ART-PRESENTATION: 5,471 miles,Part II

Kenjiro Okazaki, 十四時/Ix chel /空の水瓶, 2015, Acrylic on canvas, 6 5/8 x 7 7/8 x 1 1/4 inches, © Kenjiro Okazaki, Courtesy the artist and Blum & PoeAfter long-term COVID-19 closures, Blum & Poe Gallery announced the opening of the Los Angeles and Tokyo galleries via limited reservations. The exhibition presented in both spaces, 5,471 miles, refers to the physical distance between these two hubs, and the defining criteria for focusing the two group exhibitions respectively on work by mainly local artists.

By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Blum & Poe Gallery Archive

The curatorial theme of the exhibition “5,471 miles” is a paradox in that it is both an internationally minded twin-city exhibition but is also inherently restricted to local practicalities via the travel and shipping obstacles of the pandemic. Few people would be able to name the physical distance between LA and Tokyo because it is so easily bridged by air travel; yet never in our lifetimes has that distance felt so far and so difficult to surmount. The exhibition in each city is defined equally by the works that are there as by those that are not there.

In Los Angeles are on presentation works by: Alma Allen, Theodora Allen, Darren Bader, Robert Colescott, Sam Durant, Anya Gallaccio, Aaron Garber-Maikovska, Matt Johnson, Friedrich Kunath, Mimi Lauter, Tony Lewis, Dave Muller, Asuka Anastacia Ogawa,  Jim Shaw and Penny Slinger.

Alma Allen is a self-taught artist who began his practice by hand carving salvaged materials into unique small objects. Allen moved to New York in his early twenties and sold the miniature carvings on the street in SoHo, before catching the attention of designers nearby. After almost a decade in New York, Allen relocated to Los Angeles where he began designing furniture and creating large-scale sculptures. After repeated injury from obsessive over-carving left Allen unable to use his hands for extended periods, the artist built a robotic system out of spare assembly line parts and developed its proprietary software as a mechanized extension of hand-carving. Primarily constructed in stone, wood, and bronze, Allen’s sculptures are reminiscent of those by Constantin Brancusi and Isamu Noguchi, reflecting their ardor for experimentation, expressiveness, and originality. The paintings of Theodora Allen are quiet, restrained, and at times unsettling. Drawing from music, literature, myth and nature, Allen’s meditative compositions investigate themes of temporality and eternity, exploring a space between the physical world and an interior mindscape. In recent bodies of work, Allen has presented images of celestial bodies, moths and serpents, delirium-inducing plants, and string-less guitars emerging from geometric structures and reliquary-like spaces. The emblems are introspective and elusive, carrying the tone of despondency and the weight of existential inquiry. Darren Bader studied filmmaking and art history at NYU (BFA, 2000). He lives and works in New York and in transit. Bader’s conceptual hobbyhorses include: word works, pairings, impossible sculpture, misattribution, object fetishism, and trash sculptures. His exhibitions are often collaborative in nature, exploring and questioning the interconnectedness of seemingly disparate objects through complex (re)arrangements, surprise juxtapositions, and absurd associations. Over a nearly six-decade painting career, Robert Colescott  was a proud instigator who fearlessly tackled subjects of social and racial inequality, class structure, and the human condition through his uniquely rhythmic and often manic style of figuration. Colescott’s distinctive works, while not easily placed within any one specific school of painting, share elements of Abstract Expressionism, Pop Art, “Bad” Painting, Renaissance Painting, Neo-Expressionism, and Surrealism. Sam Durant is an interdisciplinary artist whose works engage a variety of social, political, and cultural issues. Growing up near Boston in the 1970s he experienced the radical pedagogy of A.S. Neill, Maria Montessori, and John Holt, along with anti-war demonstrations and the desegregation of the public-school system. Exposure to an educational culture emphasizing democratic ideals, racial equality, and social justice created the framework for Durant’s artistic perspective. Often taking up forgotten events from the past, his work makes connections with ongoing social and cultural issues. Anya Gallaccio studied at Kingston Polytechnic, London and Goldsmiths College of University of London. Recognized internationally for her work with natural materials to create site-specific installations, Gallaccio has consistently impacted notions of traditional sculpture. She engages organic substances such as trees, grass, flowers, fruit, and ice, enhancing their pure essence through sculptural form. Gallaccio’s sculptures are not created to capture one moment, instead she invites the viewer to witness the fluidity and impermanence of nature. The delicate and illusory appearance of her work encourages us to embrace the state and process of entropy, as the outcome of Gallaccio’s sculptures remains unforeseen, often even to the artist herself. The work of

