Sunday, December 30, 2012

Donald Martiny

In the Los Angeles Gallery
DONALD MARTINYrecent paintings
January 4 - February 2, 2013
reception Saturday, January 5, 5:00 - 8:00

For the 16th exhibit in LA, we’ll be showing recent paintings by Donald Martiny, single-color works in polymer medium and dispersed pigment that free themselves from the traditional painting support to form large brush strokes directly against the wall. They are paintings made exclusively out of paint. In many aspects they present a formal mix of Roy Lichtenstein’s brush stroke paintings, Lynda Benglis’ knotted wall pieces and Ellsworth Kelly’s shaped monochromes, but with an attenuated physical presence all their own. Martiny’s high relief flirts with sculpture, yet his working method and his conceptual focus ground these works firmly in the principles of fundamental painting. Martiny, who currently lives and works in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, studied at the School of the Visual Arts and The Art Students League in New York, New York University and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. His work is in private collections in Philadelphia, Washington DC, Amsterdam, San Francisco and Los Angeles. This is his first solo show with the gallery.




































DONALD MARTINY
Pigeon Lake, 2012
polymer medium and dispersed pigment
83 x 45 in. (210.8 x 114.3 cm)
cat. no. DOM25

Sunday, November 18, 2012

George Lawson to open new San Francisco gallery


GEORGE LAWSON GALLERY OPENS SECOND SPACE AT
780 SUTTER STREET IN SF ON JANUARY 17, 2013

San Francisco Inaugural Exhibition
780 Sutter Street
ALAN EBNOTHER
recent paintings
January 17 - February 16, 2013



















ALAN EBNOTHER
September 5 2012, 2012
cat. no. ALE40
oil on linen
23.5 x 19.5 in.


On January 17, 2013, George Lawson will open a second exhibition space in San Francisco augmenting the program at our Los Angeles location. The new gallery will be housed in a downtown storefront at 780 Sutter Street at Jones, and the program will continue to emphasize contemporary painting. Our exhibition schedule for the new year starts off with recent paintings by Alan Ebnother from January 17 to February 16, John Zinsser from February 21 to March 23, and John Millei from March 28 to April 27. Please stay tuned for updates and photographs of the new space.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Join us at Aqua


Join us in room 103 at Aqua Art Miami on Dec. 6th





Please join us in Miami from December 6th to 9th. We'll be at Aqua Art Miami at the Aqua Hotel in Room 103 showing small scale works from a selection of gallery artists, highlighted on our gallery catalog page on the Aqua site. Artists represented include Stephen Beal, Sara Bright, Alan Ebnother, Nancy Haynes, Tama Hochbaum, Erin Lawlor, Donald Martiny, Jacob Melchi, Susan Mikula, Atillio Pernisco, Ward Schumaker, Linda Vallejo, Jennah Ward and John Zinsser.






















TAMA HOCHBAUM
Garbo I (from the series, My Mother's Favorite Films), 2012
cat. no. TAH50
unique archival pigment print on aluminum
10 x 10 in.


Click on here for your complimentary ePass



Thursday, November 1, 2012

Masaru Kurose, Ward Schumaker

MASARU KUROSE

mudai: recent paintings

November 14 – December 22, 2012

reception Saturday, November 17, 5:00–8:00 PM

MASARU KUROSE
Mudai 20, 2012
cat. no. MAK20
oil on vinyl on wood stretcher
28.5 x 24 in.

For LA15 in the front room we are showing recent paintings by Kobe, Japan based artist Masaru Kurose. Kurose, who was trained as an architect, continues his exploration of oil paint on clear vinyl, an industrial support that belies the tradition and antecedent of his stretched "canvases." Vinyl allows the internal structure of Kurose's painting to show through, much in the way that a glass and steel building incorporates the supporting girder into its external sheathing. Kurose anticipates the collision of his drawn stroke with the exposed bracing of his painting's wooden chassis, and the drop effect of the paint's shadow cast unpredictably in different lights against the wall. He thus sets up a double plane, the skin of paint floating on its transparent ground against the solid wall, shadow and reflection each a measured step behind the other. Kurose's gesture is also a mixture of measure and hunch, his highly keyed hues carried by meandering strokes that are in turn considered and discovered. To see the paintings one must see through them. Their depth is sustained by an integrated drawing, an armature for color and light that supports both on more than one level and tends to splay itself wide open. Kurose's architecture, pervasive as it is across multiple surfaces, confounds the pictorial hierarchy of figure and ground we associate with the obvious historical precedent of stained glass, and positions these translucent works in the camp of painting's fresh potential, and in the ongoing understanding of painting's radical roots.



