bmjt
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 908
๐๐ป 7
April 2008
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by bmjt on Sept 10, 2008 10:17:30 GMT 1, Sorry, it is wank, regardless of the spectrum it allows, some of the previous winners have been shockers. A panel which has included Jo Wiley and Edith Bowman needs little attention (please correct me if I'm wrong here). I wouldn't even put Elbow in the top 5. I listened to it a few times and disregarded it i'm afraid.
Edit: I far from hate Elbow btw, Powder Blue is one of my favourite songs of all time, felt last few albums were real let-downs.
P.S. Antony + the Johnsons are incredible, fair play they got that one right. M-People, not.
Sorry, it is wank, regardless of the spectrum it allows, some of the previous winners have been shockers. A panel which has included Jo Wiley and Edith Bowman needs little attention (please correct me if I'm wrong here). I wouldn't even put Elbow in the top 5. I listened to it a few times and disregarded it i'm afraid.
Edit: I far from hate Elbow btw, Powder Blue is one of my favourite songs of all time, felt last few albums were real let-downs.
P.S. Antony + the Johnsons are incredible, fair play they got that one right. M-People, not.
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babyford
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 635
๐๐ป 0
June 2007
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by babyford on Sept 10, 2008 10:53:43 GMT 1, Antony is amazing live - so much hurt in his voice
Antony is amazing live - so much hurt in his voice
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by They call me Stephen on Sept 10, 2008 10:59:04 GMT 1, bmjt has pretty much summed it up. any panel with jo wiley or bowman on it has no credibility at all.
don't mind elbow at all but don't think they were worthy winners.
bmjt has pretty much summed it up. any panel with jo wiley or bowman on it has no credibility at all.
don't mind elbow at all but don't think they were worthy winners.
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by carlito on Sept 10, 2008 11:17:10 GMT 1, i've got two words for the mercury music award....
Estelle Adele
anyhoo well done Elbow
and don't diss whiley and bowman ffs they're two gorgeous women
glasvegas next year anyone?
i've got two words for the mercury music award....
Estelle Adele
anyhoo well done Elbow
and don't diss whiley and bowman ffs they're two gorgeous women
glasvegas next year anyone?
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Dellboyy
Artist
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 2,729
๐๐ป 270
October 2006
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Dellboyy on Sept 10, 2008 11:31:00 GMT 1, I've just been listening to the new Glasvegas album, i do think it's pretty good but every track seems to sound link it's ripping off a track from the 50's/60's! (Or is this just me!?)
I've just been listening to the new Glasvegas album, i do think it's pretty good but every track seems to sound link it's ripping off a track from the 50's/60's! (Or is this just me!?)
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by carlito on Sept 10, 2008 11:36:26 GMT 1, everything is ripping off something
everything is ripping off something
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Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Deleted on Sept 10, 2008 11:37:18 GMT 1, I've just been listening to the new Glasvegas album, i do think it's pretty good but every track seems to sound link it's ripping off a track from the 50's/60's! (Or is this just me!?)
I quite like them really, the sound almost reminds me of the Phil Spector wall of sound (which i remember ). I cannot understand a word of what they say though but that doesnt matter i suppose.
I've just been listening to the new Glasvegas album, i do think it's pretty good but every track seems to sound link it's ripping off a track from the 50's/60's! (Or is this just me!?) I quite like them really, the sound almost reminds me of the Phil Spector wall of sound (which i remember ). I cannot understand a word of what they say though but that doesnt matter i suppose.
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by bobbyt23 on Sept 10, 2008 11:43:21 GMT 1, everything is ripping off something
Definitely. Everything comes back to something else in the end.
everything is ripping off something Definitely. Everything comes back to something else in the end.
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by carlito on Sept 10, 2008 11:44:55 GMT 1, they say fu*k alot so probably best you can't understand...wall of sound definitely..listen to 'it's my own cheating heart that makes me cry' classic
they say fu*k alot so probably best you can't understand...wall of sound definitely..listen to 'it's my own cheating heart that makes me cry' classic
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Prescription Art
Art Gallery
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 3,146
๐๐ป 1,215
November 2007
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Prescription Art on Sept 10, 2008 11:45:11 GMT 1, glasvegas next year anyone?
I've been trying to listen to the glasvegas album this week, but i'm finding it a load of boring shite in all honesty.