Aaron Garber-Maikovska encompasses painting, drawing, performance, and video—interconnected modes of communicating a vernacular of somatic expression. Garber-Maikovska describes the site of the body and its role in making art not simply as a tool with which to navigate our world, but a centralized perceptive sphere of emotional, physical, conceptual, and spiritual inquiry. His  performances are set in private and public spaces, oftentimes in chain restaurants and mall parking lots. The artist approaches these cultural backdrops of late-capitalism, post-democracy, and neo-liberalism with kinesthetic investigations—gesture, rhythmic motion, dance and vocal utterances.  Matt Johnson’s work investigates the human desire to interact with the given world through science, mathematics, religion, art, and architecture. His exploration points to our inherent need to connect with the cosmos, our desire to understand it, and our attempts to manipulate it. The work uncovers poetry by accessing the potential of familiar objects, sometimes rendered via classical modes. Johnson’s instinctive humor and ongoing appreciation of art history are played out in materials both modern and timeless. Friedrich Kunath utilizes a personal style of romantic conceptualism, layering poetic phrases with poignant, often melancholy imagery. The work embraces comedy and pathos, evoking universal feelings of love, hope, longing, and despair. The artist’s personal journey from Germany to Los Angeles plays a key role in his work, incorporating German Romanticism and western popular culture, with still life, cartoon imagery, commercial illustration, nature photography and lyrical references. Mimi Lauter’s oil and soft-pastel works on paper assemble abstracted narratives drawn from subconscious memory, literature, sociopolitical surroundings, and classical mythology. For her first exhibition at Blum & Poe Los Angeles in 2018, Lauter presented a twenty-four part installation entitled “Sensus Oxynation” that functioned as the interior of a chapel—each wall a grouping of lush, highly chromatic works. Her practice proposes a secular relationship to spirituality in painting—belief in and devotion to the painting itself. In an ever-expanding engagement with drawing, Tony Lewis harnesses the medium of graphite powder to confront such social and political topics as race, power, communication, and labor. The material provides a literal and conceptual foundation for the artist’s work, as it is stretched, smudged, rubbed, spliced, and folded across a variety of handmade and found surfaces. Graphite powder is an inherently unruly medium, a substance that threatens to wander. Lewis nurtures this dispersal, allowing for the powder to build into a ubiquitous state that settles upon and indiscriminately marks paper surfaces; the graphite-slick studio floor becomes a “tool the same way a pencil is a tool”. Dave Muller creates paintings and installations that are rooted in his deep fascination with music, how it infiltrates and shapes our identities, and the communal dialogue it generates across cultures. Tapping into shared poetic moments and a collective dialogue, Muller depicts the myriad iconographies of his musical obsessions—album covers and spines, vinyl records, tapes, CDs, bootlegs, B-sides, disco balls, record labels, set lists, rare and popular instruments—sounds of all stripes, musicians, and singers, both beloved and unknown.

Asuka Anastacia Ogawa creates large figurative paintings that depict androgynous children in chimerical dreamscapes, otherworldly scenes formed from solid fields of color and flat picture planes. Her subjects have wide thin eyes that gaze forward, piercing the fourth wall. Ogawa conjures these compositions through an exercise that embraces unmediated impulse and channels the sense of curiosity, wonder and play paramount to childhood.  Jim Shaw is a multidisciplinary artist and an icon of the Los Angeles art scene. His work explores the countercultures and subconscious of American society, interwoven with personal history. Shaw grew up in Michigan during a time of great economic expansion—a time also known for the baby boom, the formation of suburbs, and the creation of consumer culture as we know it today. Along with the artist Mike Kelley, a fellow student at the University of Michigan, Shaw was a founder of the short-lived but influential punk-noise band Destroy All Monsters. He moved to Los Angeles in the 1970s to attend California Institute of the Arts and he is arguably one of the most notable artists to emerge from the school at that time. Penny Slinger has been exploring the connection between eroticism, mysticism, feminism, and art for over fifty years. Slinger mined surrealism in the 1960s and 1970s to plumb the depths of the feminine psyche and subconscious. She continues to work in many mediums including collage, photography, drawing, sculpture, and video.

