Showing posts with label Pasadena. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pasadena. Show all posts

22/07/25

Gabrielle Graessle @ Simchowitz Gallery, Pasadena - "True Romance" Exhibition

Gabrielle Graessle: True Romance 
Simchowitz Gallery, Pasadena 
July 26 – August 30, 2025 

Gabrielle Graessle
Gabrielle Graessle
24 hours of daytona ferrari, 2024 
Acrylic glitter and spray on canvas 
50.50h x 140.50w x 1.25d in 
128.27h x 356.87w x 3.18d cm
© Gabrielle Graessle, courtesy of Simchowitz Gallery

Simchowitz presents True Romance, a solo exhibition of new large-scale paintings by Swiss artist Gabrielle Graessle, at Hill House, Pasadena. 

Gabrielle Graessle lives and works in a small village in southern Spain, where her creative practice is deeply entwined with her daily life—her home, her studio, her dogs, and her inner world. Her paintings reflect this porous relationship between self and setting. Her home is not a retreat from the world, but a stage upon which her distinctive visual language comes to life. Often working across multiple larger-scale canvases at once, Gabrielle Graessle constructs her compositions through layers of memory and imagination. She doesn’t aim for literal depiction but seeks instead an emotional truth: a vivid evocation of the energy, glamour, and strangeness that memories can hold.

In True Romance, a series of automobiles takes center stage—sleek, stylized, and brimming with narrative. The works trace back to a childhood memory of her father’s best friend, Hans G., a flamboyant figure who drove a Mini Cooper for everyday use and a Ferrari and Lamborghini for everything else. Though the exact models have faded from memory, the impression remains. The cars are icons—not just of luxury, but of a time, a place, and a masculine mythos that shaped her early understanding of adulthood.

This memory unfolds into another: her father’s annual pilgrimages to the Geneva Auto Salon, returning home with stacks of glossy catalogs and previews of the year’s newest models. Gabrielle Graessle absorbed the visual culture that surrounded these events—the polished chrome, the theatrical presentation, the women in miniskirts with rehearsed smiles. Her painting Salon de Genève sans hôtesse, for example, critically and playfully reimagines these scenes by omitting the ubiquitous “hostess,” calling attention to the spectacle and its gendered constructions. 

Gabrielle Graessle’s interest in pop-cultural iconography—particularly cars like the Ford GT 40 and Ferrari Daytona—places her work in conversation with Pop Art’s fascination with consumer spectacle. But unlike Warhol’s mechanical detachment, Graessle’s paintings retain a hand-drawn urgency and personal resonance. Her use of acrylic, glitter, spray paint, and exaggerated proportions suggests a blend of Pop’s visual vernacular with the raw, instinctive energy of Art Brut and outsider traditions. 

While her subject matter is rooted in both pop culture and personal history, Gabrielle Graessle’s deeper project is an exploration of raw, intuitive expression—unfiltered by academic theory or aesthetic polish. There is a childlike (but never childish) spontaneity in her work: a deliberate return to freedom, where conventional rules dissolve. This spirit is echoed in her materials and occasional text, applied in ways that are both purposeful and instinctive. Vivid colors dominate, not to seduce, but to assert. Her canvases are expansive, immersing the viewer in a world that is at once intimate and strikingly universal. Each work feels less like a standalone image and more like a piece of a larger constellation—a story unfolding in nonlinear fragments. Viewers are encouraged to bring their own memories, projections, and associations into the work. Interpretation becomes a shared act, echoing the layered, open-ended nature of her compositions: ambiguous, playful, and charged with possibility.

True Romance captures the texture of a life filtered through decades of image-making. These are not documents of reality, but of feeling—records of what lingers rather than what occurred. The result is a world both strange and familiar, painted not from observation, but from what refuses to be forgotten.

SIMCHOWITZ HILL HOUSE
Pasadena, CA 91104
Visit by appointment

Douglas Knesse @ Simchowitz Gallery, Pasadena - "Harvest under the sun" Exhibition

Douglas Knesse 
Harvest under the sun 
Simchowitz Gallery, Pasadena
July 26 – August 30, 2025

Douglas Knesse Art
Douglas Knesse 
I think I saw a paradise, 2024 
Oil stick and acrylic painting on truck tarp. 
74h x 62w x 1.25d in / 187.96h x 157.48w x 3.18d cm
© Douglas Knesse, courtesy of Simchowitz Gallery 

Simchowitz presents Harvest under the sun, Douglas Knesse’s first solo exhibition at Hill House, Pasadena.

Harvest under the sun is a meditative exploration of discipline, devotion, and transformation. For Douglas Knesse, who lives and works in a coastal city along Brazil’s Atlantic Forest, painting is more than expression—it is a quiet, enduring practice and a form of spiritual communication. “Painting has always been a way for me to communicate what words could not reach,” he says. “It is in this quiet space that I connect with the spiritual field, accessing the divine to give thanks, to lay down my fears, to ask, and to speak new paths into existence.”

