‘Anxiety’ Exhibition on Purple Magazine France

eric-yahnker-copie-820x550

Eric Yahnker

steven-traylor-copie-820x550

Steven Traylor

brendan-donnelly-copie-820x550

Brendan Donnelly

  anja-salonen-copie-820x550

Anja Salonen

devin-troy-strother-aaron-elvis-jupin-and-laura-watters-copie-820x550

curator-laura-watters-copie-820x550

Co-Curator Laura Watters

devin-troy-strother-2-copie-820x550

Devin Troy Strother

cali-thornhill-dewitt-and-william-binnie-copie-820x550

hassan-rahim-and-ariana-papademetropoulos-copie-820x550

hwv8-mural-copie-820x550

cali-thornhill-dewitt-william-binnie-and-devin-troy-strother-copie-820x550

hvw8-owner-tyler-gibney-copie-820x550

Co-Curator Tyler Gibney

devin-troy-strother-copi-820x550

kyla-hansen-copie-820x550

Kyla Hansen

brendan-lynch-copie-820x550Brendan Lynch

Photos from Purple Magazine Paris.

Photo Paige Silveria

‘Distillations’ by Hassan Rahim

 

Hassan_Distaillations

TBT (Distillation 2)
25 x 33″
Metallic C-Print, Archival Inkjet, and Xerox Photocopy with 6-Ply Mat
Unique
2014

 

Hassan Rahim
Distillations
May 29th – June 22nd, 2014

Distillations is a refusal. Collage overlays images to connect disparate contexts and temporal zones. People and objects are layered, decontextualized, cut, and pasted into oblivion. At some point, a lack of restraint only leaves heaps of forced narratives, absurdity, and theoretical hash.

Instead of compositing, Rahim practices a sort of anti-collage allowing images originally chosen for montage to remain separated and unviolated.  Associated images not only share a frame, but also exist in the same chronology. This contemporaneity of pictures, given the dignity of negative space, serves to concentrate a narrative. BMW rims and Air Jordans were not only collateral in the height of ‘90s street theft but were also major pawns in collector culture. Like luxury cars, his works operate on a value of period-correctness – a system of fetish and preservation. Both abstract and figurative, his work negotiates issues of nostalgia and iconicity as constructions of the personal and universal subconscious.

He asserts the material and intrinsic worth of objects in relation to the specific time and place of their production. Cultural relics like an authentic 1984 LA Olympic archery pad and a true BMW E30 windshield existed in the same decade as 1987’s violent Operation Hammer, a city initiative where the slightest suspicion of drug possession justified a fever pitch of police brutality, mass incarceration, and prejudiced racial profiling. The archery board, an artifact from the very event that gave legislative rise to Operation Hammer, has an eerie physical relationship with the cracked windshield in which it repeats the same violence of targeting, bludgeoning, and revolt that characterized the streets during the LA Riots.

Not only are these objects part of a street market economy, holistically Rahim casts them as totems of competition: basketball, cars, gangs and music. Master of None, a weighty arrangement of tiered podiums resembling the pedestals of Formula One racing, is stripped of its function and reduced to its essential minimal form. When isolated from its competitive context, one is confronted with its brute materiality and presence. It is at once purely aesthetic and a cynical expression of hierarchy, a stage without champions. Much like the ambiguity in his other pieces, the viewer is left between sculpture and commentary.

Warp Zone #5 is part of an ongoing series of photographic drawings. Symbols and icons are transformed into spiral amorphs. They appear to be mundane objects and phrases but are flattened into a galaxy of its own skewed gravity. Each component is on the cusp of recognition and suggests a relationship with its neighboring element, but ultimately concedes to the motion of its own nightmarish realm.

With Rauschenberg’s visual semantics and Man Ray’s photographic unconscious, the pieces in Distillations are faint recollections of an era floating in purgatory. Solarized prints of Dr. Dre’s monumental album The Chronic, distorted reproductions of the Nike Air Foamposites, and Northrop Grumman’s B-2 Spirit Stealth Bomber are appropriated and manipulated into a spectral grammar of kink, poetry, and violence. Despite a conceptual grounding in his personal memories, Rahim suggests form, then rejects it; retains context, then negates it; collages, then throws it all into the white noise.

Hassan Rahim, b. 1987, Los Angeles, is a mixed media artist and art director living in Philadelphia. This is his second solo exhibition at HVW8 Art + Design Gallery; he has previously exhibited in Milan and Amsterdam.

