Francesco Giusti ‘Caribbean’ on disply until November 8th.
email info@hvw8.com for inquiries
Francesco Giusti ‘Caribbean’ on disply until November 8th.
email info@hvw8.com for inquiries
Recent article on Erin D. Garcia on Style.com :
Los Angeles, United States
Scenes of a Southern Transplant Artist in L.A.
by Chris Black
Artist and musician Erin D. Garcia is originally from the South, but he’s lived in Los Angeles for a long time and it shows in his work. He uses vibrant colors to create beautiful graphic art that is synonymous with the forefathers of the L.A. style: John Baldessari, David Hockney, and Ed Ruscha. By employing geometric abstractions to explore rhythm and permutation, his art is at once familiar and impressive.
Using a technique that is reminiscent of ’60s minimalism, Garcia focuses on essential shapes with a less-is-more approach, forgoing the complex and only retaining the essential. His second solo exhibition, 5 Shapes in 6 Colors, displays a rich body of work in a multitude of mediums: drawings, paintings, and even a mural. It’s on view at HVW8 Gallery until September 14.
Photos: Andy J. Scott
Parra ‘Same Old Song’ Installation photos by Justin Sullivan
Hassan Rahim ‘Distillations’ currently on display through June 22nd. Gallery hours – Tuesday through Sunday, 1 – 6 pm, or call 323 655 4898 to arrange an appointment.
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
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.
Recent Press on Janette Beckman in New York Magazine, The Telegraph (London) and New Yorker Magazine.
Make sure to RSVP for this Thursday, April 17th’s opening at rsvp@hvw8.com. Janette’s Rebel Cultures runs until May 18th. Please email info@hvw8.com for inquiries.
New Mural by HVW8 Gallery Alumni Parra, for this year’s Printed Matter at the LA Art Book Fair. Also on on view is Hassan Rahim’s Shabazz Projects. Book fair runs from Jan. 31st – Feb. 2nd at the Geffen Contemporary at MoCA.
Look for Hassan Rahim and Parra solo exhibitions later this year at HVW8 Art + Design Gallery.
HVW8 Alumni Parra opens his new exhibition ‘And wait for something to happen’ at Ruttkowski 68, in Cologne, Germany, this 4th of October – 17th of November. More information here.
Parra (NL)
Parra, whose real name is Piet Janssen, is a Dutch artist whose works are distinguished by their study in contrasts. They are at once figurative and abstract, colorful and plain, as illustrated in his solo exhibition, And wait for something to happen. The works on show feature females experiencing both the normal and abnormal in a metaphoric and literal sense.
Parra says he is inspired by “the everyday and the awkward,” whether it appears on the internet, in books, or in events he has observed. This allows him to address or even exaggerate issues using irony, humor
and sexuality. Parra’s dry, witty and frank interpretation of glamor, pop culture and mass consumption has made him a darling of the art world.
Parra
The One That Got Away
edition of 50
now available on Exhibition A
from Exhibition A website –
If you are in the Los Angeles area, be sure to catch the new Parra show, “Kind Regrets,” at HVW8 Gallery, an exhibition which comes fresh off his SFMOMA summer installation, an epic mural that the museum described as post-Pop. The former graphic designer follows in a long tradition of commercial artists like Andy Warhol and KAWS who later found their footing in contemporary art. Parra shares Takashi Murakami’s super flat appreciation of image-making, but with a sly sense of humor and a spare visual irreverence. His anthropomorphized characters reek havoc on the romantic in bold primary blocking that’s unmistakably Parra.
rsvp: Kind_Regrets@hvw8.com
PARRA b.1976
Riverdance, 2012
acrylic on canvas
100 x 140 cm (39.37 x 55.12 in)
part of Re:Define charity auction exhibition
rizzo, 2012
pen on paper
22.86 x 30.48 cm (9 x 12 in)
Join us tomorrow at the HVW8 Art + Design Gallery for an Artist Talk with Tim Biskup and Kelsey Brookes from 5 – 8 pm.
Lisa Leone
Fabel and Wiggles-1990 NYC, 1990
Pigment Print on Museo Silver Rag Paper
19 x 29 inches (48.25 x 73.65 cm)
Call 323 655 4898 or email Gallery info@hvw8.com for shipping.
Lisa Leone
South Bronx ‘Cars’ – South Bronx, 1984
Pigment Print on Museo Silver Rag Paper
13 x 19 inches (33 x 48.25 cm)
Edition of 20
Call 323 655 4898 or email Gallery info@hvw8.com for shipping.
Last week to view Lisa Leone ‘Then’. Pieces are available online, call or email the Gallery if you have any questions on price or shipping.
