Volume 2 Claressinka Anderson Photos by Joe Pugliese

Similar documents
Heat Camera Comparing Versions 1, 2 and 4. Joshua Gutwill. April 2004

PURSUIT OF MEMORY THROUGH LANDSCAPE

Jue Yang. artist-writer

Make art, like love Interview with Kendell Geers

Art/Write by Peter Pitzele Anatomy of a Hanging

Laura Aguilar s Fearless East Coast Premiere at the Frost Art Museum FIU through May 27

FREE LARGE PRINT information sheet please take one

TENFOLD. The Photography Programme, Canterbury Christ Church University. Ten Fold

This video installation Boundary is a metaphor for how it felt to be raised in a

JANUARY 15, 2019 BRITT STIGLER POSTED IN VISUAL SHARE

Joe Sola is Making Art

Green is the Secret Color to Make Gold. New work by Caitlin Teal Price

Robert Mapplethorpe: the young wanderer s early years

Mali Twist. 18th January André Magnin s curated celebration of Malick Sidibé

Interview with Cig Harvey: YOU Look At ME Like An EMERGENCY

Shed light on the topic: New exhibition of Niamh Barry's light sculptures

Press Sally Ross. Galerie Sultana, 10 rue ramponeau, Paris, ,

that night CHEVY STEVENS

TRANSFORMATIONS A GRAPHIC AND CHOREGRAPHIC WORKSHOP

Tokyo Nude, 1990 Kishin Shinoyama

My twin, aging faster, has left the mountains on a train,

of Trisda, they would return some of the joy to her life, at least for a handful of days. Momentarily, Scarlett entertained the idea of experiencing

Setting the Scene: An Image Maker 80 Years On Valerie Hunton

Sophie's Adventure. An Honors Thesis (HONRS 499) Kelly E. Ward. Thesis Advisor Dr. Laurie Lindberg. Ball State University Muncie, Indiana

spring summer 2015 MARMAR press kit

CHAPTER IN ORIBE EDUCA-

CMS.405 Media and Methods: Seeing and Expression

David Lynch, the director as painter, festival impresario and ant collaborator

We re in the home stretch! my mother called as we swooshed through the

A FASHION & BEAUTY MAGAZINE FOR WOMEN JUNE

T his is a map of t i he r watching me. Kristin Sanders 1

FINE ARTS PORTFOLIO CAPSTONE PROJECT

[half title graphics t/c]

Broken Collarbone? No Kit? No Problem for RAAM Racer Franz Preihs.

LIMITED EDITION COLLECTION

The Artist Creating a Karaoke Spiritual Center to Explore South Asian Identity By Sarah Burke January 22, 2018

PROLOGUE. field below her window. For the first time in her life, she had something someone to

Paul Smith Captures 48 Hours in Los Angeles in Polaroids

10 Questions With... Chris Schanck

First published in Australian Art Collector, Issue 42 October-December Afraid of the dark

Carla Mancini Leather bags

Master of Architecture

Madonna NUDE SESSIONS. Martin Schreiber

Gabriela Tama Prof. Howard Besser March 28, 2017 OBSERVATIONAL STUDY The New Museum for Contemporary Art & The Museum of Chinese America (MOCA)

Linda Wallace: Journeys in Art and Tapestry

LONGRIDER. written by. Matthew Dixon

Camp Carlos The Michael C. Carlos Museum. Summer programs for kids ages 7 to 17! welcomes children and teenagers to spend the summer

objects of desire: the foot as a site by Lia Marie Braaten July 1998

M AKE A M OVIE BEHIND YOUR E YELIDS

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: CONTACT: Mike Holmes

How Lorraine O'Grady Transformed Harlem Into a Living Artwork in the '80s and Why It Couldn't Be Done Today

Data sheet of the exhibition. Arrivals and Departures. Jacob Aue Sobol. Cultural Association ONTHEMOVE

DORIS HARDEMAN WORKS

Summer 2017 Collection

Buy The Complete Version of This Book at Booklocker.com:

Title: The Human Right; North Korea. Category: Flash Fiction. Author: Ariele Lee. Church: Calvary Christian Church.

