Tag: Tyler Gibney
WALK THE NIGHT – Miami Art Week
WALK THE NIGHT Unveils The Essence of Dance Life Through Pictures of Studio 54, Paradise Garage, and The Warehouse this Miami Art Week
Celebrating the artistry and diversity of contemporary photography,”WALK THE NIGHT – NIGHTLIFE AND CLUB CULTURE 1977′ – 1990’” is set to captivate audiences with a two-day immersive experience on Friday, December 8th and Saturday, December 9th of Miami Art Week, at Arlo Hotel Higher Ground.
This thoughtfully curated exhibit, promises to showcase the powerful narratives captured in iconic nightlife venues: Paradise Garage, The Warehouse, Studio 54, and The Music Box through the lens of three exceptional image makers. Historical photographs take the viewer into the entrancing realm of Chicago’s groundbreaking club spaces, The Warehouse and Music Box captured by Mr. Robert Williams. Feel the energy and history of Paradise Garage as Tina Paul’s photos transport you to the heart of the legendary nightclub. Delve further into the golden era of nightlife with Bill Bernstein’s striking images of Studio 54 and Paradise Garage where they provide a glimpse into the extravagant and hedonistic nights that defined an era.
Daily programming from parties to panels will be held, including an Artist Talk, which will facilitate a discussion on the careers and inspirations of five influential nightlife creatives, including Robert Williams, Tina Paul, Bill Bernstein, Victor Rosado, Arthur Baker, and Louie Vega. Moderated by Ron Trent and curator Adrian Loving, the conversation offers a compact journey through the cultural history celebrating club culture beginning in 1977 through the present.
Walk the Night is curated by Ron Trent, Adrian Loving, Tyler Gibney (HVW8 Gallery), and Rob Mc Kay.
WALK THE NIGHT SCHEDULE OF EVENTS:
Friday, Dec 8 – “WALK THE NIGHT – NIGHTLIFE AND CLUB CULTURE 1977′ – 1990’ Preview Exhibition and Artist Talk featuring Bill Bernstein, Tina Paul, Robert Williams, Victor Rosado, Arthur Baker and Louie Vega
Arlo Hotel Higher Ground, Miami, FL 33150 – 6pm-10pm
Saturday, Dec 9 – ‘”WALK THE NIGHT – NIGHTLIFE AND CLUB CULTURE 1977’ – 1990’ Public Exhibition Opening and Construction Party” Closing Event featuring Victor Rosado, Danny Krivit and Ron Trent-
Arlo Hotel Higher Ground, Miami, FL 33150
12pm-6pm / 9pm – close
Artist Run TV, Episode 1
ARTV Episode 1: Public Access
Livestreamed from HVW8 Gallery Hollywood, August 28, 2020 HVW8 Gallery presents Public Access, an exhibition made for and influenced by the COVID era.
Combining elements of fine art, music and technology, the exhibition is accessible via ARTV (Artist Run TV), a platform for Los Angeles based artists and activists to exhibit, engage and educate a global online community. The opening of the exhibition on August 28th was livestreamed on HVW8.com and showcases artwork from the exhibition, interviews with participating artists Senay Kenfe, Angela Nguyen, and Nikkolos Mohammed, DJ sets by Pubes, Zuri Adia, and Senay Kenfe as well as participation from independent local businesses such as Salon Benjamin. The exhibition and programming highlights urgent issues such as police reform and systemic inequities in education to criminal justice. A
RTV will livestream programming for Public Access throughout the run of the exhibition. For more information, please visit HVW8.com and @hvw8gallery. ARTV is a community broadcasting platform generating content and funding for and by artists, local community leaders, and grass roots organizations. Public Access features artists Laura Watters (@laurawatters), Adam Tullie (@adamtullie), Angela Nguyen (@pile_height), Nikkolos Mohammed (@honorablemohammed), Senay Kenfe (@senaykenfe), Jerry Hsu (@internetfamous) and Alex Cassaniti (@alexandracassaniti) with curation by Mattea Perrotta, Alberto Cuadros and Tyler Gibney.
