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     HIROSHI ARIYAMA : PRINTMAKER

Hiroshi Ariyama is a master printmaker living and working in Chicago. He is a family man, a disciplined printmaker and an Associate of the Printmakers Collective which is currently celebrating it's 25th Anniversary in Chicago. His work is contemporary prinmaking based in Photography, but created with a classic eye and knowledge steeped in the great print making traditions through the centuries. We spoke about his artwork, the process and working in Chicago. His Print is on The Cover of The Winter MidWest Edition available for free download on this site ...


BUREAU: Tell us about The Chicago Print Scene and your relationship with The City. 

Hiroshi ARIYAMA: Chicago has many vibrant art communities. And within each community, there are artists making all types of prints. I would say Chicago Printmakers Collaborative is one of the few places that offer the equipment and materials needed to practice or learn a wide range of printmaking methods. I found many printmakers in Chicago have a certain blue-collar tradition--they tend to roll up their sleeves and get to work and let the art speak for itself—very industrious. I'm not saying that the artists in other parts of the U.S. are not hardworking--but perhaps, Chicago’s industrial past paired with the long & harsh winter keeps us focused on our artwork.



BUREAU: Explain the Process from taking a Photograph to the actual Final Print. 

Hiroshi ARIYAMA: The process of my printmaking does not always follow the same path and I think that’s one of the keys to keeping it from turning into a production process rather than an art making process. So in my process, each step represents a chance to incorporate something new, different or improve from my previous attempts. Having said that, here’s a general work flow leading up to a completed screen print. Taking photographs: I often roam the city looking for a fresh perspective to see a moment- a slice of the city, that tells a certain story. Editing photographs : I explore the potential of image I want to use by playing with a variety of composition, contrast level, and how much detail I would need for my print. Color considerations : Thinking about the use of color or combination of it is something that I take as much time as it needed until I am satisfied. Positive films : A series of positive films are made from the photograph. In most cases each layer of film represents a certain tonal range of the image. Most of the prints I have been doing lately take around five to eight separate films. Preparing screens : Each screen is coated with photo emulsion. Once dried it becomes photosensitive and is ready for exposure. I Expose the screen with the positive film between the screen and the light source (UV light). Once the exposed screen is rinsed, the area that light didn't reach because of the film is washed away and creates an opening for the ink to go through. Ink : I use a water based acrylic ink mixed with an additive to keep the ink from drying too quickly. Paper : I use 100% cotton, acid-free paper, that is hand trimmed to size. Printing : I use my hands to pull ink onto paper and use my eyes to register each of the layers. I feel very connected to each of my prints and the slight differences between them are unique and special.



BUREAU: What originally attracted you to creating images? 

Hiroshi ARIYAMA: My subject matter - urban landscape - is not very beautiful to look at in most cases. We tend to look at the same scenes everyday on the way to work or to school and back. Yet once and a while, we stop and look at that same ordinary view and realize its beauty just because the way the light is hitting certain building or the color of the clouds in the sky. I strive to recreate this experience in my artwork. I often think about places where I lived when I was growing up. And I feel this strong urge to go back there and see them once again. These places are not necessarily beautiful places. The only significance is that they are where I spent portion of my life. I think my prints are like that. I see something that is worthwhile and memorable in each and every cityscape I have made. It meant something to me. Maybe it’s not for everyone, but it’s for the few who identify the special moment in it. 


" I often think about places where I lived when I was growing up. And I feel this strong urge to go back there and see them once again. These places are not necessarily beautiful places. The only significance is that they are where I spent portions of my life. I think my prints are like that. I see something that is worthwhile and memorable in each & every cityscape I have made. It meant something to me. "    
                                  - Hiroshi Ariyama / Chicago Print Maker

BUREAU: Ravenswood is a striking Image, describe how it came about. 

Hiroshi ARIYAMA: This was originally done as a commission for the Ravenswood Artwalk (RAW)--an art event created to promote the neighborhood as it progressed through urban renewal This visual was used in a broad range of marketing materials. 


BUREAU: Besides creating Fine Art, you have also made ART very accessible to younger collectors, explain your view on making art that everyone can own and enjoy. 

Hiroshi ARIYAMA: Printmaking in general is a more affordable form of artwork because each original print is a fraction of a total. So you’re paying for a portion of total effort not shouldering the whole cost of the creation of the piece. Offering various sizes and different price points makes it easier for everyone to choose what they can afford and also ensure that their purchase is more likely to look custom made—and intended for that particular wall space. Often the parents of young children buy my work for their kid’s room. They can decorate the room with a fairly modest budget. On a side note, I choose my materials carefully so that they last. I want to make sure that what is bought today will look good for a long time and perhaps get handed down to generations to come. That would be wild. 




THE DEC /JAN 2015  EDITION OF THE BUREAU OF ARTS AND CULTURE  MAGAZINE
250 PAGES OF ART . INTERVIEWS . PHOTO  ESSAYS . ARTICLES . REVIEWS + MORE
WE HAVE CREATED 4  LINK  ALTERNATE COVERS FOR THIS MOST RECENT EDITION 
TAP THE FOUR TITLES BELOW  RECEIVE A FREE DOWNLOAD ON YOUR COMPUTER :
KRIS  KUKSI       2 JAMES DEAN     3  HIROSHI ARIYAMI      4  F. SCOTT HESS   


Welcome to The DEC 2014 / JAN 2015 Edition of The BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE MAGAZINE. We are very pleased to bring you Interviews with two of America's strongest Literary Giants, from The East Coast, E.L. Doctorow & from The West Coast T.C. Boyle. Our Guest Artist is the ever controversial Painter: F. Scott Hess. Documentary Film maker Doug Pray explains his career in great detail. James Dean is our BUREAU Icon Essay with  a Suite of Classic images from Magnum Photographer Dennis Stock. In The Gallery with Kris Kuksi in Los Angeles, Kota Ezawa in San Francisco, Dylan Stone in New York City, America Martin in San Diego. Interviews with L. A. Abstract Painter Andy Moses, Photo Journalist Guillermo Cervera, Artist BOMONSTER, Jazz Singer Judy Carmichael, Artist Linda Stark. Chicago: The Print Scene at 25 Years with Hiroshi Ariyama. Bay Area: The Contemporary Jewish Museum with a Fabulous Photo Essay by Arnold Newman. We bring you Inside The San Diego Surfing Scene at San Clemente Beach, CA USA. Plus Magnum Photos: Remembering Rene BURRI. Moises SAMAN and Peter VAN AGTMAEL on Location in The Middle East. Independent Photo Journalist Susan Wright in Sicily, Italy. Dina Litovsky's Fashion Lust from Photo LA 2015 and The Robin Holland N Y C Flashback + Rap Stars Wu Tang Clan Back In Action. All This and more. Most Links, Pages, Logos and website adresses are  live internet connections. Go on line, read, tap and visit now ...

The Bureau Profile: MARGIE LIVINGSTON

BUREAU: What originally attracted you to modern art and share with our readers an early inspiration?

Margie LIVINGSTON: Two things attracted me to modernism: the grid and a spirit of experimentation. Working with the grid connects me to many artists including Mondrian, Sol LeWitt, Eve Hesse, and Agnes Martin.  But I’m also interested in a much earlier version of the grid: Renaissance perspective which, as Rosalind Krauss wrote, “is inscribed on the depicted world as the armature of its organization.” The entwined histories of the grid and painting inspired one of my new works, Falling Grid with Underpainting. To make it, I wove a three-dimensional grid out of string, to literalize the perspective grid in space, and then covered it with paint. Of course, paint doesn't have much tensile strength, so when I cut the grid off the frame, the painting slumped under the force of gravity. This kind of experimentation, where I push paint to do what’s not expected, is at the heart of my practice.


BUREAU: The series of works that are sculpture crafted from paint are extremely interesting, share how this technique was discovered and where you are currently taking it.

Margie LIVINGSTON: Six years ago, I started experimenting with acrylic paint to discover its physical properties in order to exploit them for their own qualities, not pictorial qualities. I glued dried paint directly to the wall, like a decal. One of the glues I tested failed, and the paint skin fell on the floor. Instinctively, I picked it up, brushed it off, and folded it neatly like a blanket. This accidental discovery led to a new body of work where I poured out gallons of paint to make huge paint skins that I then folded and placed on shelves. The “Draped Paintings” hang on a peg like a coat or scarf. When I make them, my relationship to the paint is sensual, body to body, as I must caress the paint skins to shape them. I work with the weight of painting and the paint sags in response to gravity--just like we all do. That paint so readily took on the properties of fabric led me to my newest works. I tack paint skins directly onto stretcher bars and the paint literally stands in for the canvas. Body of Work, a jumble of these paint-as-canvas works held together with wood and metal brackets, will be shown at UNTITLED 2014 this year by Luis De Jesus Gallery in Los Angeles. 