Knesse’s layered compositions resist finality. Built through repetition and reflection, they evolve, bearing traces of previous gestures. Working across acrylic, oil stick, spray paint, and pastel, he balances vibrant color and organic forms with generous use of negative space. Many works are painted on truck tarps—surfaces marked by use and history—which bring a grounded, corporeal quality to the paintings and deepen their relationship to labor, weathering, and renewal.

His imagery—leaf forms, rhythmic notations, and transient blooms—draws from the natural world but also points inward, toward an interior field of spiritual attunement. In works like TINHA UMA PALMEIRA NA PAISAGEM I, and the cloud drew my strength, this tension between external landscape and internal transformation becomes palpable.

Knesse’s practice resonates with multiple currents in art history. The gestural immediacy of his mark-making evokes Abstract Expressionism, while his use of modest materials and nontraditional supports—particularly in works like Window to paradise and Eruption and garden flowers—recalls the poetic materiality of Arte Povera. At the same time, his quiet emphasis on presence, perception, and process aligns him with Brazilian Neo-Concrete artists, whose works foregrounded sensorial experience and personal transformation.

Though rooted in a specific ecology, the exhibition speaks broadly to cycles of effort and emergence. Each piece carries the memory of what came before and the potential of what may come next. These works honor unseen labor: the slow accumulation of energy, gesture, and faith that precede visible change. Rather than seeking resolution, Douglas Knesse creates space for uncertainty, stillness, and spiritual inquiry. In this way, Harvest under the sun offers more than paintings—it provides a patient, reverent record of becoming.

SIMCHOWITZ HILL HOUSE
Pasadena, CA 91104
Visit by appointment

18/02/25

Artist Holly Lowen @ Simchowitz, Pasadena - "Etanglement" Exhibition + Selected Sculptures by Stan Edmonson + Selected Works by Ken Taylor Reynaga

Holly Lowen: Entanglement
Simchowitz Hill House, Pasadena
February 23 – March 30, 2025

Simchowitz presents Entanglement, Holly Lowen’s first solo exhibition at Hill House, Pasadena. HOLLY LOWEN shares her latest body of work, an evocative exploration of evolutionary psychology, sport, and domestication through the dynamic interplay of figuration and abstraction.

Raised in Bethesda, Maryland, Holly Lowen holds a BA in Art History from Duke University and a degree in Interior Architecture from The New School. Currently completing her MFA at the New York Academy of Art, Lowen works across pen, charcoal, oil, and pastel, crafting compositions that delve into the complexities of human and animal behavior.

Lowen’s work reflects a continuous evolution, beginning with experi­mentation in abstraction rooted in figuration. Her early pieces play with color, form, and composition, deconstructing the subject to explore emotional resonance beyond literal representation.

A pivotal shift is evident in her “Flamingo Series,” which investigates defense mechanisms in the natural world—spikes, scales, and other protective traits—and their psychological parallels in humans. Flamingos, emblematic of both grace and vulnerability, become metaphors for self-protection, their intertwined forms symbolizing mutual defense and the fragility inherent in connection.

Her exploration deepens with an introspective series examining the psychological landscape of tennis—a sport she views as a fascinating study in controlled aggression and social performance. The sterile uniformity of all-white attire, the isolated confines of the court, and the tension veiled beneath polite decorum evoke themes of repression and release.

Holly Lowen dissects the mental rigor and existential underpinnings of the sport, viewing it as a microcosm of human struggle—where precision, repetition, and control are both liberating and confining—a reference to scholarship on sport and sports psychology, such as David Foster Wallace’s collection of essays written on tennis titled “String Theory”.

Her entangled figures, set within formalized social structures, challenge perceptions of societal norms and boundaries. Inspired by the dynamic battle scenes of Peter Paul Rubens and Old Master studies, Holly Lowen reinterprets these influences through a contemporary lens, crafting a haunting critique of polite society’s suppression of passion and aggression.

Holly Lowen’s paintings interrogate the paradox of human nature: the coexistence of civility and primal instinct. Her work reveals the contained animal within, navigating the thin line between composure and chaos.

Similarly, Albert Camus’ reflections on sports psychology resonate through her work, particularly his view of sports as a metaphor for the absurdity of human existence. Camus explored how athletic endeavors embody the tension between the repetitive pursuit of perfection and the inherent meaninglessness of that pursuit, mirroring the broader existential struggle. For Holly Lowen, this manifests in the portrayal of tennis as both a disciplined ritual and an absurd exercise in controlled aggression, revealing the fragility of societal structures and the human desire to impose order on chaos.

STAN EDMONSON: Selected Sculptures
An outdoor presentation of sculptures by Stan Edmondson will be on view throughout the property, providing a wonderful opportunity to engage with Edmondson’s sculpture in an open-air setting.
 