WARD SCHUMAKER
dumb boxes
November 14 – December 22, 2012
reception Saturday, November 17, 5:00–8:00 PM


WARD SCHUMAKER
Begins Each Moment (Dumb Box #2), 2012
cat. no. WAS39
acrylic and paste on wood, cardboard
15 x 7 x 10 in.

In the middle gallery for our 15th rotation in Los Angeles, we are showing the painted objects of Ward Schumaker, selections from a series of polychromed constructions he refers to as his Dumb Boxes. These are amongst the first works Schumaker completed after his move from San Francisco to New York last year, and in many ways reflect the energy, gridded planes and silvery daylight of his newly adopted city. Often an artist fresh to New York is caught in an onrush of memory and internal ponder that acts as ballast against the sensory overload from outside. The poet Michael McClure imagined the painter Franz Kline as caught in a world of night sweats. A certain kind of leeching occurs. Schumaker's characteristic layering of text and image and gesture and wit is particularly well-suited to externalizing reflection. I suspect upon arrival he simply found the flat plane of his canvases and panels suddenly inadequate for containing whatever poured forth. And yet a life in the studio instilled in Schumaker the discipline to contain it just so. The result is an isometric suspension between sculpture and painting, neutral in its initial effect and then persistently corrosive, eating away at the membrane between the unconscious and the waking life. His biographical titles reinforce this effect, but like reviews without spoilers, do nothing to curtail the necessity of simply looking, and participating in the unfolding, like pinewood origami gates, of Schumaker's open borders.


Saturday, October 6, 2012

Linda Vallejo at Cal Sate University San Bernardino


Linda Vallejo's Make 'Em All Mexican series featured in Cal Sate University San Bernardino's currently running Perspectives exhibition. Panel discussion with the artist October 18, 4-6 PM. For information, call 909-537-7373.


Thursday, September 27, 2012

LA14 - Nancy Haynes, Erin Lawlor


NANCY HAYNES
recent paintings
October 10 – November 10, 2012
reception Saturday, October 13, 5:00–8:00 PM

















NANCY HAYNES
Referent For Departure, 2012 (cat. no. NAH14)
oil on linen
18.5 x 21.5 in.


For our 14th exhibition in Los Angeles, we showcase in the front gallery recent work by esteemed New York painter Nancy Haynes. Haynes' career spans four decades and she is the recipient of numerous awards, including two NEA grants. She has shown in museums around the country, including the San Diego Museum of Art, the Rubin Museum in New York, the Hood Museum at Dartmouth, and the Harvard University Art Museums. Her work is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum, MOMA, the Whitney, and the National Gallery. This is her second solo with us. Of her last show, critic Kenneth Baker wrote, "I think of her position as somewhat parallel to Mary Heilmann a decade ago: regarded by colleagues as a standard-bearer of the artistic life, yet little known outside a circuit of fellow professionals and collectors." Just how little-known depends on who you talk to. It is hard to find a serious painter of my generation who doesn't admire Haynes' accomplishment. She has convincingly extended forward into the current moment, something perennial at the root of post-war painting's aspiration. A younger generation, rediscovering the power of the slow reveal, will find inspiration in Haynes' ethic and her means. The challenge with work based on color and light is to preserve the substance, the body wrapped around the spirit, yet Haynes manages to stay firmly grounded. Descriptors we tend not to associate together, such as radiant and earthen, seem aptly paired. Haynes' melding of intellectual rigor and meditative abandon keeps her painting in abeyance, and reveals her image not only slowly, but sustainably.



ERIN LAWLOR
recent paintings
October 10 – November 10, 2012
reception Saturday, October 13, 5:00–8:00 PM




















ERIN LAWLOR
untitled, 2012 (cat. no. ERL17)
oil on linen
39.5 x 32 in.


In the middle gallery we present a selection of recent paintings by British-born artist Erin Lawlor, who has been living and working in France since 1987. Her work has been exhibited in London, Brussels, Paris and more recently in San Francisco; this is her first solo in Los Angeles. Lawlor's work is characterized by wide, fluid marking, closely-valued, tertiary colors, and matte, light-absorbing surfaces. Although her process involves discipline and self-editing, her painting seems effortlessly suspended, at once turgid and poised. In her own words, she is fascinated by "the small miracle of the way in which painting, in one stroke of the paintbrush and paint, can constitute all at once both space, volume, shape and time." She has synthesized much of the international diaspora of gestural painting (American Abstract Expressionism, in particular Kline and Rothko; the Sumi-inspired aspects of the Japanese Gutai movement such as Kazuo Shiraga, and the French Tachists such as Pierre Soulages come to mind) but with a release of the stress associated with these examples. The undulation between convexity and concavity in Lawlor's color-space recalls the natural rhythm of breathing. These are open images. The juxtaposition of these two artists this month sets up a serendipitous exchange about painting's adeptness at shedding light on the darker end of the chromatic spectrum, and the articulate range of touch.





Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Clem Crosby installation at Venice Architectural Biennale


Clem Crosby installation at Venice Architectural Biennale
Haworth Tompkins Limited, Architects
selected panels from the Young Vic Facade
photo credit: David Grandorge


Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Linda Vallejo

George Lawson Gallery is pleased to announce our representation of Linda Vallejo



El Vis (cat. no. LIV11) 2012
re-purposed plaster figurine, pigment print of original painting, acrylic, and 14k gold leaf
12.5(h) x 7.5(w) x 5.5(d) in.

Marielena: La Fabulosa (cat. no. LIV14) 2012
re-purposed porcelain figurine and acrylic
8.5(h) x 5(w) x 4.5(d) in.

http://www.georgelawsongallery.com/artists/l_vallejo1.html

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Jacob Melchi: new paintings, Alma Chaney: nameless spaces: recent paintings

JACOB MELCHI
new paintings
September 5 – October 6, 2012
reception Saturday, September 8, 5:00–8:00 PM




















JACOB MELCHI
Double Play 2 (cat. no. JAM14) 2012
oil on linen on aluminium stretcher
23 x 20 in.

We are opening the September season and our 13th exhibition in Culver City with two important painting exhibitions.
In the front gallery, we are showing new work by Los Angeles painter Jacob Melchi. Melchi was included here in last February's group of young LA painters; this is his first solo show with the gallery. A 2003 MFA graduate of Otis, Melchi's work has been shown previously at institutions such as The Center for Contemporary Art in Sacramento, The Torrance Art Museum, The Nordic Institute for Contemporary Art in Helsinki, and The Netherlands Media Art Institute in Amsterdam. 
Melchi practices a highly sensate, yet disciplined form of painting that uses geometry as its underpinning and the means of paint application as its mode. His process is iterative, his surfaces articulated and nuanced. He builds his image through pentimento and overpainting, paying close attention to the grain of his support and the viscosity of his medium. He leverages to great result slight biases and obliques off the regular weave of his grid, and slight shifts and stops in his stroke. The result is an agile and individuated vernacular that triggers abstract associations while grounding his work in concrete experience. Relatively modest in scale, Melchi's canvases nevertheless hold the wall with authority, and engage the viewer on every level.

ALMA CHANEY
nameless spaces: recent paintings
September 5 – October 6, 2012
reception Saturday, September 8, 5:00–8:00 PM




















ALMA CHANEY
Untitled #8 (cat. no. ALC40) 2012
oil, silverpoint and golpoint on gessoed panel
16 x 16 in.

In the middle gallery we are showing recent paintings by Seattle-based artist Alma Chaney, her second solo with the gallery. A 2010 MFA graduate of The San Francisco Art Institute, Chaney also completed post-Baccalaureate work at the Pont-Aven School of Contemporary Art in Brittany, holds a Certificate of Scientific Illustration from the University of Washington, and a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design.
In her work Chaney tackles the perennial dichotomy between drawing and painting, employing Renaissance techniques of silverpoint crosshatching beneath layers of opaque, highly mixed, off-whites and translucent glazes of tonal color. Her work presents a real dilemma for a gallerist: it is impossible to reproduce, reveals itself even in person only slowly, and makes no concessions to fashion. What it does is reward patient engagement with a series of unfoldings that could be described as florescent. Chaney manages the studio equivalent of en plein air; she is a painter of shadow and light.




Thursday, August 16, 2012

Sara Bright and Clem Crosby in the SF Chronicle


The San Francisco art scene got a little dimmer when George Lawson closed his Geary Street gallery and decamped for Culver City, the latest gallery hot zone in greater Los Angeles.
Recently Gallery 60Six invited him to stage a two-person show here, and he has brought tasty paintings by former San Franciscan, now New Yorker, Sara Bright and Londoner Clem Crosby.
The compatibility of work by artists showing together often matters little, but in this case it strengthens the impressions made by both.
Bright, true to her name, turns out sweetly eccentric pictures that could have taken inspiration from artists such as Richard TuttleHoward Hodgkin or the young David Hockney.