BUREAU: Do you subscribe to a specific thought process in your work, or is there a more tactile approach and please explain how theory meets reality in the actual creating of a work ?

Margie LIVINGSTON: My latest piece, Body of Work, provides a good example of my process, where the idea -- paint as canvas -- morphed and changed in response to the process of making. This piece came together using a combination of planning, model making, research, reflection, seat-of-the-pants problem-solving, and luck. Until I finally put it all together, I didn't know if the braces would hold. The stickiness of the paint is integral to its construction, but I didn't test that element at full scale until the final assembly, because putting two paint surfaces together creates a permanent bond. So I didn't know until the very end if I was making a prototype or the final work. This kind of problem-solving keeps things interesting. The white paint references Rauschenberg and Ryman, but a pile of white paintings reaches further back to the father of German Romanticism, Caspar David Friedrich, whose work I studied while in Berlin on a Fulbright Scholarship. The jumble of white paintings reminded me of his painting Sea of Ice (1823-24). As I worked on how to hang a pile of paintings on the wall, I made a small model out of foam core, balsa wood, and hot glue. The miniature paintings looked great on the wall, but I didn't like the way they hung there like a magic trick, denying the technical challenge of getting 18 canvases to hang together as one. This is when I added wooden and metal braces to hold them together, so its structure would be visible. I chose to use the utilitarian language of crating for this part of the piece, because I'm interested in the differences and similarities of making a painting and making a crate. During the three months it took to make Body of Work, I was imagining it hanging on the wall like a painting. The final twist came when I realized it looked great standing on the floor. As a sculpture built out of paintings, it blurs the line between sculpture and painting; it can either stand on the floor or hang on the wall with its ancestors.

ANDY  MOSES
The BUREAU ART INTERVIEW
By BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE Editor Joshua A. TRILIEGI

  
  
Joshua TRILIEGI:  We have been following your work now for almost two decades, back when the magazine was an artists’ collective. You made a sort of break through with the Fire and Ice Series some years ago: could you talk about the process from that time to the present?


Andy MOSES: The paintings that you refer to as the Fire and Ice series are a series of paintings that I exhibited in Los Angeles in 2002. I had moved back from New York in 2000 after having been there for 18 years. The work I had been doing there was done in a similar fashion to how I currently work which is by preparing, pouring, and manipulating paint on a flat surface. 


" After moving back to California I became interested in nature on a more human or tangible level and began making these panoramic paintings that were once again abstract, but now suggested horizons as seen from the ocean or the desert or the sky." 


The paintings I did in New York were mostly done through chemical reactions. Those paintings were mostly abstract but they also suggested galactic or microscopic phenomena. After moving back to California I became interested in nature on a more human or tangible level and began making these panoramic paintings that were once again abstract, but now suggested horizons as seen from the ocean or the desert or the sky.   They were made with one color of pearlescent white and were once again poured and manipulated on a flat surface. This time there were no chemical reactions. It was just the thickness of the paint that determined light and shadow. Shortly after that I made the first pearlescent white paintings I began making them on convex and then concave surfaces. I started making them convex and concave because of the way they interacted with light when you walked around them but also how the curve in the canvas seemed to suggest the curve of the earth and the curve of all space.  


" They were made with one color of pearlescent white and were once again poured and manipulated on a flat surface. This time there were no chemical reactions. It was just the thickness of the paint that determined light and shadow. " 


I have developed this work over the past 12 years going back and forth between being extremely monochromatic to working with color in extremely complex and varied ways, which is where I am at now. Also I have pushed the color from extremely subtle color variations to extreme contrast, which again is where I am now. Lastly the work has fluctuated between having what I call a defined horizon to being more topographical looking and more abstract. 


         
Joshua TRILIEGI: Being a second-generation artist is both a gift and a challenge, I remember hearing people compare you to your father [Ed Moses] back in the day. Discuss what you have dealt with and how this has affected your own style. 


Andy MOSES: Growing up with an artist Father has always made people make very strong assumptions about whom I am and where my work must be coming from. The truth is, both my brother and myself were consistently told that we could do whatever we wanted except be painters. We didn't grow up around the process at all as my Fathers studio was about five miles from our house and we were not encouraged to visit. Therefore I was never around the process of work being made growing up. I was however around finished work both in our house and at the occasional openings that we would go to. I was always intrigued by the work and always looked at it closely to try to figure out how it was done. We had a Sam Francis painting in our house for a while and I remember my Father always telling everybody that nobody knows how he does them. That intrigued me a lot - the fact that painting could be this mysterious and magical or even alchemical process. I went to Cal Arts in 1979 to study film. Once I realized how many chefs and how many elves had to be involved in film I realized I was a solo act. I had surfed a lot as a teenager and probably my favorite thing about it is that you could do it alone. You could paddle out by yourself and speak to no one and convene with the ocean. I had issues with authority as a teenager for sure and surfing was my escape. I was actually accepted into the art department at Cal Arts to make film. My teachers were John Baldessari, Douglas Huebler, Michael Asher and for one semester Barbara Kruger. Cal Arts was a very rigorous conceptual program that was extremely stimulating to me. I continued to work in film but added performance and installation to my repertoire. I did one pretty controversial performance/installation called Father Knows best. I did some paintings that were essentially like props for various installations. It was during this period that I experimented for the first time with painting flat and flowing the paint on to create an effect that I was looking for. This type of painting was like a drug for me. Once I tried it I knew I was hooked for life. Shortly after that, there was an artist visiting from New York who asked me to work for him in New York. I had only been at Cal Arts a couple of years and really loved it, but I knew I had the painting bug and I knew that it was going to take some time to develop these paintings. During that time I wasn't interested in having them critiqued as I was teaching myself how to do them and I figured, I would know when they were ready to put out in the world, to be looked at, and then critiqued,. So I moved to New York at age nineteen. When I got there the job I had been offered was gone, but that artist hooked me up with another painter Pat Steir and I worked for her. It was during the fall of 1981 that I did my first painting that I felt was successful. It was black and white and looked like a galactic explosion. I began exhibiting this work in New York in 1985 and had my first solo show in 1987 at Annina Nosei which was a very prestigious gallery for a 25 year old to have a first solo show. I lived in New York until 2000 when I moved back to Los Angeles.  Some people had heard of me through my work in New York. Others who saw my work in the early 2000's just assumed that I had started painting a few years earlier and that this was the first work that I had ever exhibited. I didn't really have to deal with comparisons to my Father's work in New York but when I moved back to L.A. there were certainly some. I know that those comparisons would have been much more intense if I had never left L.A. I feel that it has been a double-edged sword for sure. I have definitely benefitted at times and have been afflicted at others, for being a second-generation artist, but I am certainly not complaining. Everybody who has ever lived has some kind of cross to bear. I will be having a thirty-year retrospective at the Pete and Susan Barret Gallery at Santa Monica College in 2016. For the first time my New York and L.A. works will all be exhibited together. I feel like this show will put a lot of ghosts to rest, as people in L. A. will be able to see how the worked developed and evolved over the last thirty years.



Joshua TRILIEGI: The current works are slightly concave, how important is surface in your work and tell us why? 


The curves developed in an interesting way. I moved to New York in 1981. I was always very impatient and I wanted to make my stretcher bars as fast as possible so I could get to painting. I wanted to make paintings that had a weight and authority to them then so I decided to make my stretcher bars using 2x4's instead of something narrower and lighter. I wanted to make them 3.5 inches deep. I put the 2x4's together using only corrugated nails on the back. No cross bars and no triangles at the corners. 