Hassan Rahim – Distillations

 

Hassan-Rahim-Distillations-Final

Hassan Rahim
Distillations
May 29th – June 22nd, 2014

Opening Thursday, May 29th, 7 – 10pm

Please RSVP at rsvp@hvw8.com

In his second solo exhibition Distillations, Hassan Rahim applies his visual dialogue to deeper negotiate iconicity and nostalgia as constructions of the personal and universal subconscious. Using episodes from his past as a conceptual framework, futuristic fighter planes and vignettes from Los Angeles’s seedy history are re-contextualized in a spectral grammar of poetry and violence.

With Rauschenberg’s collage semantics, Stella’s defiance of the canvas, and Ruscha’s typographical sensibilities, Rahim’s obsessions are lacquered under layers of worship, kink, machinery, and analog static.

Hassan Rahim, b. 1987, Los Angeles, is an artist and art director. His work, reminiscent of vague childhood memories and adolescent fantasies, utilizes photography, collage and mixed media to create strong contextual pieces which are both appealing and alarming to the audience. This is his second solo exhibition at HVW8 Art + Design Gallery; he has previously exhibited in Milan and Amsterdam.

Please email info@hvw8.com for inquiries.

Milan and Amsterdam Opening Night and Installation Photos

Home and Away at Galleria Patricia Armocida Milan.

Francisca and Alessandro Moroder in Milan.

Lisa Leone

HVW8 Gallery Home and Away touring crew.

Home and Away, Amsterdam at Andenken Gallery

Hassan Rahim

A few photos from the Home and Away Exhibitions in Milan (Galleria Patricia Armocida) and Amsterdam (Andenken Gallery).

Thanks to Alessandro Moroder, Hassan Rahim and Lisa Leone for the artwork and Galleria Patricia Armocida (Milan) and Andenken Gallery (Amsterdam). Special thanks to adidas originals for the support.

A Home and Away tour travelogue can be found on Complex Art and Design.

More Photos below.

Home & Away – Milan and Amsterdam

LOS ANGELES has recently moved to the forefront of the contemporary art scene with HVW8 Gallery playing a pivotal role. HVW8 stands at the heart of Art, Music and Design in this emerging scene, bringing diverse groups together for its celebrated openings and exhibitions since 2006. In continuing its avant-garde tradition, HOME & AWAY is an exhibition series featuring HVW8 alumni from LA and NY making their European debuts. The exhibition will open at the Galleria Patricia Armocida in Milan and closes out in Amsterdam at the Andenken Gallery.

HOME & AWAY
Milan
GALLERIA PATRICIA ARMOCIDA
May 17 – 19th
Opening May 17th, 7 – 10pm
Via Lattanzio, 77 Milan, Italy
Contact: (+39) 02 3651 9304
RSVP press_originals@adidas.com

Facebook Event Page Milan

PR contact:
Alessia Battistello
Alessia.Battistello@adidas.com
+39 02 89181316

HOME & AWAY
Amsterdam
ANDENKEN GALLERY
May 24 – 26th
Opening May 24th, 7 – 10pm
Pazzanistraat 17 1014 DB Amsterdam
Contact: (+31) 62 155 6414

PR contact:
Ken Aerts
Ken.Aerts@adidas.com

Warp Zone Number 1- Mix for Hassan Rahim’s Art Show.

“WARP ZONE Number 1”

BOBBY EVANS

10 minutes of wildness created for Hassan Rahim’s art show “The Air Above This Ground”

1. Kwame’ Sets the Scene
2. There Was A Face On It
3. What If My Name Wasn’t Up in Lights?
4. It’s Truly A Miracle
5. …And Bit Down
6. Glass / Food
7. Reaper Come and Get Me
8. Blackness, Nothingness.
9. The Saga Continues >>>>

www.hrstudioplus.com/Hassan-Rahim-The-Air-Above-This-Ground-Opening-Friday-January-18-2013

The Air Above This Ground

 

Hassan Rahim 
b. 1987, Los Angeles

 

Hassan Rahim is an artist and art director living and working in Los Angeles. His work, reminiscent of vague childhood memories and adolescent fantasies, utilizes photography, collage and mixed media to create strong contextual pieces which are both appealing and alarming to the audience.

The artist is best characterized by a description of one of his works: Don King’s face looms large, fixed in an impish smirk across from a then-naïve-but-very-dangerous Mike Tyson. Between them is a Lamborghini Countach.  A marble backdrop could be a galaxy or an ocean. This particular piece is both exceptional and typical of Rahim’s work.  His usual themes—competition, excellence, and the decadence that come with them are all present, but in this work you also find a keen intuition of the antagonism that pervades the lives of the icons in play in the collage.  The curious detail here is that there is a fight going on, not between fighters but rather the real fight: between fighter and promoter.