Teachers Pack Whitechapel Gallery. Isa Genzken: Open, Sesame! 5 April June whitechapelgallery.org

Behind the Scenes: Mary Conner Contemporary Art

Ishmael Beah FLYING WITH ONE WING

Using Walls, Floors, and Ceilings Alex Israel

Skin Deep. Roundtable

examples of: supergraphics immersive environments larger than life experiences an event a performance an in-between space

SYNCHRONICITYLIGHTING.COM

IB VISUAL ARTS (HL) COMPARATIVE STUDY KYLIE KELLEHER IB CANDIDATE NUMBER:

32 / museum MARCH/APRIL 2017 / aam-us.org

Passionate Purples. New Jewelry Collections FALL 2008

{Chicago s Finest} slmag.net

Matthea Harvey SELF-PORTRAITS. [After paintings by Max Beckmann] Double Portrait, Carnivaly 1925

Interview: Mads Lynnerup

meet the tribe sydney training centre

Exhibitions. Julia Caprara Retrospective. The Knitting & Stitching Show all venues

Helpful Hints [How to Complete this Form] 4-H Awardrobe Clothing Event Report Form Iowa State Fair

Color Class EYES & LIPS

EXHIBITION - INTERVIEW

Twelve Days of Christmas Gift Set

"The twirling around of hundreds of sticks can become [very] dangerous," Colosseum spokesperson Christiano Brughitta said.

ZDOK.11 Susan Me, Myself Mogul: and Interogating I Myself

Daddy. Hugs for. Hugs for Daddy LEVELED BOOK K. Visit for thousands of books and materials.

2015 Silver Pen Essay Contest "I surprised myself when..."

Pao Houa Her: My Mother s Flowers

good for you be here again down at work have been good with his cat

Betye Saar: Selected Works Fine Arts Gallery, California State University, Los Angeles, CA, September 29 - October 2, 1973

The Tea Tree Spa. Prices are inclusive of 10% service charge and 7% government tax.

Three Poems by Kelley Jean White

"When I travel, I always go to public libraries," he said in a recent interview. "I m always hungry for images."

No online items

Melvin and Morris Explore Roatan, Honduras!

By Alice Gay Eby December 23, 1950 to July 4, 1951 For Miss Leola Murphy 7 th grade English

LA SERRE at mfc 2 by LA VILLE RAYÉE

Skin/Bone/Viscera Nora Green

Nir Arieli Captures Top Contemporary Dance Companies as They Collapse Together

2012 EARTH DAY POETRY COMPETITION AT TRI-C METRO CAMPUS. April 19, Christina Bellios, The Candle of My Memory

Spicy Small. Ex) My dad loves spicy food. (What describes the food? Spicy.) Ex) He owns a small shop. (What describes the shop? Small.

To Expand the Possibility of Jewelry. The intent of my project is to expand the possibility of jewelry. All of my works

ARTIST SPOTLIGHT: Identi-Tees

CHILD OF WAR HAL AMES

Roses are red, Violets are blue. Don t let Sister Anne get any black on you.

Fires of Eden. Caleb Ellenburg

From an early age, I always wanted to be inked, and I always heard the usual warnings

Dana Cox. Sally Mann

Transcription:

30 Exquisite L.A. Volume 2 Claressinka Anderson Photos by Joe Pugliese

Exquisite L.A. is a blueprint of a collective shape. Drawing on the history of the Surrealist Exquisite Corpse, we wish to create a communal portrait of the current Los Angeles art world. Consisting of photographic portraits, and spanning a year of consecutive Carla issues, each artist photographed introduces the next with a short text accompanying their portrait, outlining their connection or interest in the artist that will follow them in the series. This is an ongoing story of Los Angeles its twists and turns, side streets, and freeways. Rooted in classical portraiture, the photographs presented capture the artists in a neutral space, isolated from their work or studio. Their individual gaze, pose, or gesture becomes a continuous visual marker for the exquisite corpse that is Los Angeles. Volume I began in Carla issue 5 and concluded in the summer of 2017 in issue 8. For volume 2, we start the journey here with Anna Sew Hoy. The communal nature of Anna s work inspired us to think about what we could do to further unite the participants and bring the spirit of their connection to the portraits in a more intimate way. In volume I, we had each artist write about the artist they chose after we photographed them. For this new iteration, we are adding an audio component: each artist will be recorded speaking about the artist they have chosen to be next in the series. Then those words will be played during the photo session with that artist, allowing for the presence of the previous artist in each portrait, furthering the idea of a collective body. Pervasive in these portraits is a connective tissue of words, invisible, floating over the artists bodies and united by a thread of inspiration. Now the exquisite corpse is connected by the human voice. We, the observers, are stepping even further back, leaving the artists to hold space with and for each other. 31

