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Mana Urban Arts Project: Augustine Kofie

Mana Urban Arts Project and Jonathan Levine Gallery present this short video documenting Los Angeles-based artist Augustine Kofie’s addition to the Ice House, the latest from an ongoing collaboration. Kofie harmonizes differing shapes and angles in his work by setting futuristic compositions against vintage earth-toned palettes and collaged graphics, creating organically complex formations through meticulously structured line work and layering.

Kofie describes his process, both in collage and in painting, as one of building, like an architect making a model in two dimensions for a structure that will never be built. The found materials are the first building blocks of this process, and the painting and drawing that follows brings them into new purpose and new life. “I’m not building brand new systems, I’m building systems that have existed and have been forgotten,” he says.

https://vimeo.com/146925618

Faith47 featured on Mass Appeal

 

How Faith47 Translates Her Public Art for the Gallery

By Mike Steyels

There’s always a battle within an artist when it comes to bringing street art or graffiti into the confines of a gallery. The ideas that make art work in a public space don’t always translate well when brought indoors. Usually, the problem is one of tone, learning to use an ‘indoor voice.’ In the street, most artists clamber for attention, struggling to be heard above the din of noise created by hundreds or thousands of people crammed into one area together, all going about their own business. But when you’ve got the room to yourself, there’s no need to yell.

Faith47 has never tried to dominate a space though. The power of her public work is actually created by absorbing itself into its surroundings. She adopts the texture and colors of the surface being painted on and uses its shapes to find a composition. Rather than erasing what’s already there, she accentuates it. The paintings take into consideration the area and work within that context, which is frequently reflected in the content of her work, like portraits of Durban street vendors or images of abandoned cars.

So the question is different for her when it comes to a gallery show. How does she continue along that path, now that she’s speaking to a more selective public who have come to see her create something from scratch? The answer can be found at her show at the Jonathan Levine Gallery in New York, which opened this week, where she managed to combine the many and separate human stories from her prolific travels into one collective whole.

Called Aqua Regalia, the purpose of the show is to make the everyday sacred, and its centerpiece is a shrine dedicated to objects she’s gathered along her world-wide way. An assemblage of truly random bits and pieces, it does accomplish this. Under a shed roof addition with candles and incense lit at its base, a mix-and-match of shelves host things like pill bottles, little boxes, gold flakes, and lanterns. Pasted and nailed to the wall are sketches, old signs, and maps. Various types of paper currency in small amounts are strung across the top like festive decorations. Leaves kept pressed in books even make the cut. In the middle of it all is one of her canvases, adding a touch of regalness to the whole scene.

All the objects are all individual little items, odd pieces of ephemera, but Faith arranges them all together in a way that captures her aesthetic. The familiar rough textures and angular lines with golden bits and splashes run all throughout it. While the items on display may only be discarded, leftover objects that even the individuals they once belonged to may have deemed worthless, together they tell an engaging story full of mystery, loss, and history.

Opposed to organized religion in her personal beliefs, the South African artist reimagines religious imagery in a way that worships mankind and nature. The Santeria-style candles and ritual use of incense, the saint-like figures, and influence of sacred geometry are all used for secular purposes, drawing our spiritual gaze down towards earthly things.

She uses found objects for the texture behind paintings and drawings shown as well, recreating the feeling of her murals. There’s heavily worn, compressed wood panels, old manilla files, and pamphlets that all tell something of a tale in themselves. Blank surfaces are used as well, and she creates textures of her own that resemble the lived-in and worn-down walls she so much admires. Faith uses techniques like layering transparent paint to give the appearance of stains, cracking gold leaf stripes that may as well have battled the elements bravely, drips appearing as grooves across canvases, the edges of stencil oversprayings, and blotches that mirror darkened gum stuck to a side walk. She also frames collages with as diverse an input as a well-papered wall on a busy strip, full of sketches, lottery tickets, notes, and posters from all over the globe.

As interesting as her paintings and pieces are, they feel like small scale replicas, like gift-shop versions of her larger murals. There’s value in that, the ability for your average person (who can afford it) to hang their own piece of hers at home or their place of work. But it’s obvious she’s more passionate about the street having ownership over her work.