Recent work from Mtendere Mandowa aka ‘Teebs’.
Recent works by HVW8 Gallery alumni Charles Munka.
More on his tumblr.
Interview with Lisa Leone from Life and Times.
Bronx-born photographer and filmmaker Lisa Leone came of age in the 1980s with hip-hop and a camera. Leone is revisiting her early portraiture work in a solo exhibition on view at the HVW8 Gallery in Los Angeles through June 10. Her candid portraits capture iconic hip-hop artists at the early stages of their careers including Snoop Dogg, Lauryn Hill, Mary J. Blige and A Tribe Called Quest.
For Leone, these portraits were only the beginning of her work as a cinematographer. She has shot music videos for TLC, D’Angelo and The Brand New Heavies. Leone was mentored by Stanley Kubrick on the film Eyes Wide Shut, and has gone on to direct the films Exactly, Good Morning Baby, and the documentary Just For Kicks. She co-directed Woinshet, with Marisa Tomei and shot the film in Ethiopia. Most recently she was the cinematographer on director Nancy Savoca’s 2011 film Union Square, which premiered at the Toronto Film Festival. Leone spoke with Life + Times about her roots in New York hip-hop culture and her upcoming film and photography projects.
Life+Times: How did you first become interested in photography and filmmaking?
Lisa Leone: I became interested in photography at a very young age. My uncle set up a darkroom in his bathroom, so at the age of eight I developed my first photo with him. It was a black-and-white photo of me sitting on a carousel in Central Park.
L+T: You grew up in the Bronx. What drew you to document the New York scene in the ’80s and ’90s?
LL: I moved to Manhattan when I was 15 and went to the High School of Art + Design, otherwise known as high school of graffiti and breakdancing. MARE 139, FABEL, WIGGLES and DOZE were some of the legends to come out of there. I majored in photography so I just started to shoot my friends. When [breakdancing crew] Rock Steady began to tour they needed photos, so they asked me, from there it branched out.
L+T: How would you describe the aesthetic of your work then and now?
LL: My work now is very different, but the same feelings do come through. People have described the work as intimate, raw, while bringing beauty through.
L+T: How did you start shooting for Vibe and British Vogue?
LL: I was on Snoop’s first video “What’s My Name,” which Fab 5 Freddy directed. It was my first time in Long Beach and my first experience with LA gangs. In the middle of shooting the video there was a shootout. People scattered everywhere; helicopters flew overhead. Fab and I ran to my car and took off. Filming resumed three days later, at an interior location. When I got back to New York I wrote about it, then showed the photos to Rob Kenner at Vibe. He published the article and photos. From there it became a monthly column lasting two years. British Vogue started with a photo of Shabba Ranks I took for them.
L+T: What is your most vivid memory of your time working with your mentor Stanley Kubrick?
LL: So many amazing memories and learning experiences, like learning how to light with practicals. We would stay at the studio until 2 am testing different lamp scenerios with his Arri 2C. I (remember) his sharp, witty personality, his teachings on producing and being economical with budgets, to us getting to a set and him saying “I don’t know what to do.” That was a huge lesson — to be confident enough to say “I don’t know”.
L+T: At the time you took these photos, were you aware that you were documenting history?
LL: I still look back and can’t believe where the culture went. I never thought of it as documenting history. I was just capturing moments of creativity and beauty. I always loved photographing artists, whether they’re musicians, painters, filmmakers. When I was young I was obsessed with the photographs of Arnold Newman.
L+T: You said that you used Leica M6. Was this the camera that you always used?
LL: I had two Leicas and still do, an M6 which I’d keep color film in and an M4P which I’d use for black and white. I love using the Leicas because they’re small, quiet and not intimidating. I think it let’s people open and become more relaxed, or it can have the opposite effect like when I shot Big Daddy Kane and he made fun of my M6 because it wasn’t big and flashy. Little did he know.
L+T: How did you decide which photos to include the exhibit?
LL: It was extremely hard to pick which photos to use. I scanned a bunch and made little 4×6 prints, which I played around with for a year, showing people, looking at. Finally I said, “ok, this is it.” I enlarged the ones that spoke to me, brought me back to a particular memory, very personal. There are many more. They’ll just have to wait until the next show.
L+T: How has your process changed over the years, and been influenced by the film work?
LL: My process has definitely been influenced by my film work. When I work with someone now, I work with them as if I were directing them as an actor in a film, to bring out a particular feeling or emotion. We’ll both decide on the feeling and then I’ll work with them to hold that feeling. Also, how does the camera see a particular feeling and emotion, the lens, angle, light. When it all comes together it’s quite powerful.
