Opening night video of Inès Longevial exhibition ‘Sous Le Soleil’ at HVW8 Gallery.
Video by Tony Camero
Opening night video of Inès Longevial exhibition ‘Sous Le Soleil’ at HVW8 Gallery.
Video by Tony Camero
Article from Vogue –
Kilo Kish may be better known for wearing oversize suits than frilly dresses, but her new interactive video project for “Fulfillment,” a standout from last year’s Reflections in Real Time, proves that the rapper can pull off menswear staples and full-on gowns equally well.
Kish shared a new website designed by Empire Taste that allows the viewer to flip between four different security camera feeds of HVW8 gallery in Los Angeles. Each one depicts a different angle of Kish dancing and singing in a vintage pink gown, belted with a black ribbon that matches her long satiny gloves. HVW8 is currently housing an installation by Kish, who is also a visual artist. Of the video’s voyeuristic framing, Kish says that “watching security footage of someone alone in a big white box asks the question, ‘How do we find and define fulfillment in our digital society?’ ” So ponder the social behaviors of our current technological moment and admire Kish’s vintage pink gown by watching the clip below, or head to the website to take it in from every point of view.
BERLIN — HVW8 Gallery Berlin in collaboration with One Love Books presents
THREE THE HARD WAY
WILFRED LIMONIOUS: IN FINE STYLE
ALEX BARTSCH: COVERS
MAXINE WALTERS: SERIOUS THINGS A GO HAPPEN
September 8th – October 14th, 2017
Opening Reception September 8th 18:00 – 22:00
In Fine Style: The Dancehall Art of Wilfred Limonious, is the first solo exhibition of work by prolific Jamaican illustrator Wilfred Limonious (1949–99) in Germany, and includes reproductions of work from the early 1970s through the mid-1990s, spanning three key phases in his career: his comic strips for the Jamaican newspapers, his illustrations for the publications of JAMAL (the Jamaican Movement for the Advancement of Literacy), and his distinctive artwork for the burgeoning dancehall scene coming out of 1980s Jamaica. The exhibition is curated by Al “Fingers” Newman and Christopher Bateman and is produced by One Love Books with the support of the Limonious Estate, to accompany their book, In Fine Style: The Dancehall Art of Wilfred Limonious, the first study into the artist’s life and work.
London-based photographer Alex Bartsch makes his debut at HVW8 Gallery Berlin with photographs from his book, Covers: Retracing Reggae Record Sleeves in London, forthcoming on One Love Books. After researching various reggae LPs and twelve-inches from his record collection, Bartsch has re-photographed fifty sleeves in their original London locations, holding them up at arm’s-length so that they blend in with their surroundings, decades later. Presented in this way, the photographs document the transition of time, with the album cover serving as a window into the past, juxtaposed against today’s backdrop. From an ethnomusicological perspective the photographs also provide a fascinating insight into the history of reggae music in London, inviting the viewer to rethink the relationship between the city and its musical heritage. The exhibition includes ten select prints from the project, featuring records by artists such as John Holt, Carroll Thompson, Peter Tosh, Moodie, Jah Woosh, Pat Kelly and Smiley Culture.
Serious Things a Go Happen features various original signs and posters from the early 1980s through today, drawn from the collection of Jamaican film and television producer and director Maxine Walters. Jamaican dancehall emerged out of reggae in the late 1970s and brought with it a new visual style characterized by bright colors and bold, hand-drawn lettering. One-of-a-kind, hand-painted posters advertising local parties and concerts have become a ubiquitous part of Jamaica’s landscape, nailed to poles and trees across the island. The exhibition in conjunction with Walters’ book Serious Things A Go Happen: Three Decades of Jamaican Dancehall Signs (Hat & Beard Press) presents an unofficial history of Jamaican dancehall music told through its graphic design.
