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June 2008
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Ekundayo, Caldwell & Roukes + Rod Luff @ Thinkspace (7/13), by Thinkspace on Jul 4, 2013 22:58:08 GMT 1,
โReflections of a New Generationโ featuring new works from: Adam Caldwell - Ekundayo โ Joram Roukes
Plus in our project room: โAuroraโ Featuring new works from Rodrigo Luff
Reception with the artists: Saturday, July 13th 6-9PM
Exhibitions on view: July 13th โ August 3rd, 2013
(Los Angeles) Thinkspace is pleased to present Reflections of a New Generation, featuring new work by Ekundayo, Joram Roukes, and Adam Caldwell. These three distinct artists are unified by a painterly approach to their subject matter and by a tendency towards the surreal. Each works from a unique set of influences and introjects a personal dimension into that of the cultural. Gleaning inspiration from subculture, personal experience, and art history, each has developed a style entirely their own that speaks to a complex locus of coexisting cultural sensibilities. While their work remains graphic and representational, their painterly execution tends towards the expressionistic and the emotive. Each artistโs contribution speaks powerfully to the potential of the new contemporary movement to explore the conflicted accretions of our contemporaneity.
Ekundayo is a Los Angeles based artist, originally from Hawaii. The artistโs mixed media work harnesses the visual power of the subconscious through hyperbole and juxtaposition. Owing to his mastery of a surreal grotesque and his early beginnings as a graffiti artist, Ekundayoโs work is monumental and larger than life. The artistโs intuitive recombinations are uncanny and haunting, and betray an understanding of lifeโs most aberrant and disturbing dimensions. Ekundayo channels the sordid and the abject, but mobilizes the imaginary to attenuate its ravages through fantasy. The artist combines the human with the animal to explore a conflicted interconnectedness, and creates imagery that is allegorical and even mythological at times. Much like an idyllic nightmare, beauty exists with deformity in its midsts. Ekundayo combines the monstrous and the teratological with the beautiful and the redemptive, to convey a profound empathy for the duality of the human condition.
Joram Roukes is a painter based in the Netherlands, and a recent addition to the Thinkspace roster. His works delve into the inherent contradictions of Western culture with seething wit and abrupt adjacency. His works are painterly recombinations of daily imagery wielded into a Frankensteinian grotesque that is at once expressionistic and representational; familiar and yet dissonant. His composites are at times violent and jarring, even abject and intensely surreal, as he combines the human with the animal and the inanimate to the point of abstraction. In Roukesโ work, the representational is delivered with the expressionistic force of the abstract expressionists and the graphic precision of the illustrator. Interested in the fallacies of consumer culture, Roukes draws from daily life to seek out poetic discord from the familiarity of the mundane.
Adam Caldwell is a Bay area painter whose work explores the intersection of the psychological and the cultural. Taking stylistic elements from abstract expressionism and classical figuration, and combining them with the pop cultural and the illustrative, Caldwell amalgamates distinct and seemingly adverse vocabularies to invoke contemporary conflicts. With an interest in the thematic exploration of self and other, present and past, identity and gender, the artist explores the polarities of the colonized self with a social and political conscience. Caldwellโs work unfolds like a surreal psychological tableau, presenting a simultaneity of antagonisms and unresolved impulses: life set against death, the serious in concert with the absurd, the beautiful coexisting alongside the abject. These juxtapositions of violent classicism and seductive destruction challenge the feigned simplicity of our cultural paradigms.
Take a look at the works for โReflections of a New Generationโ coming to life here: thinkspacegallery.com/shows/2013-07/#photos
ON VIEW IN OUR PROJECT ROOM:
Rodrigo Luff โAuroraโ Concurrently on view in Thinkspaceโs project room is Aurora, featuring new work by Australian based artist Rodrigo Luff. Luffโs mixed media work combines technically resolved figuration with surrealistic imagery inspired by nature. The artist looks to 19th century art historical precedents for inspiration, and re- synthesizes its visual legacy through a contemporary aesthetic. By combining the decorative with the surreal, the human with the animal, and the observed with the imagined, the artistโs work presents us with a world of fantasy and metamorphosis.
The work is dream-like, highly stylized, and soulfully executed, owing to its technical beauty and inherent nostalgia. Reminiscent of late 19th century Art Nouveau and the likes of Mucha and Klimt, the artist combines the lyricism of organic forms and curvatures, and harmonizes them within his compositions. Rodrigo Luffโs work has an overall softness and luminosity in its execution of the figurative, much like the 19th century portraiture of John Singer Sargent. Seeking expressive license through surreal imagery and a highly refined stylization, Luffโs works are historically ambiguous, captivating, and seem to transcend their own time.
Looking to nature and the animal world for thematic inspiration, Luff tends to combine the human with the natural in a way that blurs the distinction of their boundaries. The figurative is subsumed by the movement and pattern of the organic, creating overall compositions that explore an intricate and surreal hybridity of worlds. Luffโs work deftly combines the contemporary with the historical, and the realistโs technical facility with the surrealistโs expansiveness.
