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.



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