Roni Feinstein

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Art Los Angeles Contemporary 2016

February 2, 2016 By Roni Feinstein

Art L.A. Contemporary

Art Los Angeles Contemporary this year had terrific energy and featured a lot of interesting, high quality work.  It continues to surprise me, however, given that L.A. now houses one of the world's more dynamic art scenes, being replete with artists of national and  international reputation, galleries showing exciting and important work and a growing collector base, that this, the city's preeminent fair focused on current work, which is now in its 7th year, has remained so modest in scale.  It is by no means just a local affair, as the galleries indicated below will testify, but I anticipate that in the coming years this fair will greatly expand its scope and become a magnet for collectors worldwide.  Soon, the major New York galleries that … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Los Angeles, Uncategorized Tagged With: art fair, Art Los Angeles Contemporary

John Outterbridge: Rag Man

January 11, 2016 By Roni Feinstein

John Outterbridge

Among the recent works by John Outterbridge on view at Art + Practice in Los Angeles are two very different series of modestly-scaled, wall-mounted assemblages, each of which evokes aspects of the African-American experience.  One is sculptural in nature, the works being made with a wide assortment of castoff objects; the other is aligned with painting, the pieces consisting both of flat and "stuffed" (puffy) pieces of fabric painted in bright colors. Both series consist of works that appear to have been constructed in a most casual and offhand manner.   Although contemplation reveals that formal and conceptual clarity underlies these works, their literal scrappiness and wholly unpretentious (almost Outsider Art) nature is fundamental to … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Los Angeles Tagged With: African American art, Art + Practice, Assemblage, California Assemblage, Hammer Museum, John Outterbridge, Junk Dada

Notes on Shanghai: Hugo Boss Asia Art

January 4, 2016 By Roni Feinstein

Notes on Shanghai

Do not rush to see the Hugo Boss Asia Art award exhibition at Shanghai's Rockbund Art Museum. While it is an intriguing show presented in a handsome Art Deco building, the exhibition is currently over and Shanghai's air quality is frightening, the AQI (Air Quality Index) in the "very unhealthy" range. Walking to the museum wearing a 3M particle filtering respirator mask, I felt that I had entered a dystopian future, which was made all the more horrible by the realization that this "future," for millions of the world's occupants, is now.The exhibition Hugo Boss Asia Art: Award for Emerging Asian Artists, which is in its second year, presents work by six artists who live and work in China, the Philippines, Cambodia, Taiwan and Myanmar.   … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Abroad Tagged With: Asian Art, China, Hugo Boss, Maria Taniguchi, Rockbund Art Museum, Shanghai

Sarah Sze on My Mind

December 3, 2015 By Roni Feinstein

Sarah Sze

While Sarah Sze's last show at Tanya Bonakdar consisted of several dazzling, sensorial and thought-provoking installations, one modest, barely there assemblage lingers in my mind's eye. Entitled Lavender Landscape Standing (2015), it consisted of a small (perhaps 3 x 2 inch) rock that had been split down the middle, two torn sheets of paper, one all black, the other in shades of lavender, apparently fragments of images printed out from the Internet, and tiny blobs and thread-like strings of blue paint supported by (or otherwise set in relation to) a tall, thin stainless steel armature.This was just one of a myriad of freestanding pieces that made up the environmental installation occupying the main downstairs space in Sze's exhibition, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: New York Tagged With: Assemblage, Sarah Sze, Tanya Bonakdar Gallery