Screen 2 Screen – Episode 1: Tyler Gibney HVW8 Gallery
HVW8 Gallery presents ‘Screen 2 Screen’, a weekly artist interview series featuring stay at home interviews and virtual studio visits. By focusing on artists’ perspectives, insights and practices in these uncharted times, we see how a global community of artists are dealing with and creating during current lockdown and quarantine measures.
Episode 1: Tyler Gibney HVW8 Gallery
Featuring curator and artist Tyler Gibney (HVW8 Gallery) from Los Angeles in conversation with Alberto Cuadros, discussing outlook, setting up a home studio, and the impact of the quarantine on the art world.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fj4M4l_6lLk
Tyler Gibney Interview with Amadeus Magazine
1998, artist, curator, and gallerist Tyler Gibney was studying graphic design in Montreal and decided to start an art collective with his friends called HVW8. Influenced by Bauhaus and various design movements, Gibney envisioned integrating art, design, and music through performances, happenings, collaborative murals, and immersive installations.
Twenty years later, with galleries now in Los Angeles and Berlin, Gibney continues to bridge the gap between art and industry by fostering creative minds, challenging conventional practices of art making, and stimulating our senses through memorable exhibitions and inclusive programming.
We visited Tyler at HVW8 Gallery in Los Angeles to chat about the early days of HVW8, transitioning from artist to curator, youth culture, his connection to skateboarding, the gender gap, and authenticity.
How’d HVW8 start?
I’m Canadian and I was going to art school in Montreal and I just decided to start an art collective and name it HVW8. I got a space, there was a whole bunch of us, and we started doing stuff together. I was a graphic designer, studied graphic design in school, I was really into Bauhaus, and at the same time, we were all really into music as well, like hip-hop, soul, punk, reggae, and house. So we created this space and we started doing a lot of installations. We were originally, kind of like, an art band, but instead of making music, we were making art together. We would sample certain things like Malick Sidibé photographs, or classic imagery, and then work it the same way you’d play blues or jazz. You have composition but then there’s room for improvisation, as long as everyone is working in harmony. We were not graffiti, more like post-street art. We started touring, we traveled to Japan, Puerto Rico, and we’d do these performances. I ended up liking Los Angeles and eventually working at HVW8 here in 2006, and expanded to Berlin in 2014.
What was it like touring? How many people were traveling with you?
Primarily three of us. We’d spend three or four hours on each piece. We were creating physical pieces and eventually, we grew and started building environments and installations. So when I came to Los Angeles, there weren’t any galleries really tying in music, performance, and installation. That’s when I changed from being an artist to a curator.
What was your transition like from artist to curator?
I’ve always worked collaboratively so it wasn’t too much of a transition. I like fostering different artists and working on projects together. In a lot of ways, it’s like making an album.
Who are some artists HVW8 exhibits rather often?
Originally Parra, for sure. We did like five or six shows here with him. Geoff McFetridge. Right now, Ines Longevial, Jean André, Brian Lotti, Mark Gonzales, and Atiba Jefferson, of course. I try to connect the dots a little bit, like when you’re putting together a mixtape, you try to find those subtle or obvious commonalities between artists.
“If all you are is a sugar high, you’re not going to last.”
You mentioned Gonz and Atiba. What’s your connection to the skate industry?
I mean, it’s just how I grew up. I loved Thrasher Magazine, hip-hop culture, and I also loved graphic design. I always felt that there was a weird place that was not graffiti, but not traditional, fine art. I felt like a lot of artists, they’d be working on skate culture because it was a good outlet. Like all the boards need graphics. Also the culture itself, there’s like the rockers, the hardcore guys, guys that are into the reggae vibe, or the joy division type dudes. I don’t want to be a skate gallery, but for a lot of skateboarders I know, it’s a natural transition to go from skateboarding into art. Atiba, for example, some people look at his work and are like, “What, this isn’t art.” But to me, he is an artist because he’s a documentarian of all this culture.
Do you think there’s a single commonality that connects all the artists you work with?
