Showing posts with label Abstraction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abstraction. Show all posts

Monday, June 14, 2021

57w57ARTS

 



57w57ARTS
My blue Kase Painting just back from the Latinx Abstract exhibition at BRIC will be on view at 57w57Arts in Al's Office. Along with work by Dom Gray (L) and James Sterling Pitt (On Table). Opening this Thursday June 17th from 6-8pm. Stop by and say hello! My thanks to Sue and Al Ravitz of 57w57ARTS! 

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

Kase Painting




Studio Notes: 5/26

Almost finished with this new Kase Painting in the studio. Color inspired by an old industrial site that I see each day while commuting to work. The painting is a perfect fit for the reclaim wood L-frame. Originally I had thought of making a black or dark grey painting for this frame to match the black manufactures mark on the plywood. Decided to go with the Lt blue first and figured if it didn't work it'd be easier to lay on the black/Grey then the other way around. The painting has three layers of color. The original ground color was brown with a warm white graffiti tag which I then removed with graffiti remover. The trace tag then got an additional layer of off white over coat before applying the final Lt Blue color. Just need some additional collaged on paint marks which often take a while but for the most part this painting is pretty much done. 


 

Saturday, January 23, 2021

Latinx Abstract at BRIC House Brooklyn, NY

 








Latinx Abstract Curated by Elizabeth Ferrer January 21 - May 2, 2021 BRIC, Brooklyn NY

Excited to have some of my monochromatic abstract paintings from the Kase Painting series included in this exhibition. It's one of the first times that I show this body of work in an exhibition since I started it a few years ago. This is true for the large scale pieces. Nice to see so much great work in the exhibition with some familiar names but also many artists that I had not heard of before. 

The exhibition includes work by: Candida Alvarez, Maria Chávez, Alejandro Guzmán, Glendalys Medina, Freddy Rodríguez, Fanny Sanín, Mary Valverde, Vargas-Suarez Universal, and Sarah Zapata.

*Due to Covid 19 restrictions an appointment is highly recommended.

https://www.bricartsmedia.org




Friday, January 13, 2017

In the studio for 2017









Studio Views - KASE Paintings

I've been cooking up new work for the last year experimenting with new materials and techniques. A new body of work separate from my hard edge paintings of the last few years but along similar lines. A totally different process as a means or approach to abstract painting. Unlike my hard edge paintings that are made on stretched canvas over wood panel, these new pieces are straight up stretched canvas. The application of paint is done in a combination of color washes and graffiti marks that are then completely removed using graffiti remover with additional paint colors layer on top. 

The removal of the paint is aggressive so at times I end up with traces of the strainer visible on the surface from the pressure on the canvas. I also add spots of paint spatter and or collage bits of paint skins onto the surface. Each piece has it's own custom frame that function as an additional contextualizing element separate to the function of a traditional frame which is meant to aethetisize a work of art. The frames are raw wood with visible holes and or wood patches, rubbed with floor wax or stained with graffiti Krink ink, spray primers, car  bondo, etc. 

It's taken a while to figure this work out conceptually but now I'm at the stage that I feel confortable with where it's headed. It's all steam ahead for 2017, I'm excited!


  





Monday, January 4, 2016

Perpetual Inventory


Happy New Year!

Note: A quote from a book that I just finished reading.

"With Graffiti we encounter yet another form of heterogeneity within the field of representation, one that relates to the invasive nature of this type of mark, its criminal character, so to speak, the fact that it is defined by being a violation by the marker of a space that belongs not to him but to another. Thus, no matter what the iconic character of the configuration, the graffiti mark is, like a photograph, always structured indexically, as the trace of the marker's passage, a trace that is therefore always a signature, a sign whose signified always reads, "Kilroy was here; I was here."

-Rosalind J. Krauss (Perpetual Inventory)


Studio 2016

Studio View 2016

Looking forward to the New Year! Many things are happening in the studio, none that I've shared on social media yet. I'm working on a number of other work that still incorporate the tags but are vastly different that the cross over pieces of the last couple of years. These involve the use of grids and monochromes with just hints of the tags visible. I plan on showcasing these pieces along side my  evolving Hard Edge paintings. 

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Red Bull Gives You Wings!

Hard-Edge Painting #136

Extremely happy that this painting, shown at The Untitled Art Fair in Miami, now lives at Red Bull Corporate Headquarters. Red Bull Gives You Wings!! 