I think M.I.A. should have won the mercury.
glasvegas next year anyone? I've been trying to listen to the glasvegas album this week, but i'm finding it a load of boring shite in all honesty. I think M.I.A. should have won the mercury.
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Dellboyy
Artist
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 2,729
๐๐ป 270
October 2006
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Dellboyy on Sept 10, 2008 11:45:41 GMT 1, everything is ripping off something
True, a couple sound almost too close though!
Either way, great album!
everything is ripping off something True, a couple sound almost too close though! Either way, great album!
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AoT Framing
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 570
๐๐ป 292
April 2006
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by AoT Framing on Sept 10, 2008 12:22:21 GMT 1, Elbow mmmm. Songs start well then go on and on for about half an hour before they finally end. Really self indulgent nonsense. As for Glasvegas - They're a bad Proclaimers, if that's possible?
Elbow mmmm. Songs start well then go on and on for about half an hour before they finally end. Really self indulgent nonsense. As for Glasvegas - They're a bad Proclaimers, if that's possible?
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Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Deleted on Sept 10, 2008 12:24:33 GMT 1, As for Glasvegas - They're a bad Proclaimers, if that's possible?
No this is not possible, but i think you knew that.
As for Glasvegas - They're a bad Proclaimers, if that's possible? No this is not possible, but i think you knew that.
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rolyateel
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 600
๐๐ป 9
October 2006
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by rolyateel on Sept 10, 2008 14:25:45 GMT 1, A superb record. How can you say the Mercury is a load of wank? It's one of the few awards that a whole cross section of the music world give creedence to. Portishead, Primal Scream, Roni Size, Gomez, Talvin Singh, Ms Dynamite, Dizee Rascal, PJ Harvey etc have all won it and are hardly "wank". I thought the Burial was great as well but to call Elbow uninspiring is ridiculous. It's a profound, moving, huge record that deserves to be listened to by a wider audience. Long live the Mercury and long live Elbow. RIP Bryan Glancey.
what he said Elbow album is amazing...sure it's not groundbreaking, but it's an incredible piece of work.
There were some good albums nominated this year, and whilst I Burial, Laura Marling, & Radiohead were also worthy of winning, Elbow was the right choice.
...I'm still smarting from Klaxons last year though...what a load of wank that was
A superb record. How can you say the Mercury is a load of wank? It's one of the few awards that a whole cross section of the music world give creedence to. Portishead, Primal Scream, Roni Size, Gomez, Talvin Singh, Ms Dynamite, Dizee Rascal, PJ Harvey etc have all won it and are hardly "wank". I thought the Burial was great as well but to call Elbow uninspiring is ridiculous. It's a profound, moving, huge record that deserves to be listened to by a wider audience. Long live the Mercury and long live Elbow. RIP Bryan Glancey. what he said Elbow album is amazing...sure it's not groundbreaking, but it's an incredible piece of work. There were some good albums nominated this year, and whilst I Burial, Laura Marling, & Radiohead were also worthy of winning, Elbow was the right choice. ...I'm still smarting from Klaxons last year though...what a load of wank that was
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rolyateel
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 600
๐๐ป 9
October 2006
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by rolyateel on Sept 10, 2008 14:27:07 GMT 1, glasvegas next year anyone?
I certainly hope not Overhyped load of Jesus & Mary Chain ripping off wank Saw them in Feb...bored to tears
glasvegas next year anyone? I certainly hope not Overhyped load of Jesus & Mary Chain ripping off wank Saw them in Feb...bored to tears
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Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Deleted on Sept 10, 2008 16:08:09 GMT 1, I love Elbows first 2 albums, but the 3rd was rubish and the 4th i just cant get into. maybe i'll give it a couple more listens. I personally would have chosen Burial.
I love Elbows first 2 albums, but the 3rd was rubish and the 4th i just cant get into. maybe i'll give it a couple more listens. I personally would have chosen Burial.
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brun
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 879
๐๐ป 0
December 2007
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by brun on Sept 10, 2008 19:27:38 GMT 1, burial is in his own league ! but the music biz is in sales crisis so they need a good college band to sell units and wave flags for the middle classes . burial didnt fit that bill ..........
burial is in his own league ! but the music biz is in sales crisis so they need a good college band to sell units and wave flags for the middle classes . burial didnt fit that bill ..........
