2008.06.20

Bill Berkson and Colter Jacobsen @ GALLERY 16

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BILL
By Bill Berkson and Colter Jacobsen
Book Signing and Release, Thursday, June 19th, 6-8PM
Live Music with Coconut

Gallery 16 Editions is pleased to announce the release of our latest publication, BILL, a collaboration between poet Bill Berkson and artist Colter Jacobsen.
      
      Berkson writes; “The words and title for BILL popped out of a juvenile detective novel Tom Veitch gave me around 1980. Instantly, just flipping through this little illustrated book occasioned an emergency. The editorial imagination went to work. Soon, having typed a series of short sentences, paragraphs and stray phrases towards the bottom edge of unusually thin 8 1/2” by 11” sheets... I set aside the twenty-or-so pages and forgot about them.”
      
      Once completed, the story was shelved in a manila folder where it remained for 25 years. It wasn’t until 2006 that Berkson re-visited the story and decided the blank pages needed artwork. With the help of Mac McGinnes, it was decided that artist Colter Jacobsen, and his beautifully rendered drawings, would be perfect for the job. Jacobsen found inspiration for the project in a collection of postcards, some dating back as early as the 1900’s, and up to the 1980’s. With a slow and deliberate attentiveness, Jacobsen began a series of drawings. “I felt I was responding to another time, nearer to when I was born, a time thirty years before I was born, and recontextualizing these times into images for today.”
      
      Within a year, the new BILL emerged, “a fresh creation, in its present splendor.” Gallery 16 Editions will host a book signing & release with the artists on Thursday, June 19th from 6-8 pm. We hope you can join us in celebrating this wonderful project.


Bill Berkson is a poet, art critic, editor, curator and professor at the San Francisco Art Institute. He was born in NewYork City in 1939 and entered the worlds of poetry and art and in his early twenties. He is the author of eighteen books of poetry including, most recently, Gloria with etchings by Alex Katz, and Our Friends Will Pass Among You Silently. His reviews have been featured in Aperture, Art News, Modern Painters and Artforum. He is a contributing editor for Art in America. His books of criticism include The Sweet Singer of Modernism and Sudden Address: Selected Lectures.
      
      Colter Jacobsen was born in 1975 in Ramona, California. He graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2001. His work has been exhibited at Jack Hanley Gallery, Adobe Books, San Francisco Arts Commission and New Langton Arts in San Francisco, White Columns, New York, and Corvi-Mora, London. Colter currently lives and works in San Francisco.
      
      The original words-and-drawings sheets for BILL were first shown at the Jack Hanley Gallery in San Francisco, CA, June 2007.

GALLERY 16
501 Third Street, San Francisco, CA 94107 | 415.626.7495 | www.gallery16.com

2008.04.02

LAUREN DAVIES @ GALLERRY 16

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When Hell Freezes Over is a mixed media installation that centers on a young polar bear that was shot and killed in the seaside village of Twillingate, Newfoundland. The following year the bear was returned to the town as a prize specimen of taxidermy artistry and has taken on a second life as the main attraction of Twillingate’s tiny museum. 

When Hell Freezes Over presents a sculptural replica of the Twillingate polar bear surrounded by a slightly odd assortment of natural history knock-offs, much like the actual museum in Newfoundland: sparkling iceberg models made from fake sugar cubes; landscapes models that have morphed into objects of household convenience; a tattered scrap of a fleece blanket has turned into a fuzzy waterfall; an explorer’s flag that appears to be made from wood is waving over a snow ball fort that will never melt. Combining mixed media sculpture, digital prints on fabric and diagrammatic paintings, Davies' installation meshes crafts, conceptualism and environmental concerns with questions about what comprises a museum
and one town’s sense of its own history.

Davies received her BFA and MFA in sculpture from the San Francisco Art Institute. She has exhibited her mixed media sculpture, installations, and drawings at the Oakland Museum, the Headlands Center for the Arts, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, Intersection for the Arts, The Lab, Ampersand International Arts and Gallery 16.

