Inaugural Event @ The Box


Hey Everyone! Come on out to the Closing Reception to an Mesmerizing Exhibition by Spandau Parks…RECEPTION is on JULY 19TH at 8PM at THE BOX…977 CHUNG KING ROAD IN CHINATOWN, Los Angeles, CA….read more below….

A LITTLE BACKGROUND ON THE EXHIBITION….

The Box gallery opened on June 9, 2007 with an inaugural installation by Spandau Parks. This installation is a project that began on the evening of June 9th with four projections, three onto the walls of the gallery and one out the front window onto the building across the street. The video projections are moving images that closely examine a painting triptych Spandau began in 1975.
It was decided by the artist and the gallery that the piece would not be publicly announced but would run every Thursday, Friday and Saturday night through July 21st. The work was only visible by those who happen to pass by, this included those who live and work in the neighborhood and occasional visitors to the arts scene surrounding the gallery. Spandau uses the gallery space as a working space, allowing him to change and develop the project throughout the course of the exhibition; the exhibition is art in flux. One of the changes that Spandau made was to project a video he made on June 9th of the video installation. This video includes people inside and outside the gallery, which create shadows and reflections throughout the space. The video is a video, of a video installation, of a painting triptych come alive through movement on structure walls.
Along with the videos, the artist began photographing the video installation; there are now over 1,000 images. He began printing the photographs of the video installation and placing on the walls of the rear gallery, out of public view. By placing still images of a three-dimensional video installation, Spandau has brought the work back to its original two-dimensional form.

On July 19th, the gallery is hosting a PUBLIC Closing Reception. What you will see at the closing event on July 19th, is a piece that began on June 9th and has continued to develop into an amazingly complex and cyclical group of pieces that has yet to be seen in its entirety by the public.

JULY 19TH 2007
8PM
977 CHUNG KING ROAD
CHINATOWN, DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES
CA, 90012
213 625 1747
mara@theboxla.com

The Box is an alternative gallery, incorporating the voice of the artist and the public.
The Box aims to push the concept of an art gallery, viewing it as a place of thought and education.

Mara McCarthy-Gallery Director

(BY THE WAY IF YOU KNOW OF ANYONE WHO MIGHT NOT HAVE RECEIVED THIS ANNOUCEMENT, BUT MIGHT BE INTERESTED, BY ALL MEANS SHARE IT WITH THEM!!)

What’s going on with my friend Alexander…..




Alexander Tovborg´s (b.1983) works give a panoptic view of topical an virtual spaces. Through broken perspectives, manifold ideas and repeated reconstructions, his drawings unfold as sculptural fragments of stories. Tiny bits of stories stimulate larger, bur distanced scenarios. The many blank fields in Tovborg’s images are like undone thoughts that, through his underplayed teasing, function as epilogues to stories with ironic seriousness. An entire gallery of epic figures participate side-by-side with cultural symbols: priests, giants and pilgrims present themselves among churches, castles, cemeteries and special divinities. Holes and wells appear as judgment day allegories, and the lonely cowboy is replaced by a group of suffering people. Equivocal actions are visualized in a sort of frozen glimpse. Tovborg’s cogent imaginations especially focus on ceremonial events, where people are faced with fear, suffering and religious comfort.

Both drawing and sculpture hint at a play with time and space. Present time seems to be on th verge of disaperance, while the future is just about to appear. The fusion of past and future in the present is a recurrent marker of both form and content in Tovborg’s works, and the materials and their shapely collisions are imbued with anachronisms. Thus, mahogany-laminate is mixed with cheap wood; a paper full of holes in plastic is covered in pen drawings and ceramic sculptures are mixed with their original clay-forms. In general, the works seem to expose themselves. The creation process is an intregrated part of the aesthetic, and as the sculptural shape is examined, the functionality is amputated. It thus becomes possible to understand how a mini golf course can be submitted to fantasies about death: as it closes in on itself as a grave, its sports-like function is ironically made superfluous, and its decay becomes a poetical statement. In the same way, space is scanned in minute drawings made of tape, which contain a self-destructive fragilness and grace. Tovborg draws on art historical references without reproducing them as hollow forms. He specially distils the decadent artistic language of the Baroque into his random aesthetic that controls his thematical frame which circle round illusionism and serious voyeurism.

Tovborg’s space can be read as subjective feelings that been transformed into general states of mind. Instead of pointing to an individual narrator, it is the fictive society or the epochs in time that play the main parts. Thus, the identifications is removed and perhaps the distance makes a critical freedom possible. Tovborg constructs a complex observatory that mirrors its own reflection, thus disrupting a clear and concise perception. The scenario contains a burlesque and melancholy impossibility that can remind you of the absurd pleasure you meet in the works of Samuel Beckett and which becomes part of a tale about the backsides of society.

