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MONTE VISTA PROJECTS

5442 Monte Vista St
Los Angeles, CA, 90042

MONTE VISTA PROJECTS

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Ekta Aggarwal - 6:00 PM

December 11, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Aggarwal install.jpg


6:00 PM
Ekta Aggarwal

November 16th - December 8th, 2019

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce 6:00 PM, a solo exhibition by Ekta Aggarwal. 6:00 PM is a series of drawings that address the element of time as a material in Aggarwal’s work. The natural pigments that she uses in her painting practice are derived from trees and minerals found in the earth which take anywhere from a few years (in the case of trees) to millions of years (in the case of minerals) to form. The handspun cotton (Khadi) and the hand woven textiles that she employs are produced by slow practices that take time. The intricate patterns of her paintings are also part of a slow process. She started working on this series in June 2018 where she made a drawing everyday at 6 PM. These drawings also serve as a journal of her time in the United States after her graduation from CalArts. She ended the series at the end of January 2019 when these drawings started to take up not only physical but also psychological time.

Ekta Aggarwal has an MFA in Art from California Institute of the Arts, an MA in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Arts, University of the Arts London, and a BA (Honours) in Economics from Hindu College, University of Delhi. She has received several awards and scholarships, including the Diversity Grant and Provost’s Merit Scholarship and 2017 Hybrid Incubator for Visionary Entrepreneurs from California Institute of the Arts, Workshop with Hochschule Fur Bildende Kunste, among others. Ekta’s work has been shown in Los Angeles, Copenhagen, London, and Delhi. She was an artist in residence at the Bemis Center for Contemporary Art in 2018. She is currently living and working in Doha as a fellow at Virginia Commonwealth University School of the Arts in Qatar.

In 2019

Margaret Griffith - Perforations

November 4, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Griffith Press Release Image.jpg

Perforations

Margaret Griffith

October 12th - November 3rd, 2019

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce Perforations, a solo exhibition of recent hand cut paper sculptures and ink drawings that explore geometric abstraction through representational forms found in architecture. Continuing her interest in urban boundaries, social issues and the concept of impermanence found in Eastern philosophy, Griffith selects forms that divide, distort and bear witness to the complexity of issues found in public and private spaces relevant today.

Works include a large-scale floor sculpture based on a steel fence built by Caltrans in 2017 in San Jose, California, which was erected to prevent a homeless community from returning to an encampment that was disturbing a residential neighborhood. Other works continue to investigate paper as a sculptural medium and subject matter derived from expanded steel patterns found in fences and grates. Also included in the exhibition are ink drawings on paper of breezeblocks found in mid-century architecture, which were often used as spatial and transitional devices.

Margaret Griffith is a Los Angeles-based artist and Professor of Drawing and Painting at Rio Hondo College in Whittier, CA. Griffith received her MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, MI in Sculpture and her BFA from The Maryland Institute, College of Art, Baltimore, Maryland in Painting. Upcoming solo and group exhibitions include Sculpture/Installation at La Sierra University, Riverside, CA in February 2020 and Let Me Talk at The Brand Gallery, Los Angeles in April 2020.

Griffith has shown at Western Project, Ruth Bachofner Gallery, Carl Berg Gallery, Kontainer Gallery, Occidental College, Mount Saint Mary’s University, Los Angeles, CA, Franklin Parrasch Gallery, New York, NY, Long Beach Museum, Long Beach, CA, Diverse Works, Houston, TX, Vertigo Art Space, Denver, CO, Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, NC, The Hunterdon Art Museum, Clinton, NJ, the Museo Archeologico di Amelia, Amelia (TERNI), Italy, and many other institutions and galleries. Griffith is the 2017 recipient of the Davyd Whaley Mid-Artist Career Grant and a 2018 nominee for the Fellows of Contemporary Art Fellowship in Los Angeles, CA.

In 2019

Warmly Persuasive

October 7, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Warmly Persuasive.jpg

Warmly Persuasive: ICOSA in L.A. 
Exhibition Dates September 7th-29th, 2019


Monte Vista Projects is pleased to present Warmly Persuasive: ICOSA in L.A. 

From our artist-run friends in Austin, ICOSA will have a second showing of works through the curation of Andy Campbell, assistant professor of Critical Studios at USC-Roski School of Art and Design. Hung in dramatic relation to the bureaucratic documents important to ICOSA’s founding the exhibition provides both a snapshot of the current members’ artistic practices, and the organizational peculiarities of the larger collective.

”Community can be the warmly persuasive word to describe an existing set of relationships, or the warmly persuasive word to describe an alternative set of relationships. What is most important, perhaps, is that unlike all other terms of social organization (state, nation, society, etc.) it seems never to be used unfavourably, and never to be given any positive opposing or distinguishing term.”

-Raymond Williams, Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society

Identifying community as the warmly persuasive term for being in relation to one another, the English theorist Raymond Williams rightly put his finger on community’s promise and its most common deception. Anyone who has been part of an intentional community, a collective, a consciousness raising group, a support network, or any other such organization knows that community rarely lives up to its promise—internicene fighting, power trips, and hurt feelings are mainstays of the social work of community formation and maintenance.

And yet: the potential benefits remain enticing enough to risk failure.

Investigating the terms of artistic affiliation and group structure, this exhibition features artist-members of the ICOSA collective in Austin, Texas, and aims to reflect one model of self-organization in our era of protracted economic precarity. The questions ICOSA poses via its very existence are simple and dire: how can artists create community, drawing upon commonalities while acknowledging—and fostering—difference? How can non-profit forms of governance benefit (or perhaps hinder) the artists that assemble under its administrative rubrics?