" I had to leave the studio really quickly to go somewhere so I just leaned the painting at a 45-degree angle to the wall because there was no room to lean it flat on the wall. When I got back the whole thing was lit up in a way that I had never seen before…" 




As soon as I stretched the canvas the whole structure curved out from the wall like a sail. I kept that canvas hanging for a while because it intrigued me. I was just starting to make paintings flat on the ground by pouring and manipulating paint. I couldn't find a way to connect my paintings to that form and about 3 months later I had to move out of that loft so I took that curved structure apart. The idea of working on a curved surface remained dormant for twenty years. I had just moved to a new studio in Venice in 2002 that had incredible south light. I had just started making these very reductive pearlescent white paintings and the front of my studio was getting jammed up with clutter.  I had to leave the studio really quickly to go somewhere, so I just leaned the painting at a 45-degree angle to the wall because there was no room to lean it flat on the wall. When I got back the whole thing was lit up in a way that I had never seen before, but if I moved a little to the left or right the color intensity would drop off and it had this much more mysterious shadowy look. At that moment the light bulb went on and I connected the dots. It was not long after that, I made my first convex painting and shortly after that, I made my first concave painting. I like the curves for a number of reasons. 

" … If I moved a little to the left or right the color intensity would drop off and it had this much more mysterious shadowy look. At that moment the light bulb went on and I connected the dots. " 

They blur the line a little between painting and sculpture. The curve has a functional aspect as I work with  colors that shift in hue and intensity as you move from side to side and the curve enhances that.  Also, I like the way that they refer to the physicality of the world at large, both the shape of the earth and the shape of space. I have continued to use and explore the curves since late 2002. I am just starting to really push the curved aspect as of late and have found some new materials to paint on. I have one painting in my current exhibition at William Turner Gallery called R.A.D. that I am really excited about. 



" We didn't grow up around the process at all as my Fathers studio was about five miles from our house and we were not encouraged to visit. Therefore I was never around the process of work being made growing up. I was however around finished work both in our house and at the occasional openings that we would go to. I was always intrigued by the work and always looked at it closely to try to figure out how it was done. We had a Sam Francis painting in our house for a while and I remember my Father always telling everybody that nobody knows how he does them. "     
                                           -  Andy  MOSES  /  Painter




Joshua TRILIEGI: Abstraction has it's own challenges and rewards. Would you discuss some of your influences and how you developed a style of your own? 

I have never thought of myself as a purely abstract painter. I was always looking to find a new direction through process-oriented abstraction into a new kind of language. I guess one of the things that draws me to abstract painting is it's freedom. It's free in terms of making a mark that is not beholden to anything outside of itself. I am very drawn to atmosphere as well as gesture, so I guess going back historically Pollock and Rothko sit in prime positions in terms of influence. A Rothko painting is filled with so much atmosphere and mood. A Pollock is infused with so much energy and turbulence and let's call it freedom. So historically I have been influenced in terms of abstraction by both of them equally. Yves Klein has been a huge influence as well for bringing this Metaphysical element to his work that is simultaneously extremely genuine and also somewhat staged. It keeps the viewer guessing. There are so many painters going back hundreds of years that have influenced my work as well. I love the Venetian Renaissance painters as well as the French Impressionists as well as Turner and John Martin, as well as the Hudson River school. I loved the radical approach of the early twentieth century and the Futurists, and the Surrealists and on and on and on. When I first moved to New York in 1981 there was an explosion of painting happening. I loved so many of the local painters and there were a group of young Italian painters being shown. Most of all, though, I loved the German painters that were being shown in New York. Their work went back to the sixties and Seventies but all of a sudden you saw it everywhere in New York and it was being talked about everywhere. 

" I think what also gets lost a lot in an art world that is so obsessed with naming who is on top every five minutes is the contributions of so many artists that keep the language and dialogue moving forward.  Every time I go to multiple galleries I see something that I find interesting on some level. " 

My favorite German painters at that time were Gerhard Richter, Anselm Kiefer, and Sigmar Polke, and they still are. They brought gravitas and history to their work and their work was both figurative and abstract. Over the years though, I have really loved so much painting and so much art and so many artists that run the gamut of mediums and approaches. I always thought Barbara Kruger's work was so graphically strong and conceptually powerful and direct. John Baldessari and Ed Ruscha have carved out unique niches with their different kinds of deadpan humor. Jeff Koons with his perfection. The whole light and space movement out of Southern California, which is finally being appreciated internationally.  All of the really radical art that has come out of Southern California since the seventies. Also there is so much great work being done right now pushing the envelope in photography, sculpture and installation. All of the great artists from Los Angeles who are still under the radar internationally, including Ed Moses. There are too many great artists to name. I think what also gets lost a lot in an art world that is so obsessed with naming who is on top every five minutes is the contributions of so many artists that keep the language and dialogue moving forward.  Every time I go to multiple galleries I see something that I find interesting on some level. You see a lot of cynical and derivative work as well: but the good overshadows the bad. I think for the moment we are in a golden age.



" I made a very seminal painting in 1990 that was about Alchemy. I worked in Gold and Fuchsia and Black. This was the most color I had ever used and from that point on I was addicted to color. All through the nineties I worked with a lot of very intense color and the imagery although abstract hinted at earth forms and later back to galactic and microscopic forms. " 

                                                                 -  Andy  MOSES  /  Painter



Joshua Triliegi:  What attracts you to a certain color, tone and creating combinations that develop into a series such as the current work?  

Andy MOSES: Color has been an interesting exploration for me. Through most of the eighties I only painted black and white. I loved the immediacy and the contrast. It felt very powerful and very connected to the types of paintings which I was making which included abstract paintings that hinted at galactic, microscopic and rock like forms. In the late eighties I began silk screening images and text from the newspaper, which at that time was only black and white. In about 1989 I began using color for the first time and the color I chose to work in was blue. I was still working with these images silkscreened from the newspaper but now some of the imagery related to water and sky so it was a vey logical progression. I made a very seminal painting in 1990 that was about Alchemy. I worked in Gold and Fuchsia and Black. This was the most color I had ever used and from that point on: I was addicted to color. All through the nineties I worked with a lot of very intense color and the imagery although abstract, hinted at earth forms and later back to galactic and microscopic forms. In 2002 I sort of wiped the slate clean as I began working in one shade of pearlescent white. From there I brought color back in very subtle shades of pearlescent colors. In 2004, I was working again with a lot of blue as it hinted at water and sky, which the paintings were starting to make allusions to. I really exploded color again starting in about 2010. Over the last year, I have really pushed color saturation and contrast, the most that I ever have, as well as brought very complex and layered color palettes into the work. What I always look for with color is to cause sensations that physically overwhelm and create very strong visceral reactions. Usually the reaction I am looking for is a kind of euphoria but at other times, I want those sensations to be more aggressive or turbulent. 

 ANDY MOSES is Currently showing at William TURNER Gallery  Santa Monica  CA  USA

Visit his Current Exhibition or  The Official Gallery Website  www.williamturnergallery.com 







BUREAU: Tell us about the current piece at Angles gallery. 

Linda STARK: “Fountain (crying eyes)”, is a caricature of the eternal crier, from the ongoing investigation of an archetype, and more specifically, woman as eternal crier. But in this work, she has full spectrum rainbow colored tears, so there is a combination of the auspicious with the tragic.My paintings and drawings operate as metaphors, sometimes for emotionally charged wounded states regarding the human condition, often from a particular standpoint of living in the physical body of a woman, in a world entrenched in patriarchal systems. Or they may be inquiries into feminine mysteries, and a woman’s relationship with nature. I like the pairing of opposites, expressing dualities, often with mordant humor.In this work on paper, the tears are dripped in watercolor, an ephemeral medium. But the idea stems from earlier oil paintings, such as “Crying Eyes” 1991, a face-sized self-portrait with paint heavily dripped from the eyes, like a murky gargoyle. At that time, I was influenced by the industrial storm drains, with their mineral buildup, near my downtown LA loft. I was drawn to explore the natural gravity and fluidity of oil paint, it’s tendency to drip, the way it builds up over an extended period of time, to convey a sense of geological and emotional density. 

BUREAU: What originally attracted you to painting?

Linda STARK: I have always had a reverence for the activity of painting, instilled in me when I watched my mother from a distance, painting her pictures, in the garage on weekends, with special intensity. She painted out of inner necessity.  It made me want to paint, but I didn’t start until college. It was in Cornelia Shultz’s Beginning Painting class at UC Davis, that I fell in love with oil painting. I still remember how she made the act of painting seem like an alchemical process. She taught me a valuable lesson on how to nurture and protect my creative flow. My paintings were expressionist then, and Cornelia told me to “go to the library and look at a book on Soutine, then put it back on the shelf, and walk away.” She cautioned me not to over-saturate my mind with other artists, in order to maintain a strong connection with my own voice.

