Showing posts with label Jennifer Korsen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jennifer Korsen. Show all posts

Monday, August 10, 2020

Fun & Games with Jennifer Korsen





When I started doing these little Coronavirus interviews with artists back at the end of March, things were bad. We were all quarantining, losing jobs, losing loved ones. Everything was strange and scary. We were frozen in place. Unable to move. It was bad. Well, it's July now and everything is much worse! I sent Jennifer Korsen the interview questions in April, she answered them in May. Then inertia, depression and I have just sat on them since. So, think of the following as a snapshot, a time capsule or a mere curiosity. But having Jennifer as a friend during the apocalypse has been of some comfort to me. So, here's a disjointed conversation between a couple friends just trying to get through it.


How are you feeling?
I feel pretty good. I’m about 3 weeks late filling this out so now that the panic has subsided a little I'm finding routine and trying to figure out how to navigate life after this.
Were you able to quarantine in the studio? How long has it been?
I’m away from my studio but I have some art supplies. It’s actually been kinda nice to have limited access, forces creativity and eliminates me deciding between 50 mediums how I want to express something.
When did it hit you how serious this was?
March 21, driving down the 5 freeway with almost zero cars and seeing those signs on the freeway for the first time that said to wash your hands and stay home and all that. It was apocalyptic, Ill never forget that.
Have you had cancelled/postponed exhibitions as a result?
I have artwork currently locked in at La Luz De Jesus, The Hive, Echoes, Silverlake coffee, and I think one more place I can’t remember right now, lol. Had some live painting, speaking engagements, and a school mural project postponed or cancelled, I'm not even sure which at this point.
What have you been doing with the downtime? Are you able to make art right now?
I didn't do anything creative for the first 2 or 3 weeks, it just felt like one long weird, panicky day. An artist friend of mine (PS it’s you, Keith.) invited me to draw on zoom and it kind of stoked the fire back up. I've been painting and playing the Omnichord, doing yoga, going for walks, basically all the things that have been new year’s resolutions were actually pandemic resolutions and I’m currently killing it. Also interspersed with moments of dread and panic just to keep it interesting.
Are you finding any inspiration in this mess?
I actually am, I know this sounds weird, but I tend to be calm in moments of panic and chaos. It’s totally a PTSD response but it kind of feels like the world caught up to the way I feel a lot of the time. I’ve been doing a lot of art with no objective and getting into some abstracted stuff I call micro/macro. I'm also making some resin stuff with things I find on the beach, kind of sentimental weird stuff. I think a lady may have thought I needed help while I was combing through handfuls of sand to find tiny white rocks.  I feel like this time has been a good reset for me and in the long run, I will be grateful to have been forced to slow down. I also think (hope) I hit peak anxiety during this and I survived it so that's kind of nice as well. Really making an active effort to be mindful and focus on what I can control.
What has been the most challenging part of this for you?
Losing work, cancelled projects, uncertainty about the future, basically everything I didn’t mention above. I hate going to the grocery store, seeing lines and people in masks is really disturbing and makes it hit home. It feels like a movie.
What are some of your coping mechanisms?
Painting, walking, talking to friends, yoga, Omnichord.
What's the thing/place you wish you could do/go but can't right now?
I wish I could road trip up to Portland. I do almost every year. I also had plans to go to Colorado in September and I kind of doubt that will happen now.
Done any binge watching, book reading, game playing?
I’ve watched every offshoot of 90 Day FiancĂ©, lots of ghost and paranormal stuff, Tiger King, I’m Not Ok with This, mostly stuff i can have on in the background.
Favorite work of art in Los Angeles?
I feel like the entire city of LA is a collaborative work of art, like a performance piece.
What song is stuck in your head right now (commercial jingles totally count)
I didn’t have one until reading that and what popped up is commercial from the 80's that goes "hello mother, hello father, April freshness, not a bother, just one problem, it’s my laundry, oh dear mom and dad I think I’m in a quandary." I’ve had that in the back of my head for 30+ years.
Favorite brand of toilet paper and where do you find it?
Costco brand. Charmin if I’m feeling fancy.
If you could hoard one food item, what would it be?
Artichokes, Numero Uno pizza, matzah ball soup. I need 3 food items and some yuzu chili sauce from Trader Joes.
Do you know anyone personally who has contracted the virus?
A few people but they are ok. Some family members and friends of friends have passed, and it really blows my mind how some people think its fake and overblown or aren't willing to take precautions to protect others. It makes me really sad for all of us.
How do you think this all ends?
Maybe it goes away like a miracle, maybe we have a civil war, maybe we have a massive social and financial restructuring, maybe we learn compassion and realize we are all connected and do better moving forward. Or maybe it doesn’t, and we just live like this shutting down every few months forever. I will say though, I'm super grateful for Facebook memories right now, it makes me feel like, at least I did a lot of cool stuff before this and went after my dreams. As cheesy as that sounds, seeing it gives me confidence that I’ll be able to adapt moving forward, however it goes.

