In the case of ICOSA, its mission is twofold: to provide community amongst its membership (monthly meetings keep members informed and accountable), and to generate exhibition opportunities (staging duographic exhibitions of its membership throughout the year). To accomplish these things ICOSA is organized as a 501(c)(6), unlike many other non-profits, including Tiger Strikes Asteroid, which is a 501(c)(3). The difference is slight but significant; a 501(c)(6) is considered a business league, whose primary aim is to serve the common interests its membership, while a 501(c)(3) is classified as a charity, and is meant to serve the interests of a general public. All ICOSA members are board members, and thus have a stake in the doings of the organization [this is atypical of non-profits, which often have a separate, smaller board culled from its ranks].

The works in this exhibition, taken from the roster of all current members of ICOSA in good standing, are installed to reveal networked relations between artists within this particular community. Hung in dramatic relation to the bureaucratic documents important to ICOSA’s founding the exhibition provides both a snapshot of the current members’ artistic practices, and the organizational peculiarities of the larger collective.

Warmly Persuasive includes work by: Leon Alesi, Amy Bench, Darcie Book, Shawn Camp, Carlos and Yevgenia, Jonas Criscoe, Erin Cunningham, Rachelle Diaz, Terra Goolsby, Sarah Hinreisen, Mark Johnson, Amanda McInerney, Matt Rebholz, Tammie Rubin, Jana Swec and Suzanne Koett*, Lana Waldrup-Appl, Alyssa Taylor Wendt, and Jenn Wilson. 

Warmly Persuasive: ICOSA in LA is curated by Andy Campbell, Assistant Professor of Critical Studies at USC-Roski School of Art and Design, with assistance from ICOSA members Jenn Wilson and Amy Bench.

 

 * not a member of ICOSA.

In 2019

Can We Live?

September 3, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Can We Live Press Image.jpg

Can We Live?

André Terrel Jackson, Clifford Prince King, Kimberly Morris

August 3rd to August 25th

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce “Can We Live?”, a group exhibition curated by Rakeem Cunningham featuring the work of André Terrell Jackson, Clifford Prince King, and Kimberly Morris. Inspired by the Jay Z song of the same name, Can We Live? is a selection of interdisciplinary works that acknowledge the black experience as multidimensional and nuanced. Viewers are invited to examine the tension between adversity and majesty in the everyday experience of Black America.


“I don’t think the mainstream media understands people of color are multi-dimensional. For some reason, there’s an idea that only white people are relatable. I don’t think it’s necessarily racist. But it’s odd, because the people who watch the most television are black women, so we should be represented in more ways…Black folk don’t necessarily agree with each other about what being black is.’ And, that’s not a bad thing.”

– Issa Rae

André Terrel Jackson is interested in the individual experiences that add up to create social, political and cultural groups. Mining personal history, the artist is able to use poetry, weaving, sculpture, apparel and performance to spark conversation about difficult issues related to identity. Jackson is Inspired by the work of artists from Sonya Clark and Nick Cave, Melina Matsoukas, Marlon Riggs and Tarrel Alvin McCraney; to musicians like Cakes Da Killa and Solange, Beyoncé and Janelle Monáe; to scholars like Kimberlé Crenshaw and Amelia Jones, and bell hooks; to writers like Essex Hemphill and Joseph Beam. André uses language, visual/literal/metaphorical, to center the voices and images of blackness. Intersectionality is paramount, and influences the use of materials, which take the artist from the craft store, to the hardware store, from the quirky, to the fine and luxurious. The mixing, and juxtaposing, of materials lend humor and beauty to otherwise grave topics. Jackson received a BA in Fashion from Albright College and an MFA in Fibers from Savannah College of Art and Design.

Kimberly Morris was born in West Los Angeles, California and grew up in Leimert Park,California.  Her rich Creole heritage has been a major influence on her work.  Her great-aunt was Florestine Perrault Collins, a creole photographer based in New Orleans.  Collins was one of 101 African-American women who identified themselves as photographers in the 1920 U.S. Census.

Kimberly critiques self-identity, ideas of beauty, popular culture, and race in America via video, sculpture, photography, and painting.  She inserts herself into her work by casting her own body, using her hair, and portraiture—all forms struggling with the constraining expectations society imposes on women of color.  She writes “Through the lens of beauty, I examine my position in the diaspora.  Pressures of fitting into what the majority culture defines as normal: neater hair and constrictive body typecasting, dictate my daily routine.”

Kimberly received both her BA and MA from California State University Northridge and her MFA from California State University Long Beach.  Recent exhibitions include Biomythography: Currency Exchange at California Lutheran University in Simi Valley, CA, Who Are You? at the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach,CA,Echo Location at ESXLA in Los Angeles,CA.

Clifford Prince King is an artist living and working in Los Angeles, CA. His photographs embody a timeless, nostalgic, yet everyday experience as a queer black person. 

In 2019

The Wizard

August 2, 2019 Roberta Gentry
The Wizard.jpg

The Wizard

June 29th – July 21st, 2019

Claire Rau, Ryn Wilson, Cynthia Scott, Alex Podesta Patrick Coll, David Bordett, Ruth Owens, Madeleine Wieand + Jamie Solock

 

The WIZARD

Illusionary

slick

vivid icons

cynical weirdness

the body

dark masculine energy…


Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce “The Wizard,” an exhibition by artist collective The Front of New Orleans. Artworks in “The Wizard” are thematically dark and cynical, but vivid. This exhibition will contrast The Front’s exhibition “The Jungle”, hosted simultaneously  in our sister space Tiger Strikes Asteroid Los Angeles. This exhibition is the second installment of a collaborative exchange that began in April 2019 with The Front hosting Majestic Proton Vest, a collection of work from Monte Vista Projects members, and Afterglow, a collection of work from Tiger Strikes Asteroid.