Claressinka Anderson on Anna Sew Hoy 32 Not long after I moved to Los Angeles, I visited the Hammer Museum in 2007 for the first time, to see Eden s Edge: Fifteen LA Artists, which included the work of Anna Sew Hoy. I was new to America, and I wandered the exhibition spaces looking for some sort of marker that might hint as to what it means to be an artist in this city. Gary Garrels, chief curator and director of exhibitions and programs at the Hammer at the time, wrote in his essay about the exhibition, The artists featured share a perspective toward landscape and figure that investigates complex contradictions, which are inherent to life in Los Angeles and more broadly to contemporary American culture. ¹ I felt those tensions immediately in Anna s work. Nonchalantly strung with metallic candy colored chains, feathers, and other small curiosities, her clay dream catcher sculptures enticed me with their shiny surfaces. Some of the shapes hung like suspended anatomical hearts, made vulnerable by the ventricular nature of their construction. They simultaneously felt like protective cages built around something intimate. One of the sculptures was of beer cans constructed into a knot. Who drank from these cans? There is a depth of feeling, of wanting to commune with Anna s work. Her sculptures feel like an extension of her own body, one that is intricately linked to the fabric of Los Angeles. Her work manages to be both private and communal, secretive and open. It brings us right to the edge of the collective and the personal, wrapping it up in bands of connecting clay and fabric. In more recent years, works like the oversized tissue dispensers made of clay and placed on elevated pedestals could be viewed as tongue in cheek but also bring to mind people crying in a group therapy session. Each person that grabs a tissue becomes part of the piece: a multiplication of wipes, of tears, of human experience. Los Angeles tries to be a public city, but it is, at its core, deeply cloistered. People wonder about the lives behind high hedges and security cameras and silhouettes made out through the dark tinted windows of cars. My move to Los Angeles directly followed an almost four year stint in Auckland, New Zealand, and I was surprised to read that Anna was originally from Auckland. At the Hammer, I looked to see if I could find anything comforting from that small island country on the edge of the earth lurking in her sculptures. Knowing no one here, I wanted to grasp at a chain from one of the dream catchers and let it be a rope that might connect the two of us. But what I experienced was something entirely unknown. This both thrilled and terrified me. Standing alone and motionless in that room, all I felt was vast, empty, untouchable space. I looked out beyond these shimmering, dark objects to a pink, flat horizon an imaginary L.A. sunset something a little dirty, a little hopeful. 1. Gary Garrels, Essay, Eden s Edge: Fifteen LA Artists, 2007, https://hammer.ucla.edu/exhibitions/2007/edens-edge-fifteen-la-artists/.

Anna Sew Hoy on Guadalupe Rosales 34 Lupe and I spent our teen years across town from one another in the late 80s, early 90s. Her project, Veteranas and Rucas, archives Latino youth culture from then the ditch parties, the hard techno, the clothes, and make up. Lupe s work exists as a social media feed and its accessibility echoes the spirit of its subject. Lupe s collecting of images, ephemera and music from those teen years creates visibility for her crew in that moment, some who have passed and some who are still around. It s about wearing your personal history as a badge of honor.

Guadalupe Rosales on Shizu Saldamando 36 The first time I saw Shizu s work was at LACMA when she was in the group show Phantom Sightings in 2008. It was also the first time I set foot in LACMA. I was 28 years old. When I saw her work, I saw myself, my sisters, and friends. It was a time when I had created distance between me and my family but was starting to feel homesick. I had spent eight years in New York away from family and friends. Shizu s work made me feel connected.