Alexander Tovborg is still a student at the Royal Danish Art Academy, but has already made him noticed in the exhibition scene at several occasions, i.e. through the convincing solo show “I tell you weird tales” at the gallery Bendixen Contemporary.



All the works are from 2007…his is the best!!

See you soon my good boy…

  • Do you wanne know more about Alx…
  • Bart Michiels Price Increase


    Bart Michiels, The Hindenburg Line 1918, The Knoll, 2003
    To view more of Michiels’ work, please visit our website .
    The prices of Bart Michiels’ photographs will increase September 1, 2007. Please contact the gallery for further pricing information.
    The Course of History by Bart Michiels
    At the dawn of the new millennium I had lived for more than a decade in the US since leaving Belgium and during this new political climate, I wanted to reconnect with my European roots. What experience was so European and not American?
    For centuries, from Caesar’s legions to the armies of the Nazis, my native country saw war with all its faces : invasion, occupation, terror, chaos, hunger, atrocities, destruction and collapse (of industries). After two world wars, those experiences have shaped what Europe thinks today, still affecting the generations and civilian life in modern Europe.

    The photographs in The Course Of History are landscapes of the worst killing fields of Europe, of battles that were turning points in our history, defining our future. My approach to the subject comes from the loss of innocence in nature and the dichotomy of it : beauty and evil. And war is the loss of innocence of men. Though they all have a violent history in common, our perception of these landscapes can be peaceful and serene. So, is our sense of place associated with memory and history and is our understanding of the landscape fraught with misreading?

    With little or no evidence of battle left on the land, I tried bringing back reference to it by finding happenstance traces and features on the land that refer metaphorically to combat, such as tractor tracks cleaving through a field of crops like tanks once did (Verdun, Le Mort Homme). At Waterloo, I found in a grass field a patch that was flattened. It was also where Napoleon’s elite troops and cavalry fell on the ridge, sealing the fate of the emperor.
    FOLEY GALLERY 547 W27TH ST 5TH FLOOR TEL 212.244.9081 FAX 212.244.9082

  • Patronmail
  • Klaus Weber

    The Big Giving, 2007

    Festival Terrace, Southbank Centre
    14 July – 14 October 2007

    Drinks will be served next to the fountain on Festival Terrace on
    Friday 13 July from 6pm followed by Klaus Weber in conversation with Hayward Director, Ralph Rugoff, from 7pm in Level 5 Function Room at the Royal Festival Hall.

    In Klaus Weber’s work The Big Giving a group of male and female figures are cast rising out of, or simultaneously sinking into, volcanic-looking mounds of rock. Water gushes continuously from the mouth of one, the eye of another and the genitals of a third, suggesting an abundant outpouring of bodily fluids. The title of the work, The Big Giving, refers to the native North American potlatch ceremony, in which the host’s status increases the more he or she gives. Weber’s fountain physically plays out this excess of giving and receiving, as the water gushes from one figure to another.
    Read more about the exhibition.

  • Read More about the exhibition
  • Klaus Weber: Artist’s Talk
    Friday 13 July, 7-8pm (post-reception)
    Level 5 Function Room
    at the Royal Festival Hall
    The event is free but booking is recommended. Please contact the box office on 0871 663 2519.

    Gardar Eide Einarsson:

    „South of Heaven“
    July 27 – September 16, 2007

    Press conference: July 26, 11 am
    Opening: July 26, 7 pm

    “South of Heaven” is the first major solo exhibition by the Norwegian artist Gardar Eide Einarsson, who is based in New York. The title for the exhibition “South of Heaven” is taken from one of his key works, a video piece from 2003. The exhibition occupies the three floors of the Frankfurter Kunstverein and presents a large new body of works together with some older pieces as well as all video works produced by the artist until now.

    Wrong behaviours, illegal practices, suspicious objects, and corrupted minds come closer to the viewer in this exhibition. The flags, the painted signs, the icons, the direct intervention in the wall with a black marker, the graffiti, they are all realized in a very depurated and stylish aesthetic language. They share a sober elegance that contributes even more to intrigue the viewer. One cannot help wondering about the origin and the function of this personalized catalogue of images.

    Gardar Eide Einarsson uses a great variety of media in his works: painting, prints, photography as well as installation and video. The works of Gardar Eide Einarsson are paradoxical and have a quality of low visual density. That is, in the images and the spatial arrangements, all elements seem like fragments of a bigger reality removed from the world outside and dragged into the image and exhibition space. Using what at first sight looks like a very depurated formalistic language the artist poses to the viewer the question of what he really is looking at. By absorbing and then isolating motifs from the so-called underground music and from literature scenes and then weaving them together with political references, Gardar Eide Einarsson forces us to reflect upon the difference between contemplating an image and using it.