The Front, an artist-run collective and 501c3 nonprofit gallery, fosters the development of contemporary art in the city of New Orleans through innovative exhibitions, lectures, screenings, performances, and other arts programming, all of which are free and open to the public. Founded by artists in 2008 amidst the post-Katrina resurgence of New Orleans and committed to a spirit of grassroots DIY determinism, The Front cultivates new and experimental work, in particular from emerging artists, but also from nationally and internationally known artists.

In 2019

DOUBLE DOUBLE PROJECT - Neanderthal Clickbait

June 24, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Double Double Project.png

DOUBLE DOUBLE PROJECT
Neanderthal Clickbait


June 8th to June 23rd, 2019

Double Double Project is an artist collective who have worked together since 2016. The collective’s seven core members, Perry Burlingame, Eric D. Charlton, Cait Finley, Rebecca Forstater, Jack Honeysett, Amanda Struver, and Jeremy Tarr are an international group of artists that gather bi-annually to show their interdisciplinary work together. Neanderthal Clickbait is the second in a series of seven shows in which one member’s practice becomes the nexus point for critical conversation. At Monte Vista Projects, the collective responds to the works and ideas of Cait Finley, whose musings on an unknown future have led to an exploration of the cave as an analogy for inner-space.

Within the cave, echoes of Honeysett’s soundscape, recorded using the acoustics of the Bendix Building, play throughout the gallery walls while Forstater’s user-generated house plants disperse her limited edition essential oils for the contemporary cave dweller. Burlingame’s digital avatars move rhythmically in a close-up view, juxtaposing Charlton’s uncanny virtual re-painting of Andrew Wyeth’s, Christina’s World. Finley’s mixed-media plastic sculpture displays videos of animals and ambiguous product advertisements. Struver’s found object figurative beings are displayed alongside narrative photographs telling their origin stories, and Tarr’s motion detector lights expose the exhibition that sits in darkness until audience activity is detected.

To contact Double Double Project, email thedoubledoubleproject (at) gmail (dot) com.

In 2019

Relatively Calm

June 2, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Relatively Calm.jpg

Relatively Calm

A TSA/MVP Intern Show featuring Josh Kawahata, nicola lee, Jordynn Nusz,
Rebeca Sanchez, and Beverly Siu

May 25th to June 1st
Opening Reception: Saturday, May 25th, 7-10 pm


Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce Relatively Calm, a collection of works by the interns of Tiger Strikes Asteroid Los Angeles and Monte Vista Projects. Through personal experience, time, and process, this group of artists investigates the juxtaposition of chaos and tranquility in their work.


Josh Kawahata employs iconic logos, symbols, architecture, and characters found in pop culture, engaging in humor and playfulness in their complexity and their structure. He is based in Los Angeles and is currently earning his BFA in drawing and painting from the California State University of Long Beach.


nicola lee’s “Untitled” explores the versatility of ceramics and bronze through nature’s cycle of birth, transmutation and decay. Nicola’s work explores consciousness and its relation to matter as it manifest in nature. She is currently pursuing her M.F.A. in sculpture at California State University of Long Beach. The artist writes her name in all common letters.


Jordynn Nusz
is an artist who experiments with a range of media and is interested in exploring concepts of personal introspection, systems of living as art, and social practice as performance. She will receive a BS in studio art with a minor in art history from Biola University in 2020.

“I have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder. From November–February of 2016, I suffered from a manic episode. After two years of being healthy, I decided to make art based on those tumultuous months. These artifacts are reflections of the range of emotions and thoughts that I was exposed to; often all at one time. Please sift through the artwork so your interaction can reflect my experience.”


Rebeca Sanchez is a Los Angeles based artist and a recent graduate from California State University of Long Beach, receiving her BFA in Drawing and Painting. Being brought to Los Angeles at six months old from Mexico, Sanchez was exposed to the Angelino life style and a mix of multitude of cultures around the world. Inspired by the architecture and color of cities, Sanchez works with large-scale mix media drawings that convey the texture and bustling life of the urban cities from her childhood to now. This intuitive accumulation mirrors the complexity of the cityscapes, bringing in a global aspect to her work.


Beverly Siu is a multidisciplinary artist exploring the human condition as it manifests in everyday life. Her practice combines personal expression, material experiments, and raw instinct together to subvert conventional languages in search of something truer. She will receive her B.A. in Art from the University of California, Irvine in 2020.

“Free from the deadlines of fall and spring, special things have a way of taking root this time of year.”

In 2019

CULCITA

May 20, 2019 Roberta Gentry
View fullsize Anthony Campuzano
Anthony Campuzano
View fullsize Anne Seidman
Anne Seidman
View fullsize Chris Oliveria
Chris Oliveria
View fullsize Jeremy Rocine
Jeremy Rocine

CULCITA
Anthony Campuzano, Chris Oliveria, Jeremy Rocine and Anne Seidman

April 20 – May 12, 2019

In 'Philosophical Investigations', Wittgenstein discusses the “concept with blurred edges” of language games. “These phenomena have no one thing in common which makes us use the same word for all, - but they are related to one another in many different ways. And it is because of this relationship, or these relationships that we call them all ‘language.’” Observing both discourse and games, examples can be found that may or may not be amusing, competitive, cooperative, involve life-and-death stakes, be characterized as zero-sum, or not. There is not one universal trait among them. “I can think of no better expression to characterize these similarities,” he continues, “than 'family resemblances'; for the various resemblances between members of a family: build, features, colour of eyes, gait, temperament, etc. etc. overlap and criss-cross in the same way, - And I shall say: ‘games’ form a family.” The resemblances between this grouping of artists and the way they intertwine with other practices can illuminate the vibrant impurity of approach. They engage in open-ended games involving texture, text and legibility, pattern, history and place.

