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Doze Green in Hi-Fructose

 

Hi-Fructose Volume 35

April 2015 Issue

The golden figure in "Arawak" is large, both in size – the canvas is 40” x 30” – and presence.  Powerful, energetic sweeps of yellow and umber paint connect the bold geometry that comprises his body.  He is muscular, with neck and shoulders as large as a bull’s. His white, unblinking eyes stare out of the canvas unwavering but concerned.  The rounded outline of his body suggests a space suit of organic and futuristic design, leaving the impression that "Arawak" might be an astronaut, a sojourner, a brave man stepping into a strange land.

Sojourners are not uncommon in Doze Green’s work, whether they’re depicted in large-scale murals – like those in Sao Paulo, Brazil and Las Vegas, Nevada, which teem with men, women, gods, beasts, and alphabets both domestic and interdimensional – or whether they take form of a more personal tribute to those people from Green’s past who once traversed the boroughs of New York, bringing life to the streets. —Silke Tudor

* Full article appears in the April 2015 issue of Hi-Fructose Magazine

http://hifructose.com/2015/03/12/hi-fructose-volume-35-preview/

 

JLG 10th Anniversary RECAP

 

Jonathan Levine Gallery celebrated its 10th anniversary last month with The Color and the Fury: 10 Years of Jonathan LeVine Gallery, a commemorative group exhibition featuring limited editions and prints. The last decade was full of significant occasions and the opening reception for this exhibition included many special surprises, such as a site-specific installation, an ice cream cart full of tasty ice cream sandwiches and a limited edition ZINE featuring artist’s quotes and photos taken over the years.

The site-specific installation paying tribute to Jonathan LeVine Gallery consisted of contributions made by dozens of artists, including old photographs, postcards from previous exhibitions, an array of portraits of Jonathan LeVine, handwritten notes, an original sculpture by Michael Leavitt and other pieces of memorabilia from the last decade.

Thank you to all the artists and friends of the gallery who helped us put together this milestone exhibition, and a special thanks to Max Fish for hosting an unforgettable after-party.

 

Copies of the ZINE are available HERE and come in a pack with other goodies, including pins, stickers and unique surprises from our artists. You also don’t want to miss our ONLINE STORE GIVEAWAY where the first 50 orders over $75 will receive a free, limited edition The Color and the Fury poster + stickers! You can see all the prints exhibited HERE.

 

 

 

Photo Credit: Adam Wallacavage, Alyssa Rapp, Gail Worley and Joe Russo
 

 

 

Phil Hale featured on MAGNET

 

FROM THE DESK OF BOB SCHNEIDER: PHIL HALE

Schneider: I came across Phil Hale‘s paintings about 10 years ago when I was browsing through a fantasy art catalogue. I was blown away, not only by his incredible technique, which is as good as any painter alive today, but his explosive subject matter. All of his paintings are snapshots of something going horribly awry, but what exactly that might be is anyone’s guess. As his work has evolved, he has grown into a force to be reckoned with in the fine-arts world, where he regularly shows at some of the most prestigious galleries in the world. I recently asked him a few questions for MAGNET.

What is your main inspiration for your upcoming exhibit?
Phil Hale: The inspiration is going to sound technical or tedious I’m afraid. The content comes from slowly building up a store of images—almost all documentary images from the internet, old photos, etc. I take what I like and stick them on the studio wall without really thinking about it beyond the initial impulse (which is just unexamined interest). But when they are all together, it is easy to see what I am interested in, and it side-steps any sort of self-censoring. If I were to choose my content it would be deformed by all sorts of interfering consciousness and self-awareness. This block of images is a very pure map of my interest and if I followed it through mechanically it would provide a very rarified product. But that’s almost impossible to do (follow it through faithfully).

And then I am working on finding a way to develop how I make paintings. What to avoid. There is a constant run of counter-intuitive information such as why pieces get worse or more boring as they are refined. Why is conscious effort so painful to see in the painting? Why do I pursue ways of painting that have never really paid off? How can I step outside of my own boring and familiar decisions? It feels like I am trying to align irreconcilable elements; that at best there will be a temporary equilibrium or stay of execution. Those terms aren’t so awful.

Sorry to talk in such fruity terms—but there you go. I’m a bit resistant to examine what content might be because the pieces are not making a point or directing anything in any meaningful way. They are closer to a body of instinctively bodged material that I have then had to improvise into something sympathetic. If I stopped to think about it, I would get bogged down in all sorts of fraud and manipulation. Half the time I’m just trying to protect the work from my own fake sentimental reflexes. I’m not a big fan of professionalism or methodically achieving something worthwhile. Much better to work with something weak and unsuitable and have to extemporize.