For additional information, please contact Vanessa at 415.626.7495 or email vanessa@gallery16.com

GALLERY 16
501 Third Street @ Bryant, San Francisco, CA 94107
P: 415.626.7495  F: 415.626.8439

GALLERY HOURS: Monday to Friday, 9am - 5pm; Saturday, 11am - 5pm

 

2008.03.17

JOHN DUGGER: Mount Analogue @ S. Wolf Fine Art

Banners and drawings March 21 - April 26, 2008
Opening Reception – Thurs. April 3, 5:30-7:30 pm

 

John Dugger, a Berkeley-based artist whose participation works of the 60s and 70s are widely-appreciated in Europe where he spent much of his career but hardly known here, will exhibit mountain banners at Steven Wolf Fine Arts. The Los Angeles-born Dugger began his career in London creating participation events alongside other expatriates like Lygia Clark and Helio Oiticica. This work earned him a pavilion that he shared with the artist David Medalla in the 1972 Documenta curated by Harold Szeemann.

In the middle 1970s, looking to renew his art practice, Dugger turned to banners, an ancient art form explicitly designed for public spectacles and largely ignored by western artists. He has since gone on to create banners that were used to commemorate the Dalai Lama, the Black Panthers, The Queen of England and the Olympics.

In the 1980s Dugger took up climbing and this activity led to the mountain banners, large geometric tapestries with a detailed mountain drawing in the center. Dugger makes drawings on site during his climbs then, back in the studio, uses a pen carved from a twig found during the outing to permanently fix them to the fabric using a dye-discharge process. Monochromatic by design, these panels then become the central focus of colorful banners that are hung using state of the art mountain riggings designed by Dugger himself.

Historically banners have been used in battle, in spiritual processions, in sporting events and in political marches. Both 1066 and 1968 were big years for the banner. Dugger’s first banner in 1974, commissioned by the Chile Solidarity Campaign for a march protesting that country’s military dictatorship, took its place in that tradition.

However, as our notion of public space and spectacle has evolved, we probably think of banners more now as headlines atop newspapers and internet sites than as physical standard bearers. As the physical and metaphorical space around the banner changed so too had Dugger’s work. In the late 1980s, he began to shift the banner to the private sphere. Fearing rejection from the supporters of his public art and political work, he kept the mountain banners out of sight for five years, until he encountered the Dalai Lama from whom he received a sense of permission to embrace without reservation the more overtly spiritual aims celebrated in the new work. He was also emboldened by the realization that while the mountain banners emulated the tradition of alpine drawing, glorified the great outdoors, and possessed the pantheistic spirit of American transcendentalism, they also retained some connection to his early participation work, political by nature, in which he eschewed technology for human energy and worked to bridge his audience to the environment.

The show at Steven Wolf Fine Arts, Dugger’s first one-person exhibition in the U.S., takes its name from Mount Analogue, an unfinished novel by the surrealist prose artist Rene Dumont, in which a small group of intellectual outsiders in Paris drop everything in their lives to scale a mountain that seems like it might be part fantasy, part reality, all analogy.

STEVEN WOLF FINE ARTS
415-263-3677
info@stevenwolffinearts.com

www.stevenwolffinearts.com

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2008.03.15

A PLATE OF FOOD @ LANGTON ARTS

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A PLATE OF FOOD IS
A MAP OF THE WORLD

everything in it can be traced
back to the soil
back to the land
back to people

Be it
for pleasure or necessity, when we sit down to eat a plate of food, we discover the flavor of an idea. Folded in a mushroom risotto or the wrapper of a hamburger, what is being offered is a rendering of the world, a representation of political, economic and social realities.

Over this plate of food there is often a conversation, all aspects of life are being talked about. In a restaurant, the same table may become the stage for business deals, awkward reunions, marriage proposal or calls for impeachment. All in the course of one night, all taking place in public, where diners, both actors and spectators, join in a discreet play, a theater of everyday life.

In the weaving of these stories and ideas culture finds a fertile soil.

Imagine a restaurant where artists along with cooks, servers, farmers, activists, community members and educators work together to unravel these threads. Using the elements and activities of a ordinary restaurant as a medium, they reveal, elaborate and challenge the relationships hidden in and around a plate of food.