    “All images employed by the artist were originally involved in the production of effects of power in one way or another and debate the collapse of the social democratic security”, as critic Jonas Ekeberg attempted to define Gardar Eide Einarsson’s work. Thus Liberty, 2007 depicts a red flag with a half moon, or Untitled (American Flag), 2007, an inkjet print on plywood, shows the American flag ready to be used, ready to add a personalized text. The series of Outlaws logo paintings (2004-2005), displayed on the floor, constitute a strange family album of signs ready to be used by a dubious gang. Their aesthetics convey the spirit of the conservative American south state movement, an interest, which also pops up in Conservative, Traditional, Ultra Traditional, 2005 a photographic work by Gardar Eide Einarsson in which a series of sleeves and bottoms of white-collar politicians appear in the image like a syntax of sartorial conservatism.

    Thus “South of Heaven” on one hand is intended to familiarize the viewers with Gardar Eide Einarsson’s very particular and personal way of investigating different media and materials. On the other hand it discovers the way art can serve to emphasize transversal readings, sourced from street culture and politics. In the works of Gardar Eide Einarsson art and reality come into a relation of mutual resonance and exchange rather than of representation. The artworks in this exhibition have been chosen with the intention to present a working methodology as well as to use the exhibition as a framework for the viewer to engage in the tension that exists between the world of images and the world as a place where action can take place, where violence is more than an image.

    In Underworld, a novel by the American writer Don DeLillo, one of the characters mentions how, “Lately, geography seems to have gone back on itself and become smaller.” Each of us assimilates only a part of the world that surrounds us, trying to escape from the density of an accelerated multitude of sensations. When withdrawing one only takes in a small portion of what is happening around us and thus almost automatically adapt to move around our individual realities. This is our way of shrinking our geography so that the world takes on a form, which is attainable and manageable. Gardar Eide Einarsson’s exhibition can be seen as a world in which we can move with absolute freedom, conscious that we are in control of the situation and it is not the situation that controls us. This maxim regulates our expectations regarding what surrounds us. Even if the situation can dramatically change once we pass through the exit door…

    With kind support from:
    OFFICE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART NORWAY

    Frankfurter Kunstverein
    Steinernes Haus am Römerberg
    Markt 44
    D-60311 Frankfurt am Main
    Tel. +49 (0)69 219 314 0
    Fax. +49 (0)69 219 314 11
    post@fkv.de /

  • FKV.DE
  • Opening hours: Tue-Sun: 11.00-19.00

    ::: Vilma Gold :::

    — Vilma Gold | Michael Stevenson – Opens Thurs 12th July 2007 —

    -MICHAEL STEVENSON-
    Answers to Some Questions About BANANAS

    Friday 13th July – Sunday 12th August 2007
    Opening – Thursday 12th July, 6-8.30pm
    Gallery hours – Wed-Sun, 11am-6pm
    Vilma Gold, 6 Minerva Street, London E2 9EH | +44 (0)20 7729 9888

    :::::New works:::::

    -Awesome new works from Tyler Drosdeck-

    Faded Paper
    2007
    Colored Paper and plaster
    5 x 4 x 3 inches

    Untitled 2
    2007
    Acrylic on canvas
    17 1/4 inches diameter

    Untitled 3
    2007
    Acrylic on canvas
    17 1/4 inches diameter

    Untitled 4
    2007
    Acrylic on canvas
    17 1/4 inches diameter

    Untitled (Marbles)
    2007
    Acrylic on wood panel
    27 3/4 x 43 1/2 inches

  • Newman Popiashvili Gallery
  • Interview: Chris Johanson


    Chris Johanson at Messezentrum Basel
    [10. juli 2007]

    Chris Johanson (b. 1968) organizes his colorful paintings in installations, where each painting connects with, and influences, the other. Working primarily with recycled materials, Johanson at the same time seems to be part of a major trend in the art world. For Johanson, though, this is not only a little fling with political correctness. Working with scavenged materials has been part of his artistic practice, since he began working as an artist. Represented various places at this years fair in Basel, and with a big painting installation at the Art Unlimited, the artist is a happy person: he has a mission, he would like to share with a broad audience.

    Ai Weiwei (CN), Carl Andre (US), Kutlug Ataman (TR), Bluesoup Group (RU), Mel Bochner (US), Alighiero e Boetti (IT), Mathieu Briand (FR), Christoph Büchel (CH), Daniel Buren (FR), Alexander Calder (US), Cao Fei (CN), Bruce Conner (US), Sebastian Diaz Morales (AR), Omer Fast (IL), Claire Fontaine (FR), Carlos Garaicoa (CU), Katharina Grosse (DE), Kristjan Gudmunsson (IS), William Hunt (GB), Chris Johanson (US), San Keller (CH), Matts Leiderstam (SE), Ann Lislegaard, Rafael Lozano-Hemmer (MX), Marepe (BR), Allan McCollum (US), Tomas Saraceno, Superflex, Gert & Uwe Tobias (RO), Tatiana Trouvé (IT), Clare Woods (GB), a.o.