Rahim’s knack is to contextualize culture in this way. In the artist’s world about seven percent of Michael Jordan’s significance was on-court.  Here he is treated as an event; as the kind of icon that changes the way we do icons in the first place.  Throughout the work there is a similar dialogue.  Rahim interrogates ‘the icon’ and ‘nostalgia’ as phenomena.  The investigation is very much alive, never slips into academic moralizing.  Here riches and competitive dominance are flattered, but their respective uglier sides are also sorely present. When contemplating any of these collages one has the impression of a child at a dinner party attended by sports luminaries who has just heard a dirty joke: you can’t quite put your finger on the vulgarity, but you know that something has happened.

Conversant with pre-existing works–Rahim’s “The Big Three” owes as much to Wallace Berman’s “Untitled” (hand holding a cassette) as it does to Michael Jordan, Dennis Rodman, and Scottie Pippen—his pieces build a bridge from art-historical zones to realms of culture that are usually entirely claimed by advertising.  There is a reclamation of imagery happening, the sports Hero comes back home to art. One is reminded of classical sculptures of discuss throwers, or of the fact that Nike was originally the Greek Goddess of Victory.

Hassan Rahims works are not terse.  They are simple, and deep.  Members of his generation will undoubtedly recognize his voice as their own.

Text by James Jolliff.
Music By Bobby Evans.

Hassan Rahim
The Air Above This Ground

January 18—February 22
Opening Friday January 18 2013, 7—10PM

HVW8 Art & Design Gallery
661 N. Spaulding Ave
Los Angeles 90036
323 655 4898

‘Fortune’ at Art Basel, Miami, opening night photos

Thank-you to everyone who came out to the adidas and HVW8 Gallery’s ‘Fortune’ at Art Basel in Miami featuring artists Justin West, Hassan Rahim, Alessandro Moroder and 13th Witness, hosted by A$AP Rocky.

It was an amazing night of art and music, and with 3000 RSVP’s to the pop-up Gallery’s capacity of 260 it was a packed night as well.

Photo’s by David Cabrera.

A&C Shop at HVW8 Art + Design Gallery

A&C Shop at HVW8 Art + Design Gallery
Curated by Art & Council

August 31st – September 22nd, 2012
A&C Shop Hours: Tuesday – Sunday 1-6pm

Opening Reception – Friday, August 31st, 7-10pm

HVW8 Art & Design Gallery
661 Spaulding Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90036

HVW8 Art + Design Gallery and Art & Council present the A&C Shop – a conceptual project space featuring a collection of artwork, prints, objects, books, merchandise, and more from over a dozen emerging and established international artists. The A&C Shop is a presentation of Art & Council’s varied creative interests, a destination for discovery, and a physical space to build community.

Art & Council, with support from HVW8, have also collaborated with Modernica & artist Craig Costello a.k.a “KRINK” to release an edition of 5 custom painted fiberglass shell chairs.  The chairs will be available opening night in the gallery, and online at www.hvw8.com/shop. Also the artist will paint a site specific mural on the front of HVW8.

Craig Costello a.k.a. “KRINK” or “KR”, is one of the most visionary and inspirational street artists working today, and is also the creator of KRINK, a line of the finest quality handmade inks and markers, beloved by artists and vandals alike.  For more information about Krink, please visit krink.com.

Artists taking part in the A&C Shop include Cleon Peterson, Cody Hudson, Eduardo Lopez, Hassan Rahim, Jason Jaworski, Jay Howell, John Antoski, Kelsey Brooks, Kevin Lyons, Craig Costello a.k.a “Krink”, Lisa Leone, Patrick Trefz, Purienne, Ray Potes, Tim Biskup, Tyler Warren, Tofer Chin, and more.

Art & Council is a full service agency and liaison between concept and realization. Our core interest is in the vanguard of contemporary creativity and its ability to broaden the awareness of our client’s talents and mission. We work closely with a diverse international network of cultural innovators to provide highly sought after solutions that resonate with purpose.

HVW8 Art + Design Gallery was founded in 2005 with a focus on supporting fine art & avant-garde graphic design. It soon became the premier underground gallery in Los Angeles and over the past 7 years has exhibited emerging and established artists from around the world. HVW8 has also hosted numerous musical performances and special events, continuing to cement its reputation under gallery curator Tyler Gibney as an exhibition space for artists to showcase their varied creative expression. Past exhibitors include Parra, Geoff McFetridge, Kevin Lyons, Anthony Lister, Lance Mountain, Mos Def with Cognito, Charles Munka, Michael Leon, Alvaro Ilizarbe, and more.

hvw8.com
artandcouncil.com
A&C_Shop_press_release

RSVP email

Facebook Invite
Twitter