Monday, November 25, 2013

UNTITLED Art Fair






 The UNTITLED  Art Fair, Dec 4 - 8, 2013
Courtesy of Hionas Gallery, Booth C18
Miami Beach, FL

Preview of new work for The UNTITLED Art Fair, Miami. Courtesy of Hionas Gallery, Booth C18.
Link: http://www.art-untitled.com/

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Outside The Box



Outside The Box @ The Freedman Home, Bronx, New York
October 26 - Nov 2, 2013

These are two of my pieces in the exhibition "Outside The Box" curated by Lady K Fever at the Freedman Home. 


Artists in the exhibition include:
Cornbread, Joe Conzo, Bags, Badder, Carmen J. Hernandez, Ces, Chris Riggs for Mayor, Cope2, James TOP, Edwin Gonzalez-Ojeda, Ellis Gallagher, Gary Pray, Jeffrey Meris, Jerms, Joselyn Santos,   Hick, Hec One Love, Husky, Ivan Velez JR, Karlos Carcamo, Laura Napier, Lisa Kahane, Luz Marina, Manuel Acevado, MRS, Mary A.Valverde, NB40, NIC 70, Priscila de Carvalho, Ree, Rosemary Taylor, Ruban Ubiera, Scratch, Skeme, Topaz, Zori 4. 

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Abstractions: New Modernism @ Ann Street Gallery












The Ann Street Gallery presents its newest exhibition Abstractions: New Modernism, with an Artist Reception on Saturday, March 2 from 6:30 – 8:30 pm. This event is free and the public is cordially invited to attend.
The contemporary art scene welcomes new generations of artists gleaning inspiration from the practice of the non-representational. One can see such inspired works in our newest exhibition Abstractions: New Modernism, which highlights a group of artists who make a deliberate case for abstraction, while breathing new life into the genre. Within this exhibition, the extension of abstraction runs through various and diverse mediums: painting, drawing, sculpture, collage and digital images, while resisting grand generalizations and addressing skeptical attitudes and misunderstandings we often bring to our experience of abstract art.
Western abstract art has been with us for hundreds of years, but many of us still wander around museums and art galleries perplexed as to the meaning of abstract works. New York critic Clement Greenberg acknowledged this situation when he wrote: “The pictures …startle because they seem to rely on ungoverned spontaneity and haphazard effects; or because, at the other extreme, they present surfaces which appear to be largely devoid of pictorial incident.” Then one might ask, “What is abstract art good for?” “What is the value of paintings, sculptures or drawings that do not seem to show anything except pictures of nothing?”
For a clearer understanding of abstract art one can look to its beginnings in the late 19th century, when abstraction was “invented” as a result of then avant-garde movements including Impressionism and Post-Impressionism. These styles of painting reduced the importance of original subject matter and emphasized the creative process of painting. In the first decade of the 20th century, European painters began to abandon the established Western conventions of imitating nature, and searched for new methods of form and expression sparking a movement of abstraction.
What is clear, is that abstract art can be interpreted in various ways and relies on reflection for meaning to emerge. It doesn’t matter greatly whether someone likes or dislikes abstract art. It is a common tendency of people to narrow the field of what they consider permissible in art to their own personal prejudices.
Abstractions: New Modernism offers an opportunity to transcend this way of thinking, to remain open for any individual response, especially those not confined to any single dictate or definition. The work of the artist is to affect the nature of the viewer’s response to their work.
Artists featured: Cyrille Allannic, Vivian Altman, Serdar Arat, Sarah Bednarek, Karlos Carcamo, Rosalyn Driscoll, Susan English, Catherine Evans, Kathryn Gabriel, Victoria Manning, Sanford Mirling, Kirsten Nash, Barbara Smith Gioia, Dina White and Jake Winiski.
The exhibition is on view through Saturday, April 13, 2013. The exhibition was curated by Virginia Walsh, Director of the Ann Street Gallery.
The Ann Street Gallery is a nonprofit art gallery specializing in contemporary emerging and established artists. The gallery is located at 104 Ann Street in Newburgh, and viewing hours are Wednesday and Thursday 9:00 am-5:00 pm (closed for lunch 1:30-2:30 pm) and Friday and Saturday 11:00 am-5:00 pm
For more information regarding Abstractions: New Modernism and the Ann Street Gallery, contact Virginia Walsh, Director at (845) 784-1146 or


Wednesday, November 16, 2011

New Painting


Hard Edge Painting (#116), 2011

Here it is, the finished painting! I'm happy with how it turned out even though the colors are a bit harsh. I wanted to get away from the pastel spectrum of the last few paintings. In the end I ended up adding yellow to the top left corner and two layers of grey. Love the fact that you can see the tag through the black paint even with two coats.