BUREAU: Can you describe an early time in your life when a work of art spoke to you?

Linda STARK: When I was in grade school, we had a field trip to the Balboa Art Museum in San Diego. It was my first trip to an art museum. I remember sitting in front of a Gorky painting, entranced. I opened myself up to the painting and experienced what I later learned was synesthesia. I heard an orchestra of sounds, as I looked at the complex abstract forms. That was when I had a profound realization of a painting’s potential. It was talking to me.


Linda Stark received a B.A. from U.C. Davis (1978) and an M.F.A. from U.C. Irvine (1985). Her work has been exhibited in museums and public spaces such as Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Albright-Knox Gallery (Buffalo, New York), UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art (Ridgefield, Connecticut), Oakland Museum of California, Site Santa Fe, Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, and Pasadena Museum of California Art. She is the recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artist Fellowships, a California Arts Council Fellowship, a COLA Visual Artist Fellowship, and a California Community Foundation Fellowship. Stark lives & works in Los Angeles, California USA. Tap The Link Below Visit ANGLES L A






KRIS  KUKSI : SCULPTOR

By  BUREAU  of  ARTS  and  CULTURE  MAGAZINE  Editor  Joshua  TRILIEGI


Picture if you will, The Titanic, after submission. The bodies and their souls: passengers, crew and stow ways. What would it feel like ? What might it it look like ? Imagine a world in all it's minute detail that could illustrate such a scene & you will begin to fathom the world of Mr. Kris Kuksi's sculpture. An accomplished painter who happened upon sculpture by hobbling together preexisting objects into new and original arrangements which set the bar a notch or two above any previous ideas of sculpture since, say, French Rococo or Italian Baroque architecture of olden day. Mr Kuksi subverts the ideas of religiousity, empiric nobleness and the wreckage of a post modern society into a sort of anarchy of the mind. One of the very few artists in our known history to tap into an ephemeral world with all it's detail, all it's nightmarish qualities, all it's passion, lust, violence and posture, in a tone and style that is wholly original. Mr Kuksi is steeped in mythology, astrology, greek gods and a modern history that includes Napolean, Beethoven and Oedipus. Comparisons are few, though, I would suggest Dore', Heronymous Bosch and the films of Terry Gilliam. Kuksi manufactures an overall visual schematic that provides a battlefeild of ideas which suggest the afterlife of a major event, such as, The Civil War, The French Revolution or the end of the world.  


" One of the very few artists in our known history to tap into an ephemeral world with all it's detail, all it's nightmarish qualities, all it's passion, lust, violence and posture, in a tone and style that is wholly original."


He creates a fantasy world come true in mono and duo chromatic form, that is entirley haunting, fantastic and when he is really on his game: darkly humorous.The artwork utilizes themes that freely criticize war, religious crusades and ideas of empiric ideology, while at the same time, employing the very devices, symbols and gestures that originally propagandized and sold those ideas to a hungry public. Kuksi is like a fiction writer who has established identifiable characters who will then willfully act out scenarios of a horrendous and beautifully haunting plotline that leaves us aghast, enthralled and sometimes in awe. When Jack Nicholson was asked to describe the filmmaker Stanley Kubrik after working on The Shining, he famously replied, "Brings new meaning to the word: Meticulous." To echo those sentiments and ride Jack's wave a bit, Kuksi, it might be said, brings new meaning to the word: Obsessive. Like Kubrik, he is creating a world that hints at a larger literary and historical idea wherein each character plays a part. So far, Mr Kuksi has spent a large amount of energy and time tackling European history. When he has focused on American history, there are modern takes on issues of politics and religion, though the canon is scant of our own story, such as the Native American experience or African American slavery, which is indeed a landscape worth considering. Mr Kuksi, who was born in 1973 has discovered and mined a mature style and body of work that has captured the attention of both collectors of fine art and the general populist, it will be interesting to see where he takes us next, whether it be Heaven or Hell is simply a matter of opinion.





 RUSSELL NACHMAN  




The PAINTER

BUREAU: The current paintings derive from a core story and literature, explain how that process works for you.

Russell NACHMAN: The basic answer is connective threads. In the case of my current show at Paul Loya Gallery, I was reading Stay, Illusion!: The Hamlet Doctrine,* when I first started thinking about possible themes for the exhibit. The book is an examination of Hamlet, combining literary theory and psychoanalysis. One of its themes conceives the temperament of Hamlet as a kind of impotent louche... which I found resonated with the insouciant temperament of my painting’s characters. As far as ideas based in literature, I have always found more inspiration in novels, poetry, and  philosophy than I have in the theories of contemporary art (which I personally find circuitous). * by Simon Critchley and Jamieson Webster.


" My audience is that person out there, whoever he or she may be, who sees a painting, hears a song, reads a book that totally enriches their life, augments their thought, stirs their emotion, and adds to the quality of their life. That is what all the art I love has done for me and I want to return the favor."                      
                                                           -  Russell  Nachman

BUREAU: Your aesthetic is both post modern, punk rock and 17th century, that’s an interesting mix, how did this develop ?
Russell NACHMAN:I wanted to continue the art historical trope of the harlequin to best express my ideas and emotions via an “every-man.” My harlequin developed into a stooge wearing Black Metal corpse paint. The Black Metal death mask is meant to be seen in the same way that Japanese Kabuki face paint is meant to be seen—as an embodiment of a theme or emotion, not as an individual. Using these characters I want to explore the thoughts I have concerning what I see as a loss of relevance in the Other of religion and metaphysics. Now I’m not referring to a general mind-set, I am referring more to the current state of aesthetics, philosophy, science... basically the current state of serious thought. Historically, the underpinnings of expression most often had relationships to religion or to a metaphysics concerned with “something larger than ourselves.” Presently an ambivalent stance exists that dares neither to go forward nor to retreat. A stance curtailed by an understanding that it is almost certain that there is nothing to us but matter and energy (a “dead weight” of simple mass). The current theories of consciousness and free will rest on the basis of complexity rather than exteriority. To put it simply, you are an individual with free will because the mechanism of consciousness is so intricate and “un-mappable” that, as such, manifests identity. We are much more complex than toasters, and therefore, conscious, individual beings. I have reluctantly come to see this as a more probable truth than any metaphysical truth, however much I find a need for something more or outside to my being.  As a result, I arrived at the idea of post-religious documents that are figured like Christian illuminated manuscripts, that depict a naive “fuck it” bacchanal of existential aporia.

               

BUREAU: When did you first utilize drawings and paintings as a way of expressing yourself and tell our readers about development.

Russell NACHMAN: I grew up drawing. For as long as I can remember drawing has been a constant companion and a source of joy in my life. I was a Sci-Fi, Fantasy, comic book kid and when I discovered “high” art in my late teens, I eschewed my former aesthetics, fearing them childish and low-brow. Fifteen years of avid exploration in art history and contemporary aesthetics found me constantly enamored of rebellious movements, such as DADA or FLUXUS, that challenged the status quo. With that under my belt and a dogged need for a truly individual voice in the art world, I returned to drawing and painting on paper— to the rendered image. Everything is permissible in the art world now, except for highly rendered “illustrational” images. So fuck, that’s what I’m going to use, not only to challenge the status quo, but because it is a part of who I am as an artist.

 BUREAU: Cinema effects your subjects and characters quite a bit, explain how you relate to film in this way.

Russell NACHMAN: Cinema is the lexicon of facial expressions! I turn to cinematic images for moments, for those amazing expressions you see in freeze frame.


BUREAU: The paintings are brave, ruckus and yet disciplined and visually pleasing, who would you say you paint for and how important is finding your audience as an artist ?

Russell NACHMAN: It has always been my goal to craft a voice that is contemporary without being complicit. I’ve never wanted to be relevant based on a shrewd, “professional” adaptation that jibes with the current climate. I paint for me, above all else, but I also have a great desire to share my work with other people. I need people to see my work. My audience is that person out there, whoever he or she may be, who sees a painting, hears a song, reads a book that totally enriches their life, augments their thought, stirs their emotion, and adds to the quality of their life. That is what all the art I love has done for me and I want to return the favor.