OPEN soil (a restaurant as social sculpture)

Friday, March 28, 2008
Dinner seatings: 6/6:30pm or 7:30/8:00pm
Prix fixe: $35 (wine not included)
Reservations required: 415 626 5416

Bar OPEN: 6-midnight
A la carte menu: 9:00-10:30
No reservation neccessary for bar or a la carte menu

OPEN is a place to sit down and have a basic meal for a reasonable price. But as it exists at the intersection of performance and everyday life, it turns an ordinary business proposition into a social sculpture. All the physical elements and activities of this ordinary restaurant are available for artists – along with cooks, servers, farmers, activists, community members and educators – to develop creative projects that extend the vernacular of food to social, political, economical and environmental issues, thus making visible the web of relationships that are brought together in and around a plate of food.

OPEN restaurant, as a creative gathering of people and ideas, offers a stage on which to discuss, formulate and play out the issues involved in feeding ourselves and cultivating our communities. It will be open once a month, or so, at New Langton Arts and take different forms depending on the projects involved.The night of Friday, March 28 is the first night of OPEN, and the theme is “Soil”. OPEN is a project of Jerome Waag and Sam White who both work at Chez Panisse in Berkeley CA while pursuing individual artistic practices.

OPEN is part restaurant, part installation, part performance, so feel free to come and enjoy the show!
Learn more: OPEN BLOG
OPEN is made possible by the generous support of Art Berliner and Marian Lever.

**************************************************
New Langton Arts
1246 Folsom Street
San Francisco, CA 94103-3817
For further information: 415.626.5416

2008.03.13

DERIC CARNER @ PING PONG GALLERY - March 14 - April 25, 2008

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Deric Carner uses drawing and graphic forms as a way of navigating and relating to the world. He is a collector and manipulator of signs and messages, incorporating visual and textual fragments into an over coded vocabulary. They are taken from a globalized environment and mindset that is so loaded with signs and references, that meaning is constantly disintegrating or reforming around de-racinated forms.

On view at Ping Pong Gallery are a series of hand-painted graphic posters which take an uncanny pleasure in naming and associating. Odd objects are paired with headline references to fictional and real locales, movements and people. These elliptical markers invite viewers to enter a territory of double, negated and hidden meaning. This work emerges from a perspective of rational skepticism; yet moves beyond towards the paradoxical freedom and tensions of semiotic vertigo.

March 14 - April 25, 2008

PING PONG GALLERY
1240 22nd Street (between Pennsylvania and Mississippi)
San Francisco, CA 94107
415.550.7483

CHESTER ARNOLD @ Catherine Clark

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In The Road to Paradise Chester Arnold continues his ongoing visual exploration into notions of accumulation and dispersal.  His new work is tempered also by an awareness of the obsolescence facing time honored cultural and artistic practices: heartfelt sentiments no longer occupy letters but are rather featured in e-mail as the printed word increasingly gives way to pixilated screens.  With the advent of new media the paintbrush has increasingly acquiesced to the same fate.  In this latest body of paintings, masses of books and papers line desolate streets and toss on the wind.  One painting, “The Business of America is Business,” is a classic example of Arnold’s ability to create large scale images through minute details.  Old telephones, computers, papers, books, vinyl records fill the composition.  The images wearily denote a fleeting bygone moment of destruction summoned, perhaps, by our collective visual conscience, media saturated with images of New York streets after 9/11 or the bayous of New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.  And yet in paintings such as “Reports to the Contrary,” Arnold is able to extract the ethereal beauty and optimism inherent in watching loose papers dance in the air, summoning that rare moment of hopefulness in the moribund film American Beauty (1999) when Wes Bentley’s character Ricky Fitts films a plastic bag blowing in the breeze.

Chester Arnold’s work was recently included in New Old Masters, curated by Donald Kuspit, at the National Museum in Gdańsk, Poland. His work is also included in the public collections of many institutions, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Pasadena Museum of California Art, and the San Jose Museum of Art. Arnold’s work has garnered critical reviews in Artforum, Artweek, Art + Conversation, and the San Francisco Chronicle.  He lives and works in Sonoma, California and had his first solo exhibition at Catharine Clark Gallery in 2004.  The Road to Paradise is Chester Arnold’s third solo exhibition at Catharine Clark Gallery.

