Showing posts with label Parker Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parker Gallery. Show all posts

01/04/24

Artist Annabeth Marks @ Parker Gallery, Los Angeles - " Continuous Time" Exhibition

Annabeth Marks: Continuous Time
Parker Gallery, Los Angeles
March 16 – April 27, 2024
“Color is an affirmation of presence so strong that it is almost human, almost alive.”
 - Etel Adnan
Parker Gallery presents Continuous Time, ANNABETH MARKS’ debut solo presentation at the gallery. The exhibition features an ensemble of new constructed paintings, including the largest and most complex examples to date, marking a considerable scale shift within this body of work.

Annabeth Marks is known for her woven paintings in rich, finely tuned color. Constructed out of painted canvas, their final form is the result of a series of actions expressed over long stretches of time, in a process of constant revision and transformation. Cut, layered and woven pieces form the variably loose and tightly gridded structure of her paintings, which themselves can be viewed as meditations on change itself. Removed from and extending beyond the confines of the stretcher, Annabeth Marks’ paintings encompass sculptural form and embodied presence. 

While the grid is a loose motif across her practice, each painting has its own unique internal logic and structural integrity, each its own specific color scheme charged with associative and emotive qualities. The artist hand mixes her own paint in order to achieve the desired vibration of hues within the work, in some cases highlighting a solid tone—as in Silver Spirit and Iron Rich Edge—or building on relational combinations to activate a different kind of energy. 
As Annabeth Marks notes, “While painting, color structures this investigation of material and pictorial space, it is the matter that moves between forms and projects out towards the viewer. I create visual relationships in my work that weave the eye in and out, between solid, flat color and depth, between illusion and the material complexity of a surface. The paintings are high chroma - I am interested in the gut level emotional currency that highly saturated color provokes.”
The largest works in the exhibition have a direct relationship to the scale of the human body, the woven elements knitting together like a rib cage. In Silver Spirit, a productive tension between color uniformity and surface relief combine to create a work that relishes in minute gestures of difference. Another work, Slipper, features a central red abstraction on dark ground, surrounded by a contrasting matte application of solid pink. Tabs of varying widths and lengths extend beyond the stretcher, drawing the eye down just as the center draws you in. 

Also on view are a selection of the artist’s Weaving paintings, intimately scaled works that combine overlapping vertical and horizontal painted lines in variable color combinations, producing a grid like pattern of opacity and translucency. Like the constructed paintings, these works hold in balance gesture, form and time.

ANNABETH MARKS (b. 1986 in Rochester, NY, lives and works between NYC and VT). Recent solo exhibitions include those held at Canada Gallery, New York, NY (2022), Franz Kaka, Toronto, Ontario (2022), Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI (2021), Fahrenheit Madrid Gallery, Madrid, Spain (2020) and White Columns, New York, NY (2017). Recent group exhibitions include A Project Curated by Artists: 15 Years of ACP, Morán Morán, Los Angeles, CA (2023), Something To Do With Pleasure, 12.26, Dallas, TX (2023), The Holographic Principle, Philip Martin Gallery, Los Angeles, CA (2023), Tennessee Triennial, organized by Tri-Star Arts, Knoxville Museum of Art, Knoxville, TN (2023) and Possessed: Eckhaus Latta, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York NY (2018). Her work is included in the collection of the Knoxville Museum of Art, Knoxville, TN.

PARKER GALLERY
2441 Glendower Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90027

23/09/17

Artist Franklin Williams: 1963–1973 @ Parker Gallery, Los Angeles, California

Franklin Williams: 1963–1973 
Parker Gallery, Los Angeles 
September 17 – November 4, 2017 

Parker Gallery presents a solo exhibition of early works by FRANKLIN WILLIAMS, made between 1963 and 1973: Franklin Williams: 1963-1973.

Franklin Williams was born in Ogden, Utah in 1940. The value of handicraft was paramount in the Williams household, where his grandmother and mother made everything from quilts to hand-painted wallpaper, while his Uncle George carved figures out of vegetables, among other creative pursuits. He learned to sew and crochet at an early age; skills that he would continue to use throughout his artistic practice. When dyslexia prevented Franklin Williams from learning to read and write until adulthood, his mother encouraged his artistic pursuits by transforming their basement apartment into an art studio.