Chris Oliveria stitches together surfaces from scraps of canvas conspicuously covered in the grit and everyday minutiae of studio practice: paint drips, smears, interrupted jottings and the kinds of marks one might make to test the flow of an airbrush nozzle. Jan Tumlir's 2016 essay on Oliveria's work describes how by way of these traces of nothing in particular we arrive at something extremely concrete, “haunted by all that lies outside it, an evaporated content that nevertheless defines its edges, pressing in [...] reminding us that abstraction in art has never just come down to the dissolutions of the object world into some Platonic, ideational essence.” The color and motifs in the foreground, evoking kitsch 50's fabric “which might initially strike one as straight-from-the-tube, [are] on closer inspection revealed to have been exactingly mixed.” The shapes, recalling “textile detritus, the sort that collects on the floors of an apparel sweatshop,” have been distilled from a careful process of looking. They seem to be negative spaces cut away from surrounding shapes reversed into positive, theatrical figures on grounds of visual noise that describe the story of their own making. 

Jeremy Rocine’s works on paper find their source material in 'T’s, New York c. 1910,' Plate 92 of 'The Pieced Quilt, an American Design Tradition' by Jonathan Holstein. This design suggests columns of abstract, asemic writing rendered in bold color. Rocine introduces gentle undulations that interrupt the pattern's geometric flatness, as if catching it in breeze or creasing its surface. In another variant, he strips out the blue and lays the red over a field of off-white with hints of subtle greens. Other quilts in this collection used as references bear more evocative titles like 'Road to California,' c. 1900 by an unnamed craftswoman who may or may not have traveled along that route. Many of the best examples of this style, prized for vivid saturated color were made by Mennonites, Amish and other German transplants to rural Pennsylvania. Since its modern inception with Malevich, through Op Art and P&D, abstract painting has always had a relationship with craft tradition despite attempts to draw boundaries between these practices. 

Recently moved to Los Angeles from Pennsylvania, Anne Seidman has stated “I don’t consciously think about building, per se, when i work, but I always think – especially when making drawings - that I am building or stabilizing something using these modular systems” and that “an amorphous abstract narrative is developing in my head.” Sid Sachs has pointed out a similar appeal in her paintings to rural architecture which is “architectonically orderly and casually ramshackle.” Like Oliveria, she at times recoups the detritus of the studio as raw material for her work in the form of tape, snips of obliterated text, and precise variants of color samples. Like block-style piece quilts, her paintings are assembled out of rectangles, triangles or L-shaped components joined into larger wholes. Asymmetrical non-repeating compositions seem to surge and grow as if compelled by forces of inorganic vitality. A brilliantly observant colorist, Seidman captures subliminal traces of specific sensations of local color and light. She has described attempting to replicate the pattern from a Gee's Bend style quilt, reveling in the productive imprecision of memory to produce something new from an absent original.  

Philadelphia artist Anthony Campuzano's mysteriously evocative work 'Midwestern Abstraction' seems like a not-so-distant relative of both Oliveria's foreground shapes and the places imagined but not always visited by the quilters of rural Pennsylvania. Sharing the repetitive use of the hand with much of American folk art, Campuzano's drawings teem with dense layers of meandering looping marks. Like the ghost haunting a property described in an angrily scrawled note to a landlord found by Campuzano, the artist's obsessions and textual references repeat, rotate and are echoed in abstract patterns. “The Restless Journey of James Agee” appears in one drawing, the title of Genevieve Moreau's biography of the author, whose existence was fraught with productive tensions between life and art. Born in Knoxville, he criss-crossed the U.S. and wrote 'Let Us Now Praise Famous Men' with Walker Evans, detailing the lives of Alabama sharecroppers. At times in this book, he foregrounds his intrusive presence as documentarian, at others he anonymously enumerates prosaic details like the contents of a farmer's bag. (The word 'quilt' incidentally has its Latin root in culcita meaning stuffed sack or cushion). Campuzano explains, “I was inspired by the times during the Great Depression when Agee - recently graduated from Harvard- worked at Fortune magazine in Manhattan and would spend the night in his office writing poetry. There is poetry in even just that act.”

The card game Mao is played by attempting to guess at rules unknown beforehand by anyone but the dealer. A similarly ad hoc approach toward ready-to-hand materials and content can be opposed to the kind of programmatic approach to conceptual art that proceeds directly from ideas to their realization. Economies of means helped the survivors of the Depression cope with their dire conditions as quilting styles migrated westward, continuing in a more sombre form and leaving behind tangible, tactile memories. Transformation of found texts and folk motifs and a foregrounding of their own work processes and fleeting impressions link these four artists as they glory in the irreducibly concrete and contingent. Their practices are rooted in interlocking games of repetition and discovery, color and contagion, metonym and metaphor, condensation and displacement, cutting, suture, erasure and scars - provoking us to ask not so much “what does it mean?” but “how does it proceed?”

Organized by Justin Michell

In 2019

Stephanie Rose Guerrero - The Language of Our Ghosts

April 10, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Stephanie Rose Guerrero.jpg

The Language of Our Ghosts
Stephanie Rose Guerrero


March 16th - April 7th, 2019

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of work by Stephanie Rose Guerrero.