Stan Edmondson (b. 1962, Pasadena, CA), lives and works in Los Angeles, California.  Grounded in the Bauhaus philosophy of integrating craft and fine art, Edmondson works primarily with homemade clay, embracing both aesthetic and technical complexities.

Also on view an ongoing exhibition of Selected Works by KEN TAYLOR REYNAGA, in the Simchowitz Small Barn.

SIMCHOWITZ HILL HOUSE
Pasadena, California 91104

29/05/24

Artist Peter Burns @ Simchowitz Gallery, Pasadena, CA - "Forests of the Night" Exhibition

Peter Burns: Forests of the Night 
Simchowitz Gallery, Pasadena 
June 1 – July 6, 2024

Peter Burns
Peter Burns
Wave, 2022
Oil on canvas
16.14h x 16.14w in / 41h x 41w x 2d cm
© Peter Burns, courtesy Simchowitz Gallery

Simchowitz Gallery presents “Forests of the Night”, a debut solo show by artist Peter Burns. The exhibition is on view at the gallery’s newest location - Hill House, Pasadena.

Hailing from the picturesque landscapes of Ireland, Peter Burns’ oil paintings contain elements of sculpture and collage that emanate mythic tales. With this body of work Burns deftly navigates the interplay of light and dark, while seamlessly exploring the complexities of scale and perspective. Evoking the enchantment of fairy tales, Burns successfully transports viewers to fantastical realms.

Spellbinding and occasionally unsettling, ‘Forests of the Night’ captures the imagination by weaving together the familiar and the unfamiliar. In the painting Wave, 2022, a minuscule rowboat battles against the fierce embrace of an enormous wave, whose foamy tendrils extend like arms and eerie eyes seem to observe. Despite the tumultuous sea, the golden hue of the sky imbues the scene with an unexpected sense of safety.

Peter Burns intertwines religion, classical and science fiction through a dislocation of scale and the creation of exotic landscapes. In Abraham and Isaac, 2022, two diminutive figures mounted on animals ride alongside an ominous canyon, flanked by a disproportionately massive mountain scape painted in a mesmerizing array of pink, green, and yellow hues, under a sky aglow with cosmic illumination. The tactile quality of the art, along with its almost three-dimensional layers of paint, draws you in, inviting closer inspection. Peter Burns has an MFA in painting and a BA in sculpture from the National College of Art & Design, Dublin. He has exhibited in solo shows and group shows internationally and is a recipient of the Pollock-Krasner grant. 

SIMCHOWITZ HILL HOUSE, PASADENA
Pasadena, CA 91107

10/10/23

Word as Image Exhibition @ Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena - Organized by Alex Kaczenski

Word as Image
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena
Through February 5, 2024

Liubov Popova
Liubov Popova
(Russian, 1889–1924)
The Traveler, 1915
Oil on canvas
56 x 41-1/2 in. (142.2 x 105.4 cm)
Norton Simon Art Foundation

Llyn Foulkes
Llyn Foulkes
(American, b. 1934)
Skull Rock, 1983
Oil on wood panel
20-3/8 x 20 in. (51.8 x 50.8 cm)
Norton Simon Museum, Gift of Kati Breckenridge, Ph.D

The Norton Simon Museum presents Word as Image, an exhibition showcasing 20th-century artists who experimented with letters, words and symbols as visual motifs. Culled from the Museum’s collection, the objects on view offer humorous and thought-provoking encounters between pictorial and linguistic modes of expression. Artists whose work is in the exhibition include Pablo Picasso, Liubov Popova, John Cage, Andy Warhol, Llyn Foulkes, Robert Heinecken, Rafael Canogar, William GropperYnez Johnston and others.

At the beginning of the 20th century, words appeared as elements in avant-garde compositions, where they were used to break down distinctions between art and daily life. In Pablo Picasso’s Still Life with Bottle of Marc (1911), splintered lines and shapes reinvent the genre of trompe l’oeil still-life. Only the legible letters “E,” “vie” and “Marc” prompt the viewer to perceive the central object, a bottle of brandy, and recognize the composition as a café scene. In Liubov Popova’s Cubo-Futurist painting The Traveler (1915), snippets of Russian words like журналы (zhurnaly), meaning journals, and II кл, meaning second class, evoke a train’s physical environment. Partial bits of text parallel the fragmented appearance of Cubist and Futurist abstraction while capturing the dynamism of early 20th-century modernity. 

