Showing posts with label Anthony Ausgang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Ausgang. Show all posts

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Scratching The Surface with Nicole Bruckman





Long before MSNBC re-purposed the words into a vacant slogan, I had been calling a certain gallery occurrence the 'lean in'. Every artist knows about the 'lean in'. It's that elusive moment when a gallery patron (or gasp, art critic) is so taken with a work of art that they lean in to read the tiny title card. Artists live and die by the 'lean in'. Gallerists watch for it. It can mean sales. It can mean future shows. It can lead to name recognition.

My first encounter with the work of Nicole Bruckman wasn't exactly a 'lean in'. It was more like I had been lassoed and pulled across the room. It was a painting called "Hollybird" (seen above), a vertical portrait of a young woman holding a glass box with what I first thought was a dead fish. Upon closer inspection, you can see it's a bird. It's status is vague. Is the creature sleeping, injured or deceased? The box is coffin-like, but the lid is open. The woman appears to be biting her lip, but betraying little else as far as clues are concerned. Her eyes are wide and fearless. No sign of tears. She stands before a scratchy, brushed gold field that holds echoes of Klimt. It's a really strong piece, loaded with mystery. There's an informal balance to the composition that I would later find in many of Nicole's paintings. Informal balance is a tricky business, but when done right, there is magic in the negative spaces. Nicole does it right. I was a fan immediately.

Since then, I've seen Nicole's animal rich fables exhibited at a number of venues. They always stand out. They always pull you across the room. There's a lushness to her fields of grass that just floors me. She manages a storybook charm in all work. Detailed, without being too fussy. Surreal, without being alienating. Even her most melancholy pieces exude a certain optimism. They still manage to feel familial. You never feel detached from the work as a viewer. You're inside it. She's speaking directly to you, 'I made this painting for you.' That's not an easy thing to pull off.

I've had the opportunity to work with Nicole in her role as art director for Flower Pepper Gallery. I've hung out with her while she painted a mural. She is, much like her art, warm, embracing and amiable. When you first meet her, she makes you feel like you've been friends forever. I've never asked her about "Hollybird". Oftentimes I much prefer the questions art raises to the answers. But I've wanted to do this interview since I first saw that painting. We barely scratched the surface here, so I hope it's the just first of many.