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by slowmo on Sept 10, 2008 22:20:14 GMT 1, I can give a nice unbiased view on this. I knew not who was nominated for the mercury prize. I knew very little about elbow.
For my birthday I was bought this album. Its alright, quite boring though, every song sounded the same. I found out today that apparently in rainbows was in the mix. Dont know much about who else was up for this prize, in fact know nothing about burial, but over anything I have heard in about the last 2 years (I have noticed a massive decline in the music I buy over this period) I would have given this to Radiohead, such a return to form.
I can give a nice unbiased view on this. I knew not who was nominated for the mercury prize. I knew very little about elbow.
For my birthday I was bought this album. Its alright, quite boring though, every song sounded the same. I found out today that apparently in rainbows was in the mix. Dont know much about who else was up for this prize, in fact know nothing about burial, but over anything I have heard in about the last 2 years (I have noticed a massive decline in the music I buy over this period) I would have given this to Radiohead, such a return to form.
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bowser30
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 114
๐๐ป 1
September 2007
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by bowser30 on Sept 10, 2008 23:55:03 GMT 1, They were never gonna give it to someone who wasn't there (Burial)
They were never gonna give it to someone who wasn't there (Burial)
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by josephbishmore on Nov 4, 2008 4:19:47 GMT 1,
Check out this great video Jet-Set graffiti posted of ELBOW-TOE, on the street and in his studio talking about his work and process.
Check out this great video Jet-Set graffiti posted of ELBOW-TOE, on the street and in his studio talking about his work and process.
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Thinkspace
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 292
๐๐ป 42
June 2008
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Thinkspace on Nov 4, 2008 6:36:26 GMT 1, Thinkspace presents:
Mostly Memory Featuring new works and an installation from ARMSROCK and ELBOW-TOE
Also showing in our project room: Jon Todd โ Life Sentence
Dec. 12th โ Jan. 2nd, 2009
Opening Reception: Fri, Dec. 12th 7-11PM
(Los Angeles, CA) Thinkspace Gallery is proud to present Mostly Memory. This exhibition will feature new drawings, paintings and an installation from ARMSROCK and ELBOW-TOE.
Memory is housed in everything around us. In our culture, our cities, our beliefs, and customs, it can be found everywhere. Memory is a monumental thing. Itโs reach long and uncompromising, and at the same time it is so forever fleeting, incomprehensible and changing. And everything eventually becomes memory.
ARMSROCK and ELBOW-TOE have both been working very directly with memory. Over the last few years they have been creating a body of work which is all ephemeral, and is therefore, today, mostly memory. Each artist is approaching the concept of memory from a completely different angle. They are creating a world within our space where reality and history mix with fiction and myth. Where the idea of that which is recognized as the base of what is and could be. For good or ill, the final call is up to the viewer.
ARMSROCK bio / statement: ARMSROCK is an urban-artist and activist who, for the last several years, has been working with the human condition in the urban environment. He has been working with the medium of drawing in various ways to explore and comment on the city and the society thatโs housed within it. He has been trying to question the role of art and artist in society by making art that is ephemeral, for free and for everybody. By creating hundreds of unique drawings of his fellow citizens, and placing these original pieces on the walls of the city, in an attempt to generate a critical understanding of the stories and fates that houses around and in all of us, he hopes to send a signal or raise a question about the details and mechanisms of our society.
In so many ways it seems to me that we are living in times suffering from amnesia. The forgetting of collective history serves many different purposes, but mainly it serves those who are in power, enabling them to remain that way. We seem to forget because we are easily distracted, and we seem to forget out of convenience. Sometimes history is too brutal, too horrible, to remember in detail.