Robert Heinecken
Robert Heinecken
(American, 1931–2006)
Recto/Verso, 1/5, 1988
Silver dye bleach photogram
Image: 10-1/4 x 6-7/8 in. (26 x 17.5 cm); Sheet: 20 x 16 in.
(50.8 x 40.6 cm)
Norton Simon Museum, Gift of Darryl Curran
© The Robert Heinecken Trust, Chicago

As the century progressed, Pop and Conceptual artists responded critically to their social and cultural climates by inventing visual forms, sometimes co-opting contemporary cityscapes full of billboards and graffiti-covered walls. Claes Oldenburg and Ed Ruscha evoked Los Angeles through prints of monumental architectural letters, as both considered the city’s signage part of its essential identity. Similarly, Andy Warhol’s iconic Campbell’s Soup series (the Museum’s edition is dated 1968) appropriates the visual language of mass production and typographic design to blur the distinction between fine art and advertisement. Language also serves as an inside joke for many works in the exhibition, like Robert Heinecken’s photogram Recto/Verso, 1/5 (1988), which offers a critique of fashion magazines and beauty standards. Here a single legible headline, “A Neutral Presence,” ironically accompanies a distorted image of reversed text and superimposed women’s bodies, thereby interrupting the passive consumption of mass media.

Rafael Canogar
Rafael Canogar
(Spanish, b. 1935)
The Earth 14, 1969
Lithograph
30 x 22 in. (76.2 x 55.9 cm)
Norton Simon Museum, Anonymous Gift
© Rafael Canogar

John Cage
John Cage
(American, 1912–1992)
Not Wanting to Say Anything About Marcel, 1969
Silkscreens (8) on plexiglass set in a wooden base,
edition 39 of 125
14-3/8 x 20-1/8 x 10-5/8 in. (36.5 x 51.1 x 27.0 cm)
Norton Simon Museum, Gift of Mrs. Judith Thomas, 1970
© John Cage Trust

The exhibition features artworks that engage linguistic and art historical themes simultaneously. In Arthur Secunda’s kaleidoscopic lithograph Cathedral Voices (1969), inspired by Claude Monet’s paintings of Rouen cathedral, intentionally illegible letters conjure the acoustic and optical experiences that one may have inside a religious building. John Cage, in his own nod to art of the recent past—Not Wanting to Say Anything About Marcel (1969), an homage to the great conceptual artist Marcel Duchamp—collaborated with printers, researchers and a graphic designer. The resulting sheets of Plexiglas are printed with fragmented letters that appear to float and fall in a kind of three-dimensional typographic symphony. Designed so that it could be reassembled to create new visual compositions, it likewise uses words and letters as a means of interrogating the creative process.

William Gropper
William Gropper
(American, 1897–1977)
Untitled (Unfinished Symphony I), 1967
Lithograph
18 x 14 in. (45.72 x 35.56 cm)
Norton Simon Museum, Anonymous Gift
© Estate of William Gropper

Ynez Johnston
Ynez Johnston
(American, 1920–2019)
Travels of the Sage Narada: The Other World, 1958
Color etching with poem by John Berry
19 x 15-3/4 in. (48.3 x 40.0 cm)
Norton Simon Museum, Gift of Mr. Robert A. Rowan
© Ynez Johnston Berry

Spanning the comical to the political to the conceptual, Word as Image calls our attention to how we are constantly “reading the image” in and out of museum spaces. Many of the artworks express ambivalence about the meaning and legibility of the text contained within, emphasizing instead the formal appearance of letters or numbers. As such, artists challenge us to consider language and image anew, by positioning words as an essential part of visual culture.

Word as Image is organized by Alex Kaczenski, the Museum’s graduate intern for the 2022-23 academic year. It is on view in the Museum’s Focus Gallery on the main level.

NORTON SIMON MUSEUM
411 West Colorado Boulevard
Pasadena, California 91105

WORD AS IMAGE @ NORTON SIMON MUSEUM / AUGUST 11, 2023 – FEBRUARY 5, 2024

29/06/23

Leila Spilman @ Simchowitz Pasadena - Lotsa Love Exhibition

Leila Spilman: Lotsa Love
Simchowitz Pasadena
June 8 – July 13, 2023

Simchowitz presents Lotsa Love by Leila Spilman (b. 1994 Santa Fe, New Mexico), who currently lives and works in Montana. It features nearly a dozen artworks that expand on the artist’s deeply felt, personal dialogue.

For the past decade, Leila Spilman has been in a relentless pursuit of artistic inquiry and innovation. She admits to having “few constants” in her life, “Being around a camera has been an important constant in my life, and that all started with my grandpa.” Alden Spilman (b. 1945, NY) is known to use uncommon technologies, such as some of the first color photocopiers and computer graphics, and the manipulation of printers and printing techniques. Spilman says, “He would just shoot his camera without looking through the viewfinder. He was all about chance and letting go. And that—and his whole attitude toward making art—has been a huge influence on me.”

