Tumgik
#pinkpopupshow
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-030618-jennifer-pochinskis-nude-with-pink-skirt/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles Scraping off and painting over works has been a normal part of my studio activities — so much frustration. I could never arrive at a specific method. Since moving to California seven years ago, I realized this struggle with ambiguous starting points and stopping points is painting.  #Tribelamag #Castelliartspace #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #JenniferPochinski #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine #WilliamWray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-030618-jennifer-pochinskis-nude-with-pink-skirt/
ART TODAY 030618 Figurative painter Jennifer Pochinski's "Nude with Pink Skirt"
Nude with Pink Skirt
Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
Jennifer Pochinski was an artist in The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space that was inspired and co-curated by TribeLA Magazine’s “Artist to Watch in 2018,” William Wray along with Carlos Iglesias. This avant-garde exhibit illustrated diversity in the art world with over 30 artists participating.
The figure is the central focus in my work. I have always worked from observation. I recently came across a self portrait I did right after college. I do not even remember painting it. But It reminded me of all explorations, the attempts…the progress achieved only incrementally, laterally. Scraping off and painting over works has been a normal part of my studio activities — so much frustration. I could never arrive at a specific method. Since moving to California seven years ago, I realized this struggle with ambiguous starting points and stopping points is painting.
Visit Jennifer at jenniferpochinski.com and on instagram @jenniferpochinski
ART TODAY 11.26.17 Start the buzz… The Pink pop-up Show is this weekend: over 30 diverse artists – unpredictable and remarkable at Castelli Art Space, LA
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
ENCORE of The Pink Show: The diversity between Gig Depio and Michael Flechtner - Part 1 (mark the date 11.30.17) TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles #Tribelamag #Arttoday #Gigdepio #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-10-15-17-pink-show-presents-diversity-gig-depio-michael-flechtner-part-1-mark-date-11-30-17/
ENCORE of The Pink Show: The diversity between Gig Depio and Michael Flechtner - Part 1 (mark the date 11.30.17)
The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd. Los Angeles, CA. 90016
For show information contact [email protected]
Gig Depio reminds me of a modern day Diego Rivera, a painter with an eye on popular culture and a mind full of modern history who dovetails his perspective with large scale artwork that captures the viewer and places them within the motion of his narrative. –Carlos Iglesias
Gig Depio I believe that painting is a mirror that reflects who we are, the way we interact with and perceive the world, and its meaning encrypted by culture are hidden into the form or the mark itself.
I see painting as a self-correcting, continually revising endeavor, sometimes expanding or contracting, depending on who’s looking and when, and maybe an enterprise forever tied to experience. Maybe there is a primal part of it, but the entire practice including the involvement of a community suggests that it is a product of cultural participation. A sensitivity to culture is, therefore, key to understanding art, its meaning unfolding itself willingly in its own way to the viewer.
Maybe art is an inquiry as well. What I seek by choosing to participate in the art world is authenticity, a genuine engagement with the community, to engage with myself first, my thoughts, my ideas, my history; and then sharing this self with others, encouraging engagement with the openness and exchange of a dialogue.
Art is ultimately and will always be about people, the lives we live and the tensions between our relationships, a never ending negotiation of ideas that begins at the personal level, between my imagination and the physical limits of my materials; and the progression and realization towards a much wider macroscopic perspective, wherein communities negotiate their cultures between the forces of economics and politics, or between the resistance of the status quo and the inevitability of change as we move forward to the future.
To be honest, I don’t consciously think about these things while painting, and that everything I write and say is mostly an afterthought of experience. Just like the Anasazi people inscribing the Petroglyphs in the Valley of Fire, I guess art is an expression of our encounter with life. It is a natural, unrehearsed spontaneous need to communicate with others through culture— our culture being a collective social consciousness as a living and breathing entity that evolves as a genuine response to our changing environment.
-Gig DePio
ART TODAY 10.8.17 “The Pink Pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Hofberg/Iglesias – Over 30 wildly diverse artists gather to reflect on one happy color, Pink
ART TODAY 10.9.17: “The Pink Show” is not your ordinary Art Exhibit – it is daring, diverse, and curated by three outstanding art directors and one is Artist William Wray (Pretty In Pink)
ART TODAY 10.10.17 The Pink Pop-up Show defines a new way of looking at Art – Check out David Lipson and Sean Cheatham
ART TODAY 10.11.17 The Pink pop-up Show represents harmony in the art world – “My Gun is Pink” by co-curator and view sample works by Pink artists Pablo Llana & Wyatt Mills
ART TODAY 10.12.17 The Pink pop-up Show: 31 artist, one work of art, one exhibit, a plethora of interpretation – Artists join together to show their take on PINK
ART TODAY 10.13.17: Thirty one Artists are poised, tools in hand – Come and see what they have to say at The Pink pop-up Show at Castelli Art Space 11.30.17
ART TODAY 10.14.17 – on November 30th, Witness a select group of extraordinary Artist at “The Pink pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Hofberg/Iglesias – See artists list
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/thank-pink-tastic-journey-depths-visual-art-co-curators-william-wray-carlos-iglesias/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles …Wray couldn’t impress upon me enough the immense gratitude that he has for all of the contributing artists. There is diversity not just in the artistic expression of the color pink, but also within the artists themselves… ##Castelliartspace #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/thank-pink-tastic-journey-depths-visual-art-co-curators-william-wray-carlos-iglesias/
Thank you Co-curators William Wray and Carlos Iglesias for a Pink-tastic! Journey into the depths and diversity of Visual Art
This story originally published as BREAKING NEWS on November 28, 2017. It has since been updated. As of last Friday, Carlos Iglesias reported: “It’s been nuts, in a great way!”
A chat with co-curator/artist William Wray
By Janice Bremec Blum
Pink. It’s not just for girls anymore!
The color pink as well as its varieties that range from bubble gum to flamingo to cherry blossom, is most often associated with little girls and their delicate femininity. But when you give the color to a group of creative, visual artists and ask what pink represents to them, you enter into the color behind the color. Meet William Wray, artist and co-curator of the Pink Pop-Up show happening at the Castelli Art Space in Culver City, California.
I sat down with Wray as he and a team of people were preparing the gallery for their Pink show. Sitting on an outside patio next to a wall of sparkly, pink curtains, I simply asked, “Why pink?”
“It’s a common thing in the gallery world to have a theme. I detest themes.” Wray gives a chuckle and a smirk. “Generally, they’re a choice to get commercial attention hoping for salability.” Wray tells me. “But I wanted to have a theme that didn’t tie the hands of the artist in any way.”
From that declaration, the only instruction the artists were given by Wray and his co-curator Carlos Iglesias, was to present a piece that has pink in there somewhere. Whether that meant a painting of the vocal artist Pink or the look of a healthy glow, the choice was up to the artist. As I walked through the gallery still in the process of getting assembled for the show, there was indeed a plethora of pink in all its glory. “Pink,” Wray explains, “is going away from being just a ‘girl’ color and being an everybody color.”
At the Pink Show, there is only one agenda on the table which, I’m told, has nothing to do with the title. It’s about how all art can live together in harmony.
“There’s a certain kind of classism in the art world.” Wray explains. “A lot of very contemporary art might not be so open to art that is narrative or illustrative. Oftentimes, there’s a sense that that world may be left out of a certain kind of art gallery or a show. And vice versa. There could be a more conservative gallery that may embrace the noble savage type of stuff which is the opposite extreme. I’m looking to be in the middle.”
In the “Pink Manifesto” defining the philosophy of this show, the question about the controversy of different concepts of art is addressed clearly. “Can very contemporary art live in the same room with cartoon surrealism and some variation of narrative traditional art without the room bursting into flame?” Looking at the various “pink” work that was still being hung on the walls, I can assure you that the local fire department need not be on speed dial. From what I’ve seen so far, the work is magnificent. Classic. Whimsical. Surprising. Unique.
And all pink. The wide realm of artistic expression by some of today’s leading artists rest upon the unifying comfort of that color.
“Curating an art show with such varying artists,” says Wray, “is somewhat like trying to seat a family at a dinner.” Whereas, according to the manifesto, this show, “gives many disparate artists a chance to eat together at the same table,” placing the art around the gallery takes a meticulous eye making sure that everything is complimentary and hostility is left at the curb. It’s about finding the balance. “We look forward to the tension of the merry go round of possibilities,” states Wray.
Before leaving, Wray couldn’t impress upon me enough the immense gratitude that he has for all of the contributing artists. There is diversity not just in the artistic expression of the color pink, but also within the artists themselves. Collectively, Wray feels that this collaboration encompasses narrative + contemporary + skill + technique. A winning combination for a pink-tastic show!
[hoot_slider id=”7020″]
Janice Bremec Blum is Editor in Chief at TribeLA Magazine. This multi-talented artist is an MFA graduate from Antioch University and creative writing is her domain. Janice’s work will debut under “Meet LA’s new voices of fiction in 2018.” Her extensive background as a makeup artist in the Hollywood entertainment industry has allowed her to write a book on makeup and beauty, soon to be released. A die-hard romantic, she and her husband Hunter (both art collectors) live in Los Angeles. You can contact Janice at [email protected].