“The Language of Our Ghosts” is a series of narrative paintings, translated and coded through a personal collection of visual totems, indices, and symbols. Through the translation of the narrative, these paintings become mythologized and universal themes of the human condition can be found in each tableau. Stephanie offers her personal mythologies for others to question what could be beneath the surface of waking consciousness. Utilizing the front and back of transparent and mirrored materials becomes reflective of the complexities of having a human experience. The use of collage, engraving, paints, crayons and solvents blur in and out of one another to become landscapes of what is and what could be.

Stephanie Rose Guerrero is an artist and writer working in Los Angeles, CA. Recent exhibitions of her work were at the Mexican Consulate (Los Angeles) New Image Art, ALSO Gallery (Los Angeles) and Eastern Projects ( Los Angeles)

In 2019

Molly Jo Shea - I’ll Stop the World and Melt with You

March 7, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Molly+Shea.jpg

I’ll Stop the World and Melt with You
Molly Jo Shea

February 9th - March 3rd

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce the thawing of Molly Jo Shea.

After being cryogenically frozen in the year 2017 at CalArts, Molly Jo Shea, the founder of the Suspended Animation Department, will be showing research and work post-defreeze. After becoming overwhelmed with the notion of independence and choice, Shea used her student loans to delay the inevitable Walt Disney- style. Researching real cryogenics laboratories like Alcor, struggling utopias like Arcosanti and cryotherapy clinics in Santa Clarita; Shea created her own cryogenics program on campus, Calcor.  Objects will be defrosted for this solo show of her work concerning ideas centered around desire, life, death and waiting for a better tomorrow.

Shea (wa/i)s an multidisciplinary artist working with performance, video, ceramics, and installation. Interested in mixing documentary with fantasy, her work seeks to melt the two into a new form of reality and institutional critique. Shea is currently finishing her Masters Degree in Art and Integrated Media at CalArts (when and if she plans to defrost for graduation). She has performed in places as varied as MOCA Tucson, San Diego Art Institute, the Bob Baker Marionette Theater, Im Ersten in Austria and more. Currently she has been pursuing research around living and dead archives with Australia’s seed banks and deextinction laboratories for her thesis show in March.  

This show will also be a resource for those who might have been recently defrosted and are seeking guidance and help for integrating back into society and dealing with Freezer Burn. Defrosting seminar performance and screening of Shea’s documentary, ‘Cool As Ice’ will be announced soon.


In 2019

Wholly Coast - 2019 Open call

January 27, 2019 Roberta Gentry
Nick McPhail, Balcony

Nick McPhail, Balcony

January 5th to January 27th, 2019

Rachel Apthorp, Christine Atkinson, Brad Bernhardt, Anna Breininger,
Allie Ihm, Ali Kaeini, Nick McPhail, Lauren Moradi, Camille Wong


Wholly Coast! brings together nine artists working in diverse media, with overt visual preference towards humor and color and organized around representational-abstraction. The work displayed suggests a revival of the precepts of Light-and-Space; specifically, the use of plastics, vibrant hues, and attention to the quality of atmosphere here in Los Angeles. Heightened consideration for saturation plays a common theme. Humor, also inserts itself in the form of satire. “All dogs die”, “Not a Winner”, and a Dali-esque meat montage each poke fun at cultural landmarks with ease while Plush viscera and mounted carpet seem to point their humorous critique at art making itself. Representational-abstraction prioritizes the artists viewpoint as paramount to accurate visual description, an ode to the individualism we Angelinos are famous for. The abstraction of visually recognizable forms happens through material and iconographic recontextualization, suggesting larger meanings and contexts specific to Los Angeles art making.

In 2019

Absence, the Landscape of Objects

December 15, 2018 Roberta Gentry
Absence.png

Absence, the Landscape of Objects
Michael Thomas Hurley, Vladimir Goryachev

November 10th - December 7th, 2018

Absence, the Landscape of Objects, brings together two artists working in the rendering of objects with connotations of portraiture and the landscape. The work displayed suggests post-human scenarios with objects standing in for the people who use them and the artists that created the work. The relationships between the objects, rendered and crafted, becomes of paramount importance. In Goryachev's work, tables transform into horizon lines, and cups, plates, and chairs serve as mountainous forms, all of which refer to a human-produced environment devoid of said humans. Hurley's work, in contrast, takes a more direct approach, using an earthbound material (porcelain). His subjects serve as monoliths in discrete compositions with like-minded human monoliths such as billboards and pallets. Like Goryachev, Hurley's work suggests a standalone vision of a new terrain devoid of people. Each artist approaches the idea of absence through the recontextualizing of objects and allusions to topography. In contrast to the idea of the sublime, these artists seek to signify the hand of man removed from its use value in terms of object, landscape, and absence.

Michael Hurley’s studio practice relies on the process of slip casting to produce sculptural forms.  Many of the molds are pulled from the stones and bedrock of the greater Omaha, Nebraska landscape and, more broadly, throughout the Midwest. Combined with the iconography of the landscape, he incorporates the relics and form language associated with the great plains. Using material he finds in the locality keeps him engaged in his immediate surroundings. Hurley creates compositions with these cast ceramic forms, combined with various other media, to react to political and societal issues.

Vladimir Goryachev uses the intimate process of direct observation to reflect on his surroundings to find illusive meaning in everyday interaction. The subject matter of his work is primarily figurative. In his last supper paintings, Goryachev depicts an aftermath of a party. The objects suggest what has transpired but the site is left abandoned. The empty space is full of small gestures, a compilation of events only left in someone's memories and now in these paintings.