The truest distillation of all the urban environments she’s experienced and interacted with is found with the shrine centerpiece. As an artist that has traveled to many more places than the majority of people, combined with her guerrilla experiences as a street artist exploring spots overlooked by even those living nearby, she’s seen so much. Those stories deserve to travel too. And Faith47 offers us a glimpse of them, presented in a way that captures her personal style.

http://massappeal.com/faith47-jonathan-levine-gallery-aqua-regalia-street-art/

 

 

Gary Taxali on WideWalls

 GARY TAXALI EXHIBITION SHOWS STYLIZED SUGGESTIVE VISUALS AT JONATHAN LEVINE GALLERY

Artist Gary Taxali has traveled quite a bit lately and during his trips he often wondered what does it mean to be “there”? If everything in this planet is connected, (and so it seems), is there truly a difference between here and there? Or is it all one and everything is here? Inspired by this dilemma and his continuous journeys to the Far East, he produced his latest series of artworks that will be on view at Hotel There solo show at Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York.

Vintage Pop Art Imagery by Gary Taxali
Gary Taxali is internationally known for his lively characters and vintage, hand-drawn typography. His imagery is deeply influenced by graphics and prints from the Depression-era, especially those present in comic books and advertising. Gary Taxali has always had a fascination with time and self-awareness, as well as the human ability to consciously live in the now. His pop art imagery and colorful compositions are packed with witty social commentary and imaginative, entertaining subjects. His work tugs at our heart strikes with references to nostalgia and makes us think through graphic juxtapositions.

Welcome to the Hotel There
In the previous 18 months, Gary Taxali has traveled to China and India and these recent trips have inspired the works that will be exhibited at Hotel There solo show. These works represent an array of emotions including love, hope, happiness, but also isolation, pain and fear experienced during the long journeys. In Hotel There exhibition Gary Taxali explores the concept of “there“, and since everything in this world is closely connected the artist finds this term superfluous. And while denying the existence of “there“, he comes to the conclusion that the “journey is not to a location, it’s to us“ and that every road is a road to self-awareness.

http://www.widewalls.ch/gary-taxali-exhibition-jonathan-levine-gallery/

 

New Murals by Faith47

In anticipation of her deput exhibition at Jonathan LeVine Gallery, as well as in New York City, Faith47 created a series of new murals all around the world.  With a street art carrer spanning over 15 years, she attempts to disarm the strategies of global realpolitik in order to advance the expression of personal truth. In this way, her work is both an internal and spiritual release that speaks to the complexities of the human condition, its deviant histories and existential search.  Take a look below at a selection of murals she painted in 2015. 

ESTAMOS TODOS LOS QUE CABEMOS, HARLEM, 2015

LANDFILL MEDITATION, SOUTH AFRICA, 2015

LAY YOUR WEAPONS DOWN, WILLIAMSBURG, NYC, 2015

LE PUISSANCE PSYCHIQUE DES ANIMAUX, MONTREAL, 2015

MY HANDS AND YOUR HEART EXIST ONLY IN A FRAME OF UNDERSTANDING PARTICULAR TO ONE’S OWN ILLUSION, TAIPEI, 2015

TE ‘HINA ARO, TAHITI, 2015

THE PSYCHIC POWER OF ANIMALS, NEW YORK, 2015 

THE PSYCHIC POWER OF ANIMALS, NEW YORK, 2015

 

 

Studio Visit with Augustine Kofie

Augustine Kofie (b. 1973 in Los Angeles, California) is inspired by the basic building blocks of the geometric world and has formed a retro-futuristic aesthetic, transplanting shapes and angles into an organic, yet highly mathematical form of abstraction. Merging his traditional graffiti education with his deep love of illustration and architectural renderings, he plays with form, line, balance and depth, twisting and manipulating his compositions into new and dramatic arrangements.

For his debut solo exhibiton at the gallery, Kofie created new collages and works on canvas that explore the important role inventory plays in his work. The inventory in question consists of found press- or chip-board, a heavier paper stock used in packaging and office supplies from the 1950s to the 1980s: steno notepads, file folders, envelopes, index cards, or industrial packaging designed, printed and manufactured in the USA. He begins by drawing small case studies on notepaper or note pads—loose leafed, easily discardable. These become reference for collage work, in which the discovery and collection of forsaken materials is the first step. Next, the materials enter his studio, where they are meticulously inventoried—archived by color palette, thickness, and category in vintage industrial file cabinets, “sometimes for years, sometimes for that day,” until they make their way into an assemblage. Finally, layers of pencil, ballpoint pen, silkscreen, and acrylic ink cover the assemblage, making it cohere.