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-12-2-17-gig-depios-suspicious-minds-pink-pop-up-show-castelli-art-space/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles Gig is a painter and an advocate for public art in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was awarded the 2016 Fellowship Grant in Painting by the Nevada Arts Council (NAC), and has worked on various exhibitions and projects with the Nevada Museum of Art… #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Gigdepio #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-12-2-17-gig-depios-suspicious-minds-pink-pop-up-show-castelli-art-space/
ART TODAY 12.2.17 Gig Depio's "Suspicious Minds" is irresistibly provocative – The Pink Pop Up Show at Castelli Art Space ends Sunday
Suspicious Minds by Gig Depio The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
GIG DEPIO Gig is a painter and an advocate for public art in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was awarded the 2016 Fellowship Grant in Painting by the Nevada Arts Council (NAC), and has worked on various exhibitions and projects with the Nevada Museum of Art (Reno), Nevada Arts Council OXS Gallery, UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum, UNLV Donna Beam Fine Arts, Clark County Winchester Cultural Center Gallery, Clark County Library Galleries, the City of Las Vegas Galleries, the Nevada State College Galleries, and with curator Dr. Robert Tracy at the UNLV Healy Hayes Gallery.
The Artists
SEONNA HONG Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. Seonna’s themes often include allegories of that lost child trying to find her way through her imagination onto her path in the world.
BRADFORD J. SALAMON Bradford is an American portrait painter whose subjects are often fellow artists. He imbues ordinary objects of the past with an iconic art status beyond their cultural history.  Bradford’s passion about the California art scene includes curating art shows and documenting fellow artists on film.
SHEPARD FAIREY (Frank) Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary street artist, graphic artist, muralist, activist, illustrator and founder of OBEY Clothing who emerged from the skateboarding scene. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island in 1992. He first became known for his “Andre the Giant Has a Posse” (…OBEY…) sticker campaign while attending college, which appropriated images from the comedic supermarket tabloid Weekly World News. He became widely known during the 2008 U.S. Presidential election for his Barack Obama “Hope” poster.
PAT RIOT The work of Pat Riot, whose artistic view satirizes all forms of media, has been showing in Los Angeles since 1996. His diverse influences include television; MAD Magazine; artists Henry Darger, Ray Johnson, and Tim Hawkinson; the old school video arcade game “Space Invaders”; BANKSY; and the timeless futurist, Buckminster Fuller.
SEAN CHEETHAM Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his Alla Prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time.
WILLIAM WRAY William is co-curator of The Pink pop-up Show. He blends traditional skill sets of realism and the sheer energy of abstract expressionism in an ongoing evolution to find the right balance between two seemingly unrelated styles. He challenges himself to create a brand of realistic expressionism, he hopes to use as a bridge into the customarily circumspect contemporary art world. He has lived in California most of his life and studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. Making his living as a cartoonist who specialized in painted subjects, he spent many years coalescing an eclectic array of art styles, ultimately finding his voice in a contemporized reflection of traditional California regional painting that focus on humble subject matter rarely considered as fine art.
MICHAEL FLECHTNER Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious. Despite the internal origins of his works, he strives to make them bold and easy to read, as any good sign design should be.
JENNIFER POCHINSKI Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes the form of a visual allegory in which a young woman is confronted with the need to step off of some kind of precipice that will lead to the next unknown path of life’s journey.
ASHLEY WOOD Ash does every kind of art there is from fine art painting to comics and toy design. His painting has his own style comic book structure with a expressionist painting energy confidently applied over the top of it that is at once both tender and violent, sexual yet warm and playful.
CHRIS RECCARDI The fine art of Chris Reccardi (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Glenn Barr’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) reflects a wide range of literary and visual influences, from classic Victorian/Edwardian-era science fiction, to classic cartoon styles of the 1960’s and ‘70’s, to modern design. While Chris is known for his digital fine art prints, he will have an original painting in the Pink Show.
DAVID BUCKINGHAM Sculptor David Buckingham roams the gritty industrial areas, dodgy neighborhoods, and low deserts of Southern California in search of discarded metal forms of all kinds.  In his Los Angeles studio, he uses an array of power tools and sheer force of will to muscle them into works of art. All colors remain as found, the purity of faded color carrying a history, he refuses to try and duplicate with new paint.
DAVE COOPER Dave is a self-taught artist who developed his own vision as an animator and comic book illustrator. Turning to fine art in 2003, he produced cartoonish scenes filled with his unique disturbing imagery. Dave explores body image, lewdness, hedonism, and sexually awkward-looking girls with unique flaws and imperfections, in search of his own ideal of feminine beauty.
DAVID SHARPE David is a contemporary impressionist painter from Canada who recently started to experiment in varied and unusual abstract expressionist styles.  That rapid evolution to other disciplines is what interested the curators of the Pink show as David demonstrates that a traditional skill set can help expand the artist’s toolbox of styles.
DAVID LIPSON David assembles one-of-a-kind robots from random objects. He studied oil painting at the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design. His robots have been featured in museums, galleries, books, and on television. Previously, David spent 17 years as an animation producer for film and television.
ESCOTO + CARRARA Escoto+Carrara (Frederico Escoto and Roberto Carrara) are Mexican artists and life partners, who still call Mexico home. Photographer and painter, they compliment to one another’s talent in a visual dance, culminating in an array of colors and movements pushing both photography and painting to the next level.
GLENN BARR The surreal universe of Glenn Barr (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Chris Reccardi’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) – is a drenched haze in a post-apocalyptic urban Dreamscape. His Detroit work has been labeled a variation of lowbrow pop — or as he calls it, “B Culturalism.” With a nod to old master painting, pulp art, comics and animation, Barr’s paintings are mesmerizing in their narrative complexity and technical depth.
GORDON SMEDT Gordon was trained in figure painting yet somehow gravitated to doing large paintings of objects and clothing using beautiful bright colors and flawless (yet painterly) rendering. His objective is to infuse the inanimate with energy and life.
GRONK Gronk Nicandro, a Chicano artist from Los Angeles, has developed an international reputation for a provocative body of work that includes painting, drawing, opera set design, and murals. His work is collected by museums around the country, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
ROBERT SOFFIAN Robert was born into a family that encouraged self-expression and personal artistic journeys. His journey has given him a rich a varied background–he spent part of his youth attending a radical art camp called Lincoln Farm, he went on to expand his personal and artistic horizons by travel throughout the world, and found work in Amsterdam as a government supported artist. He eventually settled in to a 30 year career at Shasta College in Redding, CA as a professor of theater, directing and lighting countless productions. He has curated dozens of exhibitions and is credited with discovering the Violent Femmes. During the last ten years, Soffian ventured from the public world of the theater to the private world of painting.
Soffian says this about his work, “I wish to paint things we all know or dream…very often I am first motivated by the excitement of the materials I am using…obviously I enjoy vibrant colors, and the texture of the physical body of the paint…for some reason, I have felt I needed to express something….what is the nature of that need and what it is compels me to keep doing this work is the subject of my life.”
JOHN BROSIO John Brosio has found by default that he is a painter immersed in a state of perpetual discontent and learning to see. Though always fascinated by the idea of making “Star Wars” kinds of fantasy movies, he has applied his imagination to layered narrative painting. Following a long series of images that depicted moments of impending disaster, his work has evolved toward a more conceptual combining of imagined tableaus of a child’s toy and drawings into an orchestration of select visual relationships.
LOIC ZIMMERMAN Loic Zimmermann is a French filmmaker and visual artist based in Los Angeles. His focus gradually shifted from illustration and 3D to photography and filmmaking. He also continues in VFX as an art director in major motion pictures. We have managed to coax him back to doing a mixed media painting for the Pink show.
MARK ENGLISH Mark English has been one of the leading illustrators in the U.S. and abroad for three decades. In 1995, as Mark began to paint more personal fine art, he sought to infuse new and exciting compositions with a rich alchemy of unusual textural sources that have contributed to a kind of unique painterly collage. Transparency and translucency reign, with rich colors and atmospheric perceptions of space and scale. His works reside in many private collections and exhibit in solo and group shows throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.
Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Noah Becker Pablo Llana Rafael Serrano
ART TODAY 10.13.17: Thirty one Artists are poised, tools in hand – Come and see what they have to say at The Pink pop-up Show at Castelli Art Space 11.30.17
ART TODAY 10.14.17 – on November 30th, Witness a select group of extraordinary Artist at “The Pink pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Hofberg/Iglesias – See artists list
ART TODAY 10.15.17 The Pink Show presents: The diversity between Michael Flechtner and Gig Depio – Part 2 (mark the date 11.30.17)
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-12-01-17-shephard-faireys-wake-up-call-pink-pop-up-show-castelli-art-space-la-ends-12-3-17/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles (Frank) Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary street artist, graphic artist, muralist, activist, illustrator and founder of OBEY Clothing who emerged from the skateboarding scene… #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Pinkpopupshow #Shepardfairey #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-12-01-17-shephard-faireys-wake-up-call-pink-pop-up-show-castelli-art-space-la-ends-12-3-17/
ART TODAY 12.01.17 Shephard Fairey's "Wake Up Call" – The Pink Pop Up Show, this weekend at Castelli Art Space, LA (it ends 12.3.17)
“Wake Up Call” by Shephard Fairey The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
SHEPARD FAIREY (Frank) Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary street artist, graphic artist, muralist, activist, illustrator and founder of OBEY Clothing who emerged from the skateboarding scene. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island in 1992. He first became known for his “Andre the Giant Has a Posse” (…OBEY…) sticker campaign while attending college, which appropriated images from the comedic supermarket tabloid Weekly World News. He became widely known during the 2008 U.S. Presidential election for his Barack Obama “Hope” poster.
