Showing posts with label hearts. heart art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hearts. heart art. 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.

























Monday, November 3, 2014

Corazon De Oro: A Studio Visit with Jennifer Korsen


I first met Jennifer Korsen at a bad weather moment. It was this past July, and we both had tables at Art Expo San Diego. Unfortunately the expo was taking place at the exact same time as Comic-Con. The bleed over foot traffic everyone at the Expo was hoping for never really materialized. Very little art was sold by anyone. On top of that, Jennifer had an ailing family member to worry about. She wasn't the happiest of campers. There was a lot of down time at the expo, and at one point, I looked across this vast room and saw every artist there just staring at their phones, everyone but Jennifer. She was in constant motion; rearranging her display, cutting out collage materials, pasting, drawing, hanging and re-hanging shadow boxes. Jennifer's restless, creative energy is truly something to behold. That "can't sit still' desire to create at all costs is the spark you have to look for in any artist. She has it in spades.

If you live in Los Angeles, and have even the slightest interest in art, it's hard not to notice Jennifer Korsen. She leaves her heart everywhere she goes. If you follow her on Instagram, she seems to be collaborating with other artists everyday. She's in a new gallery show almost every week. You can spot her hearts in episodes of Transparent, the Fosters, and the upcoming film, "Burying the Ex" People are literally wearing her hearts

But the hearts are just part of the story. I know that any artist with that kind of drive has a body of work that the public rarely, if ever, sees. I wanted to see it. Her current studio has been the workplace of many artists, including Shepard Fairey (and has the nasty punk rock bathroom to show for it). Several artists have left their marks on the walls including Neckface, Curtis Kulig, Sage Vaughn and Lister.  The studio is large, dark and masculine. It's a shared warehouse space, and Jennifer's colorful sliver of it stands out among the dusty stacks of wood. There's even a skate ramp.

When I got to her studio she started pulling out these paintings of dolls heads. The dolls are unadorned and the perspective is extremely close, creating very little space between you and the cold, lifeless doll eyes. They have a slight, but convincing smile, suggesting they are at peace with their hollowness. No heart, no feelings. Jennifer pointed out four abstract paintings she did. Each one is layered in washes of color and forms that look like gnarled bones and/or melting candles. They are mesmerizing, absolute stunners. I asked about how much of her work she keeps to herself, versus what might be "expected" of her.
Yeah, I have a lot of stuff like that. I'm trying to be careful what I'm putting out there until I'm a little more solid on what I'm doing. I'm kind of feeling this all out. I wasn't really expecting people to be paying attention this early, and sometimes I feel like I have no idea what I'm doing. Obviously I do a million different things artwise. So, I try to be careful about what I put out publicly, until I'm pretty solid on what I'm trying to build, or be. I'm a crazy emotional person, but a lot of it, I feel, I can't show. The art world is harsh and quick to label and judge. It's weird though, street art has been the best advertising I could ever hope for. I had no idea I would get this deeply involved in any of this.
Being an established street artist and showing in dozens of galleries, Jennifer has to deal with a lot of sexist garbage. At a recent panel discussion about women in street art, the artists on the panel were sharing some of their horror stories about the sexual harassment they've endured. There was a cranky, older guy who chimed in and said, "But do you really think it's different than any other job?" Jennifer was lightning fast with a response. "It's absolutely different! Because the art world is completely unregulated." It's true. The art world plays by a loose set of rules. The 50/50 gallery/artist split, for instance, exists simply because that's how it's always been. So, of course a market with zero oversight is still going to have a casting couch.
I've become such a raging feminist, just from dealing with a lot of dudes in the art world. There's no H.R. department to report harassment. You're just supposed to suck it up and deal with it. If you say something, then you're causing problems. I have crazy screenshots of text messages from other artists, where it's like 'How do you think it's okay to say this to me?!' It's not okay! I've gotten threats from guys saying they're gonna kill my career because I wouldn't sleep with them. From artists! Nothing good can come from that. Nothing good.
Jennifer and I had a much larger discussion about this which has to stay off the record. But trust me when I tell you, Jennifer has endured a colossal amount of bullshit. We talked for about four hours and I left wanting to stomp on a few skulls. But what I wanted more than anything, was to go home and paint. My afternoon with Jennifer was completely inspiring. She is a mad torrent of creativity. I trust her opinion. She speaks her mind. She doesn't pull her punches. Artists like her are the reason this blog isn't all about me. I am surrounded by these crazy, talented people and I'd be kind of an asshole to not acknowledge them and their influence on me.

I did learn how to get her to sit still for more than ten minutes at a time. You give her some paper and pens, and just ask her to draw you something. She gets into this zone, and she seems really happy to be in it. I brought my copy of Gray's Anatomy and asked her to modify a heart. She lit up like Christmas tree! She did the heart. Then she did another heart. Then she did a bleeding heart couple. Then she drew some wild wounded creature indigenous only to the recesses of Jennifer's mind.

I'll be writing a lot more about Jennifer Korsen here in the near future. I plan on doing a Korsen art tour of Los Angeles with her and we talked about collaborating on a piece or two. Jennifer will be in the El Velorio show at Plaza De Le Raza opening November 8th and her piece for that is just beautiful. You HAVE to see it in person! Also, we will both be in the Wish List show at Gabba Gallery opening on Nov. 15th. After November, Jennifer plans to take some time off from showing to focus on her upcoming solo show at Stone Malone Gallery in February.














On target.

Skate ramp collab with Septerhed











From the El Velorio show.

Custom DJ crate.





Notes to self.



Korsen pay phone.


















Corazon De Oro










Beastly


Korsen's Arsenal






















My absolute favorite Korsen heart...and it's mine!

Korsen's Anatomy




Soft in the Center


Wounded water-buffa-lion-goat.



History of a bathroom #1


History of a bathroom #2


History of a bathroom #3


History of a bathroom #3

Note: the photo captions are my own. The proper titles are unknown to me.