โTo rememberโ is derived from the Latin โre-cordisโ which means โto pass back through the heartโ. This means traveling a path that cannot only be thread with the calm and distant gaze of the passive observer. As humans, we are all intertwined in the fabric of our individual and collective history. When looking upon events of a historical nature, and therefore often a distant nature, all of that which belongs to the past, we can often remove our empathic understanding from those who were a part of these events. The events themselves take on the form of condensing symbols, becoming abstract. But if we travel the path of remembrance with heart, we can no longer remain distant. As individuals we cannot take the weight of the entire world on our shoulders, and we should not live in a landscape of collective memory colored only by guilt. Guilt to me seems like a form of punishment that I in many ways find counterproductive, because when dealing with atrocities of the past I figure that our aim should be to recognize them, reflect upon them, and strive not to repeat them. I can see one place where guilt could be a fitting term to apply. If we deliberately chose not to remember, as individuals as well as collectively, we make ourselves guilty of indifference. And history has by now proven that the indifference of some always has been the foundation for the suffering of others. To me โto remember with heartโ means acknowledging the events of the past and not trying to keep them at โan armโs lengthโ. We are all fragments in each otherโs โhistoryโ, and this must also mean that we cannot keep the history of others at a distance.
Some of the things that chisel themselves most deeply into our collective memory, also become some of the most diffused aspects of our history, perhaps because of the sheer number, is the great man-made catastrophes. In context of the exhibition โmostly memoryโ I have chosen to work with the victims of the catastrophes. The stories that I have chosen to portray are all built upon very specific historical events, but I have chosen to let them intertwine with each other and also with events of a more mythical nature, in the hope that I might be able to create something that is timeless and allegorical, perhaps striving to create something that stands as a symbol, a memorial of sorts.
I feel that I could never come close to portraying the real horror of the situations that I am confronting, but I feel that I must try to at least make however vague a blueprint in an attempt to acknowledge my own empathic understanding and fear. I feel that I must make a โreportโ on what I see, and a lot of what I see is the darkness of our heritage, and the utter impossibility of our situation. I find that in the recognition of these there lies a hope.
Artistโs blog: www.armsrock.blogspot.com/ Checkout a recent interview here: www.thecitrusreport.com/story/armsrock_765 Check out a video with the artist here:
ELBOW-TOE bio / statement: ELBOW-TOE is a Brooklyn, NY based artist that has been creating introspective urban art for several years. His artwork for the streets is grounded in myth, symbolism and poetry and is primarily executed in woodcut, stencil or large-scale charcoal drawings. His oeuvre is a study of human gesture as communication and he utilizes public spaces as stages for private moments. He is particularly interested in the ability of environmental forces outside his control to create a timeless quality to the work thereby allowing it to feel as if it has been memory and is part of the collective unconscious.
My current body of work is an allegory about memory's power to hold us back or move us forward. The central character in this parable is a 6 x 10 foot linocut of an Everyman, who has lost it all and wanders the plains with all his belongings strapped to his back. He navigates a world in crisis by learning from his past. The remainder of the characters that he encounters, are individuals lost in regret.
I have developed these paintings and prints during the American housing and credit crisis of the past year. In contemplating where we are and where we might be, I have found myself looking back at history, remembering the Great Depression, and considering what effects it had on the American psyche. The uncertainty that existed then is present now, and I am addressing the kind of escapism through nostalgia that can occur in the midst of calamity. Every character that the Everyman sees is gripped by this need to escape their present circumstance. They are people lost in a memory at the very point when they should be paying attention to what lies ahead.
Many different artists have inspired the flavor of this world including the photography of Walker Evans, the films of the Cohen brothers, the music of Tom Waits and the theatre of Robert Wilson.
Artistโs blog: street-fodder.blogspot.com/ Artistโs Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/guy_on_the_streets/sets/ Check out a recent interview here: myloveforyou.typepad.com/my_love_for_you/2008/06/qa-w-elbowtoe.html Check out a video with the artist here:
Sneak Peek of Mostly Memory: www.flickr.com/photos/thinkspace/sets/72157606341876562/
Also opening on Fri, December 12th in our project room: Jon Todd โ Life Sentence
Like a Faberge egg smuggled into the gulag, Jon Toddโs series of paintings evoke the symbolic, coded illustrative aspects of seemingly dark and dreary prison tattoos and cast them in a colorful and buoyant reworking.
Toddโs works explore diverse pictorial traditions ranging from Japanese ancestral markings, golden-age American tattoos, and Mexican wrestling imagery. His multimedia collages draw on the gravitas of these steeped traditions in order to tell personal, contemporary stories.
The particular power of Russian prison tattoos to stand as a form of positive self identity and individualization in the face of festering institutionalization and marginalization lends itself as a rich source upon which to explore more personal narratives of friends and acquaintances, some caught in a web of institutional health and correction. Toddโs works are hopeful and optimistic, almost precious, testaments to life and the living.