The Artists
BRADFORD J. SALAMON Bradford is an American portrait painter whose subjects are often fellow artists. He imbues ordinary objects of the past with an iconic art status beyond their cultural history.  Bradford’s passion about the California art scene includes curating art shows and documenting fellow artists on film.
PAT RIOT The work of Pat Riot, whose artistic view satirizes all forms of media, has been showing in Los Angeles since 1996. His diverse influences include television; MAD Magazine; artists Henry Darger, Ray Johnson, and Tim Hawkinson; the old school video arcade game “Space Invaders”; BANKSY; and the timeless futurist, Buckminster Fuller.
SEONNA HONG Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. Seonna’s themes often include allegories of that lost child trying to find her way through her imagination onto her path in the world.
SEAN CHEETHAM Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his Alla Prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time.
WILLIAM WRAY William is co-curator of The Pink pop-up Show. He blends traditional skill sets of realism and the sheer energy of abstract expressionism in an ongoing evolution to find the right balance between two seemingly unrelated styles. He challenges himself to create a brand of realistic expressionism, he hopes to use as a bridge into the customarily circumspect contemporary art world. He has lived in California most of his life and studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. Making his living as a cartoonist who specialized in painted subjects, he spent many years coalescing an eclectic array of art styles, ultimately finding his voice in a contemporized reflection of traditional California regional painting that focus on humble subject matter rarely considered as fine art.
MICHAEL FLECHTNER Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious. Despite the internal origins of his works, he strives to make them bold and easy to read, as any good sign design should be.
JENNIFER POCHINSKI Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes the form of a visual allegory in which a young woman is confronted with the need to step off of some kind of precipice that will lead to the next unknown path of life’s journey.
ASHLEY WOOD Ash does every kind of art there is from fine art painting to comics and toy design. His painting has his own style comic book structure with a expressionist painting energy confidently applied over the top of it that is at once both tender and violent, sexual yet warm and playful.
CHRIS RECCARDI The fine art of Chris Reccardi (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Glenn Barr’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) reflects a wide range of literary and visual influences, from classic Victorian/Edwardian-era science fiction, to classic cartoon styles of the 1960’s and ‘70’s, to modern design. While Chris is known for his digital fine art prints, he will have an original painting in the Pink Show.
DAVID BUCKINGHAM Sculptor David Buckingham roams the gritty industrial areas, dodgy neighborhoods, and low deserts of Southern California in search of discarded metal forms of all kinds.  In his Los Angeles studio, he uses an array of power tools and sheer force of will to muscle them into works of art. All colors remain as found, the purity of faded color carrying a history, he refuses to try and duplicate with new paint.
DAVE COOPER Dave is a self-taught artist who developed his own vision as an animator and comic book illustrator. Turning to fine art in 2003, he produced cartoonish scenes filled with his unique disturbing imagery. Dave explores body image, lewdness, hedonism, and sexually awkward-looking girls with unique flaws and imperfections, in search of his own ideal of feminine beauty.
DAVID SHARPE David is a contemporary impressionist painter from Canada who recently started to experiment in varied and unusual abstract expressionist styles.  That rapid evolution to other disciplines is what interested the curators of the Pink show as David demonstrates that a traditional skill set can help expand the artist’s toolbox of styles.
DAVID LIPSON David assembles one-of-a-kind robots from random objects. He studied oil painting at the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design. His robots have been featured in museums, galleries, books, and on television. Previously, David spent 17 years as an animation producer for film and television.
ESCOTO + CARRARA Escoto+Carrara (Frederico Escoto and Roberto Carrara) are Mexican artists and life partners, who still call Mexico home. Photographer and painter, they compliment to one another’s talent in a visual dance, culminating in an array of colors and movements pushing both photography and painting to the next level.
GIG DEPIO Gig is a painter and an advocate for public art in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was awarded the 2016 Fellowship Grant in Painting by the Nevada Arts Council (NAC), and has worked on various exhibitions and projects with the Nevada Museum of Art (Reno), Nevada Arts Council OXS Gallery, UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum, UNLV Donna Beam Fine Arts, Clark County Winchester Cultural Center Gallery, Clark County Library Galleries, the City of Las Vegas Galleries, the Nevada State College Galleries, and with curator Dr. Robert Tracy at the UNLV Healy Hayes Gallery.
GLENN BARR The surreal universe of Glenn Barr (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Chris Reccardi’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) – is a drenched haze in a post-apocalyptic urban Dreamscape. His Detroit work has been labeled a variation of lowbrow pop — or as he calls it, “B Culturalism.” With a nod to old master painting, pulp art, comics and animation, Barr’s paintings are mesmerizing in their narrative complexity and technical depth.
GORDON SMEDT Gordon was trained in figure painting yet somehow gravitated to doing large paintings of objects and clothing using beautiful bright colors and flawless (yet painterly) rendering. His objective is to infuse the inanimate with energy and life.
GRONK Gronk Nicandro, a Chicano artist from Los Angeles, has developed an international reputation for a provocative body of work that includes painting, drawing, opera set design, and murals. His work is collected by museums around the country, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
ROBERT SOFFIAN Robert was born into a family that encouraged self-expression and personal artistic journeys. His journey has given him a rich a varied background–he spent part of his youth attending a radical art camp called Lincoln Farm, he went on to expand his personal and artistic horizons by travel throughout the world, and found work in Amsterdam as a government supported artist. He eventually settled in to a 30 year career at Shasta College in Redding, CA as a professor of theater, directing and lighting countless productions. He has curated dozens of exhibitions and is credited with discovering the Violent Femmes. During the last ten years, Soffian ventured from the public world of the theater to the private world of painting.
Soffian says this about his work, “I wish to paint things we all know or dream…very often I am first motivated by the excitement of the materials I am using…obviously I enjoy vibrant colors, and the texture of the physical body of the paint…for some reason, I have felt I needed to express something….what is the nature of that need and what it is compels me to keep doing this work is the subject of my life.”
JOHN BROSIO John Brosio has found by default that he is a painter immersed in a state of perpetual discontent and learning to see. Though always fascinated by the idea of making “Star Wars” kinds of fantasy movies, he has applied his imagination to layered narrative painting. Following a long series of images that depicted moments of impending disaster, his work has evolved toward a more conceptual combining of imagined tableaus of a child’s toy and drawings into an orchestration of select visual relationships.
LOIC ZIMMERMAN Loic Zimmermann is a French filmmaker and visual artist based in Los Angeles. His focus gradually shifted from illustration and 3D to photography and filmmaking. He also continues in VFX as an art director in major motion pictures. We have managed to coax him back to doing a mixed media painting for the Pink show.
MARK ENGLISH Mark English has been one of the leading illustrators in the U.S. and abroad for three decades. In 1995, as Mark began to paint more personal fine art, he sought to infuse new and exciting compositions with a rich alchemy of unusual textural sources that have contributed to a kind of unique painterly collage. Transparency and translucency reign, with rich colors and atmospheric perceptions of space and scale. His works reside in many private collections and exhibit in solo and group shows throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.
Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Noah Becker Pablo Llana Rafael Serrano
ART TODAY 11.30.17 TONIGHT! The Pink Pop Up Show Opens at Castelli Art Space, LA with 30+ diverse artists – This is the work of world renowned Seonna Hong!
ART TODAY 11.30.17 The Pink Pop-Up Show encompasses narrative, contemporary, skill, and technique from a diverse group of artists – How Pink-tastic is that!
BREAKING ART NEWS!!! 11.29.17 The PINK Pop-Up Art Show: A chat with co-curator/artist William Wray – Pink, It’s not just for girls anymore
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-30-17-pink-pop-up-show-encompasses-narrative-contemporary-skill-technique-diverse-artists/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles Pink logo and poster by William Wray Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]. ##Castelliartspace #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Ashleywoodart #Buckinghamstudiodtla #Gigdepio #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-30-17-pink-pop-up-show-encompasses-narrative-contemporary-skill-technique-diverse-artists/
ART TODAY 11.30.17 The Pink Pop-Up Show encompasses narrative, contemporary, skill, and technique from a diverse group of artists – How Pink-tastic is that!
Pink logo and poster by William Wray Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
The Artists
SEONNA HONG Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. Seonna’s themes often include allegories of that lost child trying to find her way through her imagination onto her path in the world.
Auction by Gig Depio
GIG DEPIO Gig is a painter and an advocate for public art in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was awarded the 2016 Fellowship Grant in Painting by the Nevada Arts Council (NAC), and has worked on various exhibitions and projects with the Nevada Museum of Art (Reno), Nevada Arts Council OXS Gallery, UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum, UNLV Donna Beam Fine Arts, Clark County Winchester Cultural Center Gallery, Clark County Library Galleries, the City of Las Vegas Galleries, the Nevada State College Galleries, and with curator Dr. Robert Tracy at the UNLV Healy Hayes Gallery.
Under The Bed by Ashley Wood
BRADFORD J. SALAMON Bradford is an American portrait painter whose subjects are often fellow artists. He imbues ordinary objects of the past with an iconic art status beyond their cultural history.  Bradford’s passion about the California art scene includes curating art shows and documenting fellow artists on film.
SHEPARD FAIREY (Frank) Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary street artist, graphic artist, muralist, activist, illustrator and founder of OBEY Clothing who emerged from the skateboarding scene. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island in 1992. He first became known for his “Andre the Giant Has a Posse” (…OBEY…) sticker campaign while attending college, which appropriated images from the comedic supermarket tabloid Weekly World News. He became widely known during the 2008 U.S. Presidential election for his Barack Obama “Hope” poster.