Gallery & media contact
HVW8 Gallery Berlin , Linienstraße 161, 10115 Berlin
Jenne Grabowski
+49(0)179 – 488 1004
jenne@hvw8.com
Jenny Ames
+49(0)177 – 142 8588
jenny@hvw8.com
Supported by adidas Originals and Denon DJ
Press Release :
HVW8_PRESS_RELEASE_THREE_THE_HARD_WAY_EN
HVW8_PRESS_RELEASE_THREE_THE_HARD_WAY_DE
Articles in the New Yorker and Vogue on Maxine Walters’ Dancehall signs. Currently on display at #HVW8Berlin
Recent Press on Alex Bartsch ‘Covers’
https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/1368-let-classic-reggae-album-covers-show-you-london-then-and-now/
https://www.creativereview.co.uk/alex-bartsch-retracing-reggae-record-sleeves-photographed-london/
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/gallery/2016/nov/04/alex-bartsch-reggae-covers-photographs
https://www.redbull.com/gb-en/taking-uk-reggae-sleeves-back-home
http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/entertainment/Double-take_78821
WILFRED LIMONIOUS
IN FINE STYLE
ALEX BARTSCH
COVERS
August 18th – September 24th, 2017
Opening 6 – 10pm, Friday, August 18th.
Please RSVP at rsvp@hvw8.com
For press and artwork inquiries please email info@hvw8.com
Interview from WestwoodWestwood
Kilo Kish can do anything, but her strongest suit is processing how overwhelmingly underwhelmed we all are by life. The 27-year-old’s first professional work to explore that very theme was her 2016 debut album Reflections In Real Time. Since then, she’s jumped from industry to industry, executing everything from video to fashion textiles, and most recently, she’s found herself in a gallery setting with her first ever art exhibition, Real — Safe at Los Angeles’ HVW8.
On the day before the show’s opening on Friday, we sat down with the Los Angeles based artist to get an idea of what’s been on her mind and how her multi-media show represents the way she walks through her daily life.
Your work focuses on negotiating the personal with the public self. What’s the process of articulating these themes from music to visuals?
I just have tons of questions in general. I’m always trying to figure out my own doctrine for things and what i believe to be true at different points in my life. I definitely believe that people can change and grow. I do try to document different types of feelings over the years because they totally change. My perception even since making Reflections In Real Time to now about all those things—online interactions, being a creative—all that changed in a year in a half since that record. Working through ideas constantly.
When I think about things, I usually think that “This feels like this“: I’ll be having this conversation at this party…which literally makes me feel like I’m stuck in an elevator. Things like that. In my brain, I’m doing other stuff when I’m talking sometimes. It’s nice to sometimes, when I have the opportunity, to make those spaces real, which I try to do with my videos and films and my live performances. I try to take some of that actual emotional feelings and create spaces for them.
Are a lot of the works in the show abstract mundanities of these situations?
Yes, exactly.
What are other examples of that?
For me, when I look on Instagram and stuff like that, I’m like, “All of these are mundane situations.” It’s my lunch or my dinner or on a bike ride or getting an ice cream cone but there’s this grandeur that’s created out of it because it’s curated and formatted for a public. I do kind of the opposite, where I take these situations and make them extreme versions of what they really are.
How do you feel that–given some time after Reflections–this show and body of work evolves these subjects? Or are you going in a different direction?
This show is the farthest abstraction from the record. The music is literal: if you’re singing something and you’re the artist, people will be like, “That’s what you think!” You know what I mean? That’s usually where they’re going to take it. This is like all of the other ideas that don’t necessarily work in a musical medium or a live show. There are still parameters for a live show. If you don’t want to be a dick, there’s still things: people want to come here to come here–to have fun. They probably want to drink and hang out with the new girl they just met and whatever else. For you to push your really intense performance art show on them—which I do anyway—I curtail it a tiny bit. The extra stuff, that’s just too too much for a live show? That’s where it exists in a gallery.
One thing in reading about this show is this idea of the “blissfully blasé.” It very much feels like an excitement and constant pushing down by social structures or other generations that are making you apathetic.
Because there’s so much information.
Yeah.
I don’t think we were supposed to handle this much information. I think we were really actually supposed to hunt for our food and walk around and cook for three hours and walk up a hill for six hours and then come home and be too tired to do anything.
That’s what I was curious about. Do you think this simultaneous feeling of being both overwhelmed and underwhelmed is a bit of our generational calling card?
Totally—because it’s sensory overload…If you wanted to genuinely be happy (and not fake online happy), you really have to work on it. That’s a spiritual endeavor. You would have to disconnect a tiny bit from all of the boxes that you are looking at all times, literally and figuratively. There’s just so much to look at. If you finished posting your picture of your best day ever and—literally point two seconds after—someone posted a better best day than you and then you look at the next person and the next person and the next person…It’s not easy. It’s not easy to be one hundred percent satisfied, especially now when there are so many options. The only way to be fully happy is to not input as much information.
That’s great.