         Represented By Paul Loya Gallery in  L  A  at  http://paulloyagallery.com/ 

         Represented By LMAK  Projects in  N Y C  at  http://lmakprojects.com/  





ERIC ZENER : PAINTER


Guest Artist for October's Edition of BUREAU of Arts and Culture Magazine is Eric Zener. Mr. Zener is currently working with figural subjects in relation to the element of water. The act of diving in, the splash, the plunge, the immersion, the submission of giving yourself to a body of liquid. Normally, this subject might be considered a perfect Summer series, but with record heat waves on the West Coast, we decided to celebrate these refreshing images. Although the work is influenced by photography and lush saturated realist tones, because of the expressionist nature of the reflections and the water's reaction to the figures, there is a large amount of experimentation and abstraction within the work. Each painting is worked over with an extreme amount of detail. Many of the subjects are proportionately larger than life, in terms of scale, which takes us into the picture in the same way that a camera might magnify a subject, bringing us as the viewer into closer focus with the subject & the scene. 

The poolside in the contemporary arts has become a symbol and almost a genre of sorts. If we think of films such as The Graduate and its isolationist emotional meaning or David Hockney's pool paintings and drawings, which have a new relationship's reflective quality, or on a darker side, Billy Wilder's opening and closing scene in The classic film, Sunset Boulevard. Water equals emotions, pool side water is a slightly more controlled emotion, it is not the all powerful ocean, but a man made version. Mr. Zener's most recent work gives us pause to reflect on the stages before, during and after the experience of diving into our uncertain future. Many of the works allow for the individual to feel that surge, while others within the on going series represent a relationship of two. Zener has an evolving craft that is currently at a pinnacle, over the past decade, he has developed a style that is in a territory which might be called realism or even symbolism. What you call it is not as important as what you experience, feel and imagine while viewing it. All to often, the Art Critic, the Presenter, the Gallery and the Historian's interpretation of any given work eclipses the actual experience of simply enjoying, owning and living with a work of art. We suggest, in the case of Eric Zener's paintings, that you simply allow yourself to dive in and feel the work, immerse yourself and reflect on the refreshing qualities of relating to the element of water. 

This Series of paintings brings new meaning to the term, " West Coast Cool ". Also included throughout the entire edition are earlier works by Mr. Zener that relate to the elements of Wood, Earth & Air, making him a sort of alchemist of images. Man's Relationship to Nature: The great on going story that never ceases to effect, edify and entertain. Humankind's relationship to the elements are once again asking us, even demanding for a reevaluation of what it actually means to have an ecosystem, to relate directly to the elements and to reciprocate by preserving it's offering. Zener's newest work is exhilarating, impassioned and fresh. We are proud to have him as Guest Artist for the October 2014 Edition of BUREAU of Arts and Culture Magazine & BUREAUofARTSandCULTURE.com



ART GALLERY : KAWS IN L. A.

Street Art is at an all time crossover pinnacle. Kaws is a great example of a fierce trajectory. The current Exhibition at Honor Fraser in the Culver City Arts District is a new direction for the artist. Is it an homage, a re appropriation, a redux, a remix, a reevaluation or is it simply Kaws pressing rewind on some of his earliest influences, in this case the late, great Charles Schulze, creator of the classic fifty year comic street, Peanuts ? There are other influences here, such as Los Angeles artist Anthony Ausgang. This particular school of thought has much to do with animation at all levels. This is a mixed tape art world where samples from a classic can be used as a riff to a new hit single. Kaws is definitely pausing here to take a breather and relies heavily on Schulze's classics to get the crowd dancing, but dance they do. This is a hyper saturated, sexually suggestive and humorous take on a tried and true American Classic. To be sure purists will balk and certainly Kaws will take some heat for the sampling of something as bold as a Schulze, at the same time, he ensures that Schulze and his iconic images stay in the diaspora of artistic lingustics. Not unlike what Warhol did for Marilyn Monroe, The Mobile Pegasus and The Statue of Liberty or The Empire State building. The rules change daily and here, one of the rules has just been transgressed: See it, take it, re-do it, call it your own and do it gracefully, colorfully, boldly & don't look back. Once an artist enters the arena, it is always interesting to see just how they plan to stay in the game and not be eaten by the lions, in this case Kaws takes a bite out of a well beloved lion and the crowd cheers for more. The question is: Will he survive the next skirmish ? If we even care, he has already won the battle. Art is War. 

                                                                              - BUREAU of Arts and Culture Magazine








TOM GREGG: INTERVIEW

THE BUREAU OF ARTS AND CULTURE MAGAZINE GUEST ARTIST 


by Joshua TRILIEGI


Tom Gregg's paintings have a vibrancy, a super saturated presence that are difficult not to look at. Although based in realism, Gregg has taken the realist school of painting and cranked it up a bit. Sort of power popped it. Size is not really the issue here: style, color, shadow and light are. He's a very conscious painter with a clear understanding of whats happening on the canvas. As articulate on the page as off the page. Here at the Bureau of Arts and Culture, we talk a lot about craft. Tom Gregg is a master craftsman. Extremely dedicated to the personification of the object. Be it the American flag, a bottle full of candy, a crumpled piece of fabric, a disney curio toy or his famous on - going hand grenade series. 


American Realist painters through the years have often been attracted to the Americana of yesteryear and the new America of tomorrow, check out the works of Richard Estes and Ralph Goings. They took signage, chrome, cars, everyday commonplace objects and locales and hyper fascinated them into extremely lush and rich tapestries. Mr Gregg is doing just that, but within a kind of candy coated lens, he's taken the rose colored glasses and used them accordingly to look at objects that sometimes by their very nature carry a much more loaded symbology and made us simply look at how the color, light and vibrato relate to one another. The single object in a Tom Gregg painting becomes a sort of icon due to the amount of time, positioning, scale and fascination with tonal studies. More than one object becomes a strange interlude, an odd marriage, a pairing of the Sesame Street variety where the question was asked to the viewer, ' Which one of these objects doesn't belong ? ' But here, Mr Gregg does not differentiate that view. On the contrary, he makes them belong together and indeed, somehow they do. Through style, tone, association and placement his choices simply make us see the union and with his saturated palette, his uber craftsmanship, his outright exuberance that radiates from the actual object, we are mystified in some way. 


Where Estes and Going awed us with the fact that we could hardly believe it was a painting, Gregg takes us into a whole other ephemeral and wacked out hyper color experience that we need to see. Once focused on it, we may find it difficult to turn away, a kind of seduction of the visceral variety. An optical dessert of sorts, one bite leads to another and suddenly, we have gobbled it up. Not exactly eye candy, due to the sense of style and commitment to a serious painting, but possibly a rare delicacy. Once you have spent time with a Tom Gregg painting, the world itself may seem a bit heightened in reality, the way the light hits a color, the very sense of how colors will relate to one another, he is transferring a special experience that stays with the observer long after the viewing. It is Art.




TRILIEGI: Your work is based in realism, what led you to pursue this style ?


GREGG: As handy as it is, I hesitate to use the term realism because it tends to carry a set of limitations and might lead the viewer to be dismissive of the work before they get to what I think of as the most interesting part: the interplay of representation and thought. There is a conceptual impulse at the heart of all my paintings. They originate in an idea, a question, or a specific thought. This can be complex or ridiculously simple, perhaps even simple minded, hopefully Zen-like in some cases. In the most recent work it is as simple as a contemplation of symmetry and asymmetry, balance and imbalance. 

I guess in my head I have some Platonic ideal of a Realist painter, and it is someone who bravely jumps into the fray and takes on the world, raw, unfiltered, and messy, with their brushes and palette in hand, responding to the visual stimuli before them and trying to capture some bit of what they see out there. It seems to imply an outward stance, whereas my work is much more inwardly focused. I almost always paint from observation, but it is a highly edited, controlled and conceptualized situation that I set up, more like a laboratory or stage set than the natural world.  It is a space for a thought to occupy. Ultimately, I want the finished paintings to exist in a place that is firmly tied to the “real” world in all its physicality and complexity, while at the same time solidly staking a claim to a place in the world of painting; a 2-dimensional, painted world of image and thought.




TRILIEGI: Although it is realist work, there is a hyper saturated quality to the tones, discuss your choice of color when painting.   