Take a sneak peek at some of Rodrigo Luffโs new works coming to life in his studio here: thinkspacegallery.com/shows/2013-07-project/#photos
* Advance Collector Previews for both exhibits will follow the week of July 8th
โ Reflections of a New Generationโ featuring new works from: Adam Caldwell - Ekundayo โ Joram RoukesPlus in our project room: โ Auroraโ Featuring new works from Rodrigo LuffReception with the artists: Saturday, July 13th 6-9PM Exhibitions on view: July 13th โ August 3rd, 2013 (Los Angeles) Thinkspace is pleased to present Reflections of a New Generation, featuring new work by Ekundayo, Joram Roukes, and Adam Caldwell. These three distinct artists are unified by a painterly approach to their subject matter and by a tendency towards the surreal. Each works from a unique set of influences and introjects a personal dimension into that of the cultural. Gleaning inspiration from subculture, personal experience, and art history, each has developed a style entirely their own that speaks to a complex locus of coexisting cultural sensibilities. While their work remains graphic and representational, their painterly execution tends towards the expressionistic and the emotive. Each artistโs contribution speaks powerfully to the potential of the new contemporary movement to explore the conflicted accretions of our contemporaneity. Ekundayo is a Los Angeles based artist, originally from Hawaii. The artistโs mixed media work harnesses the visual power of the subconscious through hyperbole and juxtaposition. Owing to his mastery of a surreal grotesque and his early beginnings as a graffiti artist, Ekundayoโs work is monumental and larger than life. The artistโs intuitive recombinations are uncanny and haunting, and betray an understanding of lifeโs most aberrant and disturbing dimensions. Ekundayo channels the sordid and the abject, but mobilizes the imaginary to attenuate its ravages through fantasy. The artist combines the human with the animal to explore a conflicted interconnectedness, and creates imagery that is allegorical and even mythological at times. Much like an idyllic nightmare, beauty exists with deformity in its midsts. Ekundayo combines the monstrous and the teratological with the beautiful and the redemptive, to convey a profound empathy for the duality of the human condition. J oram Roukes is a painter based in the Netherlands, and a recent addition to the Thinkspace roster. His works delve into the inherent contradictions of Western culture with seething wit and abrupt adjacency. His works are painterly recombinations of daily imagery wielded into a Frankensteinian grotesque that is at once expressionistic and representational; familiar and yet dissonant. His composites are at times violent and jarring, even abject and intensely surreal, as he combines the human with the animal and the inanimate to the point of abstraction. In Roukesโ work, the representational is delivered with the expressionistic force of the abstract expressionists and the graphic precision of the illustrator. Interested in the fallacies of consumer culture, Roukes draws from daily life to seek out poetic discord from the familiarity of the mundane. Adam Caldwell is a Bay area painter whose work explores the intersection of the psychological and the cultural. Taking stylistic elements from abstract expressionism and classical figuration, and combining them with the pop cultural and the illustrative, Caldwell amalgamates distinct and seemingly adverse vocabularies to invoke contemporary conflicts. With an interest in the thematic exploration of self and other, present and past, identity and gender, the artist explores the polarities of the colonized self with a social and political conscience. Caldwellโs work unfolds like a surreal psychological tableau, presenting a simultaneity of antagonisms and unresolved impulses: life set against death, the serious in concert with the absurd, the beautiful coexisting alongside the abject. These juxtapositions of violent classicism and seductive destruction challenge the feigned simplicity of our cultural paradigms. Take a look at the works for โReflections of a New Generationโ coming to life here: thinkspacegallery.com/shows/2013-07/#photos ON VIEW IN OUR PROJECT ROOM:Rodrigo Luff โ Auroraโ Concurrently on view in Thinkspaceโs project room is Aurora, featuring new work by Australian based artist Rodrigo Luff. Luffโs mixed media work combines technically resolved figuration with surrealistic imagery inspired by nature. The artist looks to 19th century art historical precedents for inspiration, and re- synthesizes its visual legacy through a contemporary aesthetic. By combining the decorative with the surreal, the human with the animal, and the observed with the imagined, the artistโs work presents us with a world of fantasy and metamorphosis. The work is dream-like, highly stylized, and soulfully executed, owing to its technical beauty and inherent nostalgia. Reminiscent of late 19th century Art Nouveau and the likes of Mucha and Klimt, the artist combines the lyricism of organic forms and curvatures, and harmonizes them within his compositions. Rodrigo Luffโs work has an overall softness and luminosity in its execution of the figurative, much like the 19th century portraiture of John Singer Sargent. Seeking expressive license through surreal imagery and a highly refined stylization, Luffโs works are historically ambiguous, captivating, and seem to transcend their own time. Looking to nature and the animal world for thematic inspiration, Luff tends to combine the human with the natural in a way that blurs the distinction of their boundaries. The figurative is subsumed by the movement and pattern of the organic, creating overall compositions that explore an intricate and surreal hybridity of worlds. Luffโs work deftly combines the contemporary with the historical, and the realistโs technical facility with the surrealistโs expansiveness. Take a sneak peek at some of Rodrigo Luffโs new works coming to life in his studio here:thinkspacegallery.com/shows/2013-07-project/#photos* Advance Collector Previews for both exhibits will follow the week of July 8th
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