How often do you paint? Do you have a daily routine?
Right now, every day while I prepare for the show. But I tend to do it in an intensive four- , five- , six-month run and then collapse. I’m not sure I recommend that; in fact, it seems insane. But to paint properly seems to take a serious effort—to get up to speed—and then you don’t want to stop. The stopping, starting, on, off, etc., is fatal. I love a regular working routine, but I’m also desperate to stop.

How has the global economic situation effected the art market?
I can’t really say anything about the global market. When the recession hit, I was doing a lot of formal portraiture here in London. I don’t think it was so powerfully affected because it is more of a high craft than art (unfortunately). And London is nearly unique in its market for portraiture. It is still part of the infrastructure here, unbelievably.

I know most artists listen to music when they work. Is that the case with you? Who are you listening to now when you paint?
I’m listening to Mogwai; I have been for six months. Listening to a CD obsessively is the single greatest pleasure in my professional life. The Mogwai is so fantastic. I used Mogwai as a working title for the show. It was very useful, a tone note to keep me honest. Can you please name-check Mogwai? When am I making their vid? When I open the door of the studio, I go straight to the CD player. When the first song begins I drop right into where I left off the day before.

A story for you: I did a lot of painting to one of your live Frunk CDs last year. There cannot be anyone who has ever listened to that CD more; every day for eight hours on repeat for two or three months. I knew every cough, chair squeak, clothing rustle, pause, everything, every molecule of every instant. All those random textural ambient colloidal atmospheres were just as musical as what you were doing (sorry). I anticipated them with real pleasure and then they arrived. It was thrilling; no exaggeration.

When did you decide that you wanted to be an artist? If you could be something else, what would you do?
I came from a family where it was standard to do art, so I was always going to be doing it. If I didn’t make art (which is to say that not only do I do it but people pay me top do it), then I would do music in some form. How bland and unhelpful is that?

Do you have any New Years resolutions?
I should make one now, really. To pay attention and not slip into an auto-pilot zone. Is that too general? Not enough paying attention. Pay more attention.

Did you get anything good for Christmas?
I got a fantastic bottle of port from the cellars of Cambridge University.

http://www.magnetmagazine.com/2015/03/04/from-the-desk-of-bob-schneider-philip-hale/

 

Jeff Soto x Oreo Collab

 

Jeff Soto was one of the 10 global artists asked by Oreo to creatively illustrate their new campaign called “Play With Oreo”. According to Rae Ann Fera, Jeff Soto says he was asked to interpret three words integral to the Oreo experience: dunk, roll, and twist (other artists were given other words, such as dream and wonder). Jeff states that "As a skateboarder, roll was the idea that really resonated with me and I came up with some fun and colorful ideas. I wanted to create a fun world filled with Oreos, rainbows, and my characters rolling around on skateboards and skates. The main character is made up of clouds, bubbles, and crystals that look delicious and edible—the whole painting is like a moving playground." You can check out the new campaign everywhere around the streets of New York, Los Angeles, and Indianapolis throughout March! For more details about this Collaboration, click HERE.

Haroshi featured on The Creators Project

 

Haroshi’s Sculptures Turn Broken Skateboards into Art

By Sami Emory

Japanese artist Haroshi has stepped off his board and into the studio once again for his new series of repurposed skate deck sculptures. Still Pushing Despite The Odds, his third solo exhibition at Jonathan LeVine Gallery, features the self-taught artist’s statuesque reflections upon the resilience of skateboarders amid their daily grinds. Through the sculptures’ subtle color schemes and minutely carved details, the show is as much a tribute to Haroshi’s own background as a skateboarder as it is to the sport as an art form.

Throughout his painstakingly precise craft process—likened to the ancient technique used to sculpt Japanese Great Buddhas—Haroshi individually selects and then stacks skateboard decks into a solid, glued cube of recycled wood. Then, the artist chisels, carves, and shreds the boards, extracting from each shapeless block animals, faces, and even cars. Finally, he gives each sculpture a “soul” by hiding within it an old piece of one of his own, broken boards.

As a complement to his sculptures, Haroshi is staging his show in an environment of recycled relics. According to the press release, "In Still Pushing Despite the Odds, Haroshi incorporated articles of low-technology from the early to mid-1900s. Vintage items such as neon signs, dental tools and roller skates create a striking textural contrast when paired with the smooth silhouette of the skate decks and illustrate the artist’s passion for innovation."