 

Michael T. Hurley was born and raised in the Black Hills of South Dakota. He received a BFA degree from the University of Wyoming, Laramie in 2009 and an MFA degree from California State University, Chico in 2014. Hurley has been working as an artist assistant to Jun Kaneko for the last four years. Hurley’s work has appeared in Ceramics Monthly, NCECA’s National Student Juried Exhibition, and several international exhibitions.

http://michaelthurley.com

Vladimir Goryachev was born in Moscow, Russia and immigrated to Los Angeles in 1995. The medium used in his work varies between digital rendering, sculpture, drawing and painting. Vladimir earned his MFA degree from California State University, Long Beach in 2007. He teaches at California State Universities, Long Beach, Dominguez Hills, and Fullerton.

http://vladimirgoryachev.com

In 2018

Field of Vision

November 5, 2018 Roberta Gentry
Field of Vision.JPG

Field of Vision

October 13th - November 4th, 2018

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce Field of Vision, a group exhibition organized and curated by Vancouver artist, Andrew James McKay.

Field of Vision will feature the work of the following artists:

Andrew James McKay (Vancouver, BC), Michael Alvarez (Los Angeles, CA), Emily Blythe Jones (Los Angeles, CA), Maureen Gubia (Guayaquil, Ecuador), Tracy Kerdman (New York, NY), Juan Carlos Noria (Benicàssim, Spain), a painter of unknown name working from Dafen Oil Painting Village (Shenzhen, PRC), and the 12th form students of Kitsilano High School (Vancouver, BC).

Field of Vision restructures the historical tradition of the portrait as a presentation of an image taken to be ‘authoritative’, and is a consideration of what it is to work as an artist in a variety of geographical locations and under a variety of economic systems. The exhibition takes as its locus a series of five portrait photographs which act as source material to be interpreted by a number of artists. Some of these are professional artists, some are students, and some find a position in between. Posited through the exhibition is the theory that while each artist has painted an interpretation, all of these works together form a much more comprehensive vision of the subject to the degree that once one has seen the composed whole, returning to look upon a single work in the series it is made apparent that one cannot do the job of many. Each of the five series of works is comprised of a photographic print of the subject; a painting by artist and curator Andrew James Mckay; a painting as done by Mr. Alvarez, Ms. Jones, Ms. Gubia, Ms. Kerdman, and Mr. Noria; a painting produced by a worker in the painting village of Dafen, PRC; and paintings made by the students of Kitsilano High School.

The show additionally functions as a fundraiser for the students of Kitsilano High School. Their contributions are included primarily by way of introducing the dialogue of the project as a whole to their own nascent practices, thus developing the scope of possibilities for these students.

Speaking of the financial aspects however, each of the five sets of four works (a mounted photograph; a painting by either Michael Alvarez, Emily Blythe Jones, Maureen Gubia, Tracy Kerdman, and Juan Carlos Noria; a painting by Andrew James McKay; and a painting by the artist working from Dafen, respectively) are for sale at a sum of $1500 apiece. The proceeds of these sales to be remitted to the arts department of Kitsilano HIgh School to facilitate field trips and to provide additional material support outside state funding streams. For sales inquiries, please ask the staff at Monte Vista Projects should you be reading this at the venue, or contact via andrewjmckaystudio@gmail.com if you are reading of this via post or at andrewjamesmckay.com

In 2018

Jeffrey Atherton - SLEEPWALKER

September 28, 2018 Roberta Gentry
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September 8 – September 29

LOS ANGELES—Monte Vista Projects presents Jeffrey Atherton: SLEEPWALKER, a solo presentation of new work by this celebrated Los Angeles-based artist. An important figure in interdisciplinary avant-garde work in Los Angeles for two decades, Atherton will be displaying nine of his haunting photographs chosen from the full set of 44 that make up Sleepwalker: A Journal of Five Events, accompanied by: 10 Rules for Better Sleep. Continuing Atherton’s explorations of the boundaries between photography, fiction and performance—for example, Notes for a Lost Play (1998) and Liddy (2004)—Sleepwalker presents a series of images arranged as journal entries outlining five sleep events. Accompanying the images, the text—10 Rules for Better Sleep—challenges our presuppositions in compelling ways. The dreamlike images represent mementoes of the visions seen during a state of disturbed sleep that has been manipulated by some outside force. The text serves as an open framework for the images, shifting their context. Atherton is interested in the displacement of the object by its photographic representation. This displacement creates issues of fragmented narrative, bibliographic ghosts, signifier/signified slippage and the photographic split between photo documentation (the photojournalistic impulse) and poetics of the photographic image (Bachlelardian concepts of image and reverie). The dizzying effects of this image/text draws the viewer into new ways to relate to experience, revealing fresh capacities of the photographic medium.

In 2018

Andres Payan-Estrada - BLUE APOLLO

August 31, 2018 Roberta Gentry
Andres Payan-Estrada.jpg

August 4 – August 26, 2018

LOS ANGELES—Monte Vista Projects presents Andres Payan-Estrada: BLUE APOLLO, a solo presentation of new works by the Los Angeles-based artist. For BLUE APOLLO, Payan-Estrada uses LGBTQ nightlife aesthetics to connect the 1969 lunar landing and space exploration with historic and contemporary forms of queer liberation. The exhibition includes drawings, collage, textual pieces, and an immersive installation composed of ceramic sculpture, scent, and lighting. BLUE APOLLO is on view at Monte Vista Projects (1206 Maple Ave #523, Los Angeles, CA 90015) from August 4 through August 26.