    Chris Johanson: Untitled, 2007.

    You present your paintings in a kind of installation – what is your idea behind that?

    The point is, that everything is connected, and that is what I’m trying to show by presenting the paintings in this way. I’m pretty simple; I live a simple life, my brain is simple, and I like to make art that is pretty simple to understand – life is complex enough already. I like to present my information so I feel that anybody, whatever education they may have, can get involved into the art. I don’t want people to necessarily have an art degree to understand my work.

    So it’s important for you, that your audience grasp your things?

    Yes, it’s important that my art is understandable, on at least some levels, by the common person – and by all types of people…


    You both work with abstract and figurative motives, can you explain why?

    When you put some figures next to abstract, and you put all the paintings in a row, psychologically you can put the pieces together. For example the abstract, rectangular painting on the one side, has to do with society or systems of governments and socialization. But the one before that is totally abstract, it looks like after the Big Bang, when stardust made the planet. But before humans and animals came into the picture. It looks like a microcosm.


    Chris Johanson: Untitled, 2007.

    Do you see your paintings as belonging to one installation, or do you also see them separately?

    I see them both ways, really. But I like it as a situation. I like the idea that this piece is going to be shown in a museum next year. That’s good to me, because that’s where I prefer to be seen.

    So the museum is your favorite exhibition place?

    Well, I would say books. I think books, public sculpture and museums are my favorite. Because it’s for more people. I like to do shows in galleries, but the dialogue is different.

    You seem very concerned about the dialogue between your art works and your audience?

    Absolutely, every time.


    How can that relation be fruitful?

    Because everything affects everything.

    I also noticed that your work in itself reflects a kind of positive feeling – with the strong colors and so on – but then there also is this little dialogue balloon that says: ”We are the rulers”. What does that mean?

    That’s about the stupidity of human nature. Because, it’s a bomber, you know. People are fighting all the time: we’re just like animals, but only more sophisticated, so in stead of running in to a bunch of elks and kill it if I were hungry, then because I’m a human I’m more likely to – if I get really irritated – grab a gun and kill a lot of people on a school, or nation to nation, race to race whatever… People are just fucked up!



    Chris Johanson: Untitled, 2007.

    But still you don’t make a dark and negative art?
    No, not right now. But before I certainly did. But I want to be good in the world, and for the world. People have very different attitudes towards art, but this is really how I feel. I really think, that I have to be careful about what I put out in the world. My younger art was a lot more negative, because I was a lot more negative and reactionary. Now I’m mellower, but I know that you can use humor to get into people’s brains, and I want to get into people’s brains.

    So do you feel, that you have a mission?

    Yes, definitely. To be positive. And to make the world better, not worse. But because I’m a human being, then I am making the world worse. But I’m trying to be cool. I make art that is communicative, and when we make money from our art (Chris Johanson and his wife, red.), we give the money to different organizations, and we give art to art auctions, that are politically where we are. I also make political posters, and now I talk like this in an interview. I don’t know what else to do. I try to figure out more ways to be nice.


    Do you as a painter have any references to art history?

    Everything that has been made before is in my art. I didn’t go to a regular art school, but I went to a community college. I didn’t graduate from any school, but I took classes in sociology and psychology – I don’t remember a whole lot of it, but I know that’s inside my brain somewhere. Documentary filmmaking and photography, that’s my biggest inspiration, as far as art history goes. And reading…

    You told me before about the nature element of your work. There seems to be quite a tendency right now in the art world, to be more concerned about recycling and the ecological systems?

    I’m glad, that’s great! I’ve always done al my paintings on found wood, and I’ve always recycled, although there have been phases where I’ve been using new paper. But most of the time of being an artist, I’ve used found paper. I can use wood for one installation after the other, and then keep it. I get it out of the dumpsters, because I can’t create art on new wood, it makes me sick. If I went to a gallery or a museum, and I was supposed to have a show, and they wouldn’t give me recycled wood to work on, then I couldn’t do the show. I’m really in to it. I know it’s a control issue, but I get obsessive about it. That’s my kind of alchemy…. Seeing art that are made out of recycled materials, that has to get into people’s psyche, and if it’s like middleclass and rich people that see it, then it’s going into their lives and filter everything else. If everything that is negative affects people, then everything that is positive affects people. •