"Windy" (2012) exemplifies Bright's manner of thatching together a picture that might or might not be abstract out of blithe-looking brushstrokes. Her titles can invite figurative readings - several mention landscape or weather - but her touch is so relaxed that it tends to make any interpretation feel forced.
Crosby also seems to steer by a pleasure in making and seeing that perhaps only painting can provide at this peculiar moment of its resignation to marginality in a culture blinded by speed and greed.
Crosby paints in oil on panels of aluminum-backed Formica, a slick, impervious support that leaves his brushstrokes looking not merely fluent but wet, in jeopardy of being smeared by a viewer's sleeve.

"King Heroin" (2011) and Crosby's two other pictures here draw attention to their own framing edges by sporting grids apparently arrested as they slump into shapelessness. The grid having given painting bones since the Renaissance, its coming unstrung expresses a sort of listless foreboding plus, paradoxically, a celebratory hint of the medium's liberation from its past.
LeDoux at the Luggage Store: Despite their sense of belatedness, Bright's and Crosby's works, by their relaxed execution and dreamy ambiguity, recall the utopian air that modernist painting emanated from time to time.
The paintings of San Franciscan Neil LeDoux at the Luggage Store take us into a completely different zone, one of strange, tense, seemingly ingrown absurdity.
This exhibition celebrates LeDoux's receipt of the 2012 Tournesol Award given annually by the Headlands Center for the Arts. Its title, "People of Earth," sets an odd tone, wavering between concerned address and cheesy sci-fi nostalgia.
A couple of canvases here, "Star Control" and "Pocket Universe," recall quite clearly pictures from LeDoux's 2009 San Francisco gallery debut.
He traced that earlier series to a childhood memory of finding a magical fountain in the Louisiana woods that he could never locate a second time. The series seemed to allude to Marcel Duchamp's notorious "Fountain" (1917) and moved toward more visceral imagery in the key of Francis Bacon.
I suspected LeDoux then of concocting a personal myth retroactively to account for paintings that even he could not really explain otherwise. Nothing wrong with that, in my view, but he provides no such obvious key to the new pictures.
A couple of scumbled canvases here present as blurry textiles, something like the reverse sides of knotted rugs. A number of others, such as "Shah" (2011-12), display networks of lines, resembling a cat's cradle, spanning a shallow, torn-open picture space.
Similar patterns, looking like abstractions of exposed sinew, reappear throughout the show. They bring to mind the anatomy lesson as a theme with a long history in painting.
But, absent organic figures, anatomy of what?
Of the revenant aliens - invaders from the past - that paintings have become in an amnesiac culture with no more need of handmade images.
Bright and Crosby discover a kind of lyric freedom in the practice of painting now. LeDoux presents it as an ongoing autopsy, relieved here and there by allusions or a flighty pattern, but leaving an impression that is hard to shake.
Sara Bright: Recent Paintings; Clem Crosby: Three Paintings: Noon to 7 p.m. Wednesday-Sunday. Through next Saturday. Gallery 60Six, 66 Elgin Park, S.F. (415) 515-0563. www.gallery60six.com.
Neil LeDoux: People of Earth: Paintings. Through Aug. 11. The Luggage Store, 1007 Market St., S.F. (415) 255-5971. www.luggagestoregallery.org.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/art/article/Bright-s-eccentricity-Crosby-s-marginality-3723760.php#ixzz23klGpneT

Thursday, April 26, 2012

George Lawson Gallery facebook page


whitehot | April 2012: In Conversation with George Lawson

 George Lawson in front of the gallery with British painter Clem Crosby. photo: John Zurier