So, I know you studied art in Ohio. Were you born there?
Yeah, I'm from Mentor, which is a suburb of Cleveland, and then I went to school at Columbus College of Art & Design, which is right across the street from O.S.U. But it's like a small art school. Then I moved to London for about a year.
That was right after college?
Right after college. Like, right away. I worked at a pub there for six months, then  backpacked/traveled for six months after that. Then I moved back to Cleveland and did some freelance for Cleveland Magazine, and the Free Times, which is kind of like the LA Weekly. I did some illustration, and I waitressed, saved money and moved to Los Angeles a year later.
Where you making any art in London?
No (laughs). I should have been, but no. I was just basically traveling and partying. I did go to a bunch of art stuff, and even did interviews, but it was like 'Well, your visas up, so...'
Knowing how connected you and your art is to animals, I was wondering if you ever considered being a veterinarian, or did you always want to be an artist?
No, actually the animal thing is kind of new. When I was in fifth grade...I always kind of knew I was good at drawing, but I was also really bad at everything else, like athletic stuff. I was good at fashion. I was good at art. I tried music but I wasn't good at it. But I liked artistic stuff, and I was always that kind of way. When I was in fifth grade, my teacher told my mom that she should really put me in art class. So, I started taking after-school classes at this little studio. Basically she ripped out pages and you copied them, like calendars and stuff, and she helped you with different techniques, pen & ink, pastels, etc. I really liked it and I made some friends. I went to Catholic school until sixth or seventh grade, but they didn't have a lot of programs. The public school though was the largest public school in the whole state, and they had really good funding.They had a really good arts program. Like they had printmaking, jewelry making, photography. They had all kinds of stuff. So, I went into the arts program there, and my friends from the art class were there, you know? So, I just stuck with it.
 Then you decided to focus on art in college?
Yeah, I knew I was going to apply to go into art, but I didn't know if it was going to be art school, or like a college that had art. So, I still had to take all the annoying French classes and math classes, even though I wasn't going to end up needing them. I really wanted to go to the School of Visual Arts in New York, but my parents didn't want me going too far from home. So, I went to CCAD, and they gave me a big scholarship, and I had a good friend who was going there as well. They had a really good illustration program.
Then you moved to L.A. about two years after CCAD?
When I moved out here, I actually moved to Huntington Beach, because my friend from high school was there, and I knew that  Anthony Ausgang was kind of from that area. You know, when I was in school, Mark Ryden was huge. It was like Juxtapoz, Ryden, Joe Sorren, those guys...and my teacher, Chris Payne, took us to the Society of Illustrators conventions. Those guys were never there but we talked to everybody about them, and that was the era when illustration was becoming fine art, and La Luz was just huge. So I thought, yeah, I'll move out here. That'll be really cool. But I didn't realize how far Huntington Beach was from L.A. and I found out how terrible it was. Just the worst. There's no art, nothing. So, I moved to Los Angeles and started waitressing at The Standard...where I met my husband...and I made a lot of cool friends there. Everybody who worked there was like artistic and amazing. The people who came in were terrible, but the people I worked with were really awesome. We all stayed really close. I started showing with Cannibal Flower right away. Then I did The Hive, and it kind of went from there.
So Cannibal Flower was your first gallery show?
Yeah, Cannibal Flower was the first. I was doing commercial stuff in Ohio, illustration. Then when I got out here, I did a bunch of restaurant projects. Because I was working at restaurants, they hired me to do logos, and some big paintings for their wall. But even that is all commercial stuff, you know? But I really wanted to start showing. I wanted to be in La Luz, and I liked Thinkspace. So, I met with L.Croskey , and he was just so helpful! Like, I don't know if I ever would have started showing if I hadn't met with him. I wanted to, but I didn't know how to go about it, or what to focus on. L.C. was just really, really helpful. Because I was really nervous, and he's very nurturing. He's really calm. He can get harder on you later, but in the beginning he just gets you excited about showing. He tells you what you do that's different from someone else, and what you should focus on. This is what's good, so work with this. He put me in a show right away, so I had to make something. I was just used to making stuff for projects, like for spec. I had to come up with something last minute. I was really scared at first, but once I started showing with him it just became a lot easier. Cannibal Flower had shows every month. Then I did The Hive, and I had something at C.A.V.E. once.
Well, I first saw your work  at WWA Gallery.
Well, that's really interesting. I was working at New Stone Age...they're kind of like Gold Bug but not as dark...artsy jewelry and stuff. One of the girls I was working with, her sister was an artist, and she was an actress. We became really good friends, and she was friends with Gaston, who owns Meltdown Comics. She had done stuff there before, and we started curating shows there. She knew people too, like Tim Biskup, and would put them in the shows. WWA had just started, and they came to all our shows. Then they put me in shows, and we put Rob in shows. He had just started to paint. Then Stephanie and I did a show at Cella together---and Marcos Saldana and I curated The Hounds of Love show there last year.
And now you have shown at La Luz!
I have shown at La Luz! I did one of their group shows, the Kitsch'n Sync, and I did the coaster show last year. I did the Kiss dogs!
When you were growing up, did you go see a lot of art as a kid?
You know there wasn't a lot of galleries, or anything like that where I grew up. But Cleveland has a really good art museum. My mom used to take us there all the time. She didn't work, so we would go there all the time with her and my grandma. I loved Renoir! That was my favorite. I was obsessed with his stuff. I was really into the impressionist stuff.
What else were you drawn to?
At one point, I thought I wanted to be a ballerina. We used to go to ballets all the time. but I was not good at it, and had no patience with it. Then it quickly became that I liked the ballet because of the aesthetic of it. I wanted to do the sets and that part of it. I was always into fairy tales too. So, I really wanted to make the books come to life, you know? At first I wanted to move to New York and paint backdrops for Broadway or something. Then I found out that's not as glamorous as you think. It's not really about painting, and you don't make any money. 
 What's the best thing you learned in art school?
Chris Payne's seminar was really amazing for me. At first, I really wanted to do children's books. But the amount of work, to do every page as a painting...plus the amount of money they made? Chris did start doing some children's books, but mostly like covers. Anyway, he taught us so much. He did all different things. He taught us to use tracing paper, which is really fun. It's cheap for one thing, but also you can do your sketch, and then you can go over it and correct your own sketch, instead of erasing and erasing. So, for concepts, that was really helpful. He would bring in, like, John Wayne movies, and he'd say 'Check out this lighting. This is what you should be looking at.' He was the biggest thing for me then. The color concept class too. Color is really important to me, so I was really into that.
And now you're the art director of Flower Pepper Gallery.
Yeah, so I had curated the shows at Meltdown and a couple at Cella. Also, Flower Pepper had a bunch of products in there that we used to sell at New Stone Age. So, I was familiar with the products. They had the show Painted Sound going on, and Nom Kinnear King was in it and I had done lots of shows with her. So, I was like 'Oh! This is in Pasadena. This is close to my house. I'm going to have to go check this place out.' Then I found out they were hiring---and they kind of tested me out by letting me curate a show, which sort of led to me getting that position.
Let's talk about influences. You had mentioned Renoir, who else has made a big impact on you?
When I was in college, it was, for sure, Mark Ryden and Joe Sorren. They were huge. That was like everything. Camille Rose Garcia. I love Walton Ford, his technique is incredible, but I love the stories behind his animals. There will be a starling eating a piece of chocolate because starlings moved here, or were transplanted here but shouldn't exist here, just like they shouldn't be eating chocolate. Very nature involved, intricate story lines in beautiful old fashioned compositions. So, I really like his stuff. I always liked Lucian Freud paintings. There's a wide swath there.
What do you find the most challenging thing to paint? 
Trees. I love them, but the bark is tricky, and leaves are very time consuming. It is hard to know how much detail to include and when to stop.
Lastly, I'm kind of in awe of how you render leaves of grass. What's the trick to painting grass?
First I paint the sky to cover the whole panel. Then I mix a few different greenish colors, adding some of the sky color closest to the horizon to make it seem in the distance, and I basically paint every blade of grass adding more dark and more light to certain areas for depth. Fairly simple, just kind of time consuming.


