Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Hearne Pardee: Robert Else Gallery

Hearne Pardee Souvenir: New Caledonia
  Hello everybody, today I am excited to talk a little bit about the current exhibition here at Sac State in the Robert Else Gallery.  Here you will find a little hidden gem of a show exhibiting the work of Hearne Pardee.  Hearne Pardee is currently a professor at UC Davis and the show consists of a mixture of mediums including collage and painting.  The show is titled Souvenir: New Caledonia and displays works inspired by Pardee's experiences from New Caledonia and the modernization of small villages over time.
Hearne Pardee, Hienghene, acrylic collage on paper, 2012
  Pardee talked about his experiences in a recent interview with the Huffington Post.  I shared the link to the article at the bottom of the page.  Pardee studied at the New York Studio School in the 70's and was interested in observation art.  This he later combined with collage to form a colorful palette of geometrical shapes with gestural brush strokes.
Hearne Pardee, Home, acrylic and collage on panel, 2012
Pardee's current exhibition in the Else Gallery consists of works from his most recent trip to New Caledonia as well as some from his previous visit.  New Caledonia is a southern Pacific island and former French colony that houses some of teh most diverse flora and fauna on the planet Pardee shared many of his stories through diary entries provided to the gallery visitors. Having gone to New Caledonia in the late 60's to assist ethnobotanist Jacque Barrau, Pardee taught the local youth art classes through a missionary program.  This allowed him to observe the local life of people he became interested in.  After returning to the U.S. Pardee continued depiction of local life, but that of the American variety.  Part of Pardee never really forgot New Caledonia though and he returned in 2008 to locate some of his former students and document the changes through his art.

Hearne Pardee, Birch Lane, acrylic and collage on panel, 2012
Pardee's paintings are reminiscent of Cezanne and indeed he was influenced by the artist as he put it to  "develop spaces constructed with color".  This he would combine with the heritage and local cultures of the village communities. Pardee's usage of collage within his paintings serves a specific purpose of which he describes as "organizing the field rather than depicting a model".  In Hienghene he uses the collage as a very subtle effect in the blue skyline. Whereas in Home he ups the ante quite a bit by adding reds and blues to both the house and trees. In his Birch Lane he pushes the abstract even further with extensive use of colorful collage that almost totally obscures the house behind it.
  Overall I enjoyed the show quite a lot and though collage is not quite the medium I am used to working with, I appreciated its use in telling a story about people from a place that I new little about.  In that respect it probably succeeded in bring awareness to what appears to be a very magnetic and charming place.

 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-seed/hearne-pardee-and-gina-we_b_4243052.html
http://arts.ucdavis.edu/faculty-profile/hearne-pardee




Saturday, March 8, 2014

Lecture Series: Remembering TB-9

Usually one reads about history in a book or watches a program on television.  It is rare that you get to listen to people who were intricately involved with creating the history you are interested in.  I had that pleasure last Thursday evening when I got to listen to three most distinguished artists recollect about a very important time period and share their thoughts and experiences. 

Peter VandenBerge, Stephen Kaltenbach, Gerald Walburg
Remembering TB-9 was a discussion with emeritus art professors Peter VandenBerge, Stephen Kaltenbach, and Gerald Walburg about their experiences working with Robert Arneson, an important sculptor and professor of ceramics who taught at UC Davis.  All three were graduate students under Arneson in the 60's when an important transformation occurred.  Prior to this time ceramics was seen as more of a functional art than a fine art.  Arneson changed this during a California State Fair event where Stephen Kaltenbach met him during an exhibition of ceramics.  One piece in particular stood out of a bottle that was capped off.  We are used to seeing ceramic pots and bottles with holes in them to "stick a plant in" or something as Stephen Kaltenbach explained.  Arneson changed this by  putting a cap on it, or in some ways putting a cap on the conventional views of art when it came to ceramics.  Arneson was recruited along with other known artists such as Manuel Neri and Wayne Thiebaud to work at UC Davis in the early 60's.  Arneson  took over TB-9 or temporary building number 9 and made into into a hive of art creation that would be impossible to recreate today. Gerald Walberg explained much  about the laid-back atmosphere combined with obsessive work output.  TB-9 was accessible twenty-four hours a day and it was not uncommon to have a keg or two of beer around.  It was also not uncommon to find Robert Arneson there at all times of the evening and early morning according to the three artists.