In considering the current political climate and onset of a New Space Era, Payan-Estrada’s new body of work urges a dismantling of hetero-patriarchal, colonial, and militaristic histories that define how outer space is understood in the greater American consciousness. He presents the possibility of a space imaginary that poetically mutates these narratives into boundless queer explorations. 

Many of the works make poetic associations between these seemingly disparate themes. Downtown LA 1969 and Downtown LA 2018 are charcoal and color pencil drawings that depict the locations of LGBTQ bars as stars in a dark sky—functioning as both geographic maps and imaginary constellations. For Light of a Thousand Moons (Blue), Payan has collaged onto a deep black surface numerous disco ball photographs he has taken at gay bars throughout the U.S. Disassociated from their original context, the group of objects floats without relation to a physical space.

The immersive installation Last Call anchors the exhibition space, consisting of a fifty-foot black velvet curtain with a glowing blue spotlight cast onto the gallery floor and an installation of 500 lbs of loose porcelain. The blue light acts as the only light source in the gallery and evokes the imagined aesthetic of a gay club in a lunar environment. The installation includes objects such as a porcelain-tiled disco ball and a scent that mimics the smells of a bar.

“I am fascinated by the way memory, meaning, and value are placed onto objects and spaces and how these LGBTQ spaces offer the possibility to transport you into a safe reality,” says Andres Payan-Estrada. “One of my fondest memories growing up in Mexico is going to a gay bar for the first time. It was quite a stupefying moment- a sloppy bar night that allowed me to experience the boundlessness of queerness." 

 

Andres Payan-Estrada (b.1987, Ciudad Juarez, Mexico) received his MFA from the California Institute of the Arts and BFA from The University of Texas at El Paso. He is currently the curator of public engagement at the Craft & Folk Art Museum and visiting art faculty at the California Institute of the Arts. His work as an artist, educator, and independent curator champions contemporary craft and ceramic practices. He aims to create accessible ways to understand materiality, object theory, making, and the role they have in adding value to the everyday. 

In 2018

Andy Fedak - The Crystal Spirit Or: How I Became An Anarchist

July 29, 2018 Roberta Gentry
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This exhibition explores Anarchist thought through the eyes of George Orwell’s time in the Spanish Civil War. Probing into anarchism’s altruistic roots, it ties together a diverse group of connections from contemporary neuroscience, to spirituality and politics, on into the current uprising in the Rojava region of Kurdistan where the same anarchist practice is going on today that Orwell discovered in Spain. A deeply personal work, it also reveals the artist’s own journey to find alternative ways of seeing the world after recovering from a mental illness.

A combination of a surrealistic narrative film and virtual reality installation, the work utilizes state of the art visual effects, 3D animation, and interactive virtual reality techniques to immerse the viewer inside the worldview of the anarchist.

 

Andy Fedak was born in 1978 and lives and works in Los Angeles. He received his BFA from New York University and his MFA from the University of California, Irvine. His work has been shown at the Palace of Fine Art in Mexico City, the Luckman Gallery in Los Angeles, the Ottawa International Animation Festival, the Laguna Art Museum, and other venues around the world. Andy is currently an Assistant Professor of Art at California State University, Fullerton.

In 2018

Nick Loewen and Rimas Simaitis - Optic Treatment

June 23, 2018 Roberta Gentry
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Monte Vista Projects is proud to present Optic Treatment. This exhibition features two Los Angeles based artists: Nick Loewen and Rimas Simaitis. The exhibition explores the relationships between image and form, surface and color, process and content, light and shadow, and their friendship.  The work, made by both mechanical and manual means, uncovers similarities between organic and automated processes of production. The two artists first met in graduate school at UCSB, and since their graduation, have reflected on each other’s work. They initially didn’t intend to show together, but circumstance has brought them together. Call it coincidence or chance, it’s clear that they share similar wavelengths.

Nick Loewen creates all over composition paintings using found lenticular imagery. He then meticulously cuts the lenticulars into small squares then reassembles them into mesmerizing and hypnotic mosaics. His randomized method of generating images obscures the content and meaning of the found imagery. From landscapes to still lifes, Nick Loewen splices imagery, color, and movement to make subtle moments that call for interaction on the part of the viewer.

Rimas Simaitis takes inspiration where science intersects moments of mysticism. This is when his work crystallizes. His cast aluminum objects resemble patterns that were left on a sandy beach or in a sandbox. The objects reflect the moments of focused energies or patterns, revealing the possibility and mystery that shapes Simaitis's worldview. 

 

Nick Loewen (b. 1984) lives and works in Los Angeles. He received a BA from Goshen College in 2006 and an MFA from the University of California, Santa Barbara in 2012. His work has been exhibited in New York, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara and Wonder Valley, CA. 

Rimas K. Simaitis was born in Coeur d’Alene, ID (1983), and currently lives and works in Venice Beach, CA. He completed his MFA in Spatial Studies at the Univeristy of California, Santa Barbara in 2012.  His work has been exhibited around the country, and has been included in biennial exhibitions at the Boise Art Museum (2010) and at the New Wight Gallery at UCLA (2012).  He has completed residencies at the Ox-Bow School of Art, Wave Farm, and on Andrea Zittel’s Indy Island at the Indianapolis Museum of Art.  

 

In 2018

Philip Newcombe - ODEON

May 15, 2018 Roberta Gentry
Philip Newcombe.jpg

April 14th - May 13th, 2018

Philip Newcombe subtly alters everyday objects, creating through the manipulations he makes in relation to their original function, a whole host of possible narratives / alternative realities. Like a deflating beach ball filled with air from the lungs of a dying man or a folded up piece of paper of the most beautiful place in the world, carried around in his back pocket, these objects go beyond the exhibition’s space / time-frame. Some are erected as performative monuments, like the fact of sucking a gobstopper to create a universe or dipping a piece of thread from a fallen button, in perfume. Although at times the work appears elusive, it is nevertheless still concerned with a form of intimate and direct communication with the onlooker.