Leila Spilman, who went into foster care at an early age, says that “making art has been an amazing way to reconnect with my family.” Leila Spilman’s grandfather taught her the importance of “play” in art making and the importance of life-as-art. Lotsa Love, in essence, is a love letter to him and his artistic practice. It began organically, with Leila Spilman coming across images in his studio, images that had been degraded by moisture, mold and light, images that had no plan for use. Leila Spilman applied various chemicals to each, pressing them between sheets of plexi, and letting them degrade further. That process produced a number of hazy, mysterious images that she later rescanned and printed. Some hint at backyard gardens and/or idyllic, dreamlike, organic worlds that mirror their biotic processes. These works are neither wholly abstract nor wholly representational, nor are they clearly photographs or paintings. They exist somewhere in between. For Leila Spilman, they can also be seen as portals into her past and future. They tap into the “deepest relationship of her life” as she describes her relationship to her grandfather, while representing a new phase of her art-making. While she has explored the idea of corrosion and toxicity in the past, it takes on even greater weight in this new body of work. As she says, the process of “throwing something toxic on something beautiful” can be read as a metaphor for some of the trauma that has haunted her family.

SIMCHOWITZ PASADENA
2785 E. Foothill Blvd., Pasadena, CA 91107

09/12/20

We Are Here: Contemporary Art and Asian Voices in Los Angeles @ USC Pacific Asia Museum, Pasadena

We Are Here: Contemporary Art and Asian Voices in Los Angeles
Reanne Estrada, Phung Huynh, Ahree Lee, Ann Le, Kaoru Mansour, Mei Xian Qiu, Sichong Xie
USC Pacific Asia Museum, Pasadena
Through spring 2021

USC Pacific Asia Museum presents We Are Here: Art and Asian Voices in LA featuring work by Reanne Estrada, Phung Huynh, Ahree Lee, Ann Le, Kaoru Mansour, Mei Xian Qiu, and Sichong Xie. Organized by USC Pacific Asia Museum Assistant Curator Dr. Rebecca Hall, the exhibition aims to ignite understanding across geography and generation, culture and difference. These seven Los Angeles based female contemporary artists of diverse Asian Pacific heritages engage with and draw from their family’s experiences as refugees, immigrants and foreign nationals to create compelling works of art that invite visitors to think about their histories. Interwoven in their works are personal and universal narratives that give voice to the plural community we call home. A variety of media are exhibited, including painting, photography, installation, performance and video. 

Reanne Estrada
Reanne Estrada’s practice includes work in drawing, sculpture, and installation as well as collaborative work in performance, video and photography. Estrada utilizes the body in space to question identity and its fragile nature. Born in the Philippines, Estrada moved with her family to California as a child. This experience emphasized the importance of community and the ways people renegotiate themselves in response to their environments. With a socially engaged artistic practice, her work explores systems and their effects on individuals as they negotiate their place in the world. For We Are Here, she has created artworks that challenge us to consider our experience of technology and surveillance and ask how we might assert greater control over our digital bodies and what is extracted from them. Exploring systems of surveillance, Estrada provides social commentary on the tenuous relationship of people to larger systems of control, using her artwork as a catalyst for public good.

Phung Huynh
Phung Huynh was born in Vietnam and came to the United States as a refugee when she was a toddler with her family. Her narrative of survival and migration is entangled in the complex history of postwar Asia, a period of upheaval, decolonialism, reconstruction, and nationalism. Huynh’s paintings investigate notions of identity from a kaleidoscopic perspective, exploring how cultural ideas are imported, disassembled, and then reconstructed. Her recent work on view in We Are Here explores the Southeast Asian refugee experience in Los Angeles. Portraits of refugees on pink donut boxes reference the donut shops that gave Cambodian refugees an opportunity to build a new life after fleeing genocide. The sensitive portraits of refugees celebrate their power and perseverance. Cross stitch license plates with non-Western names resemble souvenir keychains,creating inclusivity and an opportunity for all Americans to find their names on these ubiquitous mementos. With this work, Huynh reveals the resilient nature of refugees in shaping the Southern California cultural landscape.

Ann Le
Ann Le was born in the United States to a refugee family from Vietnam. She uses photography to excavate her lineage within the larger context of war by revisiting her family’s experiences. Drawing from her archive of family photos and stories, familiar symbols, and research, Le creates narratives with layers of images related to real and constructed memories. Using a variety of methods including collage and illustration, she combines found and new images to touch on emigration, history, family, and conflict. Le’s photomontages reveal complex constructions that contemplate the meaning and effect of war. She adamantly conveys that those affected by war will not be silenced as they piece together new versions of themselves amid unparalleled, irreversible change.

Ahree Lee
As a child of Korean immigrants raised American, Ahree Lee looks to the past and across distances to investigate what constitutes an individual or collective identity in an increasingly diasporic, culturally alienated and fractured world. Lee uses algorithms to transform imagery like daily self-portraits, home movies, and other image archives that she finds or creates. Her work aggregates these fragments into a new sum that is greater than its parts using contemporary time-based mediums such as video, sound, and interactivity. Lee’s artworks uncover personal links to ongoing inquiries about who and what is integral to social and technological change. Her recent work investigates how invisible labor, specifically work that has traditionally been done by women, is essential to the life of economic systems. Lee’s handwoven textiles merge weaving and computer coding. Through research and process, Lee reveals a history of connection: the first computers were based on the technology of the loom. Reactivating the link between weaving and computing, Lee’s weavings and computer-generated videos draw on code, algorithms, and self-generated labor data.