GREGG: I choose to keep the color as keyed up as I can without breaking the internal visual logic of the painting. I try to push it to an edge where it just starts to pop a bit. The flat, pigmented world of a painting will never really compete with raw experience and the full range of real visual stimuli, but I take a perverse pleasure in trying to get it to. On another level, color is incredibly sensual and expressive, as well as elusive and limitless. I never feel like I comprehend color in its fullness; it always gets away and I am left feeling futile, with a mere record of the attempt.I think any true knowledge of color comes from experience. Outside of simply painting a lot, there were two fundamental steps in my understanding of color. The first was studying with a man named Sy Sillman at RISD. He had been a student and collaborator of Josef Albers and had us spend enormous amounts of time, until our eyes were shot, looking and looking at color, doing all sorts of color experiments with color-aid papers.  I couldn’t tell you any one specific thing I learned, but I looked at and tried to understand a seemingly endless amount of color. The second step came in Saskatchewan, where I lived for a few years in an attempt to digest graduate school. It has a vast, empty, stunning landscape with a very specific light. I painted from this landscape, plein-air style, on an almost daily basis for most of the time I was there. I would do 2 or 3 or more small paintings a day, trying to capture the light, the atmosphere, the colors. I covered a lot of panels with a lot of paint, too fast to think much about it, relying on instincts and experience. Most were failures, but sometimes something happened, something was captured. I still have boxes of these paintings in my studio.





TRILIEGI: Objects play a key role in your body of work, how do you choose what to paint ?


GREGG: When people find out you’re a painter they inevitably ask what sort of paintings you do. Early on I noticed the answer “still life” was often accompanied by a glazing over of the eyes, or an “oh”, and a slow nod of their head, as if it were some sort of unfortunate news. I learned to enjoy this, and almost take it as some sort of challenge, to try to exceed the mundane and lowly expectations of the genre. I find that still life offers me almost total control of the visual situation, not just the objects, but also the lighting, the colors, the forms, the space. This makes it a great vehicle for a certain sort of experimentation and provides a great framework for conceptual pursuits.

I have been painting still lives for decades now and my choices of what to paint and the role these objects will play has shifted many times based on the conceptual demands of the paintings.  Simply put, sometimes I want the objects to make the initial impact and be seen first, at other times I want them to be more transparent and secondary to the visual orchestration of the painting. I think there is a stereotypical or classical idea of still life subject matter: fruit, glasses, drapery, flowers, etc. These objects don’t ask many questions in and of themselves and therefore allow the formal choices and the mechanics of the painting to be the focus. The challenge here is to transcend the familiarity of the objects and arrive at something that will hold the viewer’s attention, almost in spite of them.  On the other hand if I choose to paint hand grenades, guns, pharmaceuticals, Big Macs or crumpled up American flags, the viewer is confronted by a whole different set of questions and has a different entry into the painting. In an odd way the challenge here is similar, but starts from the other side of the problem: to transcend the confrontational aspect of the objects and seduce the viewer into the sensuousness and beauty of the painting itself. At the heart of it all is my belief that even the humblest and most banal of objects has the possibility of being transformed in a painting, and given existence at the core of something profound and meaningful. Even the most mundane of objects seem to possess some sort of secret or a dignity that lies beyond my comprehension and seems worthy of contemplation.




TRILIEGI: Each painting seems like you invest a large amount of time into, without attempting to quantify a value point, how much time will you invest in a painting such as the new works: Cocktails, etc …

GREGG: My “work” does involve a lot of actual work, though work I enjoy. The number of hours invested in a painting seems to have little bearing on the ultimate success or failure of the piece. And paintings can get worse the longer you work on them. There is no equivalency between time invested and success, which makes the process more engaging and demanding of my full attention.My working process starts with a lot of drawing. In these drawings I figure out the scale, the composition and placement. I get to explore and work out a lot of decisions before getting into the actual painting. I find it a lot easier to change my mind in a drawing than in a painting.  The drawings are very much working drawings, not finished pieces, and primarily serve as a step into the painting. I transfer the drawing to the panel, re-draw it, and rough in the painting with this as a guide. Then I try to make the whole thing come together. 


A lot of the process of painting for me is looking, and marking, and looking again, and marking again, adjusting and changing, repeating this process until I feel I have captured something meaningful or profound about what it is I am seeing. This seems to go beyond illusion and has more to do with the energy found in visual relationships. My guess is that a bit of life is given to the painting when a relationship or a set of relationships is observed and experienced openly and directly, (whether it be one color to another color, or one ellipse to another, one space to another, etc.), and then that relationship is reinvented and brought into the painting itself. Time has little to do with this in any direct sense, other than that if I keep the process open, then the longer I try, the more chances I take, the more likely I am to hit on something.



TRILIEGI: The shadows in the newer works appear to have eyes, were seeing a lot of reference to that lately, in much of the contemporary art scene, is this a conscious decision or just a happenstance ?

GREGG: I am not aware of the profusion of eye references, so I can’t claim to be a part of that as a trend or as a part of the contemporary scene.  But I was definitely aware of the eye - like shadows in some of these recent paintings. So the effect was heightened, if only subtly. I enjoy the extra layer of visual reference that this gives to the piece. The viewer can flip their attention from “oh, it’s two cocktails” to “there are two eyes staring out at me” and have these competing stimuli struggle a bit in your head, a bit like the classic optical illusion of the rabbit or the duck. I believe a great deal in the power of subliminal decisions and the role instincts play in how we go about things, and it is undeniably fun to discover things within things, so on some level I am responsible for those eye references in the paintings, and glad you noticed them. I will add that my father passed away, rather suddenly, about 5 years ago and ever since then I have had the tendency to fabricate faces, most often his face, in all sorts of patterns and situations, as if trying to find his presence in my world, bring him back or just ease the loss.




TRILIEGI: Do you believe in a school of thought, or does the individual artist still have the power to express something alone ? 

GREGG: Tough question, it sort of goes in a lot of directions. I believe we are all so embedded in our time and world that we are more or less completely defined by it, especially in this supersaturated media culture. The world seems to be made smaller by technology but at the same time fragmented, shattered and without boundaries.

I believe we are all formed by our environment and can’t escape our place and time. We all build on the work and accomplishments of others and operate in the context of our culture. Artists have always fed off of other artists; there is no avoiding it and no shame in it. I don’t think any of us exist alone, as some sort of outsider. A favorite quote seems applicable here: “we are only as original as the obscurity of our sources”.  But I also believe that we each provide a slight shading or slight shift in perspective to the larger culture.

For about 5 years I helped coordinate and curate an artist run gallery here in Kansas City. There was a core group of artists who showed consistently over that time and occasionally you could see some direct lifting of ideas or stylistic crossing over, but for the most part the artists involved were distinctly defined in interests and direction. What did seem to be shared and what did get passed around was the energy, the ambition, and the desire to be a participant in what was happening, an impulse to step it up.  So there was a sort of school of energy more than thought. At this point in our culture, which is so fragmented, and has unlimited options for expression, it seems almost impossible to narrow to a school of thought in any traditional sense, everything can and does co-exist simultaneously and it makes for a much more vibrant conversation. I trust that in a hundred years the art historians will put the labels on what is happening now and give the names to the schools of thought.




 TRILIEGI: The craftsmanship in your work is amazing, how long have you been painting and who were / are your influences as an artist ? 

GREGG: I always flinch at the use of the word craftsmanship in regards to painting. It seems that as an artist you just have to do what the painting demands and use the materials however they need to be used to get there. Any notion of craftsmanship is integral to the artwork as a whole. So it seems to be more a matter of necessity than craftsmanship. I guess in that way I would consider De Kooning a great craftsman, because the paint does exactly what it needs to do to get those paintings to work. Paint, as a material, can do so many things and be used in so many ways that I think all painters use it a bit differently.  You have to find out not just how you can use it but also how you need to use it: it evolves with the vision of the work.  My use of paint is always slowly evolving and changing and providing slightly different possibilities for the paintings. As for influences, I think I am generally voracious as an art and culture consumer and digester and like to think that, at least in terms of inspiration, that all these experiences get channeled into what I do. I get thrilled at a show of Tom Friedman or an Ingres retrospective. As I think it is with most artists, there is a big sort of soup that is always on the stove somewhere in my head and all kinds of stuff, everything, really, gets thrown in there and cooked together and then it gets ladled out in the form of my paintings. The influences more directly related to my paintings are most likely predictable for the sort of painter I am. From an early fascination with Giotto, Masaccio, and Pierro della Francesca I worked my way up through art history on up to the present and Lucien Freud, Balthus, and Euan Uglow. But my heart keeps returning to the Seventeenth century where, for me, some sort of pinnacle was reached with Caravaggio, Rembrandt, Velasquez and Vermeer. I am always cruising through both the past and the present for inspiration, and easily falling in love with an artist’s work, whether for a fleeting moment, a lifelong fascination or just a new spot on the map of my art experience.




