they happen to be works by artists not represented in the Frick: Jacopo Bassano’s brilliant Flight into Egypt (c. 1544-45), Peter Paul Rubens’s admirable Holy Women at the Sepulcher (c.1611-14), Giovanni Francesco Barbieri’s (Guercino) striking Aldrovandi Dog (c. 1625), Francisco de Zurbaran’s extraordinary Still Life with Lemons, Oranges and a Rose (c.1633), and Bartolome Esteban Murillo’s touching Birth of Saint John the Baptist (c. 1660).  These five artists are in the first tier of the finest Flemish, Italian and Spanish European master painters.

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The Art of Photography: Michael Grecco

Written on: Thursday, February 26th, 2009 | Filed under: Art  | Art Chat

Greco 434

Michael Grecco wanted to be a great Hollywood photographer ever since his days on assignment with People, where he shot journalistic pictures to illustrate lifestyle stories. “I immediately started to request more opportunities to take portraits,” he says. “I’ve been attached to the portrait ever since I was a little kid, but when I started to shoot serious actors, there was a whole new added depth of expression that our collaboration would provoke that was exciting. Actors certainly raise the bar of every shot.”

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Robert Graham 1938 - 2008

Written on: Friday, January 30th, 2009 | Filed under: Blog, Art  | Art Chat

Robert Graham by Jim McHugh

[Portrait by Jim McHugh]

The legendary Robert Graham passed away in late December at the age of 70. As follows is a piece from the current issue of Art and Living in which Daniella Walsh highlights the legacy of the artist and the grief that has gripped the art community since his passing.

As the City of Angels says farewell to Robert Graham, one of its most renowned and best-loved artists, it brings us great sadness to join in. Mr. Graham built a stellar career on creating public sculptures that paid homage to figures like Duke Ellington, Charlie “Bird” Parker and Franklin Delano Roosevelt. He gained world attention when he created two statues for the “Olympic Gateway” at the Memorial Coliseum for the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.

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