Brian Lotti: Echo Park on Nowness

New feature on Nowness


Brian Lotti: Echo Park
Visionary skate filmmaker Jacob Rosenberg captures the artist’s LA story

It is no surprise that American artist Brian Lotti’s work takes in inner-city neighborhoods, alleyways, vistas and purposefully-striding figures – the elements inherent to the urban landscape with which his years as a professional street skateboarder made him so intimately familiar.

After a successful career in the sport (he is credited as being one of the originators of technical street skating), the Okinawa-born Lotti studied art at San Francisco State University, after which he returned to Southern California.

Directed by renowned skate director Jacob Rosenberg – responsible for the pioneering Plan B films Questionable and Virtual Reality, and whom Lotti first met 27 years ago at a skateboard camp in Santa Clara – today’s profile follows the painter as he prepares for his first solo exhibition at HVW8, a collection of oils, color studies and monotypes that captures his home base in Los Angeles’s Echo Park with bold impressionistic strokes and vivid colors that bring to mind Cezanne’s Provençal landscapes.

Echo Park by Brian Lotti at HVW8 gallery, Los Angeles runs to August 2.

James Wignall is Copy Chief at NOWNESS.

HVW8 on Nowness

Hassan_Rahim
TBT (Dr Dre 2)
Hassan Rahim

from Distillations, HVW8 Gallery, 2014

HVW8_Gallery
Parra
Exterior of HVW8 Gallery

From Same Old Song, HVW8 Gallery, 2014

Janette_beckman

Janette Beckman
Installation photo

From Punks, Rap and Gangs, HVW8 Gallery, 2014

Jean_Andre_2

Jean André
Fuck You Tyler

2014

Jean_Andre

Jean André
Marie 89

2014

jjjjound

Justin R. Saunders
via the Wushipu Oil Painting Village in Xiamen, China.

From JJJJound Correspondence, HVW8 Gallery, 2013

Parra_2

Parra
Betrayed

From Same Old Song, HVW8 Gallery, 2014

Parra

Parra
Lunch Beers

From Same Old Song, HVW8 Gallery, 2014

Peter_Beste

E.S.G., Missouri City, 2005
Peter Beste

From Houston Raps, HVW8 Gallery 2014

 

New article on HVW8 Gallery and Summer School from Nowness.com

Summer School: HVW8 Gallery

Art Lessons and Dance Sessions in the Californian Desert

From the brazen imagery of Amsterdam’s Parra to the internet-inspired visuals of the Kanye West-affiliated Canadian artist JJJJound, LA gallery HVW8 cultivates an international collision of pop culture and graphic design in a contemporary art setting. “We allow someone that might not be familiar with the artists we exhibit to see them in a lineage of El Lissitzky or Roy Lichtenstein, who to me are examples of fine graphic artists,” says HVW8 co-founder Tyler Gibney. This month the gallerist took psychedelic artists Erin D. Garcia, Teebs, Jean André and Alvaro “Freegums” Ilizarbe on a desert road trip for Summer School, an art and music weekender at the Ace Hotel in Palm Springs featuring sun-kissed West Coast bands such as dance-punk duo De Lux. “I grew up with a Bauhaus education and I love the idea of artists teaching and exposing their craft,” says Gibney of the hands-on experience of Summer School’s workshops. Founded in 2011 by LA new music champions School Night and the Ace Hotel, the micro-festival’s inaugural line-up included cult mobile letterpress studio Movable Type, and Chris Johanson of the Mission School art movement. “I approach my drawings as a viewer, I want to understand why a choice is made and the reason behind it,” says Garcia, who took on collage class duties while Cali locals Teebs went cosmic with Japanese tie-dye alongside Ilizarbe’s infinity patterns, and Paris’s André showcased poster techniques. “I think there’s an elegance in a simple idea that’s communicated well.”