You’d have to disconnect a tiny bit and be like, “My day was great. And I really don’t care about all that other stuff that’s going on right now.”
What’s next after this?
After this, I’m probably going to do one more video for Reflections In Real Time and then I need to really, seriously start working on a new album.
For more on Kilo Kish, check out her SoundCloud and follow her on Instagram + Twitter.
Please join us for a conversation with Kilo Kish this Saturday 8/12 at 2 pm at HVW8 Gallery LA. She will be discussing her current exhibition ‘Real Safe’ which closes Sunday 8/13.
Some Recent press on Kilo Kish’s ‘Real–Safe’ exhibition.
Photo’s from Budland installation courtesy BFA.
Flaunt Magazine
http://www.flaunt.com/content/art/welcome-to-the-real-safe-zone
Nylon Magazine
The Kilo Kish Playbook To Living Your Most Authentic (And Artistic) Life
HVW8 Gallery will be doing an Installation at this weekend’s ‘Budland’ event in Los Angeles. Check budland.la for more information.
An exploration of the medium current state and its relevance in the digital age.Selfpublishing on paper as a direct counteract towards the unlimited access to imagery and information of todays times. Put your cold technical device away for a moment and just imagine your fingers touch the warm pages of a paper made zine. Stay in this very moment… for a second. Doesn’t it make you feel good? The haptical sensation mixes with the joy of seeing imagery and thoughts of its creator unfolding in front of you. That’s what we thought. You can have all of this in a cosy environment now. And we even preselected the very best zines for you. So you don’t need to exhaust yourself by going through millions of publications.
You’re welcome and see you there!
M.O. + T.M.
Show event at HVW8 Linienstrasse 161 – BERLIN
A collection of zines and works on paper
Curated by Thomas Marecki & Manuel Osterholt
with
Naives and Visionairies
sub-press
innen
lodown magazine
Stefan Marx
Conny Maier
Will Sweeney
Bad Buzz
SuperBlast
Sebastian Haslauer
Kento Watanabe
and the others…
Kish Kilo performs on Jimmy Fallon last night with Vince Staples, Damon Albarn, Ray J and the Roots.
Kish’s exhibit ‘real — safe’ opens July 7th.
Mark Gonzalez ‘Fower Plower’ opening night at HVW8 Gallery, Los Angeles.
Shot and edited by Joe Miller.
Music “Mondo and His Makeup”
Performed by Hanni El Khatib
Courtesy of Innovative Leisure
Recent Press from Mark Gonzales “Fower Plower” exhibit
Additional Press
GQ Interview with Mark Gonzales
Amuse/ iD : Mark Gonzales Opens Solo Show in LA
Juxtapoz : Mark Gonzales “Fower Plower”
Live Fast : Mark Gonzales Defies the Constraints of Human Emotion in “Fower Plower” at HVW8
Hypebeast : A Look Inside Mark Gonzales “Fower Plower” Exhibit in LA
Los Angeles Times : Mark Gonzales “Fower Plower”
Thank you to everyone who passed by for the opening of ‘Fower Plower’. More photos on HVW8 Facebook. Film Photography by Reserve Result.
After Party –
HVW8 x WWFM : Busy P + guests // 19-04-17 // 8PM-2AM BST / 12-6PM PST
Tomorrow (April 19th) is the start of the HVW8 x WWFM live world wide broadcast. We’re lucky to have Busy P of the mighty Edbanger crew playing a set along with Jeremy Sole and Jimetta Rose featuring Ill Camille. Live broadcast 12-6pm PST, tune in at worldwidefm.net or come by our Los Angeles gallery at 661 N. Spaulding Ave, 90036, West Hollywood.
Please RSVP at rsvp@hvw8.com
In a new film, Paris-based artist Inès Longevial walks us through her daily routine. From morning painting in her airy Haussmann apartment to afternoon strolls through the streets of the French capital, stopping at a few local spots along the way.
from Nowness
Look for an upcoming exhibition with Inès later this year.
Kilo Kish and Vince Staples in New Yorker Magazine.
Look for an upcoming Kilo Kish installation at HVW8 Los Angeles soon.
A selection of past work now on display. To visit HVW8 Berlin please email info@hvw8.com or pass by Thursday – Saturday, 1 – 6 pm.