Franklin Williams attended California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, where he received a BFA in 1964 and an MFA in 1966. Franklin Williams was implored by Fred Martin to begin teaching at the San Francisco Art Institute, assuring the reluctant young artist wary of his competence, “Your gift is what counts.” At the Art Institute, Franklin Williams taught alongside Joan Brown, Bruce Conner, Jay DeFeo and Bruce Nauman. Franklin Williams was included in the landmark 1967 Funk exhibition at the Berkeley Art Museum, and Whitney Museum Sculpture and Painting Annuals in 1967 & 1968.

Franklin Williams: 1963-73 focuses on the early part of the artist’s  career, from his formative student years through the development of his mature style. Most of the works in the exhibition have never been seen outside of the studio. They include sewn canvas sculptures stuffed with cotton batting and surfaces covered in painted dots and knotted yarn; small, contorted canvases on the brink of bursting; bulging box-like constructions sprouting appendages; and a suite of elegant organic abstractions composed of cut, folded and collaged paper. 

The exhibition is accompanied by a limited edition fully-illustrated catalogue, including reproductions of early exhibition announcements and an essay by writer and curator Eli Diner.

FRANKLIN WILLIAMS (b. 1940 in Ogden, UT, lives and works in Petaluma, CA). Select solo exhibitions include Eye Fruit: The Art of Franklin Williams, Sonoma County Art Museum, Santa Rosa, CA (2017), Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, Logan, UT (1997), Braunstein Gallery, San Francisco, CA (1971-89), Utah Museum of Fine Arts, Salt Lake City, UT (1984), Franklin Williams Paintings & Constructions, San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA (1983), Galerie B, Paris, France (1975), Gallery Marc, Washington, D.C. (1972), Phyllis B. Kind Gallery, Chicago, IL (1969), Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA (1968), Dilexi Gallery, San Francisco, CA (1967), Richmond Art Center, Richmond, CA (1966), and New Mission Gallery, San Francisco, CA (1964). 

PARKER GALLERY
2441 Glendower Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90027

03/06/17

Nut Art Movement @ Parker Gallery, Los Angeles - Inaugural Exhibition

Nut Art
Parker Gallery, Los Angeles
May 28 – August 5, 2017

Parker Gallery presents its inaugural exhibition, Nut Art, featuring works by Robert Arneson, Betty Bailey, Clayton Bailey, Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, Hannah Greely, Calvin Marcus, Maija Peeples-Bright, Benjamin Reiss, Peter Saul, Sally Saul, Harold Schlotzhauer, Richard Shaw, Irvin Tepper, Chris Unterseher and Franklin Williams.

Nut Art is a movement founded in the late 1960s by five Northern California artists: Clayton Bailey, Roy De Forest, David Gilhooly, Maija Peeples-Bright (then Maija Zack, aka Maija Woof) and David Zack. Legend has it, the group was at Roy De Forest’s “purple house under the golden hills of Port Costa, California…looking out the window at some horses and drinking Swan Lager beer.” David Zack, an arts writer and correspondence artist, was searching for a new movement; something that might be an artists’ answer to the Funk moniker adopted by curator Peter Selz. “Roy’s mother Oma came up with a round tray full of open brown bottles of Swan Lager, plus some vegetarian bacon crisps. Everyone said Nut Art at once. Nut Art was born.”(1)

A few Nut Art exhibitions shortly followed, including one organized by Clayton Bailey in 1972 at California State University Hayward. For the exhibition’s staple-bound catalog, De Forest wrote what is commonly referred to as the Nut Art manifesto. The manifesto declares, in all caps:
“THE WORK OF A PECULIAR AND ECCENTRIC NUT CAN TRULY BE CALLED ‘NUT ART’… THE NUT ARTIFICER TRAVELS IN A PHANTASMAGORIC MICRO-WORLD, SMALL AND EXTREMELY COMPACT, AS IS THE LIGHT OF A DWARF STAR IMPLODING INWARD AND IN PASSAGE COLLAPSING PARADISE AND HELL TO ONE AS IT VANISHES FOREVER WITH OUR JOYS, SORROWS AND UNREQUITED LOVE.”(2)
Nut Art at Parker Gallery brings artists from Clayton Bailey’s 1972 exhibition together with contemporary artists who help reveal that the spirit of Nut Art is alive and well. Nut Art includes 10 works from the original exhibition, many of which have not been publicly exhibited since 1972.

(1) David Zack, “Basic Art,” unpublished manuscript, c.1971, 120–21.

(2) Nut Art (Hayward, Calif.: California State University, Hayward, Art Gallery, 1972), n.p.

PARKER GALLERY
2441 Glendower Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90027