You can currently see Nicole's work in the Pandamonium show (which she curated) at:
Flower Pepper Gallery
121 East Union Street
Pasadena, CA 91103
Next Saturday (6/21/2014), you and your kids can make some art with Nicole, myself, and other artists at Flower Pepper from 1pm -4pm (see flyers below)

You can see Nicole's "King Atticus" mural at:
Gabba Gallery
3126 Beverly Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA. 90057

Coming up in August, Nicole will have work in the "Baby Animals" show at:
bG Gallery

...and much more after that! I'll keep you posted.


Roar

Back To Neverland

The Pit Bull and the Pea



Winky & Blinky


Idol Time In The Moonlight


Hello Kitty


Kiss Dogs



White Rabbit


Sketchbook stuff


Tracing concepts


The arsenal




Saturday, March 1, 2014

Art Picks of the Month - March 2014

"March comes in like a lion..."

Every so often the art gods smile down on Los Angeles and give us a cornucopia of fine art to behold. Such is the case this March. You have a plethora of choices, so let me help narrow them down for you. Some of my favorite artists drawing breath are showing work in L.A. this month. Grab you're calendar and a pen (not a pencil). Here's what you need to see:

March 1st:


Daniel Rolnik curated "The Season of Spring" for Flower Pepper in Pasadena. The exhibit faetures something like 138 artists from around the globe, including JAW Cooper, Liz McGrath, Anthony Ausgang, Alex Schaefer, and Ryan McIntosh. This show isn't fucking around! The prices will range from free (yeah) to around $200. Why would you miss this?

In the interest of full disclosure, yes, I am in the show too. But I'd be recommending it regardless. You can click here for a little interview I did for the show.

Opening reception: March 1st, 6 pm. It's cash and carry so get there early.

Flower Pepper Gallery
121 East Union Street
Pasadena, CA 91103

Tel: 626.795.1895


March 8th:


"Drawings by Lowell Darling" at Future Studio Gallery.

It's Lowell Darling. Just trust me.

Opening reception: March 8th, 7 pm

Future Studio Gallery
5558 N. Figueroa St.
Los Angeles, CA 90042
(323) 254-4565


March 15th:


"A Better Home for a Quiet Wolf" - Matjames Metson at Coagula Curatorial.

Look, nobody is doing what Matjames is doing, NOBODY. You're gonna hear more from me (and him) about that soon. In the meantime, you can read the first thing I ever wrote about the guy by clicking here.
I've seen some of the new work in progress, and really, it's upper tier.

Opening reception: March 15th, 7 pm.

Coagula Curatorial
974 Chung King Road, Los Angeles CA 90012
(424) 226-2485


March 29th:


"Sinful Saints & Saintly Sinners at the Margins of the Americas" at The Fowler Museum.

In case "A Quiet Wolf" doesn't satiate your appetite, Matjames is in this show too.

Opening Reception: March 29th, 6 pm.
RSVP by March 7, 2014
(310) 206-7001 or fowlerRSVP@arts.ucla.edu

The Fowler Museum is located in the heart of UCLA's north campus.

