26
Jul/11
0

Space B’s Greatest Hits: The Chelsea Years

John Sarra, throw it higher, oil on panel, 11 x 14, 2011

If you happen to be in New York this summer, stop by to check out Space B’s Gallery’s new location at 59 Franklin Street in TriBeCa.  On view is Space B’s Greatest Hits: The Chelsea Years, which  features work by Jeff Bailey, Conrad Bakker,  Daniel Caspera, Marc Connor, Randy Gilmore, Alex Menocal, Mary Anna Pomonis, John Sarra, Alex Schuchard, Patrick Smith, John Coyle Steinbrunner, and Erik Wicker.  The exhibition continues through the end of August.  Gallery hours: Friday & Saturday 12:00-6:00 and by appointment.  Call Alex at 917-518-2385.

18
May/11
1

back to basics

Junior Kindergarteners at Central Christian School get quizzed regarding recognition and the "real".

This morning I visited my daughter’s Junior Kindergarten classroom, where they are completing a unit on artists and art making.  It was an opportunity to tell them about what I do in my own studio, and to talk about some of the reasons that we make works of art.  One of the great things about art making is that it is accessible on so many levels.  It was fun to be able to discuss the same impulses and ideas that are of interest to my college and graduate students, and to see these four and five year old faces light up with an understanding of the differences between found and made things, realities and representations, and the ways that we try to hold on to things which are otherwise ephemeral and fleeting.

5
Nov/10
1

recent work

lunette/flume, headstone/tomb: for Li Bai

lunette/flume, headstone/tomb (for Li Bai)

We had a Washington University faculty exhibition at the Des Lee Gallery last month, which was a good excuse to finish a new painting and try a different form of presentation.  Instead of using the word “installation”, I might use something like “actualization”, as the point of the piece was to enhance the viewer’s awareness of the object-presence, material relationships, imaginative space, and historical (or anecdotal) reference with near simultaneity.  This poses an interesting set of problems in a gallery context because of the associated conventions for displaying and interacting with the work.  Lunette is painted on a sheet of sandpaper from a floor-sander, and features a wooden remnant from some plumbing work in my house.  The painting is hung about ten inches lower than normal, a kind of “setting” towards the bench which is meant to emphasize their relationship while encouraging the viewer to lean over.  I made the frame out of African Mahogany flooring reclaimed from my neighbor’s house.  It is the same species of wood that I used to build the bench, wood which had been discarded because of the extreme warping and cupping that it had undergone.

Collectively the work is meant to invoke rather than portray the ingredients of the poet Li Bai’s anecdotal demise– intoxicated, falling from his boat and drowning while trying to embrace the reflection of the moon.

9
Mar/10
0

new work

installation view with bench

installation view with bench

Friday’s opening was an enjoyable one, thanks to the large crowd that didn’t seem to want to go home.  I had a real sense of accomplishment seeing the 12 pieces on the wall and under the lights, with six of the paintings being finished very recently– some as late as March 2nd.  Many thanks to Ellen Gochnour for orchestrating the exhibition, which will be on view through March 26.  I have included images of the most recent work, below.

love seat, oil on canvas, 54x 64, 2010

love seat, oil on canvas, 54x 64, 2010

annunciation, oil on canvas, 41x 30, 2010

annunciation, oil on canvas, 41x 30, 2010

we’ll work with what we’ve got, oil on canvas, 50 x 46, 2010

where we stand is beginning to end, oil on canvas, 50 x 46, 2010

a tree for our sorrow: memorial, oil on canvas, 40x 54, 2010

a tree for our sorrow: memorial, oil on canvas, 40x 54, 2010

a tree for our joy: memorial, oil on panel, 9.25x 10.5, 2010

a tree for our joy: memorial, oil on panel, 9.25x 10.5, 2010

our geometry is a fiction of cleanliness, oil on canvas, 64x 54, 2010

our geometry is a fiction of cleanliness, oil on canvas, 64x 54, 2010