GEORGE LAWSON GALLERY was established in 2008 in San Francisco as room for painting for paper, later renamed the George Lawson Gallery. They mounted 52 exhibitions at their 49 Geary location before moving the gallery to Culver City in June of 2011. Whitehot’s Tracey Harnish asks Lawson how he’s liking it here.
Tracey Harnish: Why did you relocate your gallery from San Francisco to LA?
George Lawson: I moved because I wanted to expose the artists in my stable to the larger forum here. I had the impression Los Angeles offered more opportunities for critical review, and this has proven to be true. There are certainly more museums. I knew LA supported a larger community of artists, and I've come to realize how tightly knit they are. I had the impression that there were more buyers, though that remains to be seen. The level of activity is daunting--curatorial efforts, blogging, group shows in alternative venues, and so many fledgling art magazines.
Harnish: The tightly knit community you speak of, is it artists, gallery owners, the museum staff, that you speak of? How has the tightly knit issue affected your gallery?
Lawson: I was thinking in particular of the artists. They stay in touch and they compare notes. Many are organizing shows and events. They are supported in their efforts by independent organizations such as ForYourArt, community venues such as Center for the Arts Eagle Rock -- just a lot of opportunities. They seem to me on the whole to be quite serious. I've been impressed. Now that you mention it, there is something of that feeling in the dealer community as well. I have reciprocal relationships with Tom and Damon at Cardwell/Jimmerson–they found me my space–and also Clyde Beswick at CB1, Whitney Carter at Carter and Citizen and Tom Jancar in Chinatown. I've been quite warmly welcomed by a lot of my neighbors along the strip here. It affects my efforts quite positively.
Harnish: What are the differences now that you've been in LA almost a year?
Lawson: There are a few differences I knew in principle while underestimating their impact. First the lack of a walking culture. It turns out looking and walking are intimately tied. The galleries are spread out and it is hard to get around, so daily traffic is less than I'm used to although Angelenos do turn out in force for openings and events. We just had a panel discussion in the gallery that was surprisingly well attended. Secondly, how fiercely loyal to its own Los Angeles turns out to be, and conversely less open to work from other city centers. I show an international roster with strong representation from New York so this is requiring a bit of adjustment.
Harnish: In saying LA is fiercely loyal to it's own, you speak to one of my theories on the LA art scene. Unlike New York, LA is physically far from Europe, and a much newer city than New York. It seems natural to me that LA would not follow a European painting tradition, that Ab Ex would not be the darling of the LA like it was in NYC. And that naturally LA would have a multitude of reactions to the movie industry, which permeates everything in LA. Has this inclusiveness induced you to add LA artists to your roster? Have you found a way to make your international artists fit into the LA scene niche?
Lawson: International includes Los Angeles. Being here I will inevitably add more local artists and I'm fortunate enough to have some good ones to choose from. I just hope I can convince enough local people to participate in a broader sense of inclusion. I don't think the polarity with New York is stylistic though--not about gesture versus finish or something like that. And it isn't really about plugging into Europe versus the Pacific Rim, although I used to think so. There's too much of a mix in both cities to pin it down like that. The difference in what constitutes visual literacy in LA versus NY has more to do with the allegiance to a deeper sense of history in New York and the sense here that there is less need for that set of references. A focus on the present spawns a certain freedom but it is tricky. History is like any other discipline. You have to absorb it before you can let it go.
Harnish: That's exactly what I meant. You articulated it better than I. What's better, what's worse about the move?
Lawson: Compared to San Francisco, LA is a noisy town and I feel I have to adjust my own volume to draw attention. I did a lot of advertising when I first came and it drained my resources and I'm not sure it did much good. It was easier in San Francisco just to run a quiet program and garner interest. Somehow we got discovered. Maybe not that different, under the best of circumstances it takes time. What's better or worse has to do with the culture of looking. There are many aspects of the scene here that have at once positive and at the same time potentially skewing influences on viewers. One is the dominance of the schools with their different aesthetic positions, another the emphasis on youth and innovation, and another the tendency to compare the impact of the plastic arts to that of the film industry. Behind it all though I think the challenge of the sheer difficulty of getting around town can't be overestimated.
Opening: Seven Young Los Angeles Painters I Like. Courtesy of  George Lawson Gallery