Below, a selection of works from Still Pushing Despite The Odds:

http://thecreatorsproject.vice.com/blog/haroshis-sculptures-turn-broken-skateboards-into-art

 

Phil Hale featured on Arrested Motion

 

Previews: Phil Hale – “Life Wants to Live” @ Jonathan LeVine Gallery

Tonight in Chelsea at Jonathan LeVine Gallery (529 West 20th Street), accomplished illustrator and artist Phil Hale will be presenting his first solo stateside in the last four years. Life Wants to Live will feature the London-based artist’s oil on linen paintings as well as drawings in a cohesive body of work in both subject matter and atmospheric language. The new pieces are a testament to the disjointed and uncertain times society is currently faced with, strewn with scenes of disaster and debris fields. Rendered in his distorted aesthetic and with a somber palette, Hale’s haunting imagery won’t be soon forgotten by those who see it.

http://arrestedmotion.com/2015/02/previews-phil-hale-life-wants-to-live-jonathan-levine-gallery/

 

Jonathan LeVine Interview with All City Canvas

Jonathan LeVine Interview with All City Canvas: Part I & II

As Jonathan Levine Gallery turns 10 this year, All City Canvas pays tribute to the man behind one of New York’s most prestigious art galleries. We sat down for an afternoon chat with founder Jonathan Levine for a mind-blowing time travel tale, going from his beginnings in the counterculture world of art, punk rock and fanzines, to curating shows at Maxwell’s, Max Fish and CBGB’s, to opening Tin Man Alley in New Hope alongside his mother, to working with Shepard Fairey and Gary Baseman. Along the way, he reveals some of the amazing adventures he has gone through to get where he is today, from bagels to tin toys.

Watch below, Part I & II of an intimate peek at how it all began for Jonathan Levine.

 

 

Haroshi featured on Spoon & Tamago

 

New Wooden Sculptures Made From Recycled Skateboards by Haroshi

Tokyo-based artist Haroshi began skateboarding at the age of 15. But as he amassed interest in the sport, so too did his pile of skateboard decks and broken parts. Skaters will tell you that they go through new decks in 1 – 3 months. Some will even replace their decks every week so you can imagine how quickly these pile up. But instead of throwing them away, Haroshi decided to keep them.

One day, when he decided to cut into one of the decks, Haroshi discovered a fascinating wooden mosaic pattern that was a result of the laminated layers of wood. The self-taught artist, now 37, has created dozens of sculptures over the last decade and his latest creations are part of an upcoming solo exhibition in New York at Jonathan Levine Gallery.

“Still Pushing Despite the Odds” opens this week on February 19 and incorporates “articles of low-technology from the early to mid-1900s. Vintage items such as neon signs, dental tools and roller skates create a striking textural contrast when paired with the smooth silhouette of the skate decks,” says the gallery. “Throughout their lifespan together the skater and his board get battered, but even so they get up again to face the obstacles in their path,” says Haroshi, explaining the meaning behind the title of his show.

Although not always visible, Haroshi incorporates every part of the old skateboard into his sculptures. The metallic, non-malleable parts are often placed in the center as a “soul” of the sculpture. The process mimics a certain Japanese tradition: the sculpting of Great Buddhas. “90% of Buddha statues in Japan are carved from wood, and built using [the same method]” expalined Haroshi. Unkei, a 12-th century Japanese sculptor of Buddhas would set a crystal ball called Shin-Gachi-Rin (Heart Moon Circle) in the position of the Buddha’s heart.

“Still Pushing Despite the Odds” runs through March 21, 2015.

http://www.spoon-tamago.com/2015/02/16/new-wooden-sculptures-made-from-recycled-skateboards-by-haroshi/

 

New Interview with Jonathan LeVine

VantagePoint is a bi-weekly radio show hosted by James ‘JB’ Bullough (co-founder of mural collective JBAK) and Tom Auto64. Each episode features an established artist or someone related to the post graffiti/urban art/contemporary art scene and bridges the gap between the artwork hanging on gallery walls around the world, and the artists who create that work. Their last episode featured a really cool interview with Jonathan LeVine followed by a playlist of songs chosen by Jonathan. You can listen to the interview HERE.

Saner featured on Hyperallergic

 

In the Face of Violence, a Mexican Artist Finds Sanity in Stereotypes

By Julie Schwietert Collazo

Photos by Francisco Collazo

When Mexico City artist Edgar Flores, aka Saner, started talking with New York City’s Jonathan LeVine Gallery about his first solo show with the space, the 43 students in the rural town of Ayotzinapa, Mexico, who would be kidnapped and disappeared by military and police in late September 2014, were still going about their daily lives. Mexicans around the country hadn’t yet taken to the streets for months of protests. The Mexican attorney general hadn’t yet held a press conference in which he would report that the students had been thrown on a burning pyre and incinerated beyond even forensic recognition. And an intrepid young man named Adán Cortés hadn’t yet tried to draw international attention to the disappearances by interrupting the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony, running towards the winners with the Mexican flag and begging youth activist Malala Yousafzai to talk about what was happening to young people in Mexico.

