6 posts tagged “garden fresh”
David Lowman, Aaron Nather, Michael Pajon.
Project Space: PST “Osculum Infame.”
Opening reception Friday June 1st, 2007, 6 – 10pm.
Exhibition continues through 7th July, 2007.
GARDENfresh is pleased to present David Lowman, Aaron Nather and Michael Pajon three artists whose otherworldly spirit images tread a winding path through torment and joy, despair and love, the cherished and the abject.
David Lowman's recent work highlights perceived natures of god and self. “God’s First Blowjob” served as the gateway to the series, as did prevailing themes of grappling with ultimate power, personal dualities, the life force of sexuality, and humanized imagery of god. Aaron Nather’s current work shows an awkward beauty lurking beneath the surface of beings who struggle with elemental forces in their dreams and nightmares. Their faces express the bittersweet wonder of being alive and wide-awake in a savage, alien, and sadly beautiful universe. Michael deploys a range of images from The Standard American collages that merely hint at the dark side of glossy Americana to the series of Narrative Works. Rural mythic landscapes that display a humanity deprived of inhibition, lawless and chaotic. In these scenes, mobs of frightened angry people mete out violence on solitary victims alone in the woods.
Project Space: PST “Osculum Infame.”
“Osculum Infame” invites questions as to the darker mechanics of the creative imagination, its role in the achievement of “justified true belief,” and the necessity of duplicity for self-knowledge. It’s in these subjects that we find the answer to the age-old question: “On what do our lives depend?” - PST is an acronym for post/send/tell, the most common forms of communication in massively multiplayer online gaming environments. PST makes art of and about role-playing and video games.
- Alejandra Abad, Mark Beasley, Frederick Elms, Joshua Felix, Natasha Fountain,
Aaron Henderson, Tiffany Holmes, Aaron Koelsch, Jared Madere, Matthew Nelson Eliza Ryus, Joshua Stanholz, Emily Siefken, Bruno Torquato -
In communications, a code is a rule for converting a piece of information into another form or representation, not necessarily of the same type. In communications and information processing, encoding is the process by which a source performs this conversion of information into data, which is then sent to a receiver, such as a data processing system.
Wikipedia“Code is the only language that is executable.”
Lev ManovichVOID: The Presence of Absence
Opening May 18, 2007In January of 2007, fourteen artists at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago began a fourteen-week investigation of the practice of programming for drawing. According to Whitney curator Christiane Paul, code is the “paint and canvas” of the digital artist. Yet code transcends traditional mediums because it enables artists to literally create their own tools.
VOID: The Presence of Absence exhibition presents a glimpse of the process of learning how to sketch in code. The display of algorithmic drawings includes a series of emulators, or software that generates art using the compositional rules of Giorgio Morandi, Piet Mondrian. Sol Lewitt, and Ellsworth Kelly. Other works include a group of information visualizations and creative responses to depicting time.
Please join us for a reception on May 18th from 6-9pm.
Gallery artists Burtonwood and Holmes are showing new work at the Around the Coyote Gallery in Chicago's Wicker Park neighborhood. Gallery hours are 10 am - 5pm Mon - Fri, noon - 6pm Sat. www.aroundthecoyote.org The show features two brand new sculptures, "subtle Combat" (pictured), and The Law of Diminishing Returns Pt II (part one wasi n our previous show We'll Meet Again) it's a life size mockup of a pillbox replete with video monitors where the guns should be. Work will be available from GARDENfresh by B & H at Bridge Art Fair Chicago, Apr 26 - 30th, 350 W. Mart Plaza. Bridge Art Fair
Here's a sneak peak of art we're bringing to Bridge Art Fair next week, this piece is by Aaron Nather, we're thrilled to have Aaron's work at the fair, you can check out more of his work at www.crickskipper.com
:)
Thanks to Lisa, Elisa and Trish for putting together a great show and to Jeremiah for coordinating it all. Also thanks to everyone who came out to the opening friday night, we posted some of the photos from the opening to flickr , images of the work will be available later in the week, so check back then to get an look at the show in more detail. Also Also big thanx to DJ Emulsion whose tunes we're awesome very atmospheric. Check him out every other tuesday at Sonoteque in Chicago!
You Winsome, You Lose Some
April 13nd – May 12th.
Opening reception Friday April 13th from 6pm – 10pm
TRISH GRANTHAM, ELISA HARKINS, LISA KUPPINGER
GARDENfresh is pleased to present a group show by three upcoming artists spanning from Chicago IL to Portland OR. The unbearable tendency of being cute has become increasingly prevalent in the art-world today. Lisa Kuppinger, Elisa Harkins, and Trish Grantham offer an introspective view of their visionary worlds populated by quirky creatures painted with vivid pallettes.
Lisa Kuppinger, is a Chicago-area artist who “explores the idea of being a wordy worldling through animalism's, hair-brained cookery, hocus pocuses and other billowy riddlings”. Her paintings are filled with glowy fogs and gleamy seams, and have been creeping up in group shows across the country. This is Lisa’s second show with GARDENfresh. When she is not busy making things she can be found “sprinkling sproutlings, looking at bloodshed films, and seesawing with a bearded wheeler”. www.chickenperm.com
The Chicago artist Elisa Harkins (aka Pooper) loves cute stuff. She put in 6 years
as an Internetologist, but all the advertising that comes along with Web programming and designing made her queasy. In response she started drawing large-scale caricatures of her native culture and affixing them to vacant storefronts. She also enjoys making zines (R.I.P., Digital Disobedients), producing tiny videos of fucked-up stuff, DJing from elaborate set lists, Jagerbombs, and dancing, but her favorite past-time is still illegally posting her art on the street. Photos of her work have been published in Lumpen, Punk Planet, and UR Chicago.www.pooptronica.com
Trish Grantham, a self-taught painter and emerging Northwest artist, has truly captured our imagination with her playful works. Using a variety of media and acrylic paint on wood panels, Grantham paints a cast of doe-eyed, cartoon-like characters: Bunny, Robot-Panda, Girl, Carl the Squirrel, Think-Monster, Toast, Birds, and more populate her surfaces. The simple lines and stylized characters parallel Japanese anime, yet the fantasy world they inhabit is wholly original. Appearing alternately wistful, pensive, punch-drunk, in love, or troubled, these characters play out classic themes of good versus evil, and romantic love. They are often surrounded by cartoonish action-lines, scrawled text, or schoolgirlish hearts, and they engage in mysterious antics over complex backgrounds of cumulous clouds in washes of pale blues, greens, or pinks. Like a Japanese manga series, these works pull the viewer into their quirky world. The plotlines, however, are left open. [www.trishgrantham.com]