Kaoru Mansour
Kaoru Mansour is a native of Japan now living in Los Angeles. She moved to California in 1986 and studied at Otis Art Institute (now Otis College of Art and Design) in Los Angeles from 1987-1989. Her experience growing up in a small village in Japan meant that nature and the seasons were integral to her life. She draws from daily life and the natural world to create balanced paintings that rediscover the joys of color, line, family, plants, and animals. Mansour plays with materials and images to create layered paintings that recall Edo period painted screens and Raku ceramics. Mansour's collages are made up of multiple layers of pigment and collaged elements on wooden panels and canvas. The softly detailed surfaces give a sensuous appearance to the paintings and serve to elevate the subject – trees, fruit, leaves, and birds – to something revered, sacred and even mystical.

Mei Xian Qiu
Mei Xian Qiu’s complex family history directly informs her photography. Qiu was born in the town of Pekalongan on the island of Java, Indonesia, to a thirdgeneration Chinese minority family. In the aftermath of the Chinese and Communist genocide, the family immigrated to the United States. She was moved back and forth several times between the two countries during her childhood. Drawing from her personal history, Qiu reconstructs iconic images and dissects familiar archetypes through a lens of fantastical notions of culture. These investigations into power, politics, and individual interior worlds, reflect the contemporary landscape of transience and a growing global monoculture. Qiu plays with archetypes and creates artworks that are rich in metaphor and meaning. Through photography, she speaks to the displacement she experienced as a result of her multiple heritages. Three series are featured in We Are Here; each reflects the artist’s experience traveling between China, Indonesia, and the U.S. In one series, the models for the imagery are Pan Asian American artists and academics specializing in Chinese culture, the very group at risk in the Hundred Flowers Movement. Hidden political dangers are suggested but put aside momentarily, subsumed to the romance of “the beautiful idea.” The costumes are discarded U.S. military uniforms, cheongsams constructed for the photographs, and Chinese mockups taken from a Beijing photography studio, specializing in getups for foreign tourists to re-enact Cultural Revolution Propaganda imagery.

Sichong Xie
Sichong Xie creates performance, video, and installation to explore her identity and place in the world as an expatriate Chinese citizen. She investigates the relationship between the state and the individual against various backdrops in both China and the U.S., much of her work using displaced cultural imagery within new social constructs. Xie’s practice deals with issues of identity, politics, crossculturalism, and the surreal potential of her body in the ever-changing environment. Her recent work explores Chinese culture versus American culture and the connection between politics and family heritage. The multi-channel, multimedia installation included in We Are Here explores the impact of art and the fluidity of memory as a form of protection. Her grandmother is the family’s only witness to an event that had great effect on her grandparents: her grandfather’s political illustration, now destroyed, that landed him in prison for two years. Xie recreates the illustration many times with the aid of her grandmother’s everchanging memory. Like much of Xie’s work, this piece presents an open-ended question about survival, the stories that connect generations, and the transient nature of life.

USC PAM is temporarily closed due to Covid-19. 
You can visit the exhibition in 3D at 

USC PACIFIC ASIA MUSEUM
University of Southern California
46 N Los Robles Avenue, Pasadena, CA 91101

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27/10/16

Vincent van Gogh, The Bedroom, 1889 - On Loan From the Art Institute of Chicago at the Norton Simon Museum

Van Gogh’s ‘Bedroom’ on Loan From the Art Institute of Chicago
At the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California
December 9, 2016 - March 6, 2017


Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853–1890)
The Bedroom, 1889.
The Art Institute of Chicago, Helen Birch Bartlett Memorial Collection.

The Norton Simon Museum presents an installation of Vincent van Gogh’s tender and intimate Bedroom from 1889, a highlight of the Art Institute of Chicago’s superb 19th-century collection. A meditation on friendship, hope and crushing disappointment, Van Gogh’s Bedroom serves not only as a kind of self-portrait, but also as a symbol of the artist’s wandering existence and search for an elusive sense of repose. The second of three versions of the interior scene, the Chicago Bedroom was painted by the artist while at the asylum of Saint-Paul-de-Mausole at Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France, in September 1889. Its installation at the Norton Simon Museum marks the first time the painting has been on view on the West Coast, and it will hang in the Museum’s 19th-century art wing, surrounded by the Simon’s own important collection of Van Gogh works, from Dec. 9, 2016 through March 6, 2017.