Nevertheless, for anyone who is familiar with the story about the disappeared students, a twisting (and twisted) tale involving state complicity that has gripped the entire country, the more than 30 works in Primitivo (Spanish for “primitive”) will seem eerily prescient and relevant, as will the name and theme of the exhibition and the philosophy informing it.

“It’s called ‘Primitivo’ because in this ‘sophisticated’ world we live in, we believe that we’re people who have achieved so much, that we’ve invented so much in the realm of technology, that we live such stable and comfortable lives,” Saner told me during a walk-through preview of the show the day before it opened to the public. “But in certain moments, we behave a lot like primitive people. If we look at a number of situations around the world, it seems that we’re more primitive than ever. We have no problem flattening other people in our own pursuit of what we want.”

These are the ideas that Saner, who started his career as a street artist, engages in Primitivo. The works draw on imagery from ancient indigenous Mexican cultures: there’s a wolf mask over the face of a man dressed in a contemporary suit, a cheetah mask hiding the face of a mariachi in full dress, and jade and wooden masks obscuring the faces of lovers locked in an embrace. The identities of burly-bodied cartel members with coarse, powerful hands are protected by animal masks, and the image of the wolf in sheep’s clothing, a recurring symbol in Saner’s work, makes an appearance in the series as well. But the notion of the “primitive” is applied in another sense, too, one that Saner hopes will give viewers of his work reason to pause.

“We often use the word ‘primitive’ to talk about our baser behaviors and impulses, our raw instincts,” he said, “But I’m also exploring the idea of ‘primitive’ here by acknowledging that so-called primitive people often had a much more sophisticated, profound relationship with the world than we do. They respected the world in which they lived more than we do. They realized that they couldn’t be sewing and reaping simultaneously. It would help us to remember that, to recall that we’re part of a longer, larger past. The symbols in these pieces — the jade, the feathers, the masks — aren’t just about obscuring; they’re about recalling that living in harmony with our surroundings is possible, that it’s something to aspire to.”

Only a couple weeks passed between Saner’s initial talks with the gallery and the devastating events in Ayotzinapa. As the complicated narrative of the kidnapping unfolded and the role of the state in the students’ disappearance became clearer, the symbolism of the theme and motifs visible in the works in Primitivo gained greater power, and Saner began conceptualizing a few additional pieces specifically about the missing students to include in the show. “I’m not a demonstrator in the streets,” he said, referring to thousands of Mexicans who have participated in peaceful protests around the country since the students’ disappearances. “What I have is my pen and my brush.”

Saner’s work has always had political and social elements, even when he was a young street artist. And it wasn’t only in his colorful murals where the ideas he continues to explore today were evident. “My first street art name was SPIC,” he said, explaining that he has played with and contested the ways in which people see and name one another throughout his career. SPIC was a reappropriation of the derogatory term “’spic,” short for “Hispanic,” that was used more commonly in the early 1990s than it is now. Over time, he changed his street tag to Saner, saying that the new name reflected his growing interest in the labels of and relationship between the concepts of “sane” and “crazy.”

As his work has evolved and his profile has become more visible, however, Saner has been confronted with many of the same questions about power and progress that his art — now mainly on paper and canvas — tends to tackle. He is acutely aware, for example, that exhibiting his work in a New York City gallery to deep-pocketed buyers who likely know little, if anything, about contemporary Mexican politics and society, could be considered selling out. At the same time, he points to the fact that the grand Mexican muralists like Diego Rivera, who are often considered (especially by outsiders) as highly political, were often in the employ of the state and charged with the task of painting works that enshrined a certain version of history. The challenge of staying true to the spirit of street art while stepping into the rarefied world of the art gallery — a New York art gallery in particular — is one he is learning to negotiate as he goes along, he says. And while the imagery of the pieces in Primitivo is undeniably Mexican in origin and references Mexican history and current events, Saner contends that the viewer doesn’t necessarily need to have reference points from Mexican culture to “get” the work or its message. The idea of the primitive and the impulse to hide behind masks, whether out of discomfort or malice, is one that’s universal, he says.

http://hyperallergic.com/178432/in-the-face-of-violence-a-mexican-artist-finds-sanity-in-stereotypes/

 

JLG Presents: DYNAMO EDITIONS

Jonathan LeVine Gallery is proud to present Dynamo Editions, a new online venture by Jonathan LeVine and Ken Golden. The site showcases limited edition, single run prints from established and emerging contemporary artists. Currently Dynamo is presenting inaugural prints by Kevin Cyr and Gary Taxali, hand numbered and signed, for you to enjoy. In the coming months, you will find bold and innovative work created by an impressive roster of artists. We want Dynamo Editions to be your go-to source for limited edition but in order to stay up to date with Dynamo Editions print releases, it is essential that you SIGN UP HERE.