ASHLEY WOOD Ash does every kind of art there is from fine art painting to comics and toy design. His painting has his own style comic book structure with a expressionist painting energy confidently applied over the top of it that is at once both tender and violent, sexual yet warm and playful.
Roomates by William Wray
PAT RIOT The work of Pat Riot, whose artistic view satirizes all forms of media, has been showing in Los Angeles since 1996. His diverse influences include television; MAD Magazine; artists Henry Darger, Ray Johnson, and Tim Hawkinson; the old school video arcade game “Space Invaders”; BANKSY; and the timeless futurist, Buckminster Fuller.
SEAN CHEETHAM Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his Alla Prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time.
WILLIAM WRAY William is co-curator of The Pink pop-up Show. He blends traditional skill sets of realism and the sheer energy of abstract expressionism in an ongoing evolution to find the right balance between two seemingly unrelated styles. He challenges himself to create a brand of realistic expressionism, he hopes to use as a bridge into the customarily circumspect contemporary art world. He has lived in California most of his life and studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. Making his living as a cartoonist who specialized in painted subjects, he spent many years coalescing an eclectic array of art styles, ultimately finding his voice in a contemporized reflection of traditional California regional painting that focus on humble subject matter rarely considered as fine art.
MICHAEL FLECHTNER Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious. Despite the internal origins of his works, he strives to make them bold and easy to read, as any good sign design should be.
JENNIFER POCHINSKI Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes the form of a visual allegory in which a young woman is confronted with the need to step off of some kind of precipice that will lead to the next unknown path of life’s journey.
CHRIS RECCARDI The fine art of Chris Reccardi (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Glenn Barr’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) reflects a wide range of literary and visual influences, from classic Victorian/Edwardian-era science fiction, to classic cartoon styles of the 1960’s and ‘70’s, to modern design. While Chris is known for his digital fine art prints, he will have an original painting in the Pink Show.
DAVE COOPER Dave is a self-taught artist who developed his own vision as an animator and comic book illustrator. Turning to fine art in 2003, he produced cartoonish scenes filled with his unique disturbing imagery. Dave explores body image, lewdness, hedonism, and sexually awkward-looking girls with unique flaws and imperfections, in search of his own ideal of feminine beauty.
Surfer’s Credo by David “KooK” Buckingham
DAVID SHARPE David is a contemporary impressionist painter from Canada who recently started to experiment in varied and unusual abstract expressionist styles.  That rapid evolution to other disciplines is what interested the curators of the Pink show as David demonstrates that a traditional skill set can help expand the artist’s toolbox of styles.
DAVID LIPSON David assembles one-of-a-kind robots from random objects. He studied oil painting at the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design. His robots have been featured in museums, galleries, books, and on television. Previously, David spent 17 years as an animation producer for film and television.
ESCOTO + CARRARA Escoto+Carrara (Frederico Escoto and Roberto Carrara) are Mexican artists and life partners, who still call Mexico home. Photographer and painter, they compliment to one another’s talent in a visual dance, culminating in an array of colors and movements pushing both photography and painting to the next level.
DAVID BUCKINGHAM Sculptor David Buckingham roams the gritty industrial areas, dodgy neighborhoods, and low deserts of Southern California in search of discarded metal forms of all kinds.  In his Los Angeles studio, he uses an array of power tools and sheer force of will to muscle them into works of art. All colors remain as found, the purity of faded color carrying a history, he refuses to try and duplicate with new paint.
GLENN BARR The surreal universe of Glenn Barr (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Chris Reccardi’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) – is a drenched haze in a post-apocalyptic urban Dreamscape. His Detroit work has been labeled a variation of lowbrow pop — or as he calls it, “B Culturalism.” With a nod to old master painting, pulp art, comics and animation, Barr’s paintings are mesmerizing in their narrative complexity and technical depth.
GORDON SMEDT Gordon was trained in figure painting yet somehow gravitated to doing large paintings of objects and clothing using beautiful bright colors and flawless (yet painterly) rendering. His objective is to infuse the inanimate with energy and life.
GRONK Gronk Nicandro, a Chicano artist from Los Angeles, has developed an international reputation for a provocative body of work that includes painting, drawing, opera set design, and murals. His work is collected by museums around the country, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Gronk Nicandro, untitled
ROBERT SOFFIAN Robert was born into a family that encouraged self-expression and personal artistic journeys. His journey has given him a rich a varied background–he spent part of his youth attending a radical art camp called Lincoln Farm, he went on to expand his personal and artistic horizons by travel throughout the world, and found work in Amsterdam as a government supported artist. He eventually settled in to a 30 year career at Shasta College in Redding, CA as a professor of theater, directing and lighting countless productions. He has curated dozens of exhibitions and is credited with discovering the Violent Femmes. During the last ten years, Soffian ventured from the public world of the theater to the private world of painting.
Soffian says this about his work, “I wish to paint things we all know or dream…very often I am first motivated by the excitement of the materials I am using…obviously I enjoy vibrant colors, and the texture of the physical body of the paint…for some reason, I have felt I needed to express something….what is the nature of that need and what it is compels me to keep doing this work is the subject of my life.”
JOHN BROSIO John Brosio has found by default that he is a painter immersed in a state of perpetual discontent and learning to see. Though always fascinated by the idea of making “Star Wars” kinds of fantasy movies, he has applied his imagination to layered narrative painting. Following a long series of images that depicted moments of impending disaster, his work has evolved toward a more conceptual combining of imagined tableaus of a child’s toy and drawings into an orchestration of select visual relationships.
LOIC ZIMMERMAN Loic Zimmermann is a French filmmaker and visual artist based in Los Angeles. His focus gradually shifted from illustration and 3D to photography and filmmaking. He also continues in VFX as an art director in major motion pictures. We have managed to coax him back to doing a mixed media painting for the Pink show.
MARK ENGLISH Mark English has been one of the leading illustrators in the U.S. and abroad for three decades. In 1995, as Mark began to paint more personal fine art, he sought to infuse new and exciting compositions with a rich alchemy of unusual textural sources that have contributed to a kind of unique painterly collage. Transparency and translucency reign, with rich colors and atmospheric perceptions of space and scale. His works reside in many private collections and exhibit in solo and group shows throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.
Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Noah Becker Pablo Llana Rafael Serrano
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-30-17-tonight-pink-pop-up-show-opens-work-world-renowned-seonna-hong/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. ##Castelliartspace #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Pinkpopupshow #Seonnahong #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-30-17-tonight-pink-pop-up-show-opens-work-world-renowned-seonna-hong/
ART TODAY 11.30.17 TONIGHT! The Pink Pop Up Show Opens at Castelli Art Space, LA with 30+ diverse artists – This is the work of world renowned Seonna Hong!
“The Magic Number” by Seonna Hong The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
by Seonna-Hong
SEONNA HONG Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. Seonna’s themes often include allegories of that lost child trying to find her way through her imagination onto her path in the world.
The Artists
BRADFORD J. SALAMON Bradford is an American portrait painter whose subjects are often fellow artists. He imbues ordinary objects of the past with an iconic art status beyond their cultural history.  Bradford’s passion about the California art scene includes curating art shows and documenting fellow artists on film.
SHEPARD FAIREY (Frank) Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary street artist, graphic artist, muralist, activist, illustrator and founder of OBEY Clothing who emerged from the skateboarding scene. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island in 1992. He first became known for his “Andre the Giant Has a Posse” (…OBEY…) sticker campaign while attending college, which appropriated images from the comedic supermarket tabloid Weekly World News. He became widely known during the 2008 U.S. Presidential election for his Barack Obama “Hope” poster.
PAT RIOT The work of Pat Riot, whose artistic view satirizes all forms of media, has been showing in Los Angeles since 1996. His diverse influences include television; MAD Magazine; artists Henry Darger, Ray Johnson, and Tim Hawkinson; the old school video arcade game “Space Invaders”; BANKSY; and the timeless futurist, Buckminster Fuller.
SEAN CHEETHAM Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his Alla Prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time.
WILLIAM WRAY William is co-curator of The Pink pop-up Show. He blends traditional skill sets of realism and the sheer energy of abstract expressionism in an ongoing evolution to find the right balance between two seemingly unrelated styles. He challenges himself to create a brand of realistic expressionism, he hopes to use as a bridge into the customarily circumspect contemporary art world. He has lived in California most of his life and studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. Making his living as a cartoonist who specialized in painted subjects, he spent many years coalescing an eclectic array of art styles, ultimately finding his voice in a contemporized reflection of traditional California regional painting that focus on humble subject matter rarely considered as fine art.
MICHAEL FLECHTNER Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious. Despite the internal origins of his works, he strives to make them bold and easy to read, as any good sign design should be.
JENNIFER POCHINSKI Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes the form of a visual allegory in which a young woman is confronted with the need to step off of some kind of precipice that will lead to the next unknown path of life’s journey.
ASHLEY WOOD Ash does every kind of art there is from fine art painting to comics and toy design. His painting has his own style comic book structure with a expressionist painting energy confidently applied over the top of it that is at once both tender and violent, sexual yet warm and playful.
CHRIS RECCARDI The fine art of Chris Reccardi (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Glenn Barr’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) reflects a wide range of literary and visual influences, from classic Victorian/Edwardian-era science fiction, to classic cartoon styles of the 1960’s and ‘70’s, to modern design. While Chris is known for his digital fine art prints, he will have an original painting in the Pink Show.