Sunday, February 23, 2014

5 Questions with ANTHONY AUSGANG


To paraphrase the worst Clash album ever, let's cut the crap! There's about zero chance that you're reading THIS blog without knowing who the hell Anthony Ausgang is. Unless you're my mother, in which case, Hi Mom! But really, do you need me to remind you of Anthony Ausgang's secure seat at the pop surrealist table? I can safely assume you're familiar with 'Dude Descending A Staircase', right? If you're an artist who does your homework, you already own the seminal Kirsten Anderson book on the lowbrow movement. Hell, you can probably quote the Robert Williams essay in that book verbatim. Maybe you're here because you're a MGMT fan, and you're hoping to dig up some dirt on the band (sorry, we didn't really go there). Maybe you're a fan of weird abstract literature looking for clues to deciphering the  "Pawnee Republican" and "Sleep of Puss Titter" (I can't help you there either). I arranged a meeting with him, to ask only 5 questions. But if I'm completely honest, I just really wanted to see his studio, and get to know the man a little better. I wasn't disappointed. Ausgang possesses a keen intellect, a  witty, jovial veneer, and his studio (as you'll see below) is brimming with archival delights from every stage of his artistic development. Let's go!


1) What was the most revelatory art experience you've ever had?

Well, really it was when I was sixteen, I went to Bali, Indonesia with my family. We stayed there three months. You know, my experience with art up to that point was strictly in museums, art museums around the world. So, I hadn't really had an experience looking at art outside of a museum situation, and when I was in Bali I saw all kinds of art that was being made...for example, there was a tree that had been carved by the side of the road, just this phenomenal sculpture. It was really interesting to see how art was integrated into everyday life there. When I saw that, it made a lot of sense to me. It clicked, right there...about what art is, and the purpose of art, and how it can actually exist outside the laboratory of the museums.

2) You've paid homage to a number of artists in your work, perhaps most famously Duchamp. You've also had some harsh words for John Baldassari. Who do you consider the most historically underrated and most overrated artists?

(laughs) Wow! Yeah, actually I have shifting tastes. My fandom of certain artists comes and goes, but when I was younger I was really impressed by Franz Marc. He had this tragic story, where he was killed in World War I, before he really managed to get any super masterworks done. I find his work really inspiring, because he did some really great paintings of animals, that sort of caught the essence of what it is to be a non-human, sentient being. There's also a Dutchman, colonial cat, living in Indonesia. His name is Walter Spies. He combined, sort of European painting technique with Eastern perspective. So he did these really beautiful paintings, where they seemed to be flat, but they still had that kind of Japanese perspective. Where they don't really decrease in size, things are just kind of stacked on top of each other? He's almost completely unknown outside of Dutch colonial circles. Overrated? Yeah man, Baldessari. I'm against the dude a hundred fucking percent! I don't have anything personally...you know, this is not a personal attack. But I guess in the art world, if you attack somebodies work, you're attacking them personally. I don't necessarily feel that way. But yeah, I think he's overrated. Art should be an additive process, and when it becomes a subtractive process like that...I think it's bullshit. Unless you're sculpting, taking a block of stone, and subtracting the sum until the figure is there. But with painting, where you actually remove imagery, to me is counter intuitive.

3) I asked Isabel Samaras this question once, and got a rather enthusiastic response. What's the most beloved brush in your arsenal?

I use a fan brush, which are for blending...from one color to another, or one value to another. those are my favorites now...because I've seen people use them...like Ron English can use these, and he can actually stop in a perfect spot, whereas I still have to tape it off, it's almost like airbrushing. So, yeah, I love those right now, because I still haven't figured their mystery out. I'm still sort of intrigued by how to use these brushes. Probably my least favorite brush is the pin striping brush. I did pin striping, I use a line brush. You know...actually, my favorite brush is what most artists would consider their worst brush. I use these brushes, and so they get to the point where they're just shit...and most people would just use them to mix paint, or just use them as a stir stick, but at that point...say it's a round, and the bristles are all splayed out. Somehow I figured out how to use those brushes to blend, so they are like a fan brush, but it's a round. Most people would've thrown those brushes away years ago.

4) If you could create the artwork for any Link Wray song, what song would you like to do?

Well, it would be "Rumble" wouldn't it? Link Wray...here's this dude who got shit on. They called his music dangerous. "Rumble" was taken off the charts, right? It was banned...and the dude still kept fucking going...and to me that's one of the most important things about art, is you gotta be in it for the long haul. Sure, I was the hot new flavor at one time, and I've seen other kids now, they're the hot new flavor, and yeah, that's great, but it's longevity and commitment that I think are one of the most attractive qualities for artists...assuming that they do good work, 'cause you know, Baldessari's been around for a while too.

5) I read you were shot at...twice! What the fuck?