Njideka Akunyili Crosby on the Rise

November 30, 2015 By Roni Feinstein

If you haven't yet heard the name Njideka Akunyili Crosby, then you haven't been paying attention, as she is a young (32-year-old) Los Angeles-based artist on a meteoric rise and her work is phenomenal--the most jaw-droppingly wonderful and accomplished work I have encountered in an age.  That said, I walked right by it at the New Museum's 2015 Triennial: Surround Audience, where both her two paintings on view and I were overwhelmed by the hubbub.  Akunyili Crosby has since gone on to have simultaneous solo exhibitions at L.A.'s Hammer Museum and Art + Practice and to win the Studio Museum in Harlem's Wein Prize.  As of November 23, 2015, a billboard entitled Before Now After (Mama, Mummy and Manna), which reproduces one of her paintings, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Los Angeles Tagged With: African American art, Art + Practice, California Assemblage, contemporary art Beijing, Hammer Museum, Jamillah James, Njideka Akunyili Crosby

Gego at Dominique Lévy Gallery

September 21, 2015 By Roni Feinstein

Gego at Dominique Levy

Works of Gego's Reticulárea Series (1969-82)--sculptures in which slender lengths of wire are used to create space-enclosing networks of lines in undefined shapes--have increasingly appeared in museum collections and art fairs over the course of the past decade. Yet this German-born, Venezuelan artist, who died in 1994, remains underknown by North American audiences. A small survey of her work at the Drawing Center in 2007 attracted some attention, while a show at the Americas Society in 2012 was all but ignored. The tightly-curated, museum quality exhibition Gego: Autobiography of a Line, currently on view at the Dominique Lévy Gallery in New York, may finally do the trick in establishing her reputation. The show is timely, coming at a … [Read more...]

Filed Under: New York Tagged With: Dominique Levy Gallery, Gego, Latin American Art

Picasso Sculpture at The Museum of Modern Art

September 18, 2015 By Roni Feinstein

Picasso Sculpture

All hail the genius of Picasso! When visiting Picasso Sculpture at The Museum of Modern Art, it is impossible not to stand in awe before the work of an artist who, although primarily a painter, revolutionized for all time what a sculpture can be. At the same time, as this survey exhibition well demonstrates, he produced a host of the 20th Century's most iconic sculptures using an inconceivably wide range of materials, processes and forms. While Picasso's achievements in his work in three dimensions are of high seriousness and continue to be of formidable influence (more on this later), it is clear that his attitude in making sculpture was often remarkably casual--at times, he appears to have been just fooling around.I confess that I had the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: New York Tagged With: MoMA, Museum of Modern Art, Pablo Picasso

Mark Bradford: Scorched Earth at the Hammer Museum

August 20, 2015 By Roni Feinstein

In the way that Noah Purifoy's assemblage-based art had its source in the Watts Rebellion of 1965, Mark Bradford's artistic practice can be understood to have had its roots in the backlash after the Rodney King beatings in 1992, which Bradford experienced as a young man working in his mother's beauty shop in South L.A.   For a gay, black youth, the police brutality and resulting race riots, which came at a time when he saw the AIDS epidemic running rampant around him, exerted an indelible formative influence.   Since 2001, when Bradford emerged as a fully mature artist, his art has addressed injustice to African Americans, gays and women in an extension of the "Identity Politics" of the art of the late '80s and early '90s, but which … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Los Angeles Tagged With: African American art, Hammer Museum, Mark Bradford, Roni Feinstein, Scorched Earth

Notes on Beijing: My introduction to art in China

August 20, 2015 By Roni Feinstein

First, some general comments with regard to Don's and my hotels and sightseeing during our brief stay in Beijing. Whereas we stayed in the nondescript Westin Hotel Bund Center in Shanghai, in Beijing we spent several nights luxuriating at the Opposite House, located in a lovely neighborhood replete with high-end stores and foreign embassies. The hotel is new, hip and styling (part of the Swire Hotel chain, which also manages the Upper House in Hong Kong, another of our favorites) and we were upgraded to an enormous, incredibly well-appointed room, which we loved. As it was raining the night of our arrival, we ate in one of the hotel's restaurants, Sureno. Don and I sent back a shrimp appetizer that we found sub-par, only to have the chef, … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Abroad, China Tagged With: Ai Weiwei, Chambers Fine Art Beijing, contemporary art Beijing

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