DAVID BUCKINGHAM Sculptor David Buckingham roams the gritty industrial areas, dodgy neighborhoods, and low deserts of Southern California in search of discarded metal forms of all kinds.  In his Los Angeles studio, he uses an array of power tools and sheer force of will to muscle them into works of art. All colors remain as found, the purity of faded color carrying a history, he refuses to try and duplicate with new paint.
DAVE COOPER Dave is a self-taught artist who developed his own vision as an animator and comic book illustrator. Turning to fine art in 2003, he produced cartoonish scenes filled with his unique disturbing imagery. Dave explores body image, lewdness, hedonism, and sexually awkward-looking girls with unique flaws and imperfections, in search of his own ideal of feminine beauty.
DAVID SHARPE David is a contemporary impressionist painter from Canada who recently started to experiment in varied and unusual abstract expressionist styles.  That rapid evolution to other disciplines is what interested the curators of the Pink show as David demonstrates that a traditional skill set can help expand the artist’s toolbox of styles.
DAVID LIPSON David assembles one-of-a-kind robots from random objects. He studied oil painting at the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design. His robots have been featured in museums, galleries, books, and on television. Previously, David spent 17 years as an animation producer for film and television.
ESCOTO + CARRARA Escoto+Carrara (Frederico Escoto and Roberto Carrara) are Mexican artists and life partners, who still call Mexico home. Photographer and painter, they compliment to one another’s talent in a visual dance, culminating in an array of colors and movements pushing both photography and painting to the next level.
GIG DEPIO Gig is a painter and an advocate for public art in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was awarded the 2016 Fellowship Grant in Painting by the Nevada Arts Council (NAC), and has worked on various exhibitions and projects with the Nevada Museum of Art (Reno), Nevada Arts Council OXS Gallery, UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum, UNLV Donna Beam Fine Arts, Clark County Winchester Cultural Center Gallery, Clark County Library Galleries, the City of Las Vegas Galleries, the Nevada State College Galleries, and with curator Dr. Robert Tracy at the UNLV Healy Hayes Gallery.
GLENN BARR The surreal universe of Glenn Barr (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Chris Reccardi’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) – is a drenched haze in a post-apocalyptic urban Dreamscape. His Detroit work has been labeled a variation of lowbrow pop — or as he calls it, “B Culturalism.” With a nod to old master painting, pulp art, comics and animation, Barr’s paintings are mesmerizing in their narrative complexity and technical depth.
GORDON SMEDT Gordon was trained in figure painting yet somehow gravitated to doing large paintings of objects and clothing using beautiful bright colors and flawless (yet painterly) rendering. His objective is to infuse the inanimate with energy and life.
GRONK Gronk Nicandro, a Chicano artist from Los Angeles, has developed an international reputation for a provocative body of work that includes painting, drawing, opera set design, and murals. His work is collected by museums around the country, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
ROBERT SOFFIAN Robert was born into a family that encouraged self-expression and personal artistic journeys. His journey has given him a rich a varied background–he spent part of his youth attending a radical art camp called Lincoln Farm, he went on to expand his personal and artistic horizons by travel throughout the world, and found work in Amsterdam as a government supported artist. He eventually settled in to a 30 year career at Shasta College in Redding, CA as a professor of theater, directing and lighting countless productions. He has curated dozens of exhibitions and is credited with discovering the Violent Femmes. During the last ten years, Soffian ventured from the public world of the theater to the private world of painting.
Soffian says this about his work, “I wish to paint things we all know or dream…very often I am first motivated by the excitement of the materials I am using…obviously I enjoy vibrant colors, and the texture of the physical body of the paint…for some reason, I have felt I needed to express something….what is the nature of that need and what it is compels me to keep doing this work is the subject of my life.”
JOHN BROSIO John Brosio has found by default that he is a painter immersed in a state of perpetual discontent and learning to see. Though always fascinated by the idea of making “Star Wars” kinds of fantasy movies, he has applied his imagination to layered narrative painting. Following a long series of images that depicted moments of impending disaster, his work has evolved toward a more conceptual combining of imagined tableaus of a child’s toy and drawings into an orchestration of select visual relationships.
LOIC ZIMMERMAN Loic Zimmermann is a French filmmaker and visual artist based in Los Angeles. His focus gradually shifted from illustration and 3D to photography and filmmaking. He also continues in VFX as an art director in major motion pictures. We have managed to coax him back to doing a mixed media painting for the Pink show.
MARK ENGLISH Mark English has been one of the leading illustrators in the U.S. and abroad for three decades. In 1995, as Mark began to paint more personal fine art, he sought to infuse new and exciting compositions with a rich alchemy of unusual textural sources that have contributed to a kind of unique painterly collage. Transparency and translucency reign, with rich colors and atmospheric perceptions of space and scale. His works reside in many private collections and exhibit in solo and group shows throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.
Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Noah Becker Pablo Llana Rafael Serrano
ART TODAY 10.15.17 The Pink Show presents: The diversity between Michael Flechtner and Gig Depio – Part 2 (mark the date 11.30.17)
ART TODAY 10.18.17 “The Pink Show” – Sean Cheetham paints portraits with mind-blowing technical accuracy, and we can’t wait to see what he paints for The Pink Show
ART TODAY 10.20.17: Pink Show artist Pablo Llana’s art reflects critical issues such as, housing, health, and human rights
ART TODAY 10.8.17 “The Pink Pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Hofberg/Iglesias – Over 30 wildly diverse artists gather to reflect on one happy color, Pink
ART TODAY 10.10.17 The Pink Pop-up Show defines a new way of looking at Art – Check out David Lipson and Sean Cheatham
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/pink-pop-up-art-show-chat-co-curator-artist-william-wray/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles “There’s a certain kind of classism in the art world.” Wray explains. “A lot of very contemporary art might not be so open to art that is narrative or illustrative. In the “Pink Manifesto” defining the philosophy of this show, the question about the controversy of different concepts of art is addressed clearly. #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Bradfordjsalamon #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/pink-pop-up-art-show-chat-co-curator-artist-william-wray/
Breaking Art News 11.29.17 The PINK Pop-Up Art Show: A chat with co-curator/artist William Wray – Pink! It's not just for girls anymore
William Wray portrait by Bradford J. Salamon The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
By Janice Bremec Blum
The color pink as well as its varieties that range from bubble gum to flamingo to cherry blossom, is most often associated with little girls and their delicate femininity. But when you give the color to a group of creative, visual artists and ask what pink represents to them, you enter into the color behind the color. Meet William Wray, artist and co-curator of the Pink Pop-Up show happening at the Castelli Art Space in Culver City, California.
I sat down with Wray as he and a team of people were preparing the gallery for their Pink show. Sitting on an outside patio next to a wall of sparkly, pink curtains, I simply asked, “Why pink?”
“It’s a common thing in the gallery world to have a theme. I detest themes.” Wray gives a chuckle and a smirk. “Generally, they’re a choice to get commercial attention, hoping for salability.” Wray tells me. “But I wanted to have a theme that didn’t tie the hands of the artist in any way.”
From that declaration, the only instruction the artists were given by Wray and his co-curator Carlos Iglesias, was to present a piece that has pink in there somewhere. Whether that meant a painting of the vocal artist Pink or the look of a healthy glow, the choice was up to the artist. As I walked through the gallery still in the process of getting assembled for the show, there was indeed a plethora of pink in all its glory. “Pink,” Wray explains, “is going away from being just a ‘girl’ color and being an everybody color.”
At the Pink Show, there is only one agenda on the table which, I’m told, has nothing to do with the title. It’s about how all art can live together in harmony. “There’s a certain kind of classism in the art world.” Wray explains. “A lot of very contemporary art might not be so open to art that is narrative or illustrative.
Oftentimes, there’s a sense that that world may be left out of a certain kind of art gallery or a show. And vice versa. There could be a more conservative gallery that may embrace the noble savage type of stuff which is the opposite extreme. I’m looking to be in the middle.”
In the “Pink Manifesto” defining the philosophy of this show, the question about the controversy of different concepts of art is addressed clearly.
“Can very contemporary art live in the same room with cartoon surrealism and some variation of narrative traditional art without the room bursting into flame?” Looking at the various “pink” work that was still being hung on the walls, I can assure you that the local fire department need not be on speed dial. From what I’ve seen so far, the work is magnificent. Classic. Whimsical. Surprising. Unique.
And all pink.
The wide realm of artistic expression by some of today’s leading artists rest upon the unifying comfort of that color.
“Curating an art show with such varying artists,” says Wray, “is somewhat like trying to seat a family at a dinner.”
Whereas, according to the manifesto, this show, “gives many disparate artists a chance to eat together at the same table,” placing the art around the gallery takes a meticulous eye making sure that everything is complimentary and hostility is left at the curb. It’s about finding the balance. “We look forward to the tension of the merry go round of possibilities,” states Wray.
Before leaving, Wray couldn’t impress upon me enough the immense gratitude that he has for all of the contributing artists. There is diversity not just in the artistic expression of the color pink, but also within the artists themselves. Collectively, Wray feels that this collaboration encompasses narrative + contemporary + skill + technique. A winning combination for a pink-tastic show!