Peter VandenBerge, House Poet, Ceramic, 2000
This was further explained by the answer to the question I proposed to the trio when I asked them if they could bring one aspect that is lacking in art education today from there experiences at TB-9.  All three of the former Davis students went on to have careers teaching at Sacramento State. Steve said access would be the one thing that is missing today as there was an open door policy at TB-9. Although currently it is possible for students  to obtain a key to Sac State art facilities during off hours, it is not anywhere near as open as TB-9 was.  Peter said interaction was very important and that they all had a certain bond at TB-9 that allowed them to share ideas and sometimes steal them as well. They took a minute to rib each other a little  and accused each other in a playful tone of using each others ideas from sketch books.  Geri said fortitude and work ethic were the main things missing from students today. He said that the talent is present but there has to be " a drive inside you". 

From those wise words I hope teachers and students alike can apply certain elements of TB-9 into their current world.  The height of TB-9 occurred long before I was even born and having grown up in the Midwest I was unaware of the history of it until recently.  It seems as if their lives were intertwined with art and the people that they crossed paths with.  They also had a lot of great advice to pass on.  Therefore I am very fortunate to have introduced myself to these producers and teachers of not only art, but that of life itself.



Monday, March 3, 2014

Charlie Rose: David Zwirner

Jeff Koons, Dolphin, 2007-2013
   Hey everyone, tonight I was checking out Charlie Rose and came across an interview with David Zwirner.  Zwirner is considered one of the most influential gallerists and art dealers in the United States.  Some of the artists he has represented include Donald Judd, Jeff Koons, and Dan Flavin.  In this interview Zwirner shows a great fondness of minimalism.  In fact he is quoted as saying minimalism was "the last really great newness".  He goes on to say that pop art was dis-appropriately valued in comparison to minimalism.  I included a link to the video and a link to Zwiner's gallery site to see his current and past exhibitions.
Karla Black, Practicality in Shadow, 2013


http://www.charlierose.com/
http://www.davidzwirner.com/image/new-york/

Friday, February 28, 2014

Student Awards Show: Robert Else Gallery

Robert Else Gallery
Jeff Carter, Extension, oil on canvas
Hello everyone, I recently toured the Robert Else Gallery here at Sacramento State which is showcasing  students works for the Annual Student Awards Show.  A little background first, the Robert Else Gallery was named for well known Professor of Art Emeritus Robert Else and is used almost exclusively for student art.  Currently there are works by 27 students at both the undergrad and grad level in a variety of mediums from painting to animated short film.  The students who submitted works were competing for scholarship awards in different categories which also included an art history award which was located in a separate category.  I will update who the winners were in a later blog when I get further details.  The Else Gallery offers a great opportunity for students to showcase their work and get a feeling of how their education can be applied in the field so to speak.  Receiving support and praise from both students and professors alike can also make a young artist more confident in their craft. 
When looking at the art itself I was really impressed by some of the work I looked at.  I have to say as an artist myself I have a slight bias to the painters of the group, but there
were other mediums well represented as well.

Sean Hong, Let Me Through, acrylic on canvas
The first work to really catch my eye was Extension by Jeff Carter.  The palette choice works well in this painting because of the cool blues mixed with reds and the very warm orange.  Although the composition looks like it was done from a photograph the use of colors portraying shadows give it a less "Polaroid Effect"than most paintings that can fall victim to it.  The brush strokes and portrait placement also make it somewhat reminiscent of a Lucian Freud painting.
The next work that stuck out both literally and figuratively was that of Brian D. Burns II in is work titled The Red Door.  The immediate thing that sticks out besides the pieces of the work itself are the obvious similarities to works by Robert Rauschenberg, the famous Neo-Dadaist.