Yeah, I think they all share a certain authenticity. I feel like all the artists I work with have a really honest perspective. I definitely exhibit a lot of youth artists, cross-cultural artists, and last year, I exhibited mostly female artists. I just felt like our programming needed more female voices.
Do you find it difficult to find female artists fit for HVW8?
For sure. In all honesty, HVW8 was becoming a boys club. I’ve made a conscious effort to step out of that and give more opportunities to female artists because it doesn’t need to stay the way it was.
As a curator, how do you distinguish between sincere and authentic skill and craft, versus hype?
It’s a balance. I’ve probably designed around 250 shows so far and of course, you have hits and misses, but I think it’s important to stay true to the artists you respect and the work you know is deserving. At the same time, you can’t completely exist in a vacuum either.
The superficial stuff doesn’t last. If you really want to do art, and you want to have a fifty-year career, you don’t want to have something that’s only going to last because you’re beautiful between the ages of twenty-one and twenty-five, and then nobody cares anymore because there’s someone else, because it’s pop culture. If all you are is a sugar high, you’re not going to last.
What’s your main goal for HVW8, twenty years deep? Anything you’ve been itching to try?
Inclusivity. I feel like sometimes art stuff can be really exclusive and pretentious. I think you can still show stuff with integrity.
One thing I’m really enjoying right now is technology. Like with bitmapping, there’s so much stuff you can do. I really enjoy helping artists build installations and environments that are thought out and immersive, and still include an artist statement and present ideas that challenge the viewer. We don’t have a crazy budget, but through technology, we can create almost anything we want.
What shows are coming up?
Los Angeles: Steven Traylor – Brian Lotti – Alima Lee
Berlin: Chi Modu – Josep Maynou – Aurora Sander
For more from HVW8 Gallery follow them on Instagram: @hvw8gallery.
Photography by Brian Overend.
Under the Glass, HVW8’s Creative Class
Interview/text from Honeyeecom.us
Miami Art Week had a lot of parties, a lot of looks and a lot of corporate sponsors trying to get in on the art scene.
That’s why HVW8 Gallery’s Creative Class stood out to our team. Held outside of the Miami Beach vicinity, they presented five artists Atiba Jefferson, Kilo Kish, Lisa Leone, Ines Longevial and Brian Lotti at their three day exhibition at Miami’s historic, Jewel Box. The standout feature all five artists: all five had their first shows with HVW8.
Second to that, the team worked with adidas and Sonos, in a way that was subtle, including the brand as patron of the arts and not some culture vulture (which we witnessed plenty of throughout our time in Miami).
We talked with Tyler Gibney, one of HVW8’s founders, about Miami and about their mission with HVW8.
Perspective Tyler Gibney of HVW8 Gallery
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
‘Anxiety’ Exhibition on Purple Magazine France
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
HVW8 Gallery— Tyler Gibney on Art & Politics
Listen to the Interview — Tyler Gibney of HVW8
To not stand for something means you’ll fall for anything. HVW8 Gallery’s Tyler Gibney has never been content on the sidelines. Despite the inability to vote as a Canadian citizen, Gibney put his artistic stake in the ground for the 2016 Presidential Election. The global influence of the United States is an important part of the world’s fabric. To be apathetic and not challenge the world around us is a great disservice according to Gibney. The HVW8 story is not focused so much on the candidate they support. It’s about the very decision to pick a side and to tell a story through art in the divisive world of politics.
By Eugene Kan
Photos by Alex Maeland
Full Interview HERE
Bernie Sanders NYC Exhibition
Bernie Sanders at the opening night.
Artwork by Dan Buller and RoStarr
Deee Lite’s Lady Miss Kier
Aaron Draplin, Luis Calderin, Cody Hudson
Dan Buller
The Hole NYC
Romon Yang ‘RoStarr’, Prince Language
Bernie Muppet, Bernie and Jane Sanders, Dave Driscoll.
Stretch Armstrong, Pete Rock
Tyler Gibney, Luis Calderin
Patrick Martinez
Photos from the Art Of A Political Revolution NYC now online.