Starkly colored, like some piece of freshly smeared urban graffiti, Toddโs work is presented often in refined Victorian picture frames, itself an indicator of the sort of delicate balance that he brings to each of his compositions.
Todd is a Toronto-based artist. He has recently exhibited in Montreal, New York, Los Angeles, Miami, and Toronto.
Artist website: www.jontodd.ca/ Sneak Peek at Life Sentence: www.flickr.com/photos/thinkspace/sets/72157606482334419/
About Thinkspace Gallery: Established in November of 2005, Thinkspace exists as a catalyst for the ever expanding new contemporary art movement that is exploding forth from the streets and art schools the world over. We are here to help represent this new generation of artists, to provide them that home base and to aid them in building the right awareness and collector base necessary for long-term growth.
Our aim is to help these new talents shine and to provide them a gallery setting in which to prove themselves. It is our hope and dream that through these opportunities these individuals will prosper and continue to grow to amaze us all for years to come. With the love of and for our community, and with the talents of so many incredible artists involved, we believe that this movement will provide the necessary proving ground for the ideas and dreams of today to become the foundations of a new tomorrow.
Thinkspace Gallery is located at 4210 Santa Monica Blvd (near Sunset Junction), in the Silver Lake area, Los Angeles, CA 90029. Gallery hours are Thursday thru Sunday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. and by appointment. For more information, please call 323.913.3375, visit www.thinkspacegallery.com, or email contact@sourharvest.com.
Also this December: December 4th - 7th - Join us at the GenArt Vanguard Art Fair in Miami during Art Basel where we will be previewing our 2009 lineup with work from: Allison Sommers, Amy Crehore, Andrew Hem, Anthony Clarkson, Anthony Pontius, ARMSROCK, Bo130, Brandi Milne, Brian Viveros, Camilla dโErrico, Cherri Wood, Damon Soule, Dan-ah Kim, David MacDowell, Elbow-Toe. Ekundayo, Esao Andrews, Fafi, Imminent Disaster, Joao Ruas, Johnny โKMNDZโ Rodriguez, Kelly Vivanco, KuKula, Matthew Feyld, Michael Alvarez, Microbo, Mr. Jago, Neasden Control Centre (aka Stephen Smith), Paul Barnes, Peter Taylor, Reuben Rude, Sarah Joncas, Seth Armstrong, Stella Im Hultberg, Timothy Karpinski, Tony Philippou, Yosuke Ueno
Coming up in January, 2009: โFrom the Streets of Brooklynโ Group show curated by Ad Hoc Art
With featured installations from Gaia, Imminent Disaster and Ellis G. and a group show featuring works from over 40 of Brooklynโs finest
Exhibition run dates: January 9th โ February 6th, 2009
Opening reception: Fri, January 9th 7-11PM
Thinkspace presents: Mostly Memory Featuring new works and an installation from ARMSROCK and ELBOW-TOE Also showing in our project room: Jon Todd โ Life Sentence Dec. 12th โ Jan. 2nd, 2009 Opening Reception: Fri, Dec. 12th 7-11PM (Los Angeles, CA) Thinkspace Gallery is proud to present Mostly Memory. This exhibition will feature new drawings, paintings and an installation from ARMSROCK and ELBOW-TOE. Memory is housed in everything around us. In our culture, our cities, our beliefs, and customs, it can be found everywhere. Memory is a monumental thing. Itโs reach long and uncompromising, and at the same time it is so forever fleeting, incomprehensible and changing. And everything eventually becomes memory. ARMSROCK and ELBOW-TOE have both been working very directly with memory. Over the last few years they have been creating a body of work which is all ephemeral, and is therefore, today, mostly memory. Each artist is approaching the concept of memory from a completely different angle. They are creating a world within our space where reality and history mix with fiction and myth. Where the idea of that which is recognized as the base of what is and could be. For good or ill, the final call is up to the viewer. ARMSROCK bio / statement: ARMSROCK is an urban-artist and activist who, for the last several years, has been working with the human condition in the urban environment. He has been working with the medium of drawing in various ways to explore and comment on the city and the society thatโs housed within it. He has been trying to question the role of art and artist in society by making art that is ephemeral, for free and for everybody. By creating hundreds of unique drawings of his fellow citizens, and placing these original pieces on the walls of the city, in an attempt to generate a critical understanding of the stories and fates that houses around and in all of us, he hopes to send a signal or raise a question about the details and mechanisms of our society. In so many ways it seems to me that we are living in times suffering from