TRILIEGI: Does Music or Film or some special activity inform or inspire your work process,  if so, please tell our readers a bit about that process. 

GREGG: Music has always had the ability to flood me with emotion, to overwhelm me, or bring tears to my eyes in a completely irrational, physical and emotionally rooted way. I have never studied music and never played an instrument and can’t carry a tune, so there is no other way for me to experience music. It serves as a source of inspiration because it hits me directly and leaves me feeling defenseless in a manner that painting almost never does. Painting and visual art enters through my eyes and mind, music through my ears and gut. That said, I do have my own, uneducated ideas about music that filter into my paintings. I often think of color as musical tones, as having a pitch and harmonizing with other colors. I also use ideas of rhythm and movement that come from musical ideas. Sometimes I think of my paintings as small, minimalist symphonies, each “instrument” playing its’ role in the whole piece. Haiku poetry is another form that I look to and hope to channel into my work. There is a stunning beauty in the sparseness and economy of conveying emotions and ideas and a stark use of the juxtaposition of image that I often think of in relation to my paintings. I have also been practicing Chi Gong and Tai Chi for almost 5 years now and have found it making its’ way into my work, particularly the recent series of paintings. In both these practices there is a strong emphasis on subtle movements and repetition, and on balance and gravity, and on being grounded. It is all ultimately about focus, energy and awareness.



TRILIEGI: The backgrounds in the newer works are extremely worked over, when your dealing with a smaller object, like say a shot glass, is there a need to invest a certain amount of time into the background or is there simply a habit of entirely presenting a serious work on every square inch of the painting ? 

GREGG: The backgrounds, or what I think of as the wall, are always an integral part of the painting and often end up being what the success or failure of the piece rides on. It is the largest part of the painting and therefore the dominant color proportionally. It is a particular challenge to paint because in order to succeed it has to have a sense of light and atmosphere and it also has to create a space for the still life to exist in. And it has to do this with the barest of elements; it is flat, without detail, and has no definition beyond the play of light across its surface. Because of this I consider it to have a certain visual and conceptual purity. It is working with color and light, nothing else. To make it work is difficult, and most often leaves me with a sense of a long pursuit that comes to an end with me empty handed. That pulsing of life and light that I saw and experienced and seemed so palpable, and that I just spent all day chasing with paint, almost always gets away.




TRILIEGI: Where do you live and work and how does that influence your work ? 

GREGG: I live and work in Kansas City, Missouri. I was born in California, in Long Beach, and at age seven moved to a town outside of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. I went to RISD and lived in Rhode Island for eight years and Connecticut for two years while at Yale, then spent two years in Saskatchewan before landing in Missouri.

Kansas City has a lively art scene, and I think a true sense of community among artists across a range of disciplines.  It provides an ease and a clear feeling of being connected, perhaps due to its size. It ebbs and flows, but at times there has been a vibrant dialogue between the art makers here, a feeling that there is something being shared, that the community is being pushed farther than any one individual could go on their own.  A sense that there are other tuned-in voices right here that are listening, and responding: an audience of artists and other participants in the aesthetic cultural here and now. There is a lot going on here, a lot of opportunities for artist driven projects and a real commitment to the arts all across the spectrum.

Mr Gregg The Guest Artist  JUNE 2014 and you will find his work available at George Billis Gallery 
in Los Angeles at Culver City's Art Row on La Cienega and in New York City with a New Show 
scheduled this Fall 2014. Many of the Interviews throughout this Publication feature Mr Gregg's 
Paintings and we are very pleased to have him at BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE Magazine.

George Billis Gallery LA  2716 S. La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles  CA  90034  T: 310-838-3685
George Billis Gallery NY  525  W. 26th  Street, New York City    NY  10001  T:212- 645-2621





10 QUESTIONS: Colin SHERRELL

Bureau:  How long have you been creating objects?

CS: I have been creating for as long as I can remember. When I was five, my father gave me a bunch of scrap wood and a hammer and let me build my first chair. The chair took on characteristics of a Gerrit Rietveld classic De Stijl chair and was built to the best of my abilities. It held together with bent nails, hammer dents, and rather rickety but surprisingly strong enough to hold both me and my father. Before that I can’t really remember, but I’m sure I was messing around with something in my dad’s studio.

Bureau: Your sculpture work is very impressive, do you have any immediate influences?

CS: Too many to list. I am a third generation artist and grew up surrounded by art. I spent the majority of my youth going to museums, galleries, openings, and artists’ studios with my father and found that most of everything I saw, I absorbed into my own practices. Most of my work is informed by art history and characteristics of both modern and contemporary art.

Bureau: The work seems to be evolving from a raw aesthetic into a kind of refined ideology, what drives the evolution of your work?

CS: Well I try to just go with the flow of my styles, but I leave my practices open for growth and experimentation into many different mediums, processes and concepts. I don’t necessarily like to stick to one or the other so that I can always be thinking about different avenues and approaches to making art. 


Bureau: Much of your work is charged with a pervasive sexuality, how much do personal relationship effect our work as artists?

CS: Depends on the artist. For me, my personal relationships certainly effect avenues of my artwork. My Master’s thesis was centered on the idea of unions between two objects and was mainly influenced by the relationship I have with my fiancée Theresa Karnick and my immediate family. The connections between the two objects in each piece in the thesis show hold metaphorical and symbolic significance to my own relationships, but also to anyone and everyone. I feel that as an artist I can look into my own relationships for inspiration because they are what shape my life and my life shapes my art.  


Bureau: You have experimented with video, photography and sculpture, do any of these mediums inform each other?

CS: Yeah, although they are completely different mediums, depending on how I use them and in what context I use them, I feel that they can transform into each other or at least take on characters of each other.  For instance, I take photographs of lumber and scale and print them to life size, and mount the photos back onto the original piece of wood.  In some versions I remove the photographed knot hole and expose the real wood knot below. Once the photo is mounted onto the wood, the photograph transforms into that piece of wood and turns into, at least for me, a sculpture and not a photograph. Or in another piece, I projected a video of a braille book onto a blank braille-less book. The viewer went to touch the book and felt nothing, losing the image of the braille under their hands shadow. The video for me transformed into or informed the sculptural aspect of this work. Although the video I made was used traditionally as a projection, the act of using it to imply space and texture, I feel became sculpture and transcended the medium of video.



Bureau: Did you go to school and what did you pick up along the way ?

CS: I started my studies by attending Joliet Jr. College in Illinois, were my father was my teacher and mentor. I then went on to the New World School of the Arts in Miami, FL where I received my BFA. Immediately upon graduating I pursued my MFA from University of Miami, and as of this weekend have now received it. Along this long journey I have picked up so much I wouldn't even know where to begin. I couldn’t narrow down to anything specific without going on and on because they taught me so much. I did find that by working through art schools, I now think that I know what the hell it is I am doing as an artist and what my work is about, in ways. I don’t think I’ll ever stop picking up things throughout my life as an artist.

Bureau: PLUSH is a lovely object, tell us a little about the process of creating this work from beginning to end.

CS: Well this was a tricky piece to make, and rather interesting that you ask about this piece the way you do, wanting to know from beginning to end. I'll keep it short for you. This piece is the final version of three attempts. The first version gave me tremendous amounts of difficulties and eventually was scrapped and recycled to attempt it again. After getting about 98percent of the way complete with making the second version, an electrician went into my studio and attempted to move it. It resulted in being completely demolished and an insurance claim with their company. After the third attempt I was successful and able to create this plush form. The piece was tricky because it has both and interior view and exterior view and made from ceramic. Its form takes on resemblances of pillows or for me a plush shape and needed to be as smooth and uniform as possible. 

Bureau: How important is experimentation in your work?

CS: Extremely, how else am I going to grow or learn anything?

Bureau: Some of your works are rather obsessive, like the cigarette sculpture. Tells us about following through with your ideas and how that works.

CS: I’m still trying to figure that out. I don't know what makes me choose the pieces or ideas or processes that I want to work with until the time comes. If I have an idea and I can’t shake it for a few months I know that I have to look into it a little deeper and make the idea come to life.

Bureau: You have representation on the East Coast at NOW Gallery, where else can we find your work and what are you working on at this time? 

CS: As of right now I am mainly in private collections, in Chicago, LA, New York, and Miami, but currently only showing out of Miami. My next projects involve a series of sculptures based around birdhouses and another series based on child hood objects such as a large scale pacifier, a high high chair, and other children's toys. 