Below are images and a video that document the artistic process Kofie underwent creating these new works.  INVENTORY opens on November 21, 2015.

 

Dylan Egon Collaboration with Chanel

The Fall 2015 issue of NO TOFU Magazine features a Chanel Beauty editorial spread that includes new art objects by Dylan Egon. Model Enly Tamella is accessorized in a helmet, headpiece and storm trooper armor created by Egon, all of which fit his aesthetic of merging art and design, as well as highlight his commitment to fine craftsmenship. Below is also an image of his piece IGNI FERROQUE (‘brass knuckle’) shot by Tuukka Koski for a forthcoming book about motocycles.  All of these one of a kind objects will be featured in Egon’s next solo exhibition.

Photographer: Jamie Nelson

 

 

In the Gallery with Brett Amory

Brett Amory | This Land Is Not For Sale: Forgotten, Past and Foreseeable Futures

Brett Amory continues to develop his Waiting series in This Land Is Not For Sale: Forgotten, Past and Foreseeable Futures, his third solo show at the gallery that explores the gentrification of New York City’s Lower East Side.  In this new body of work Amory offers viewers an insider’s historical road map of the East Village, from ABC NO RIO and The Nuyorican Poets Cafe to the headquarters of The Catholic Worker and Moshe’s Bakery. In works on canvas, as well as a site-specific installation, he captures the breathtaking physical presence of these neighborhood landmarks and movingly conveys the sense of the artist as witness. Watch the video below to learn more about Amory’s artistic process and his views on the ever-changing neighborhood.

Courtesy of Child’s Play Films

Editor and Videographer: David Givens

 

Mana Urban Arts Project: How & Nosm

How & Nosm finished a new mural in Jersey City this month as part of the latest edition to the Mana Urban Arts Project, a collaboration between Mana Contemporary and Jonathan LeVine Gallery. The piece, titled At the Center of It All, explores themes that the artist duo, as well as twin brothers, think are univercally common. Subjects such as danger, aggression, violence, greed, materialism and narcissism are depicted through different cues and symbols. By highlighting these everyday social ailments, the New York-based artists hope to question the human approach to the pursuit of happiness and ask what is really at the center of it all.  Using their signature color palette consisting of shades of red against black & white, the two were able to show their impressive can control as well as the ability to use very different styles. From geo-based patterns and shapes, Hokusai-influenced elements, graffiti-based characters or totemic structures to surrealist compositions, this large wall is another maze of incredible visuals that takes time to dissect and absorb. While creating both gallery pieces as well as public works, How and Nosm hope their art is more than a decorative element and can give people a chance to pause, connect and find some relief and happiness.

Big thanks to Joe Russo Photography for documenting the entire process.

 

 

 

 

Seonna Hong featured on WIRED

 

 The Soundtrack to Painter Seonna Hong’s Dream Worlds

Los Angeles artist Seonna Hong paints fantastical landscapes, on canvas, and in the pages of books. The scenes are often navigated by a young girl, a stand-in for Hong herself. Her newest solo show is called “If You Lived Here, I’d Be Home by Now,” and is currently on display at Jonathan LeVine Gallery in New York. I asked her to come up with an imaginary soundtrack to go with the work, but it turned out, she already had a soundtrack in place: There were specific songs that had served as inspiration for specific paintings.

Where does the show’s name come from?
“If You Lived Here, I’d Be Home by Now” is a play on the architectural planned home communities that say “if you lived here, you’d be home by now,” but for me, it’s about connection and, at the heart of it, a “home is where the heart is” kind of thing. Having connection with people, or someone in particular, and feeling like that place is home once you find that.

When I’m putting a show together, music is a huge part of what inspires me. It has an indelible impact and imprint on me. I can hear a song and completely go back to a specific time in my life, and not just the memory of it, but I can remember how I felt then. Or a certain relationship.

Come Undone is named for an Isobel Campbell and Mark Lanegan song. That song is, to me, about when a connection maybe sometimes is so strong that it kind of wrecks you a little bit. Because it’s rare when that connection happens. The times I have experienced that, it’s been pretty knee-wobbling. [Laughs.]