amnesia. The forgetting of collective history serves many different purposes, but mainly it serves those who are in power, enabling them to remain that way. We seem to forget because we are easily distracted, and we seem to forget out of convenience. Sometimes history is too brutal, too horrible, to remember in detail. โTo rememberโ is derived from the Latin โre-cordisโ which means โto pass back through the heartโ. This means traveling a path that cannot only be thread with the calm and distant gaze of the passive observer. As humans, we are all intertwined in the fabric of our individual and collective history. When looking upon events of a historical nature, and therefore often a distant nature, all of that which belongs to the past, we can often remove our empathic understanding from those who were a part of these events. The events themselves take on the form of condensing symbols, becoming abstract. But if we travel the path of remembrance with heart, we can no longer remain distant. As individuals we cannot take the weight of the entire world on our shoulders, and we should not live in a landscape of collective memory colored only by guilt. Guilt to me seems like a form of punishment that I in many ways find counterproductive, because when dealing with atrocities of the past I figure that our aim should be to recognize them, reflect upon them, and strive not to repeat them. I can see one place where guilt could be a fitting term to apply. If we deliberately chose not to remember, as individuals as well as collectively, we make ourselves guilty of indifference. And history has by now proven that the indifference of some always has been the foundation for the suffering of others. To me โto remember with heartโ means acknowledging the events of the past and not trying to keep them at โan armโs lengthโ. We are all fragments in each otherโs โhistoryโ, and this must also mean that we cannot keep the history of others at a distance. Some of the things that chisel themselves most deeply into our collective memory, also become some of the most diffused aspects of our history, perhaps because of the sheer number, is the great man-made catastrophes. In context of the exhibition โmostly memoryโ I have chosen to work with the victims of the catastrophes. The stories that I have chosen to portray are all built upon very specific historical events, but I have chosen to let them intertwine with each other and also with events of a more mythical nature, in the hope that I might be able to create something that is timeless and allegorical, perhaps striving to create something that stands as a symbol, a memorial of sorts. I feel that I could never come close to portraying the real horror of the situations that I am confronting, but I feel that I must try to at least make however vague a blueprint in an attempt to acknowledge my own empathic understanding and fear. I feel that I must make a โreportโ on what I see, and a lot of what I see is the darkness of our heritage, and the utter impossibility of our situation. I find that in the recognition of these there lies a hope. Artistโs blog: www.armsrock.blogspot.com/ Checkout a recent interview here: www.thecitrusreport.com/story/armsrock_765 Check out a video with the artist here: ELBOW-TOE bio / statement: ELBOW-TOE is a Brooklyn, NY based artist that has been creating introspective urban art for several years. His artwork for the streets is grounded in myth, symbolism and poetry and is primarily executed in woodcut, stencil or large-scale charcoal drawings. His oeuvre is a study of human gesture as communication and he utilizes public spaces as stages for private moments. He is particularly interested in the ability of environmental forces outside his control to create a timeless quality to the work thereby allowing it to feel as if it has been memory and is part of the collective unconscious. My current body of work is an allegory about memory's power to hold us back or move us forward. The central character in this parable is a 6 x 10 foot linocut of an Everyman, who has lost it all and wanders the plains with all his belongings strapped to his back. He navigates a world in crisis by learning from his past. The remainder of the characters that he encounters, are individuals lost in regret. I have developed these paintings and prints during the American housing and credit crisis of the past year. In contemplating where we are and where we might be, I have found myself looking back at history, remembering the Great Depression, and considering what effects it had on the American psyche. The uncertainty that existed then is present now, and I am addressing the kind of escapism through nostalgia that can occur in the midst of calamity. Every character that the Everyman sees is gripped by this need to escape their present