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An Electronic Interactive Version of  BUREAU of Arts and Culture Magazine. 'Electronic' meaning you are reading it with a device, 'Interactive' meaning you can actually tap the featured interview or image & listen to extended Audio Interviews & Links. BUREAU Magazine can be read without being on-line, though it is much more useful and interesting if you are actually on-line or you may visit our website and enjoy a compendium of Interviews, Articles, Reviews and Essays. We suggest you view the pdf in the Two Page and Full Screen Mode options which are provided at the top of your menu bar under the VIEW section, simply choose Two Page Layout & Full Screen to enjoy. This  format  allows  for  The Magazine to be read as a Paper  Edition. The BUREAU of ARTS and CULTURE has been a respected ART Institute since the early Nineteen Nineties. Many of the original BUREAU members have gone on to have stellar careers in The ARTS. Artists, Filmmakers, Musicians such as: Lucas Reiner, Spike Jonze, Alex McDowell, Martin Durazo,  James Gabbard, Christina Habberstock, Lorna Stovall, Heather Van Haaften, Chris Greco, Don Harger, Ron Riehel, Joan Schulze  all had very early collaborations with The BUREAU Projects. Our relationship with ART spaces who have been interviewed / reviewed by BUREAU: Jack Rutberg, Susanne Vielmetter, Tobey C. Moss, Shoshana Wayne, Known Gallery, Sabina Lee, The Bowers Museum, The Geffen Contemporary,  Hammer Museum, RED CAT, The Skirball Cultural Center, Museum of Contemporary Art in L A, San Diego and in Santa Barbara help to create well earned future partnerships, distribution as well as a 'word of mouth' that is priceless. Collectively, they have been in the business for hundreds of years. Not to mention the thousands of public readers that have received the magazine on their door steps. 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BUREAU Magazine Clients, Affiliates and Advertisers Include: MAGNUM Photo Agency, Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, Fahey/Klein, Tobey C. Moss, Craig Krull, Western Project, George Billis, Kopeiken, Ace Gallery, Soap Plant, Known Gallery, Morrison Hotel Gallery, Couturier Gallery, Robert Berman Gallery, Martin-Gropius-Bau in Berlin, San Jose Museum of Art, First Run Features, Downtown Records, Susanne Veilmetter, Koplin Del Rio.  Contributing BUREAU Magazine Photographers : Guillermo Cervera,  Dina Litovsky, Susan Wright, Rene Burri, Dennis Stock, Moises Saman. Van Agtmael, Cathleen Naundorf, Terry Richardson, Phil Stern, Dennis Morris, Henry Diltz, Steve Schapiro, Yousuf Karsh, Ellen Von Unwerth, William Claxton, Robin Holland, Andrew Moore, James Gabbard, Mary Ellen Mark, John Robert Rowlands, Brian Duffy, Jon Lewis, Sven Hans, David Levinthal,  Joshua White, Brian Forrest, Ai Rich, Lorna Stovall,  Elliott Erwitt  

Contributing BUREAU Magazine Artists: Kahn & Selesnick, Jules Engel, Patrick Lee, David Palumbo, Tom Gregg, Tony Fitzpatrick, Gary Lang, Fabrizio Casetta, DJ Hall, David FeBland, Eric Zenner.  The Editor, Joshua Triliegi is a Writer, Photographer, Filmmaker & Third Generation Fine Artist. Simply Tap the Titles & Links attached  to this correspondence and download FREE past Magazines and Join us at BUREAU Magazine Cities and Sites. BUREAU Magazine has been a respected ART Institute since the early Nineteen Nineties. Many of the original BUREAU members have gone on to have stellar careers in The ARTS. Artists, Filmmakers, Musicians such as: Lucas Reiner, Spike Jonze, Alex McDowell, James Intveld, Christina Habberstock, Lorna Stovall, Joan Schulze all had very early collaborations with The BUREAU Projects. 

Interviewed or Reviewed By The BUREAU : T.C. Boyle, Sam Shepard, Luis Valdez, Gagosian Gallery, Robert Redford, Martin Scorsese, David Bowie, Marlon Brando, Orson Welles, Susanne Vielmetter, Tobey C. Moss, Shoshana Wayne Gallery, Known Gallery, Sabina Lee, The Bowers Museum, The Geffen Contemporary,  Hammer Museum, Red Cat,  Skirball Cultural Center, Museum of Contemporary Art in L A, San Diego and in Santa Barbara help to create well earned future partnerships, distribution as well as a 'word of mouth' that is priceless. Collectively, they have been in the business for hundreds of years. Not to mention the tens of thousands of public readers that have received the magazine on their door steps. Our coverage of International Art Fairs with in depth audio & slide presentations allow us to create a lasting relationship with the ' National Big Tent ' art events that allow for fundraising activity. We recently interviewed the Grammy Museum and are creating a lasting relationship. The same pattern applies for THEATER: Edgemar, LATC, Circle Theater, Cygnet, Robey.  MUSIC : The Echo, The Redwood, The Roxy, Grammy Museum, Origami, Vacation, Record Collector, LA Philharmonic & The San Francisco Philharmonic. BUREAU Magazine has created relationships with: Film, Music and Art Festivals, National & Local Radio Stations, continuing the tradition created with BUREAU Film projects and the utilization of Print.

BUREAU MAGAZINE and RADIO Publicity:  Triliegi Film programs were discussed on KCRW 89.9, KPFK 90.7 and Indie 103 FM  within the non profit umbrella in the past and we plan to sustain & develop those ties. We were invited to Cumulus Radio's Commercial Rock Formatted KLOS 95.5 FM [ Bureau mentioned on air] to consider an affiliation.  We recently interviewed Miles Perlich of KJAZZ 88.1 FM and we were given tickets to Classical Music concerts by K-MOZART Radio & we invited a guest reviewer to attend. The BUREAU of Arts and Culture Magazine will continue to create a lasting relationship with the Art Institutes, Media & Schools that drive the Arts in America. We distributed Paper Editions to OTIS Art School & The Campus at USC to support alignments with faculty, staff & students who will become future entrepreneurs & participants in the Arts. Our interview with Barbara Morrison and her connection with UCLA Jazz music department with Herbie Hancock & The Thelonius Monk Institute is solid. We delivered the first edition of the magazines to: Beverly Hills, Pacific Palisades, Palos Verdes, West Hollywood, Los Feliz, Malibu and The beach communities: Hermosa, Redondo & Manhattan beaches. We received financial support from the arts & culture communities by creating a dialog about the arts, reviewing their art exhibitions, theater plays & films. Art Galleries from Culver City to Bergamot Station to Glendale approved of and supported Edition One. Now we have an online READERSHIP that grows exponentially. 


BUREAU Community & City Sites: Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, Santa Barbara, New York City, Seattle, The Mid-West and now The SOUTH : TEXAS, ARIZONA, NEW MEXICO and LOUISIANA  allow for anyone, anywhere, to see what is going on in the arts in that particular city. Which we feel will allow for us to apply for support, distribution and grants within those particular cities and for local businesses to buy ads. We add new cities quite often and create a lasting relationship with the established Arts Foundations in ART, MUSIC, THEATER. Which usually includes Classical music, Art Galleries, live Theater and Film. We added Surfing , Skateboarding and Biking to get the interest of a younger readership and indeed it worked. We have also celebrated those subjects with our fundraisers, selling artworks in relation to Biking & Skating. We partnered with local & national businesses that assisted & we provided logo affiliation & coverage on the web: Chrome Bags, Jarrittos, LA Skate, DTLA Bikes and The Los Angeles Bikers coalition, to name a few. Established Artists from diverse cultures also participate in the BUREAU of Arts and Culture Exhibitions and Interviews. We brought together Native American, African American, Chinese American, Armenian American and Mexican American elder artists in a single exhibition: a financial as well as critical success with "Gathering The Tribes: Part One". We hand delivered the first paper Edition throughout Southern California and select neighborhoods in San Francisco. We introduced the magazine & created Popular Cultural Sites. We are an official media Sponsor for L A Art Fair, ASIA ART FAIR, PHOTO LA Photo Fair. We extensively cover and or interview galleries at Art Fairs such as, Platform LA, Pulse LA, Untitled Art, Basel Miami, Art Miami, Miami Project,  LA Art Book Fair. We provide an extensive overview, Audio walk throughs, visual presentations with up to 100+ images per on-line feature.