Political Minded – Mass Incarceration
Mass Incarceration in the Land of the Free – The U.S. represents just 5% of the world’s population, but holds 25% of its prisoners making it the world’s leading jailer. Fueled by “tough on crime” politics in the 80’s and 90’s, incarceration rates exploded. The event strives to raise awareness of the disproportionate effects of the criminal justice system and infrastructure on minority communities.
Political Minded is an ongoing art and music series dealing with social and political issues. First debuted in Montreal in 2003, Political Minded events have been held in NY, SF, LA and Munich.
Saturday, Feb. 25th, 1- 7pm
Artists –
Fulton ‘Mr. Wash’ Washington
(Recipient of Obama 2014 Clemency program)
Tyler Gibney
Spanto
Coleman
Music –
Nick V (Baka Boyz)
Mr. Choc (Beat Junkies)
Ralph M (K-Day Mixmaster)
+ more
Film Screening –
13th (Oscar nominated Best Documentary Feature)
https://www.youtube.com/
Presentation by Keldren ’Kpook’ Joshua #frommyeyestoyours. On August 10th, 2016, Keldren Joshua was released from Terminal Island prison as a result of President Obama’s 2014 Clemency program.
Article from Outline on Fulton ‘Mr. Wash’ Washington and Keldren ’Kpook’ Joshua’s Clemency from Obama Here.
Black Book Session Artists – Artwork celebrating a second chance at freedom and to spread awareness of using art as a tool for change and education.
Program Support:
Wyatt Closs, @BigBowlofIdeas
Cali Thornhill DeWitt featured in the The Art Issue of Surface Magazine.
New Work on Display at HVW8 Los Angeles. Email info@hvw8.com for inquiries and appointments.
Brian Roettinger
Lichtenstein: Done Deal
2015
15.5 × 21 in. (39.37 × 53.34 cm)
Framed
Screen printed on styrene
info@hvw8.com
Devin Troy Strother
2 in the pink 1 in the stink (part 1) “get’cha nger outta there”
2016
20 x 16 in. (44 x 35.2 cm)
acrylic, oil, cut painted paper, on wood panel
info@hvw8.com
Cody Hudson
Doomsday Reggae Sunsplash I
2015
24” x 24” (52.8 x 52.8 cm)
Acrylic on Linen
Just a few pieces available from past exhibitions. Please email info@hvw8.com for inventory.
From last weekend’s installation with PartyNextDoor.
Please follow @HVW8gallery
Alex Bartsch in documenting album covers in Miami.
More on @HVW8gallery
Our HVW8 Exhibition space at Miami Art Week with artwork from Wilfred Limonious ‘In Fine Style’, Alex Bartsch ‘Covers’ and Dancehall signs with Maxine Walters. Event with Walshy Fire, Silent Addy, Al Fingers and Eccentrix Sounds featuring new HVW8 Sidebar mural in tribute to Limonious painted by Dan Buller. Thanks to Sonos and adidas.
See more photos from Miami on the HVW8 Gallery Facebook Here.
Artist and gallerist Tyler Gibney spoke to VSCO at his Los Angeles gallery HVW8 about the exhibition “Anxiety” (Nov 4 – Dec 16), a group show he curated with Laura Watters that sought to address “the unnerving tension of the strange climate of present day.” The theme of the show would prove to be even more relevant as the US and the world reacted to the new era that was ushered in on November 8th. Following the election, works in the show resonated with further levels of meaning — Cali Thornhill DeWitt’s opioids and Earths installation, Brendan Lynch’s tribute tee to Eric Garner (which the artist had worn across a two-year span), and Gibney’s own “Gun America” mural painted large on the side of the building. Gibney has a history of organizing work that intersects with politics and social issues, most notably, “The Art of a Political Revolution — Artists for Bernie Sanders” earlier in 2016. And in this vignette, Gibney offers his views on the gallery’s role, and responsibility, in providing the needed context for the crucial position that artists play in offering perspectives on the pressing issues of our times.
Video by Wilson Cameron
Link to VSCO site HERE
Eric Yahnker
Steven Traylor
Brendan Donnelly
Anja Salonen
Co-Curator Laura Watters
Devin Troy Strother
Co-Curator Tyler Gibney
Kyla Hansen
Photos from Purple Magazine Paris.
Photo Paige Silveria
Photos from EINHUNDERT x NATIVE TEENAGE “DIVERSITY AND CONFORMITY” EXHIBITION AND ZINE LAUNCH Pictures by Helge Kiehl & Roberto Brundo
More photos Here