L+T: Your film Just for Kicks documents another aspect of culture — the style. Do you have plans to revisit hip-hop culture in film work?
LL: Yes, I co-created a story with Matt Levy and am producing a feature called “Once Upon a Rhyme” starring Rakim. We hope to begin filming later this year.
L+T: What are you working on next?
LL: As far as the photography goes, I’m working on a series of women artists, investigating the complexity, beauty and rawness of real feelings within women. I also have another film in development about love, family and sex in the Bronx.
source : New York Times
HVW8 Gallery alumni Geoff McFetridge contributed his thoughts on the sad passing of an icon, Maurice Sendak. A beloved inspiration to HVW8 as well.
Geoff’s thoughts and illustration from the NYT article.
GEOFF McFETRIDGE
My first exposure to Maurice Sendak was as a child reading “Where the Wild Things Are.” From the first time I saw it I was floored. It was a book about something I loved; it was a book about drawing! For many years it was the high point to aim for when it came to things like hands, feet, claws, crosshatching and bloodshot eyeballs. There was one small thing that Maurice once said in an interview that left a big impression on me. He said that when he started illustrating books, he really could not draw. I am not sure if he was really hard on himself. I get the impression he was. There is something in his drawings that alludes to this angst. Something unsettling. Maurice did not settle for fantastic, he was aiming for something much higher, and deeper.
An artist with a show in London in September at Ivory & Black.
Portion of the installtion view of Lisa Leone’s ‘Then’ opening tonight.
Also there will be signed copies of our first gallery exhibition catalog available tonight. Only 100 made. Each photo with text from Lisa Leone. Printed by Icon.
Available online with signed exhibition poster Monday. Please check back.
A few words and photos from Lisa …. exhibition opens May 11th.
Nas – 1993. During the recording session of Nas’s first album “Illmatic”…considered by critics as one of the quintessential hip hop recordings and one of the greatest hip hop albums of all time. VH1 licensed the photos for Nas: Behind the Music….they were told there were no photographers during the session, but they were wrong!
Slick Rick – 1992. At Riker’s Island. I went with Russell Simmons…as we were leaving Russell gave Rick $40 for the commissary, a second later Russell swiped back a twenty saying, “you don’t need that much”.
Pharcyde – 1995. On the set of Spike Jonze’s classic video “Drop”.
A few photos and a time-lapse from Parra’s opening at the SFMOMA.
Photos by Reserve Result of Parra at HVW8 last year.
And below a detail from Parra’s work in progress Mural opening this Saturday at the SFMOMA.
email info@hvw8.com if interested in work by Parra.
HVW8 alumni Parra opens at the SF MOMA this March 31st to July 29th, 2012 with Weirded Out.
Also see Parra in conversation at the SFMOMA on Tuesday, April 3rd.
Was listening to the NPR program about the ‘Jimi Hendrix of Dance Music – Larry Levan’ and it brought me back to 2000, when we did a piece of Larry with Tony Humphries at Garage 416 in Toronto.
Not sure where this piece currently lives, but thanks to Simon B from Montreal for tracking down this image.
Below a few of my favorite Larry Levan tracks.
– Tyler Gibney
“Germs”
Acrylic and screenprint
23.5 x 33″ (59.7 x 83.8 cm)
Michael Leon
2009
Untitled
Raif Adelberg
Original Print
18 x 24″
Limited Edition of 10
Signed and Numbered by Artist
2010
“Xanax Stick”
Cast plastic, aqua resin and plaster
6.25″ x 23″
(15.86 cm x 58.42 cm)
Inner City Avant-Garde
(Ulysses Pizarro, Darnell Prince and Noah Davis)
2010
For more on the Look Mom, No Talent Exhibition at the HVW8 Art+ Design Gallery, click here.
HVW8 Gallery Alumni Parra speaks on his artwork in this new Video by Stussy.
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“Tin Tin”
Silkscreen
29″ x 21″ (73. x 53.3 cm)
Parra
2009
Signed and numbered by Parra
edition of 30 / waterbased archival ink on archival paper
Buy Here.
“Brazilian Wax and Facial”
Ink on Paper
18” x 24” (45.72 x 60.96 cm)
Kevin Lyons
signed
2008
Call or email for further detail.
Buy Here
“I Knew It”
Drawing on Black
16.5” x 11.5” (41.91 x 29.21cm)
Parra
2007
Buy Here
“Cockbridge”
Silkscreen
edition of 30 / waterbased archival ink on archival paper
21” x 29” (53.34 x 73.66 cm)
Parra
2008