Friday, December 30, 2016

KrossD Awards (2016 Can Fuck Off Already edition)

"Images of Police Brutality #4" by Steven Thomas Higgins

This is gonna be short and sweet. I didn't even want to do it all. Just 10 days into this year, I woke up to the news that David Bowie had died. I was completely unprepared for the degree to which that would hurt me. The shit snowball just gained velocity after that. Merle, Prince, Leonard. Then, in November, because of an arcane electoral system (that was put in place to exploit slaves), my country elected a megalomaniac racist, peeping tom, pussy grabber to the most powerful position on the planet. But even that wasn't enough for 2016. No, it had to take Carrie Fisher and her Mom away too. Fuck you 2016!

I'm forced to write this one because the best art of 2016 was so damn great, and I worry that you didn't notice. I've been kind of selfishly busy with my own career and haven't been writing about others as much as usual. I'm sorry. I owe you this much.

ARTIST OF THE YEAR: Steven Thomas Higgins

The one single shining, glorious bright spot of this horrible year, has been watching Steven Thomas Higgins work. He hasn't been loud about it. His name doesn't turn up in every group show around town. He's just been quietly, diligently, slaving away in his studio, exploring color, tonal duality, textures, and themes.He has dedicated himself to his craft, and doesn't seem to care if you're paying attention. I am. I know a few gallerists who might read this. I'm writing this for you. You need to be watching this guy. You need to be showing this guy. We need his art. Pay attention!

"In Groups" by Steven Thomas Higgins

"Lines in Blue and Red" by Steven Thomas Higgins

BEST SOLO SHOW OF THE YEAR: Public Secrets - Abel Alejandre at Coagula Curatorial

You've heard me fawn about Abel before. He has a way with line that just wrecks me. "Public Secrets" was a show that delved into myth, conspiracy theory, and family that may have been the most honest exhibit of the year.

"Ebola" by Abel Alejandre

BEST GROUP SHOW OF THE YEAR: "Sticks and Stones" curated by Douglas Alvarez at Cactus Gallery.

The theme seemed simple enough, create something that reflects childhood lessons/experiences. Who knew that that this would take every artist in the show out of their comfort zone (and signature styles) to create deeply personal, and touching work? Who knew that Alex Schaefer and Jennifer Korsen had shared memories of prismatic fascination? I spent a good chunk of the opening sitting on a forklift and being fittingly delinquent with good friends before we had to chase zombies (long story). Also, this show had my single, favorite work of art of the year in it, by Snow Mack.

"Jackson Browne Goes Downtown in his Jacks on Brown gown" by Snow Mack


NINTH WONDER OF THE ART WORLD: Leigh Salgado's laugh.

If you've never felt the healing powers of this woman's laugh, I feel sorry for you. It makes everything okay.




MOST TEARS SHED: Tfail (aka Tina St. Claire).

Although we had many mutual friends, and rubbed artwork elbows a few times, I never got to meet Tina. But her art always grabbed me by the throat, and made Los Angeles an insanely beautiful place to live. For all the heroes that fell this year, I cried the most about losing Tina. Please remember her!

Tfail

...and while I'm at it...


WORST ARTIST OF THE YEAR: Milo Moire

Yep. Her again. This year Milo actually invited strangers to grope her through a mirrored box. For fucks sake! You can talk to me until you're blue in the face about how this was a profound statement regarding consent. I'll quietly listen as you tell me that the mirrors reflect our inner perversions. I might even nod as you talk. But after you finish explaining art to me, I'm gonna walk far, far away from you and hope to never see you again.

Fuck off, 2016!




Sunday, November 8, 2015

Sneak Peek: Wish List 3.0 at Gabba Gallery


It's that time of the year again. Christmas lights are being hung way too early, the stench of pumpkin spice hangs thick in the air, and bratty kids are scrambling to get their names expunged from the naughty ledger. But it's also time to rejoice, because Gabba Gallery's annual Wish List show is upon us! Wish List 3.0 will be a constantly morphing group show featuring over 60 artists that run the gamut of visual mediums. Nothing in the show will be priced higher than $1,000 and much will be had for far less. This year, the show includes the likes of Alex Schaefer, Amy Smith, Cody Bayne, Jennifer Korsen, Kate Kelton, Leba, Loudlabs, Nicole Bruckman, Septerhed, Pastey Whyte and Valerie Pobjoy, just to name a few. It's all cash & carry, so as one piece is sold, a new piece takes it's place on the wall. So, you should come early and stay a while just to watch the exhibit shape-shift. The show is so massive it needs two openings! The first opening will take place November 14th, with the second on December 12th. Below is just a small preview of what's in store. Top pic is from My Dog Sighs.

Wish List 3.0
November 14 through December 20, 2015
7pm - 11pm

Second opening December 12th, 2015

Gabba Gallery
3126 Beverly Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90057

Alex Schaefer

Valerie Pobjoy

Valerie Pobjoy

Septerhed

Amy Smith

Amy Smith
Mike Bell

Mike Bell

Phobik

Phil Santos

Nicole Bruckman

Cody Bayne

Pastey Whyte

Jennifer Celio

Nathan Anderson

Leba

Toshee

Clinton Bopp

Jennifer Korsen


Jennifer Korsen

Jaime Becker

Peter Greco

Kate Kelton


Carly Ealey


Jodi Bonassi


Peter Goode

Mark Waldman

Jason Ostro

KrossD

Wrdsmth