HVW8 on Nowness
TBT (Dr Dre 2)
Hassan Rahim
from Distillations, HVW8 Gallery, 2014
Parra
Exterior of HVW8 Gallery
From Same Old Song, HVW8 Gallery, 2014
Janette Beckman
Installation photo
From Punks, Rap and Gangs, HVW8 Gallery, 2014
Jean André
Fuck You Tyler
2014
Jean André
Marie 89
2014
Justin R. Saunders
via the Wushipu Oil Painting Village in Xiamen, China.
From JJJJound Correspondence, HVW8 Gallery, 2013
Parra
Betrayed
From Same Old Song, HVW8 Gallery, 2014
Parra
Lunch Beers
From Same Old Song, HVW8 Gallery, 2014
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.”
Outside the Lines at MOCA
HVW8’s Tyler Gibney will take part in today’s book launch at the MOCA and will be on hand to sign copies of his contribution to Outside the Lines.
Info below from from the MOCA website :
Join us for the book launch of OUTSIDE THE LINES: AN ARTISTS’ COLORING BOOK FOR GIANT IMAGINATIONS, a striking collection of illustrations from more than 100 creative masterminds, including animators, cartoonists, fine artists, graphic artists, illustrators, musicians, outsider artists, photographers, street artists, and video game artists, curated by Souris Hong-Porretta. Enjoy DJ sets by Shepard Fairey and Dylan Nathan aka JEGA as well as activity stations for drawing and coloring. Over 50 artists will be on site to sign copies of the book.
FREE INFO 213 621 1710 or STOREONLINE@MOCA.ORG
Paris Art + Design
Jean Dubuffet
Joan Miró
Victor Vasarely
A few photos taken by HVW8’s Tyler Gibney during his visit to the Paris Art + Design Fair and surrounding area this past week.
Gun America
Gun America by Tyler Gibney.
I was hoping to retire this image after our Political Minded series and the end of the Iraq war/George Bush era, but after the recent mass shootings in Colorado, Wisconsin and now this morning in New York City, I think it’s time for America to rethink it’s gun laws. Guns don’t kill people, but crazy people with guns do. In Japan there are virtually no gun deaths because there are no guns. Just something to think about.
Versions Galores 4th Anniversary Guest Cover Mix by Tyler Gibney
HVW8’s Tyler Gibney is featured on Versions Galore, a website in tribute to cover verisons.
The link and playlist below.
– from Versions Galore
VG 4TH ANNIVERSARY GUEST MIX N° 8:
HVW8 (TYLER GIBNEY)
Happy Birthday to us! It’s the 8th and final installment of Versions Galore’s 4th Anniversary Guest Cover Mix series…
HVW8, for the uninitiated, are an art collective made up of Gene Pendon, Tyler Gibney and Dan Buller who immoratlize their idols on canvas. Muhammad Ali, Fela, Stevie Wonder, Coxsonne Dodd, Serge Gainsbourg, Gil Scott Heron, Roy Ayers (to just scratch the surface) all get painted from a palette that is just as likely to include colors like funk, soul and afrobeat than just browns, oranges and blues. While they are in global demand, exhibiting anywhere from Parco (Tokyo) toStreetwise (London), HVW8 stay true to their musical roots by often painting in their natural environment; live music events. Indeed they can be found applying paint and pen soul alongside genre pushing luminaries like Bugz In The Attic, Gilles Peterson, Jazzanova and Roots Manuva. HVW8 are not afraid to share the limelight either. While hailing from Canada, they have established a firm base camp just off Melrose in Los Angeles in the form of the HVW8 Art + Design Gallery curating shows by the likes of Parra, Kevin Lyons, Ed Templeton, Geoff McFettridge and Michael Leon. And with that I’m excited and honored to pass today’s cover selector baton to HVW8′s Tyler Gibney.
