Tuesday, September 25, 2018

Current Exhibition: Cheryl Dimont, Sunhee Joo, Marion Wood, Elyse Wyman

September 25 - October 20, 2018
Opening Reception: Saturday, October 6, 5-8pm
Artist Talk: Saturday, October 13, 3pm

Cheryl Dimont -- Looking Closer
Cheryl Dimont, The Quilt, Archieval pigment print
Sunhee Joo -- Message of Love
Sunhee Joo, The Kite Flyer, Digital painting, 9 x 9"
Marion Wood -- Field Notes
Marion Wood, Grounded, Acrylic, 48 x 30"
Elyse Wyman -- Signs of the Times
Elyse Wyman, Choice, Mixed media bas-relief, 32 x 15 x 4"

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

Artist Spotlight: Karen Sarrow -- FEM

Karen Sarrow, Protectors, Vets Arrive at DAPL, Acrylic and oil on linen, 25 x 31"
Karen Sarrow’s new exhibition, FEM, is comprised of a series of political paintings depicting struggles and environmental activism.
Karen Sarrow, After 9-11, Acrylic and mixed media on linen, 17 x 17"
The piece After 9-11 was painted during the Obama Administration, partly celebrating how the country had come together to elect a new President, reflected by the purple morning glories, and mourning the recent history of the Iraq War and violence in the Middle East. The future is obscured by the present immediacy of a chain link fence, with the fog of war and the tragedy of 9-11 in a faded vision inside the fence.
Karen Sarrow, Chain, Acrylic and mixed media on linen, 17 x 17"
Chain, painted prior to After 9-11, was more focused on the position of Sarrow as a new mom, acknowledging that society held the ideals of corporations, religion, energy and chemical exploitation higher than the health of families, children, and the environment.

Themes of human vulnerability permeate the FEM series of paintings, to emphasize that the life of the body is a physical reminder that we only have one earth to protect. The central image of the feminine is one that Sarrow has long waited to represent. The Earth, as an expectant mother, as with the feminine, will ultimately not be overcome by suppression.
Karen Sarrow, Fire Rose I, Acrylic on canvas, 25 x 19"
Karen Sarrow was born in the U.K., and grew up in Missouri. She received an M.A. in Art History from The Ohio State University, and an MFA in Painting from Pratt Institute. She serves as TAG President and co-founder of Imagi.Life. She and her family live in Studio City.


The exhibition runs through September 22, 2018
Artist Talk: Saturday, September 15, 3pm

Thursday, September 6, 2018

Artist Spotlight: Boris Litvinov -- End of Privacy

Boris Litvinov, Data Harvester, discarded parts of household electronics, 31 x 16"
Feeling called to action in the last year, artist Boris Litvinov produced a body of work drastically different from his typical stonework. The works in End of Privacy find Litvinov discarding the traditions of stone carving in favor of found objects and a microelectronic material palette. End of Privacy is a dive into social media’s function as instrumental tool in the spreading of false information, propaganda, and “fake news.”
Boris Litvinov, Ads Attack Kids, found electronic parts and epoxy resin, 25.5 x 44.5"
Previously living under the totalitarian rule of the Soviet era, Litvinov and his family aimed to live under the concept of a free society governed by a true, functioning and healthy democracy. However, since the last election, there has been an alarming increase in the number of hate crimes, calls for violent rhetoric, basic human decency, and empathy from the current administration and president. There has been a systematic, unabated obfuscation of reality, an assault on facts and truth, chaos disguised as political strategy, tax cuts for the rich, overt and blatant obstruction of justice, treasonous behavior domestically and internationally, disregard for and complete ignorance of the content of the foundational document of this great country - all committed by or because of one person whose only concern is for himself.
Boris Litvinov, Propaganda Machine, discarded parts of household electronics, 34 x 34"
End of Privacy asks us to look at our own role in the propaganda machine and how our own social media presence may contribute to an atmosphere of toxicity, lies, and hostility.
Boris Litvinov, Data Storage, discarded parts of household electronics, 29 x 20"
The exhibition runs through September 22, 2018
Artist Talk: Saturday, September 15, 3pm