Janice Bremec Blum, Editor in Chief [email protected]
ART TODAY 10.8.17 “The Pink Pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Hofberg/Iglesias – Over 30 wildly diverse artists gather to reflect on one happy color, Pink
ART TODAY 10.9.17: “The Pink Show” is not your ordinary Art Exhibit – it is daring, diverse, and curated by three outstanding art directors and one is Artist William Wray (Pretty In Pink)
ART TODAY 10.10.17 The Pink Pop-up Show defines a new way of looking at Art – Check out David Lipson and Sean Cheatham
ART TODAY 10.11.17 The Pink pop-up Show represents harmony in the art world – “My Gun is Pink” by co-curator and view sample works by Pink artists Pablo Llana & Wyatt Mills
ART TODAY 10.12.17 The Pink pop-up Show: 31 artist, one work of art, one exhibit, a plethora of interpretation – Artists join together to show their take on PINK
ART TODAY 10.13.17: Thirty one Artists are poised, tools in hand – Come and see what they have to say at The Pink pop-up Show at Castelli Art Space 11.30.17
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-28-17-michael-flechtners-medium-evokes-thought-emotion-neon-pink-show/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious. ##Castelliartspace #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Michaelflechtner #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-28-17-michael-flechtners-medium-evokes-thought-emotion-neon-pink-show/
ART TODAY 11.28.17 Michael Flechtner's medium evokes thought and emotion with Neon – See 30+ artists at The Pink Show 11.30 at Castelli Art Space, LA
Thimk–Michael Flechtner The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
MICHAEL FLECHTNER Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious. Despite the internal origins of his works, he strives to make them bold and easy to read, as any good sign design should be.
The Artists
SHEPARD FAIREY (Frank) Shepard Fairey is an American contemporary street artist, graphic artist, muralist, activist, illustrator and founder of OBEY Clothing who emerged from the skateboarding scene. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, Rhode Island in 1992. He first became known for his “Andre the Giant Has a Posse” (…OBEY…) sticker campaign while attending college, which appropriated images from the comedic supermarket tabloid Weekly World News. He became widely known during the 2008 U.S. Presidential election for his Barack Obama “Hope” poster.
PAT RIOT The work of Pat Riot, whose artistic view satirizes all forms of media, has been showing in Los Angeles since 1996. His diverse influences include television; MAD Magazine; artists Henry Darger, Ray Johnson, and Tim Hawkinson; the old school video arcade game “Space Invaders”; BANKSY; and the timeless futurist, Buckminster Fuller.
SEONNA HONG Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. Seonna’s themes often include allegories of that lost child trying to find her way through her imagination onto her path in the world.
SEAN CHEETHAM Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his Alla Prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time.
WILLIAM WRAY William is co-curator of The Pink pop-up Show. He blends traditional skill sets of realism and the sheer energy of abstract expressionism in an ongoing evolution to find the right balance between two seemingly unrelated styles. He challenges himself to create a brand of realistic expressionism, he hopes to use as a bridge into the customarily circumspect contemporary art world. He has lived in California most of his life and studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. Making his living as a cartoonist who specialized in painted subjects, he spent many years coalescing an eclectic array of art styles, ultimately finding his voice in a contemporized reflection of traditional California regional painting that focus on humble subject matter rarely considered as fine art.
JENNIFER POCHINSKI Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes the form of a visual allegory in which a young woman is confronted with the need to step off of some kind of precipice that will lead to the next unknown path of life’s journey.
ASHLEY WOOD Ash does every kind of art there is from fine art painting to comics and toy design. His painting has his own style comic book structure with a expressionist painting energy confidently applied over the top of it that is at once both tender and violent, sexual yet warm and playful.
BRADFORD J. SALAMON Bradford is an American portrait painter whose subjects are often fellow artists. He imbues ordinary objects of the past with an iconic art status beyond their cultural history.  Bradford’s passion about the California art scene includes curating art shows and documenting fellow artists on film
CHRIS RECCARDI The fine art of Chris Reccardi (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Glenn Barr’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) reflects a wide range of literary and visual influences, from classic Victorian/Edwardian-era science fiction, to classic cartoon styles of the 1960’s and ‘70’s, to modern design. While Chris is known for his digital fine art prints, he will have an original painting in the Pink Show
DAVID BUCKINGHAM Sculptor David Buckingham roams the gritty industrial areas, dodgy neighborhoods, and low deserts of Southern California in search of discarded metal forms of all kinds.  In his Los Angeles studio, he uses an array of power tools and sheer force of will to muscle them into works of art. All colors remain as found, the purity of faded color carrying a history, he refuses to try and duplicate with new paint.
DAVE COOPER Dave is a self-taught artist who developed his own vision as an animator and comic book illustrator. Turning to fine art in 2003, he produced cartoonish scenes filled with his unique disturbing imagery. Dave explores body image, lewdness, hedonism, and sexually awkward-looking girls with unique flaws and imperfections, in search of his own ideal of feminine beauty.
DAVID SHARPE David is a contemporary impressionist painter from Canada who recently started to experiment in varied and unusual abstract expressionist styles.  That rapid evolution to other disciplines is what interested the curators of the Pink show as David demonstrates that a traditional skill set can help expand the artist’s toolbox of styles
DAVID LIPSON David assembles one-of-a-kind robots from random objects. He studied oil painting at the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design. His robots have been featured in museums, galleries, books, and on television. Previously, David spent 17 years as an animation producer for film and television.
ESCOTO + CARRARA Escoto+Carrara (Frederico Escoto and Roberto Carrara) are Mexican artists and life partners, who still call Mexico home. Photographer and painter, they compliment to one another’s talent in a visual dance, culminating in an array of colors and movements pushing both photography and painting to the next level.
GIG DEPIO Gig is a painter and an advocate for public art in Las Vegas, Nevada. He was awarded the 2016 Fellowship Grant in Painting by the Nevada Arts Council (NAC), and has worked on various exhibitions and projects with the Nevada Museum of Art (Reno), Nevada Arts Council OXS Gallery, UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum, UNLV Donna Beam Fine Arts, Clark County Winchester Cultural Center Gallery, Clark County Library Galleries, the City of Las Vegas Galleries, the Nevada State College Galleries, and with curator Dr. Robert Tracy at the UNLV Healy Hayes Gallery.
GLENN BARR The surreal universe of Glenn Barr (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Chris Reccardi’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) – is a drenched haze in a post-apocalyptic urban Dreamscape. His Detroit work has been labeled a variation of lowbrow pop — or as he calls it, “B Culturalism.” With a nod to old master painting, pulp art, comics and animation, Barr’s paintings are mesmerizing in their narrative complexity and technical depth.
GORDON SMEDT Gordon was trained in figure painting yet somehow gravitated to doing large paintings of objects and clothing using beautiful bright colors and flawless (yet painterly) rendering. His objective is to infuse the inanimate with energy and life.
GRONK Gronk Nicandro, a Chicano artist from Los Angeles, has developed an international reputation for a provocative body of work that includes painting, drawing, opera set design, and murals. His work is collected by museums around the country, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
ROBERT SOFFIAN Robert was born into a family that encouraged self-expression and personal artistic journeys. His journey has given him a rich a varied background–he spent part of his youth attending a radical art camp called Lincoln Farm, he went on to expand his personal and artistic horizons by travel throughout the world, and found work in Amsterdam as a government supported artist. He eventually settled in to a 30 year career at Shasta College in Redding, CA as a professor of theater, directing and lighting countless productions. He has curated dozens of exhibitions and is credited with discovering the Violent Femmes. During the last ten years, Soffian ventured from the public world of the theater to the private world of painting.
Soffian says this about his work, “I wish to paint things we all know or dream…very often I am first motivated by the excitement of the materials I am using…obviously I enjoy vibrant colors, and the texture of the physical body of the paint…for some reason, I have felt I needed to express something….what is the nature of that need and what it is compels me to keep doing this work is the subject of my life.”
JOHN BROSIO John Brosio has found by default that he is a painter immersed in a state of perpetual discontent and learning to see. Though always fascinated by the idea of making “Star Wars” kinds of fantasy movies, he has applied his imagination to layered narrative painting. Following a long series of images that depicted moments of impending disaster, his work has evolved toward a more conceptual combining of imagined tableaus of a child’s toy and drawings into an orchestration of select visual relationships.
LOIC ZIMMERMAN Loic Zimmermann is a French filmmaker and visual artist based in Los Angeles. His focus gradually shifted from illustration and 3D to photography and filmmaking. He also continues in VFX as an art director in major motion pictures. We have managed to coax him back to doing a mixed media painting for the Pink show.
MARK ENGLISH Mark English has been one of the leading illustrators in the U.S. and abroad for three decades. In 1995, as Mark began to paint more personal fine art, he sought to infuse new and exciting compositions with a rich alchemy of unusual textural sources that have contributed to a kind of unique painterly collage. Transparency and translucency reign, with rich colors and atmospheric perceptions of space and scale. His works reside in many private collections and exhibit in solo and group shows throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.
Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Noah Becker Pablo Llana Rafael Serrano
ART TODAY 10.10.17 The Pink Pop-up Show defines a new way of looking at Art – Check out David Lipson and Sean Cheatham
ART TODAY 10.13.17: Thirty one Artists are poised, tools in hand – Come and see what they have to say at The Pink pop-up Show at Castelli Art Space 11.30.17
ART TODAY 10.14.17 – on November 30th, Witness a select group of extraordinary Artist at “The Pink pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Hofberg/Iglesias – See artists list
ART TODAY 10.15.17 The Pink Show presents: The diversity between Michael Flechtner and Gig Depio – Part 2 (mark the date 11.30.17)
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-27-17-jennifer-pochinskis-poetic-expression-of-the-human-spirit/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles Painting for Jennifer Pochinkski is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind. ##Castelliartspace #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #JenniferPochinski #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-27-17-jennifer-pochinskis-poetic-expression-of-the-human-spirit/
ART TODAY 11.27.17 Jennifer Pochinski's poetic expression of the human spirit – The Pink Pop-Up Show
Nude with Pink Skirt The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
JENNIFER POCHINSKI Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
The Artists
ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes the form of a visual allegory in which a young woman is confronted with the need to step off of some kind of precipice that will lead to the next unknown path of life’s journey.