Says Museum President Walter Timoshuk, “The Norton Simon Museum is delighted to feature Van Gogh’s mesmerizing masterpiece in our galleries this winter, and we are grateful to President James Rondeau, to Chair of European Painting and Sculpture Gloria Groom, and to the board of Trustees at the Art Institute of Chicago for making this exceptional exchange possible.” Adds James Rondeau, President and Eloise W. Martin Director at the Art Institute of Chicago, “Our recent exhibition featuring Van Gogh's Bedroom reaffirmed what we have long believed about the power of this beloved picture to remain relevant and resonant to new generations of audiences. We hope the Southern California community will enjoy the opportunity to see Van Gogh’s Bedroom, which has been a star in our permanent collection for nearly 100 years.”

About Van Gogh’s Bedroom

In his brief life (just 37 years), Van Gogh sought a place to call home in four countries and 37 residences. In only one of these did he find something approaching contentment: his leased rooms at No. 2 Place Lamartine in Arles, the so-called “Yellow House,” where he dreamed of establishing a “Studio of the South.” He painted his bedroom in situ for the first time in autumn 1888 (a picture today in the Van Gogh Museum), having spent two days confined to his bed by a fit of exhaustion. In an Oct. 16 letter to his brother, Theo, he explained:
I had a new idea in mind... This time it’s simply my bedroom, but the color has to do the job here, and through its being simplified by giving a grander style to things, to be suggestive here of rest or of sleep in general. In short, looking at the painting should rest the mind, or rather, the imagination. The walls are of a pale violet. The floor — is of red tiles. The bedstead and the chairs are fresh butter yellow…

(16 October 1888. Van Gogh Museum, Vincent van Gogh: The Letters, No. 704).
The artist’s specific interest here in the decoration of his home betrayed nervous excitement in anticipation of Paul Gauguin’s arrival the following week. Already Van Gogh’s friend, competitor and artistic idol, Gauguin was to be his collaborator at last, to live and work by his side in the Yellow House. The violet walls, the butter yellow chairs and bedstead, the selection of portraits on the wall in the bedroom: these were all carefully chosen with Gauguin’s future residence in the adjacent room in mind.

The dream of a shared Studio of the South, however, proved short-lived, descending before the year was out into a nightmare, when Van Gogh experienced a nervous breakdown in late December and presented a severed portion of his own ear to a local prostitute. In and out of the hospital at Arles through the spring of 1889, Van Gogh admitted himself to the asylum of Saint-Paul-de-Mausole at Saint-Rémy-de-Provence in early May. It was there, the following September, that he undertook the second and third versions of his Bedroom, today in the Art Institute of Chicago and the Musée d’Orsay, respectively. Both were adapted from the original canvas, which had sustained serious water damage in a flood at Arles. As he copied the damaged Bedroom in his asylum studio at Saint-Rémy, the hopeful moment that picture had once captured must have seemed to Van Gogh far away. Yet the second version—the Chicago picture—is, if anything, more startlingly vivid than its predecessor, its colors more vigorously contrasted, its surface more thickly covered in paint. Hoped for, lost, and longingly remembered, the peaceful scene here rematerializes with the intensity of a fever dream.

Van Gogh’s ‘Bedroom’ on Loan From the Art Institute of Chicago is organized by Chief Curator Carol Togneri. The painting’s installation at the Norton Simon Museum comes shortly after the Art Institute’s revelatory exhibition “Van Gogh’s Bedrooms” (Feb. 14–May 10, 2016), which brought together all three versions of the interior and presented new research on the works. That exhibition’s curator, Gloria Groom, chair of European Painting and Sculpture and the David and Mary Winton Green Curator at the Art Institute of Chicago, will present a lecture on Van Gogh and his ‘Bedrooms’ at the Norton Simon Museum. Information about additional events, including a lecture by Van Gogh Museum Director Axel Rüger, will be made available this fall.

Van Gogh and His Bedrooms
Gloria Groom, Chair of European Painting and Sculpture and the David and Mary Winton Green Curator at the Art Institute of Chicago
Saturday, Jan. 7, 2017, 4:00–5:00 p.m.

NORTON SIMON MUSEUM, PASADENA, CA
www.nortonsimon.org

16/09/12

Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait, 1889 on Loan from the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC at the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California


Vincent van Gogh: Self-Portrait, 1889 
Loan from the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC 
At the Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, California
December 7, 2012 - March 4, 2013

The installation of Vincent van Gogh’s Self-Portrait at the Norton Simon Museum is the first time the painting has been on view on the US West Coast, and while Southern California is home to several outstanding works by Van Gogh, none of his self-portraits are in collections here. The loan is part of a special exchange program between the Norton Simon foundations and the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC. 