Brian D. Burns II, The Red Door, mixed media
Another painting that I spend quite a bit of time looking at was by Sean Hong titled Let me Through.  What appears to be an urban landscape takes the viewers perspective and warps it with his displacement of objects both in and outside themselves.  It is as if you are looking through a prism of sorts or maybe some sort of special window.  There is some tension created due to the eye wanting to correct what you are seeing and could allude to what the title is referring to in some aspect.  Overall I was very impressed by the talent represented and I hope Sac State and other institutions don't underestimate the importance of art education as it is an integral aspect of student expression.

http://www.csus.edu/galleries/else.html

Friday, February 21, 2014

Contemporary Korean Art

"The Land/The People" Exhibit
I recently had the pleasure of visiting the Sacramento State University Library exhibit of contemporary Korean Art.  The show began Feb. 6th and will continue until May, 17th. It is titled  "The Land/The People" and primarily consists of various woodcuts, linocuts, and digital configurations.  Immediately upon entering the gallery the tone is set by the large works accompanied by subtle hums and the steady beat of the music playing throughout the gallery.

You can sense a real foundation of style and technique with each work that was taken by each individual artist and given its own unique flavor.  Ten artists were chosen overall, many of whom are relatively unknown outside Asia and Europe.  Like its name suggests the works in the show either take on a human or geographic theme to them.  Sometimes they are both combined.
Ryu Yeun Bok, Gumgang Mountain, 2007
Ryu Yeun Bok chose Gumgang Mountain as his subject in a series of prints that each take on a personality of their own.  As the only place South Koreans can visit in North Korea, they also have a very serious political tone to them.  Moving from print to print you can sense an almost seasonal change in each one.  Almost as if  to say that the mountain has been there forever and will continue to whether or not the disputes are settled. 
JungWon Chul "Comfort Women" linocut, 2001
In a series of linocuts, Jung Won Chul elegantly displays the faces of older women who manage to display a mood of both sadness and stoicism. In fact these are the faces of "comfort women" who were Korean women forced into servitude of Japanese soldiers during Japan's invasion of Asia. 
Yoon Yeo Geul, Shinchon, 2009, woodcut
Both people and land are represented  in the woodcuts of Yoon Yeo Geul.  His use of line work is superb and is reminiscent of an Albrecht Durer work.  In a lot of the works the aggressive cuts of each one signify the importance of each strike and their place in the work.  Geul is no different but his portrayal  of Seoul and the people that live there gives each one of his works a story that one can make their own. It also shows the transformation of nature into a new landscape filled with architecture and people.
Overall I suggest anyone in the Sacramento region go and see this exhibit.  Most Americans are familiar with Korea through the turmoil that befalls that region of the world and would benefit from seeing another side that is very much worth getting to know. 

To learn more and see information on how to see the show, see my link below.

http://www.csus.edu/sacstatenews/Articles/2013/12/KoreanArt12-05-13.html


Sunday, February 2, 2014



Andy Warhol, Campbell's Soup Cans, 1962


 

Hello my name is Kevin and this is my blog about everything art.  I will be posting many cool art- related articles over the course of the next few weeks.  Most of my posts will primarily focus on contemporary art in the San Francisco and Sacramento regions including art galleries, museum exhibitions, and lectures from notable area artists.  To start things off I would like to include some pictures of my trip to MoMA, New York from last summer.  If you ever get to New York City I highly recommend  visiting MoMA.  As it happens I was there during a heat wave so it was nice to get out of the sun for a day and look at some of my favorite artists' work. www.moma.org




Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d' Avignon, 1907
Vincent van Gogh, The Starry Night, 1889