ASHLEY WOOD Ash does every kind of art there is from fine art painting to comics and toy design. His painting has his own style comic book structure with a expressionist painting energy confidently applied over the top of it that is at once both tender and violent, sexual yet warm and playful.
BRADFORD J. SALAMON Bradford is an American portrait painter whose subjects are often fellow artists. He imbues ordinary objects of the past with an iconic art status beyond their cultural history.  Bradford’s passion about the California art scene includes curating art shows and documenting fellow artists on film.
CHRIS RECCARDI The fine art of Chris Reccardi (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Glenn Barr’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) reflects a wide range of literary and visual influences, from classic Victorian/Edwardian-era science fiction, to classic cartoon styles of the 1960’s and ‘70’s, to modern design. While Chris is known for his digital fine art prints, he will have an original painting in the Pink Show.
DAVID BUCKINGHAM Sculptor David Buckingham roams the gritty industrial areas, dodgy neighborhoods, and low deserts of Southern California in search of discarded metal forms of all kinds.  In his Los Angeles studio, he uses an array of power tools and sheer force of will to muscle them into works of art. All colors remain as found, the purity of faded color carrying a history, he refuses to try and duplicate with new paint.
DAVE COOPER Dave is a self-taught artist who developed his own vision as an animator and comic book illustrator. Turning to fine art in 2003, he produced cartoonish scenes filled with his unique disturbing imagery. Dave explores body image, lewdness, hedonism, and sexually awkward-looking girls with unique flaws and imperfections, in search of his own ideal of feminine beauty.
DAVID SHARPE David is a contemporary impressionist painter from Canada who recently started to experiment in varied and unusual abstract expressionist styles.  That rapid evolution to other disciplines is what interested the curators of the Pink show as David demonstrates that a traditional skill set can help expand the artist’s toolbox of styles
DAVID LIPSON David assembles one-of-a-kind robots from random objects. He studied oil painting at the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design. His robots have been featured in museums, galleries, books, and on television. Previously, David spent 17 years as an animation producer for film and television.
ESCOTO + CARRARA Escoto+Carrara (Frederico Escoto and Roberto Carrara) are Mexican artists and life partners, who still call Mexico home. Photographer and painter, they compliment to one another’s talent in a visual dance, culminating in an array of colors and movements pushing both photography and painting to the next level.
GLENN BARR The surreal universe of Glenn Barr (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Chris Reccardi’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) – is a drenched haze in a post-apocalyptic urban Dreamscape. His Detroit work has been labeled a variation of lowbrow pop — or as he calls it, “B Culturalism.” With a nod to old master painting, pulp art, comics and animation, Barr’s paintings are mesmerizing in their narrative complexity and technical depth.
GORDON SMEDT Gordon was trained in figure painting yet somehow gravitated to doing large paintings of objects and clothing using beautiful bright colors and flawless (yet painterly) rendering. His objective is to infuse the inanimate with energy and life.
GRONK Gronk Nicandro, a Chicano artist from Los Angeles, has developed an international reputation for a provocative body of work that includes painting, drawing, opera set design, and murals. His work is collected by museums around the country, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
JOHN BROSIO John Brosio has found by default that he is a painter immersed in a state of perpetual discontent and learning to see. Though always fascinated by the idea of making “Star Wars” kinds of fantasy movies, he has applied his imagination to layered narrative painting. Following a long series of images that depicted moments of impending disaster, his work has evolved toward a more conceptual combining of imagined tableaus of a child’s toy and drawings into an orchestration of select visual relationships.
LOIC ZIMMERMAN Loic Zimmermann is a French filmmaker and visual artist based in Los Angeles. His focus gradually shifted from illustration and 3D to photography and filmmaking. He also continues in VFX as an art director in major motion pictures. We have managed to coax him back to doing a mixed media painting for the Pink show.
MARK ENGLISH Mark English has been one of the leading illustrators in the U.S. and abroad for three decades. In 1995, as Mark began to paint more personal fine art, he sought to infuse new and exciting compositions with a rich alchemy of unusual textural sources that have contributed to a kind of unique painterly collage. Transparency and translucency reign, with rich colors and atmospheric perceptions of space and scale. His works reside in many private collections and exhibit in solo and group shows throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.
MICHAEL FLECHTNER Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious.  Despite the internal origins of his works, he strives to make them bold and easy to read, as any good sign design should.
PAT RIOT The work of Pat Riot, whose artistic view satirizes all forms of media, has been showing in Los Angeles since 1996. His diverse influences include television; MAD Magazine; artists Henry Darger, Ray Johnson, and Tim Hawkinson; the old school video arcade game “Space Invaders”; BANKSY; and the timeless futurist, Buckminster Fuller.
SEONNA HONG Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. Seonna’s themes often include allegories of that lost child trying to find her way through her imagination onto her path in the world.
SEAN CHEETHAM Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his Alla Prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time.
WILLIAM WRAY William is co-curator of The Pink pop-up Show. He blends traditional skill sets of realism and the sheer energy of abstract expressionism in an ongoing evolution to find the right balance between two seemingly unrelated styles. He challenges himself to create a brand of realistic expressionism, he hopes to use as a bridge into the customarily circumspect contemporary art world. He has lived in California most of his life and studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. Making his living as a cartoonist who specialized in painted subjects, he spent many years coalescing an eclectic array of art styles, ultimately finding his voice in a contemporized reflection of traditional California regional painting that focus on humble subject matter rarely considered as fine art.
Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Gig Depio Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Noah Becker Pablo Llana Rafael Serrano Robert Soffian Shepard Fairey
ART TODAY 11.26.17 Start the buzz… The Pink pop-up Show is this weekend: over 30 diverse artists – unpredictable and remarkable at Castelli Art Space, LA
ART TODAY 10.12.17 The Pink pop-up Show: 31 artist, one work of art, one exhibit, a plethora of interpretation – Artists join together to show their take on PINK
ART TODAY 10.13.17: Thirty one Artists are poised, tools in hand – Come and see what they have to say at The Pink pop-up Show at Castelli Art Space 11.30.17
ART TODAY 10.18.17: Meet Seco! He is 34″ tall and made from random objects, created by master Robot builder David Lipso – see his work at “The Pink Show,” Castelli Art Space on November 30th
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-26-17-start-buzz-pink-pop-show-weekend-30-diverse-artists-unpredictable-remarkable-castelli-art-space-la/ TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles Pink art by William Wray The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected] The Artists ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes ... ##Castelliartspace #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-11-26-17-start-buzz-pink-pop-show-weekend-30-diverse-artists-unpredictable-remarkable-castelli-art-space-la/
ART TODAY 11.26.17 Start the buzz... The Pink pop-up Show is this weekend: over 30 diverse artists – unpredictable and remarkable at Castelli Art Space, LA
Pink art by William Wray The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space, November 30 – December 3, 2017 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles For show information contact [email protected]
The Artists
ARON WIESENFELD Aron Wiesenfeld is an allegorical figurative painter. His work often takes the form of a visual allegory in which a young woman is confronted with the need to step off of some kind of precipice that will lead to the next unknown path of life’s journey.
ASHLEY WOOD Ash does every kind of art there is from fine art painting to comics and toy design. His painting has his own style comic book structure with a expressionist painting energy confidently applied over the top of it that is at once both tender and violent, sexual yet warm and playful.
BRADFORD J. SALAMON Bradford is an American portrait painter whose subjects are often fellow artists. He imbues ordinary objects of the past with an iconic art status beyond their cultural history.  Bradford’s passion about the California art scene includes curating art shows and documenting fellow artists on film
CHRIS RECCARDI The fine art of Chris Reccardi (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Glenn Barr’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) reflects a wide range of literary and visual influences, from classic Victorian/Edwardian-era science fiction, to classic cartoon styles of the 1960’s and ‘70’s, to modern design. While Chris is known for his digital fine art prints, he will have an original painting in the Pink Show
DAVID BUCKINGHAM Sculptor David Buckingham roams the gritty industrial areas, dodgy neighborhoods, and low deserts of Southern California in search of discarded metal forms of all kinds.  In his Los Angeles studio, he uses an array of power tools and sheer force of will to muscle them into works of art. All colors remain as found, the purity of faded color carrying a history, he refuses to try and duplicate with new paint.
DAVE COOPER Dave is a self-taught artist who developed his own vision as an animator and comic book illustrator. Turning to fine art in 2003, he produced cartoonish scenes filled with his unique disturbing imagery. Dave explores body image, lewdness, hedonism, and sexually awkward-looking girls with unique flaws and imperfections, in search of his own ideal of feminine beauty.
DAVID SHARPE David is a contemporary impressionist painter from Canada who recently started to experiment in varied and unusual abstract expressionist styles.  That rapid evolution to other disciplines is what interested the curators of the Pink show as David demonstrates that a traditional skill set can help expand the artist’s toolbox of styles
DAVID LIPSON David assembles one-of-a-kind robots from random objects. He studied oil painting at the Art Students League of New York and the National Academy of Design. His robots have been featured in museums, galleries, books, and on television. Previously, David spent 17 years as an animation producer for film and television.