VINCENT VAN GOGH, SELF-PORTRAIT, 1889

Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853-1890) 
Self-Portrait, 1889 
Oil on canvas 
57.2 x 43.8 cm (22 1/2 x 17 1/4 in.)  
Collection of Mr. and Mrs. John Hay Whitney, 
National Gallery of Art, Washington 


Vincent van Gogh (Dutch, 1853-1890) is among the world’s most beloved and admired artists, yet he was virtually unknown during his lifetime, and struggled with depression and mental illness. After voluntarily committing himself in May of 1889 to the mental asylum Saint-Paul-de-Mausole at Saint-Rémy in France, the tormented Vincent Van Gogh began the isolated and recuperative process of calming the delusions, paranoid panics and poor health that had plagued him for much of his adult life. Only six months before, he had quarreled with his dear friend Paul Gauguin in Arles and then severed part of his own ear in a fit of desperation and despair. The National Gallery of Art’s jolting, Self-Portrait is one of the last renditions of Vincent Van Gogh’s interpretation of his own visage. Only three of his 36 self-portraits depict him as an artist, holding his palette and brushes. With his wounded ear turned away from the viewer, he confronts his own gaunt image, full of introspection and intensity. Unable at this point to confront other patients, or reality itself, he assumes the dual role of model and artist. By September 1889, after creating Starry Night (now at the Museum of Modern Art, New York) and painting the wheat fields that could be seen from his rooms at the asylum, he wrote to his brother Theo in Paris about two self-portraits he was painting:
So I am working on two portraits of myself at this moment—for want of another model—because it is more than time I did a little figure work. One I began the day I got up; I was thin and pale as a ghost. It is dark violet–blue and the head whitish with yellow hair, so it has a color effect. 
The rapid, almost violent background strokes, painted thickly, shimmer in dissonance and contrast with the artist’s deeply penetrating stare. Emerald highlights in his face, the blue of his smock, and the golden yellows of his hair and beard are all echoed on his palette—pigments that had only recently been ordered and sent as a care package from his brother. The rapidity and repetition of his linear movement belie the amount of forethought and precision that Van Gogh has applied to this composition; it is with utmost restraint that he circumscribes the nose with that bold green outline and calculates the effects of the brilliant yellows and blues. He was known as the redheaded madman by locals, and yet he carefully composed hundreds of moving letters that demonstrated his love of nature, of man, of literature and language. In 10 short years, from 1880 to 1890, he painted almost unceasingly; more than 850 oil paintings are attributed to him today. One can only imagine his legacy, had he lived beyond his short 37 years.

Art exchange program
In 2007, the Norton Simon foundations entered a new phase in their history by forming an art exchange program with both the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and The Frick Collection in New York City. Works of art from the Norton Simon foundations are lent to both of these estimable institutions for special viewings and, in return, masterpieces from their collections make their way to the Norton Simon Museum. The exchange is an opportunity to promote the Norton Simon collections to a much wider audience while simultaneously providing Southern California audiences the chance to view some of the world’s most significant and visually compelling paintings.


NORTON SIMON MUSEUM
411 W. Colorado Blvd, Pasaneda, California 91105
www.nortonsimon.org


15/08/08

Sam Davis, Return to Desert Island, Sponsoring by Harman

Ufojoan (c) Sam Davis - All rights reserved
Astronaut (c) Sam Davis - All rights reserved
‘Return to Desert Island’ is an exhibition of work by Sam Davis – a renowned artist and full time instructor at The Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. Taking place from July 6th to August 31st at the Red Barn Art Centre of the Goldwell Open Air Museum, Rhyolite, Nevada, the event features images which combine obscure technology, science fiction and childhood fantasy to call into question notions regarding memory, nostalgia imagination and pulp/cyber folklore. Davis, a UNLV, MFA graduate, makes full use of the Red Barn Art Centre’s location in the Amargosa Desert near Death Valley National Park for what’s been termed an ‘exploration of the spectacular’. His decision to shoot film, instead of digital, allows him to reflect on reality and what is conceivable in the desert’s open expanse of space and time. The museum - which is perhaps best known for its 8 acre sculpture park including work by the late Belgian artist Albert Szukalski - will complement the exhibition with outdoor showings of classic sci-fi films. Davis used papers from two of Harman technology’s brands for the event. Specifically, he opted for Ilford Multigrade IV FB Fiber from the Ilford Photo range of monochrome products for his black and white images, and the Harman Photo Gloss FB AI from the Harman Photo range of professional inkjet media for all but two of his color shots.
As Davis himself points out: “I've been using Ilford products since I began shooting photography in the late 1980's. I've always been fond of the quality and consistency of their products and the ease with which they let me produce images." “When I began shooting in color it was a reluctant move from being a serious black and white photographer. I was never fond of the printing surfaces available and always wished there was a way to make images that looked more like dye transfer; that look of color imagery on fiber based paper. While I am ardently in favor of silver imaging, I feel that many of my images are well suited to the traditional feel of the baryta enhanced, fiber base employed by the Harman Photo inkjet range."