Info: Blum & Poe Gallery, 2727 S. La Cienega Boulevard, Los Angeles, Duration: 21/7-15/8/20, Days & Hours: Tue-Sat 10:00-18:00, www.blumandpoe.com

The galleries are open to the public through limited reservations.

Alma Allen, Not Yet Titled, 2020, Marble, 10 x 22 1/2 x 18 inches, © Alma Allen, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Alma Allen, Not Yet Titled, 2020, Marble, 10 x 22 1/2 x 18 inches, © Alma Allen, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Darren Bader, CS15, 2020, Greg Lake’s treadmill; Phyllis Diller’s sheet music; Elizabeth Taylor’s hand towel; Bob Keeshan’s trench coat; Eartha Kitt’s coin purse; Raymond Burr’s stamp album, © Darren Bader, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Darren Bader, CS15, 2020, Greg Lake’s treadmill; Phyllis Diller’s sheet music; Elizabeth Taylor’s hand towel; Bob Keeshan’s trench coat; Eartha Kitt’s coin purse; Raymond Burr’s stamp album, © Darren Bader, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Dave Muller, Rising, 2020, Acrylic on plywood panel, Three parts; 58 1/2 (diameter) x 1 1/4 inches, © Dave Muller, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Dave Muller, Rising, 2020, Acrylic on plywood panel, Three parts; 58 1/2 (diameter) x 1 1/4 inches, © Dave Muller, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Kazunori Hamana, Untitled, 2020, Ceramic, 20 3/8 x 25 5/8 x 22 inches, Photo: Noboru Murata, © Kazunori Hamana, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Kazunori Hamana, Untitled, 2020, Ceramic, 20 3/8 x 25 5/8 x 22 inches, Photo: Noboru Murata, © Kazunori Hamana, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Left: Anya Gallaccio, Untitled, 2018, Mineral pigment and dirt on paper, 49 1/2 x 38 inches52 3/8 x 41 x 1 1/2 inches framed, © Anya Gallaccio, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe  Right: Matt Johnson, David, 2020, Painted bronze, 108 1/2 x 41 x 31 inches, Edition 1 of 2, 1AP, © Matt Johnson, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Left: Anya Gallaccio, Untitled, 2018, Mineral pigment and dirt on paper, 49 1/2 x 38 inches52 3/8 x 41 x 1 1/2 inches framed, © Anya Gallaccio, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Right: Matt Johnson, David, 2020, Painted bronze, 108 1/2 x 41 x 31 inches, Edition 1 of 2, 1AP, © Matt Johnson, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Tony Lewis, Weather, 2020, Graphite powder, pencil, and colored pencil on paper mounted on wood, 75 x 99 1/2 x 7 inches framed, © Tony Lewis, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Tony Lewis, Weather, 2020, Graphite powder, pencil, and colored pencil on paper mounted on wood, 75 x 99 1/2 x 7 inches framed, © Tony Lewis, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Yukie Ishikawa, Impermanence — Kobushi Magnolia, 2020, Acrylic and sand on canvas, 39 3/8 x 39 3/8 inches, © Yukie Ishikawa, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Yukie Ishikawa, Impermanence — Kobushi Magnolia, 2020, Acrylic and sand on canvas, 39 3/8 x 39 3/8 inches, © Yukie Ishikawa, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Left: Theodora Allen, Calendar, No.3, 2019, Oil on linen, 44 x 34 inches, © Theodora Allen, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe  Right: Theodora Allen, Life Thread, (Asclepius) No. 3, 2019, Oil on linen, 56 x 42 inches, © Theodora Allen, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Left: Theodora Allen, Calendar, No.3, 2019, Oil on linen, 44 x 34 inches, © Theodora Allen, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Right: Theodora Allen, Life Thread, (Asclepius) No. 3, 2019, Oil on linen, 56 x 42 inches, © Theodora Allen, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe

 

 

Yukie Ishikawa, Impermanence — Tanjitsu, 2020, Acrylic and sand on canvas, 35 7/8 x 35 7/8 inches, © Yukie Ishikawa, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe
Yukie Ishikawa, Impermanence — Tanjitsu, 2020, Acrylic and sand on canvas, 35 7/8 x 35 7/8 inches, © Yukie Ishikawa, Courtesy the artist and Blum & Poe