 

Are there other paintings named after specific songs?
That’s Us/Wild Combination is named after the song by Arthur Russell. I’m that annoying person that you’re driving with that will play a song over and over and over again in the car. I will hit repeat. Or a particular album, especially if it means something to me. This was a song somebody sent to me, and then listening to it, it just has a really big impact. When people exchange music, it says a lot about a person.

 

What about paintings that don’t get their names from songs?
PJ Harvey, “It’s You.” [Wonder Twin] isn’t named for that song, but that song has a lot of meaning for me. This time, I was affected by the music before the lyrics. It’s got this low feeling. It just feels like when you’re consumed by someone. I’ve only played this song for one person.

 

Has a song ever directly influenced the look of one of your paintings?
“Our Way to Fall” by Yo La Tengo. I love that song. [The Way We Fall] was probably the most direct from the song interpretation for the painting, because I just straight-up love part of the lyrics, and wanted to put them into a painting. Again, this idea of a connection, and that even if its fleeting or just a teeny piece of it, just acknowledging it and capturing it and appreciating it.

 

What about music’s influence on the feeling of a piece?
“Limit to Your Love” by James Blake (Feist cover). This is about those things that you crave in a relationship that you wish a person would give you and sometimes would give you if they could. But also the limitations in myself, and sometimes how I have to compartmentalize. In [Map with No Ocean] the girl is sort of corralled in, and for me, in my life right now, I’m looking for wide open spaces.

http://www.wired.com/2015/10/imaginary-playlist-seonna-hong/

 

 

Brett Amory featured on The Bowery Boogie

Brett Amory’s ‘This Land is Not for Sale’ Exhibit is a Breathing Commentary on LES Gentrification

By Lori Greenberg

Can artists prevail where politics and protests haven’t?

Brett Amory’s new exhibit, “This Land is Not for Sale: Forgotten, Past and Foreseeable Futures,” is a thought-provoking form of visual protest against rapid gentrification and a changing New York City.

The California-based Amory is known for his “Waiting” series of paintings, which depicted haunted and lonely scenes of London and San Francisco. Turning his focus to the Lower East Side, his new works capture a disappearing neighborhood, representing now-shuttered iconic landmarks (CBGB, Mars Bar), along with surviving sites that remain open for now (Block Drug Stores, Yonah Schimmel Knishery, Economy Candy, Katz’s), but seem anachronistic among an ever-expanding series of generic high rises and chain stores.

Viewers enter the Jonathan LeVine Gallery through a faux-construction scaffolded entrance representing the city being “sledgehammered into gentrification.” A small diamond-shaped glass window, set in to the entrance area, allows viewers to peer at a miniature model depicting the aftermath of the recent East Village gas explosion on Second Avenue.

Later tonight, there will be a panel “bringing together some of the legendary figures and activists of the Lower East Side to explore gentrification.” Moderated by author Alan Kaufman, the panel will include Brett Amory; Lincoln Anderson, Editor-in-Chief of The Villager; Clayton Patterson, LES-based photographer and activist; Jose “Cochise,” the founder and former leader of the notorious Satan’s Sinner Nomads (the last gang to fly colors in LES) and author of the forthcoming Street Gangs of the Lower East Side; and Lorcan Otway, the Director of Theater 80 on St. Mark’s.

“This Land is Not For Sale” is currently running through November 14.

The free panel discussion, open to the public, will take place tonight at the Jonathan LeVine Gallery, 557C West 23 St, at 6:30pm. 

http://www.boweryboogie.com/2015/10/brett-amorys-land-not-sale-exhibit-breathing-commentary-les-gentrification/

 

 

Studio Visit with Brett Amory on Juxtapoz

BRETT AMORY "THIS LAND IS NOT FOR SALE:

FORGOTTEN, PAST AND FORESEEABLE FUTURES"

Brett Amory’s exhibition This Land is Not For Sale: Forgotten, Past and Foreseeable Futures, opens at Jonathan LeVine Gallery in NYC this evening. We stopped by his studio a few weeks ago to catch him in the process of working on the new series of paintings.

http://www.juxtapoz.com/current/brett-amory-this-land-is-not-for-sale-forgotten-past-and-foreseeable-futures