Harnish: I think anyone growing up in LA gets used to the idea that everyone and everything is permeated by the Business (aka film industry). I think a lot of the conceptual art is a subtle reaction to the Business. There is a lot of intertwinement with film and art while at the same time a reaction to it. How do you think this dichotomy affects the LA art scene in a way you haven't seen in other cities?
Lawson: It's very in-your-face here and one could feel inadequate in the shadow of celebrity culture, but in one way or another, artists all over the world are exploring the role of still pictures versus moving pictures, small pictures versus those with the scale of the theater screen, quiet pictures versus ones accompanied by dialog, music and the sound of explosions--all of it. Then there's the box office receipts. It adds up to a challenge you take into the studio. As an artist if you are up for it, it can be catalytic; if not, it can be disastrous, really quite distracting.
Harnish: I think a lot of people in the art community have felt that over shadowing of the Business and celebrity culture while at the same thumbing their nose at it and also desiring to be a part of it. That has spawned a lot of interesting responses. An artist almost has to consciously decide to use it or ignore it because it is so pervasive. Do you think the idea of box office receipts and the way they drive what kind of movies are being made parallels the art world in some ways? If as an artist, you believe that it does, it can be really confusing and that results in the need to block out a lot of noise in your own mind to make the art you want to make.
Lawson: Money changes things. The potential for a kind of accelerated appreciation can shift the goals for both artists and dealers. With living artists now selling works for millions of dollars, it has become harder to maintain a middle class, or a blue collar work ethic. What's interesting is how inflation works in similar ways although operating in different spheres. It tends to go viral and undermine other values besides the value of the dollar. The box office mentality, however, can also serve as a foil, something to bite against, to help sharpen one's focus on more radical reasons for making and promoting art. Even with a serious program, though, the challenge is still finding ways to pull people in, let them know about it.
Harnish: Let's talk about the gallerist/artist relationship a bit. I think that sometimes artists have some misconceptions about what their gallery should do and can do for them. I suspect most of the public has no clue what the gallery does and provides. Do you think collectors know? Are they privy to a special relationship with the gallerist? What do you expect in your relationship with artists? Do you expect to have very different relationships with each artist? What about the old legends where the gallerist gave the artist money for paint or found them a studio, does that exist anymore?
Installation View, Richmond Burton, Los Angeles Paintings. Courtesy of George Lawson Gallery

Lawson: The first lay misconception is whom the gallery works for. The film industry paradigm can set a productive example here. Even though ticket buyers are the source of income, an agent's clients are the actors--not the audience. In the dealer-artist relationship this is important to keep in mind. The collectors aren't my clients; nor are the other viewers who come into the gallery. The artists are. This isn't true for third party consultants who simply place work. Their clients are the collectors. I see the dealer's role as helping to make the artist's accumulated body of work more widely appreciated, and to facilitate its creation by reducing stress and distraction for the artist, and increasing opportunities. To this end we put energy into all the channels of communication at our disposal. Besides the exhibition schedule, we publish books, place ads, put on events, do presentations, and try to be ubiquitously present at as many art world functions as our biology will stand, always as a representative of our stable. The gallery also negotiates other venues, manages archives, sets pricing, tracks the secondary market as well as more functionary tasks such as shipping and framing, appraisal and conservation, and the intangibles--a lot of hand holding. What I expect in a relationship with an artist is that they recognize our efforts together as a collaboration. So far I haven't bought anybody paint, though. If you want to know what an art gallery does, take a look at their checkbook stubs. I write checks to people it never occurred to me were part of the art world but if they are in the cash flow then they are—printers, truckers, real estate and insurance agents, utility and phone companies, all manner of vendors. It's like that Joe Kennedy quote: "if you do business, sooner or later you do business with everybody."
Harnish: It's an interesting dynamic because an agent has to make sure his client (the actor) gets good acting gigs, has to help build his career, because it's the most financially beneficial to him/her. Yet the audience's feelings and perception of the actor have to be taken into account in the decision making process. I think some artists, certainly not all, get confused about this relationship because it can appear that the gallery cares more about the collector than the artist. Isn't it true that galleries tend to have a collector base that they manage like they do their artists? I've heard many a story on the wining and dining of collectors by galleries.
Lawson: Anything that helps to broaden the awareness and appreciation of the work of an artist in the stable is a win all around. Coming from a place of genuine enthusiasm, I don't make all that much distinction between my efforts towards collectors and towards artists, or curators, writers and fellow gallerists. How many variations are there on, "Hey, look!" ? I wine and dine everybody.
Harnish: Also, what you describe as your role in the gallery/artist relationship is ideal. I imagine the concept of that relationship is created by the many varying experiences each artist has. How do you find the artists that you choose to represent?
GL: I started out knowing a lot of artists, many in other countries. I started the gallery with colleagues and branched out from there. People come to me every day, via every channel of communication. I of course can accommodate very few of them but I'm always looking. I believe if an artist is doing good work, they don't have to promote it. Someone will find them. They are being hunted. It has taken a while to understand the nature of my own interests, as the program has focused not just on painting but a certain presentation of painting's possibilities, its currency. Inevitably there is turnover. I have to say I have a wonderful group of artists right now. It's a good micro-culture here in the gallery. I'm enjoying myself very much. 
Wining and Dining: Lawson with collector Paul Rickert in Culver City after Susan Mikula's opening. photo: Frisso Potts







Tracey Harnish is a writer in Los Angeles. 


    

Sara Bright's works on paper laid out for cataloging at the Los Angeles gallery