Catharine Clark Gallery, now at 150 Minna Street, between 3rd and New Montgomery
Solo Exhibition: Chester Arnold: The Road to Paradise
Video Room: Winchester Redux by Jeremy Blake

2008.02.24

Mark McKnight @ Iceberger

Mark2_4 Mark13
McKnight is a Los Angeles based photographer who's work explores the reciprocal and codependent relationship shared by nature and culture.  Acting as a mirror for the surrounding culture his work reveals an underlying landscape; urbanized, exploited, at war and in flux.

In conjunction with the opening of a physical space the gallery is also bringing an interactive photography project to the streets of San Francisco.  Made possible by Cadre Art Grant, the project redefines the traditional role of a gallery and sponsors artists to make work that can be installed in the public art sector.
Mark McKnight's photography will be taking vinyl form and placed randomly throughout the city in an attempt to reflect the culture in a new light.

Iceberger, a new project space designated to collaboratively work with emerging and established artists, is proud to announce their premier opening with photographer Mark McKnight.

Iceberger
3150 18th St. #109 (18th & Treat)
San Francisco
February 23, 2008- March 17, 2008

2008.02.21

INTERVIEW: ALEX ZECCA

Alex Zecca, December 6.2007 (30
Alex Zecca, December 6.2007 (30"x 30")

ALEX ZECCA Interviewed by Franz Schnaas

Some years ago, pointillism painting-as-method, enthralled my mind to the point I could barely remember the actual representations rendered in Georges Seurat's work. Experienced in person, I dived for the granular, mesmerized, analyzing the intricacy of his colored dot clusters and the possible systems implicated to produce such complexity of the impressionistic kind.

Little over a year ago at Gallery 16 in San Francisco, I encountered Alex Zecca's planar, line meshes for the first time. A dejà vu of sorts, as his work instantly drew my attention and invited a closer look. Intricate systems, deployed by a mind who is evidently keen on the phenomenological effects stemming from simple rules, hand-drawn lines, and the programmatic shift of angles, became apparent.  Variables such as frequency, sequence, color tonalities –and of course, repetition, carefully orchestrated –and layered, to reveal complex patterns, seemed at the center of the artist's drive.

Whereas Seurat's process applied color and optical theories of the late 1800's and explored the relationships of complimentary colors in particular, it aimed to construct impressionistic representations of the real, the 'dot' was his constant.
Zecca's work eschews representation altogether, but it also defies the catch-all labels of 'minimalism' or 'op-art' by honing-in on 'process.' He has defined his own working paradigms and methods, and his constant is not only the 'line' but its projection in time.
His work can be seen through the lens of a new pragmatism evident in other contemporary productions, such as strains of minimal, highly structured, electronic music which aptly enough are, by and large, made with digital sequencers that facilitate systematic layering and repetition.

Zecca's new work beams out vortexes and dimensionality. It bit-streams new patterns and projects delicate color waves that unfold at the intersection of every set of hand-drawn lines.
I recently caught up with the artist to discuss this new geometric imperative in his work. Show opens Friday 29, 2008, 6- 9 pm at Gallery 16 in San Francisco.

FRANZ SCHNAAS_Where does the work begin and when does it end?
ALEX ZECCA_ The most recent drawings begin with a formula, and specific sequence and spacing of colored lines. After that it's just a matter of executing the processes. A series of drawings may all contain the exact same amount of lines all in the same places, so I know just when it ends. That part of the process is great. It really forces me to work it all out before I begin and then the results are what they are. Whatever happens, hopefully I've learned something from the exercise.

Alex Zecca, January 19, 2007
Alex Zecca, January 19, 2007

Fz_ When you set a formula, do you envision the final result or you leave it as a systemic phenomenon, meaning you set a system and the process unravels and yields a surprise?
AZ_ Both. When I set a sequence in motion I have some idea or instinct about what will happen but it always yields a surprise.

Fz_ You described the work as formulaic, you mean there is an algorithm to your work?
AZ_ Yeah, I guess I'm a little involved or obsessed with the process. Each drawing has a specific algorithm worked out. In the 'cone or cylindrical' shaped pieces in the show, I use the sequence (or algorithm) to mix colors. I follow the somewhat simple, repeating patterns that become condensed as they move towards the same fixed point. Producing a radius form.

Studio Visit
Studio Visit

Fz_ This series involves more geometry than the more planar, grid-like works I have seen before, is your mind lusting over new potential shapes to come?
AZ_ The changing geometry is a part of that 'surprise' experience. As I make small adjustments, like in the way the angled lines intersect or a slight change in the position of the fixed radius, the effect is profound. As far as my mind, it is usually lusting.