I was walking down the street in Austin, Texas around 1978. Austin was entirely different at that point. I walked by this movie theater, and this black dude was...at that moment he was getting kicked out of the theater for drinking. I thought, 'oh, that's fucking weird'. So, I stood around to watch. The ushers got this dude out in the street, and he kicked him in the ass. Then this guy just turned around with his gun, and shot the usher three times in the stomach. Everybody scattered. Everybody split---except me. So, I'm standing there like...'Wow!' Then the guy pointed the gun at me. The instant he pulled the trigger a little alarm went off that said 'Hit the ground dude!'. So, I hit the ground...and split. He went one way, and I went the other. I ran down this alley, and he suddenly changed his mind. He came back and he was running down the alley behind me, and I thought 'This is fucking it man.' So I just stopped, and I got on the ground. The guy ran by me. He was really stupid. He was wearing a white Panama hat, white suit, you know? He couldn't blend in anywhere. I went back the next day and saw that there was a bullet hole in the glass. Another time, I actually did get shot, but it was self-inflicted. It was really stupid. It was the day of the L.A. riots. I learned my lesson. You never have two people handling a loaded gun (laughs), at the same time. But some things you can be told, and other things you have to learn by experience.



Anthony Ausgang will be included in the Daniel Rolnik curated 'Season of Spring' group show
at Flower Pepper Gallery opening March 1st, 2014.
He's also busy curating a Kustom Kulture show in Milan this September, and working on a new novel.


Ausgang in the studio.
A work in progress.

The Ausgang brush corner.

The 'why would you throw it away' brush.

Ammunition.

A life in sketchbooks.

From the Ausgang sketchbook files.

I'm really hoping I posted this right side up.

Vintage Ausgang!

A Raymond Pettibon palm frond!

Another Raymond Pettibon from the Ausgang collection!

The Ausgang album cover files.

Ausgang-edlia.

Thrift store score #1.

Thrift store score #2.

Old Skool Ausgang Xerox manipulations.

The end? Spoiler alert: it didn't.


Friday, January 10, 2014

Art Pick of the Month: "Two Johns and a Whore"



Let me tell you a story. I first met Lisa Derrick outside Copro Gallery. She was coming out, I was heading in. Lisa was standing with a couple friends of mine. She was very animated and railing about a particular painting in the show that she found utterly abhorrent. Lisa was clearly very angry about it, and sure enough, when I went in to investigate, there was this large painting of a big-eyed (natch) pre-teen girl apparently suffocating on a pair of panties that had been wrapped around her face. It was truly odious. It was the kind of art that has only one play; agitation. I ended up seeing some decent art elsewhere that night at Bergamot Station, but what remains memorable for me is that first impression of  Lisa Derrick. She was/is fervent, boisterous, agitated, and staunchly passionate about art.  I liked her right away.

Lisa has been my editor at Cartwheel for over a year now (and gawd knows I need one). We've argued about punk rock timelines. She's scolded me on my incorrect use of, and penchant for ellipsis (it's a Lester Bangs thing). She's been a great sounding board. More than anything, she's been a friend. She's always come through whenever I asked her for anything. She's even stopped me from taking a job that would have placed me within the jaws of Scientology. She's true.

So...(wink) while I've ranted here recently about how stagnant art in L.A. seemed to be last year, 2014 is kicking off with all sorts of bloody promise! Saturday night at Coagula, "Two Johns and a Whore" opens in Chinatown. The jumping off point thematically will be the world's oldest profession and it features the work of John Fleck, John Roecker (get it?), Anthony Ausgang, Orianna Small, Stacy Lande, Jane Cantillon, Anthony Ausgang, Louie Metz and Mimi Universe, just to name a few. I could tell you another story about how drop dead gorgeous the work of Stacy Lande is, and how fucking cool she was when I reached out to her for advice over a decade ago, but I'll restrain myself. The biggest catalyst for you to get up off your ass and see this show is that it has been curated by, yep, Lisa Derrick. Beyond Firedoglake, Huffington Post, Larry Flynt, Sacred History, and all of her other accomplishments, Lisa is a fierce advocate for the arts. More than that, she doesn't fuck around, she doesn't mince words and you can bet if she put this together, it's gonna be something special. So I urge you...GO!

"Two Johns and a Whore" opens January 11, 2014 - 7pm
runs through January 25, 2014
Coagula Curatorial
974 Chung King Road, Los Angeles CA 90012

John Roecker work mid-installation

John Roecker work on paper

John Roecker piece awaiting the hang.

"DSL" by Orianna Small (don't act like you don't know)

John Roecker work on canvas

Top photo: "Three Figure Study" by Louie Metz
All photos courtesy of Lisa Derrick