ESCOTO + CARRARA Escoto+Carrara (Frederico Escoto and Roberto Carrara) are Mexican artists and life partners, who still call Mexico home. Photographer and painter, they compliment to one another’s talent in a visual dance, culminating in an array of colors and movements pushing both photography and painting to the next level
GLENN BARR The surreal universe of Glenn Barr (who is Pink Show artist’s, William Wray and Chris Reccardi’s fellow “Ren and Stimpy” alumnus) – is a drenched haze in a post-apocalyptic urban Dreamscape. His Detroit work has been labeled a variation of lowbrow pop — or as he calls it, “B Culturalism.” With a nod to old master painting, pulp art, comics and animation, Barr’s paintings are mesmerizing in their narrative complexity and technical depth.
GORDON SMEDT Gordon was trained in figure painting yet somehow gravitated to doing large paintings of objects and clothing using beautiful bright colors and flawless (yet painterly) rendering. His objective is to infuse the inanimate with energy and life.
GRONK Gronk Nicandro, a Chicano artist from Los Angeles, has developed an international reputation for a provocative body of work that includes painting, drawing, opera set design, and murals. His work is collected by museums around the country, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
JENNIFER POCHINSKI Painting for Jennifer is a mysterious process. A figurative painter, she loves the paint itself. The application of the loaded brush has a sensuousness that has developed into her personal language, yet she still feels like a bystander to this internal world that seems to drive itself thru her unconscious mind.
JOHN BROSIO John Brosio has found by default that he is a painter immersed in a state of perpetual discontent and learning to see. Though always fascinated by the idea of making “Star Wars” kinds of fantasy movies, he has applied his imagination to layered narrative painting. Following a long series of images that depicted moments of impending disaster, his work has evolved toward a more conceptual combining of imagined tableaus of a child’s toy and drawings into an orchestration of select visual relationships.
LOIC ZIMMERMAN Loic Zimmermann is a French filmmaker and visual artist based in Los Angeles. His focus gradually shifted from illustration and 3D to photography and filmmaking. He also continues in VFX as an art director in major motion pictures. We have managed to coax him back to doing a mixed media painting for the Pink show.
MARK ENGLISH Mark English has been one of the leading illustrators in the U.S. and abroad for three decades. In 1995, as Mark began to paint more personal fine art, he sought to infuse new and exciting compositions with a rich alchemy of unusual textural sources that have contributed to a kind of unique painterly collage. Transparency and translucency reign, with rich colors and atmospheric perceptions of space and scale. His works reside in many private collections and exhibit in solo and group shows throughout the world, including the United States, Canada, Europe, and Japan.
MICHAEL FLECHTNER Neon has been Michael’s medium of expression for nearly a decade. His work reflects a fascination with the symbols of language, technology, and their influence on popular culture which he transmutes into visual word games from his unconscious.  Despite the internal origins of his works, he strives to make them bold and easy to read, as any good sign design should
PAT RIOT The work of Pat Riot, whose artistic view satirizes all forms of media, has been showing in Los Angeles since 1996. His diverse influences include television; MAD Magazine; artists Henry Darger, Ray Johnson, and Tim Hawkinson; the old school video arcade game “Space Invaders”; BANKSY; and the timeless futurist, Buckminster Fuller.
SEONNA HONG Seonna felt like an outsider in school until she discovered she could open up communication with her art.  From photo realist and comic book influences, her art evolved back into the more collage-oriented creations of her childhood. Seonna’s themes often include allegories of that lost child trying to find her way through her imagination onto her path in the world.
SEAN CHEETHAM Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his Alla Prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time.
WILLIAM WRAY William is co-curator of The Pink pop-up Show. He blends traditional skill sets of realism and the sheer energy of abstract expressionism in an ongoing evolution to find the right balance between two seemingly unrelated styles. He challenges himself to create a brand of realistic expressionism, he hopes to use as a bridge into the customarily circumspect contemporary art world. He has lived in California most of his life and studied painting at the Art Students League in New York. Making his living as a cartoonist who specialized in painted subjects, he spent many years coalescing an eclectic array of art styles, ultimately finding his voice in a contemporized reflection of traditional California regional painting that focus on humble subject matter rarely considered as fine art.
Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Gig Depio Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Noah Becker Pablo Llana Rafael Serrano Robert Soffian Shepard Fairey
ART TODAY 10.11.17 The Pink pop-up Show represents harmony in the art world – “My Gun is Pink” by co-curator and view sample works by Pink artists Pablo Llana & Wyatt Mills
ART TODAY 10.9.17: “The Pink Show” is not your ordinary Art Exhibit – it is daring, diverse, and curated by three outstanding art directors and one is Artist William Wray (Pretty In Pink)
ART TODAY 10.10.17 The Pink Pop-up Show defines a new way of looking at Art – Check out David Lipson and Sean Cheatham
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 7 years
Text
ART TODAY 10.18.17 "The Pink Show" – Sean Cheetham paints portraits with mind-blowing technical accuracy, and we can't wait to see what he paints for The Pink Show TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles #Allartallthetime #Arttoday #Pinkpopupshow #Seancheetham #Tribelamagazine #William_Wray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/httptribelamagazine-comart-today-10-18-17-pink-show-sean-cheetham-paints-portraits-technical-accuracy-pink-show/
ART TODAY 10.18.17 "The Pink Show" – Sean Cheetham paints portraits with mind-blowing technical accuracy, and we can't wait to see what he paints for The Pink Show
Portrait, Oil on Board
Sean Cheetham Sean is a figurative painter whose technical accuracy of his alla prima paintings, is derived from a deep understanding of drawing and his own system of mixing colors. Using the human form in familiar urban scenes (and often using his friends as models) he reveals a truthful, and often raw spirit that makes his work a distinctive, contemporary testimony of our time. His blog: http://seancheetham.blogspot.com/. His site: http://www.seancheetham.com/
The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space November 30 – December 3 5428 W. Washington Blvd., Los Angeles, CA. 90016 For show information contact [email protected]
The PINK show artists include: Aron Wiesenfeld Ashley Wood Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Bradford J. Salamon Chris Reccardi David Lipson David Buckingham Dave Cooper David Sharpe Escoto + Carrara Gig Depio Glenn Barr Gordon Smedt Gronk Jenniffer Pochinski John Brosio Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Loic Zimmermann Mark English Michael Flechtner Noah Becker Pablo Llana Pat Riot Rafael Serrano Robert Soffian Sean Cheetham Seonna Hong Shepard Fairey Steven Skollar William Wray Wyatt Mills
PINK logo Design2 by William Wray
Castelli Art Space is a different sort of gallery. There, Fred Goldstein and Iglesias believe that they have a space that serves artists in Los Angeles to present their artwork outside of the normal gallery ethos. Whereas traditional galleries will take a 50/50 or 60/40 commission, artists retain 100% of their sales when they rent the art space. If the artist works with a curator, the commission is usually an 80/20 or 70/30 split, which enables the artists to earn more, so they can continue to create without restrictions.  http://castelliartspace.com
0 notes
tribelamag-blog · 6 years
Text
ENCORE of L.A.'s Pink Pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Carlos Iglesias – Over 30 wildly diverse artists gather to reflect on one happy color, Pink TribeLA Magazine • Los Angeles #Tribelamag #Arttoday #Pinkpopupshow #Tribelamagazine #WilliamWray
New Post has been published on http://tribelamagazine.com/art-today-10-8-17-pink-30-wildly-diverse-artists-gather-first-time-reflect-one-happy-color-pink/
ENCORE of L.A.'s Pink Pop-up Show” curated by William Wray and Carlos Iglesias – Over 30 wildly diverse artists gather to reflect on one happy color, Pink
The Pink Show at Castelli Art Space November 30 – December 3 • 5428 W. Washington Blvd. • Los Angeles, CA. 90016 For show information contact [email protected]
The Pink Show is an outrageously simple concept: we are stripping the meat off the usual curatorial group show carcass of political complexity, and playing with a cute little chew toy combo instead. This group of wildly diverse artists has been gathered at great effort and expense, just to reflect upon one happy color (in this case, Pink) in their own personal way. It may just be a drop of the color pink on the nose of a confused bunny rabbit, or a complex Lego world gone leather-disco gay. We’re asking the controversial question: can very contemporary art live in the same room with cartoon surrealism, and various types of traditional narrative art, without the room bursting into flame?
We get a little queasy wondering if while hanging the art, we might find works complimenting each other by happy accident, or be stuck in a retina-straining house full of horrors filled with pieces abstractly at war. Either way, we like the tension of the merry-go-round of possibilities.
Sample works by Gronk and Aron Wiesenfeld [hoot_slider id=”6801″]
The PINK show artists include: Aron Wiesenfeld Ashley Wood Andrea Bogdan Bill Barminski Bradford J. Salamon Chris Reccardi David Lipson David Buckingham Dave Cooper David Sharpe Escoto + Carrara Gig Depio Glenn Barr Gordon Smedt Gronk Jenniffer Pochinski John Brosio Jorge Pinzón Casasbuenas Loic Zimmermann Mark English Michael Flechtner Noah Becker Pablo Llana Pat Riot Rafael Serrano Robert Soffian Sean Cheetham Seonna Hong Shepard Fairey Steven Skollar William Wray Wyatt Mills
0 notes