Fz_ Are the 'sequences' in your work metaphors for other sequences found in art or nature? Music? Astronomy?
AZ_ Oh yes. Isn't it all made up of the same stuff anyway? I've always been attracted to physics and the planetary sciences, and how it all comes down to mathematics. I take comfort in that. Although I barely get it.

Fz_ Expand a bit about your relationship to 'the line'?
AZ_ The line does it all for me. I find the action and the result so right. It's a finite and complete mark. And for this work it's a perfect building block.

Fz_ Why do you stick to the analogue process? Are you ever tempted to build the same effects in illustrator in the computer? (if not, why not?)
AZ_ The 'by hand' aspect has always played an important role in my work. Even when I was painting, I spent the majority of my time hand-mixing pigments and fine-tuning the paint-making process. Not to take away anything from computer or digitally generated images, they are increasingly more part of our lives –art or otherwise, for me that's where the connection to an old-world-like,  analogue,  process holds so much importance.

Fz_ What other art expressions influence your work? What about it (them)?
AZ_ Music has such a real power to impact you on an emotional level. The same way visual art can. I'm very involved in music when working. There are moments of a 'Tai Chi', drawing in rhythm, kind of thing that goes on.

Fz_ What kind of music do you listen to when you work?
AZ_ It's all over the place... the last couple of months I've been loving the new Shins and new Radiohead albums. But I can go anywhere from, Built To Spill, Deftones, and Ween, to old Goodie Mob and the Roots, and even the occasional Cagedbaby mixed in.

Fz_ Where does light come into play?
AZ_ It's an integral component in color mixing, which is where my head is much of the time.

Fz_ How you negotiate your color mixing? What saturations, primaries, complimentary relationships come into play into the algorithms and how do you dial them for the final effect?
AZ_ The color mixing within the context of the algorithms has been a real 'learn as you go' experience. One combination of sequences takes me somewhere, I'll make an adjustment in color or order, always keeping track, and systematically working combinations. I ain't no scientist but I try to work like one.

Fz_ At what point in the 'process' do you allow shifts away from the formula, if any?
AZ_ At times I'll allow myself more freedom, to go at it with a looser plan, but it seems the more I work on these drawings the more regimented and structured they become.

Fz_ What about morays? How do you manipulate or allow them to happen? Where do these fall in the intersection of light/color and your algorithmic approach?
AZ_ The moray and interference patterns are another wonder of the geometry and the algorithms. And as soon as I stumbled across them I was hooked.

Alex Zecca, February.8.2008 (Detail)
Alex Zecca, February.8.2008 (Detail)

Fz_ Are there any accidents in your work? Is there room for any? What happens if the process is interrupted by a wrong line?
AZ_ Oh yes, there are accidents. The pens spit out ink, on occasion a line will go a wry. But no matter how obsessive or careful I am, they are hand made. And any evidence of that serves as an important distinction from things made mechanically.

Fz_ Do you know the works of any digital/electronic music artists? Who, what draws you to their work?

AZ_ In terms of electronic music, as a child of the 80's I was very aware of computerized music. From Craftwerk to Brian Eno and others I wouldn't admit. These days I'm crazy about RJD2, Talvin Singh, and D.J. Shadow. They are each purists. And masters of assembling sounds.

Fz_ Are you familiar with the music of Frank Bretschneider?
AZ_ No I'm not, but I just checked him out and I should be! I'd love to see it live. The interplay between visual stimulus (light and geometry) and those precise thumping sounds. Thanks for the introduction.

Fz_ You are a native San Franciscan, what about your experience growing up here do you credit for any direction in your work?
AZ_ We're all a product of our environment. I was exposed to a lot of art as a kid and my Mom studied at SFAI in the late 70's. Those days were nuts! From chaos comes order. In some way it must have directed my work, but mostly being from SF just makes me cynical about everywhere else in this country. We're out west on an island I'm afraid. 

Opening Night
Opening Night

Show opened Friday 29, 2008, 6- 9 pm
GALLERY 16
501 Third Street (@ Bryant)
San Francisco, CA 94107
415.626.7495

June 2008

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