Here is his mix:
VERSIONS GALORE 4TH ANNIVERSARY GUEST MIX N° 8:
HVW8 (TYLER GIBNEY)
And here is what he had to say:
Had a fun time pulling this together … and ended up with a lot or reggae versions. Always was a fan of Christine Lewis’s ‘Juicy Fruit’ along with Sly and Robbie covers. Tina Turner’s ‘Whole Lotta Love’ is a slept on version as is Grace Jones remake of Tom Petty’s ‘Breakdown’. So many great songs I didn’t include … could have went on an hour more!
Recorded it live at the HVW8 Gallery in Los Angeles, Ca.
Fever – Susan Cadogan (Peggy Lee)
Whole Lotta Love – Tina Tuner (Led Zeppelin)
Light My Fire – Al Green (the Doors)
The Bed Too Big Without You – Shelia Hylton (the Police)
Southern Man – Merry Clayton (Neil Young)
Inner City Blues – Sly and Robbie (Marvin Gaye)
Don’t Stop Til You Get Enough – Derrick Laro & Trinity (Michael Jackson)
Shimmy Shimmy – Prince Fatty (ODB)
Juicy Fruit – Christine Lewis (Mtume)
Between The Sheets – Soul Clap (the Isley Brothers)
Come As You Are – Lil Roy (Nirvana)
You Belong To Me – Michael McDonald (I thought it was actually Carly Simon that recorded it first, but it was the Doobie Brothers in 1977)
Trans Europe Express – Senor Coconut (Kraftwerk)
Billie Jean – Sly and Robbie (Michael Jackson)
Light My Fire – Jose Feliciano (the Doors)
Breakdown – Grace Jones (Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers)
Easy – Jimmy Lindsey (Commordores/Lionel Ritchie)
Walking on the Moon – Sly and Robbie (the Police)
Reasons – Seven Extension (Earth, Wind and Fire)
Summer Breeze – Jackie Mittoo (Seals and Crofts)
Roxanne – Okada with Ranking Roger (the Police)
I Want You (She’s So Heavy) – Eddie Hazel (the Beatles)
— — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — — —
Enjoy!
LS
How To Make It: 15 Rules For Success From Creative Industry Insiders
Tyler Gibney of HVW8 Art + Design Gallery contributed to Complex Art + Design’s How To Make It: 15 Rules For Success From Creative Industry Insiders
Rule: There is no singular rule for success.
“Yes, hard work, developing an audience/patrons, finding your artists, studying, networking, gallery location, commitment, seeing as much art as possible, making your own art, finding and developing new talent, not being afraid, proper curation, enjoying yourself, attention to details — these are all important, but there is no formula for success in art. It can be absurd, and you can learn from others, but it’s your own trials and tribulations, mistakes, and experiences that will lead you to your path and define what success means to you.”
A Better L.A. Auction and Fundraiser
Tim Biskup and Nikki.
Alvaro Ilizarbe
HVW8’s Tyler Gibney and Wazy Idah.
HVW8’s Lisa Leone with Marisa Tomei
HVW8 Art + Design Gallery took part in last night’s ‘in the Art of the City’ a fundraiser for A Better LA.
Lisa Leone, Tim Biskup, Alvaro Illizarbe and Tyler Gibney all donated pieces through the HVW8 Gallery for auction, and were lucky to raise a fair amount for this great organization.
Here are some photos of the event.
A Better LA – The Art Of The City – May 3rd
HVW8 Art + Design Gallery along with Gallery alumni Lisa Leone, Tim Biskup and Alvaro Ilizarbe take part in A Better LA’s In The Art In The City.
Tickets are available here.
More about IN THE ART OF THE CITY –
On Thursday, May 3rd, 2012, join A BETTER LA at The Vibiana in Downtown Los Angeles for a spectacular evening celebrating the vibrant and diverse communities and individuals of Los Angeles at our 3rd annual fundraiser; IN THE ART OF THE CITY. With celebrity hosts and participants, including Pete Carroll, Jeffrey Deitch, Tim Leiweke, Sharon Stone, and Forest Whitaker, enjoy a night featuring the eclectic cuisine of some of LA’s most famed chefs, silent and live auctions showcasing artwork created by some of our city’s most esteemed artists, and music provided by LA’s hottest DJ’s. Please click here for more info or contact A Better LA at events@abetterla.org or call 213-412-3111
Tyler Gibney
Tyler Gibney stands in front of a classic HVW8 Art Installation (tyg, g.starship, dstrbo) piece of U-Roy from 2003 at the HVW8 Art + Design Gallery.