 

Philip Newcombe (b. Germany 1970. Lives and works in the UK).Recent selected exhibitions include solo exhibitions at 'ATTIC', Brussels (2018), ‘A+’ Berlin (2017), Maria Stenfors, London (2015, 2014), CAPC Musée d'art contemporain, Bordeaux (curated by Alexis Vaillant, 2013) and group shows at MUDAM, Luxembourg (2016) MuHKA, Museum of Contemporary Art, Antwerp (2014), Tripode, Rezé, Nantes (2014), Neon Parc, Melbourne, Aus (2013), CAPC Bordeaux (2012), Stuart Shave / Modern Art, London (2009), New York Art Book Fair with Jessica Silverman Gallery, San Francisco (2008), Centre d'art Contemporain, Chamarande. Paris (2008). Newcombe recently completed a residency in 2017 at CCA Andtratx, Mallorca.

 

In 2018

Alex Robbins - Complements

April 9, 2018 Roberta Gentry
 Photo credit: Ruben Diaz
 Photo credit: Ruben Diaz
 Photo credit: Ruben Diaz
 Photo credit: Ruben Diaz
 Photo credit: Ruben Diaz
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All photos by Ruben Diaz

Alex Robbins
Complements

March 17 - April 8, 2017

 

Monte Vista Projects presents a continuing series of works by Alex Robbins called “Complements.”

Meticulous copies of early modernist paintings, these works are executed in the complementary colors of the originals. The paintings on exhibit here concentrate on the female nude as painted by artists Christian Rohlfs (1849 - 1938), Pierre Auguste Renoir (1841 - 1919), Walter Sickert (1860-1942), and Willem De Kooning (1904 - 1997).

The nude painting has historically been an object of desire, titillation, and ownership. It is perhaps only through the history of painting that a naked body can be considered nude. As the nude became cemented as a standard motif, the painters color sense concurrently emerged as arguably their most irreducible subjective quality, a foothold for individuality. Inverting the narrative space of the paintings color by color, brushstroke by brushstroke, Robbins’ “complements” destroy and fetishize the subjective process developed by the original artists. The nudity is laid bare, unprotected by natural light.

Also included is a non-color inverted replication of a work by society painter John Singer Sargent (1856 - 1925). “Mrs. Carl Meyer and her Children” is a famed family portrait in the collection of the Tate Britain. The exacting replication acts as a kind of inane but playful doubling whereby artifice investigates art. Next to the inverted nudes, this work seems uncannily protected by clothing and light.

 

Alex Robbins is an artist and educator working in Los Angeles, CA. Recent exhibitions of his work have appeared at Atlas House (Ipswich, UK), Commonwealth and Council, (Los Angeles, CA), Luckman Fine Arts Complex - CSU LA, (Los Angeles, CA). He is also the curator of a small experimental exhibition space called The Window located at 1909 7th Ave. Los Angeles, CA 90016.

 

In 2018

Cell, Share, Swivel Chair

January 29, 2018 Roberta Gentry
cellshareswivelchairImages.jpg

Cell, Share, Swivel Chair
Lynne Marinelli Ghenov, Justin Michell, & Adrian Paules
January 6-28, 2018
 

Monte Vista Projects is pleased to announce Cell, Share, Swivel Chair, a three-person exhibition featuring works on paper by Lynne Marinelli Ghenov and Justin Michell and sculptures by Adrian Paules.

In what ways can the infinite possibilities of a specific practice or space be aligned with a finite gridded structure? We often think of structures as rigid constraints, but perhaps a necessary flip side to this can be found in children's playground equipment. In this case, the grid functions as a space of open-ended play, where users continually re-invent new ways of interacting within these forms. In ‘Sade, Fourier, Loyola’ Roland Barthes considered three different authors as what he called “logothetes,” the founders of new discourses. Each began by breaking down their subject matter into discreet units or logical possibilities, and then proceeding to put those pieces to use and make choices among them in a combinatory - a field with its own set of rules or grammar. As Wittgenstein might have put it, logothetes are inventors of new language games.

Structure can take the form of a strict self-imposed method of production, an organized visual code found in source materials to be mutated or reacted against, or a visual syntax within which to arrange a set of elements. The resulting production invites us to ‘read’ it according to its own terms, at the same time that it resists attempts to translate it into speech or written words. This structuring exists independently from the kind of linear, propositional logic found in verbal or written statements - enacting itself directly in space. Each of the artitsts in this exhibition explore these themes in distinct ways.

Lynne Marinelli Ghenov uses graphite on found ledger paper that evokes vivid childhood memories of her parents’ home office. The relic becomes both the site and implement for the artist to invent with and compose new amalgams of forms and objects. The results are akin to a child's inventive mimicry of adult activities like bookkeeping.

Justin Michell employs a purposely limited set of elements in his diagrammatic drawings. Colored blocks, comic strip speech bubbles, and wiry lines of acrylic squeezed from syringes suggest interlocutors engaged in imaginary conversations. These noisily mute rebuses tempt us to decipher while resisting straightforward narrative.

Adrian Paules uses stacks of sawn and finished boards as a three dimensional record of movements and thoughts. Each stack functions as a record of its own making, as well as the logic and subjective decsions attached to these changes. In relation to each other, each scuplture becomes one enactment or iteration selected by the artist from an endless virtual series. 

In 2018
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