Past & Present
Here is an excerpt from an interview with HVW8’s Tyler Gibney on Hi-Fi’s recent acquisition of number of pieces from the HVW8 Gallery.
CF (Vanessa Conley): What can we expect from this collection of artists?
The Hifi acquired a number of pieces and prints from the HVW8 Gallery. This represents a good cross section of what the Gallery is about, with a mandate of representing avant-garde graphic design; Some of best international artists of this genre.
‘Past & Present’ is the theme of the collection. What does this entail?
HVW8 started in a golden era of Montreal in 1998. In 2005 we opened the Gallery in West Hollywood. This represents pieces from the past 14 years to present. The artwork ranges from myself, HVW8 Art Collective to number of past alumni at the HVW8 Gallery.
How does the aspect of music contribute in this collection?
We’ve always had music and music artists at the Gallery … Mos Def, Snoop Dog, Mayer Hawthorne, Master Blazter have all done things at the space, as well a number of bands were created during live recordings at the Gallery. Art and music have a symbiotic relationship – aural and visual, but the process is the same, so I think there is context for the two to live together, and I try to do that at the Gallery. These pieces reflect this.
What can this HVW8 installation bring to Calgary to help develop the local arts scene?
I’m from Calgary, went to Montreal, ended up in Los Angeles and now I’m back here, all through art and music.
Art can be a very difficult term to define. What is art to you?
Art is a mediation and reflection of life. Art is the times.
Can you explain how HVW8 Art Collective works?
We started off as three guys coming together creating live pieces and we were lucky to travel around the world. We had installations and exhibitions in cities such as Tokyo, Munich, London, Amsterdam, New York, Miami, San Juan, Puerto Rico to name a few. We were the first ‘Art Band’ creating pieces collectively.
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adidas Originals – All Originals, Iconics 2011 featuring HVW8
Tyler Gibney on Mondette
Recent Artwork by Tyler Gibney
Life in photos – Oct 9 to 11
Barnstormers vs. HVW8, Music by Rich Medina, Montreal 2001
At tomorrows ‘The Site of NOW’ show there will be a small section on display from the “Barnstomers vs. Heavyweight” Live painting session that was done in Montreal in 2001. It featured Montreal artists from Heavyweight; Gene Pendon, Tyler Gibney, Dan Buller with the NYC based collective Barnstomers; featuring David Ellis, Rostarr, Mike Ming, Jose ‘Ease’ Parla.
The piece was done at a large party in Montreal with music by Rich Media, with the artists going over each other back and forth. The final was a bit of a drunken mess but still cool to check out.
On display through Oct. 3 to 15th at Royal/T in Culver City, Los Angeles, CA.
R to L: Gene Pendon, Tyler Gibney, Dan Buller, RoStarr, David Ellis, Jose Parla, Mike Ming, and ?
The SITE of NOW – Curated by Tyler Gibney – Exhibition
THE ABC’S OF L.A.: TY G
ABCLA:Tyler Gibney of “HVW8” from Kevin Boston on Vimeo.
Our neighbor Cottrell, from Joyrich, made this video on Ty G and the HVW8 Gallery. Featured are some scenes from the enjoi Gallery show and also highlightes from the recent Hawthorne Headhunters podcast.
More HERE.
Small Talk Giclée print by Tyler Gibney
1/20
12.5″ by 17.5″
signed and numbered
Limited ‘Small Talk’ Gicleé prints by Tyler Gibney now available. $45.
Pilfered Magazine
gallery days
Revolution of the Mind – Tyler Gibney $70 framed
Bullies of the Block – Kevin Lyons $150 framed.
Is that a Gun My Friend Sweatshirt – $45
Gallery summer hours – Tuesday through Sunday, 12 – 6pm.
Directions HERE