circumstance. They are people lost in a memory at the very point when they should be paying attention to what lies ahead. Many different artists have inspired the flavor of this world including the photography of Walker Evans, the films of the Cohen brothers, the music of Tom Waits and the theatre of Robert Wilson. Artistโs blog: street-fodder.blogspot.com/Artistโs Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/guy_on_the_streets/sets/ Check out a recent interview here: myloveforyou.typepad.com/my_love_for_you/2008/06/qa-w-elbowtoe.html Check out a video with the artist here: Sneak Peek of Mostly Memory: www.flickr.com/photos/thinkspace/sets/72157606341876562/ Also opening on Fri, December 12th in our project room: Jon Todd โ Life Sentence Like a Faberge egg smuggled into the gulag, Jon Toddโs series of paintings evoke the symbolic, coded illustrative aspects of seemingly dark and dreary prison tattoos and cast them in a colorful and buoyant reworking. Toddโs works explore diverse pictorial traditions ranging from Japanese ancestral markings, golden-age American tattoos, and Mexican wrestling imagery. His multimedia collages draw on the gravitas of these steeped traditions in order to tell personal, contemporary stories. The particular power of Russian prison tattoos to stand as a form of positive self identity and individualization in the face of festering institutionalization and marginalization lends itself as a rich source upon which to explore more personal narratives of friends and acquaintances, some caught in a web of institutional health and correction. Toddโs works are hopeful and optimistic, almost precious, testaments to life and the living. Starkly colored, like some piece of freshly smeared urban graffiti, Toddโs work is presented often in refined Victorian picture frames, itself an indicator of the sort of delicate balance that he brings to each of his compositions. Todd is a Toronto-based artist. He has recently exhibited in Montreal, New York, Los Angeles, Miami, and Toronto. Artist website: www.jontodd.ca/ Sneak Peek at Life Sentence: www.flickr.com/photos/thinkspace/sets/72157606482334419/ About Thinkspace Gallery: Established in November of 2005, Thinkspace exists as a catalyst for the ever expanding new contemporary art movement that is exploding forth from the streets and art schools the world over. We are here to help represent this new generation of artists, to provide them that home base and to aid them in building the right awareness and collector base necessary for long-term growth. Our aim is to help these new talents shine and to provide them a gallery setting in which to prove themselves. It is our hope and dream that through these opportunities these individuals will prosper and continue to grow to amaze us all for years to come. With the love of and for our community, and with the talents of so many incredible artists involved, we believe that this movement will provide the necessary proving ground for the ideas and dreams of today to become the foundations of a new tomorrow. Thinkspace Gallery is located at 4210 Santa Monica Blvd (near Sunset Junction), in the Silver Lake area, Los Angeles, CA 90029. Gallery hours are Thursday thru Sunday, 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. and by appointment. For more information, please call 323.913.3375, visit www.thinkspacegallery.com, or email contact@sourharvest.com. Also this December: December 4th - 7th - Join us at the GenArt Vanguard Art Fair in Miami during Art Basel where we will be previewing our 2009 lineup with work from: Allison Sommers, Amy Crehore, Andrew Hem, Anthony Clarkson, Anthony Pontius, ARMSROCK, Bo130, Brandi Milne, Brian Viveros, Camilla dโErrico, Cherri Wood, Damon Soule, Dan-ah Kim, David MacDowell, Elbow-Toe. Ekundayo, Esao Andrews, Fafi, Imminent Disaster, Joao Ruas, Johnny โKMNDZโ Rodriguez, Kelly Vivanco, KuKula, Matthew Feyld, Michael Alvarez, Microbo, Mr. Jago, Neasden Control Centre (aka Stephen Smith), Paul Barnes, Peter Taylor, Reuben Rude, Sarah Joncas, Seth Armstrong, Stella Im Hultberg, Timothy Karpinski, Tony Philippou, Yosuke Ueno Coming up in January, 2009: โFrom the Streets of Brooklynโ Group show curated by Ad Hoc Art With featured installations from Gaia, Imminent Disaster and Ellis G. and a group show featuring works from over 40 of Brooklynโs finest Exhibition run dates: January 9th โ February 6th, 2009 Opening reception: Fri, January 9th 7-11PM
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Cocteau 101
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 3,508
๐๐ป 1,227
January 2007
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Cocteau 101 on Nov 5, 2008 22:31:58 GMT 1, Fantastic, and extremely talented. Hugely underated. The collages are stunning.
Fantastic, and extremely talented. Hugely underated. The collages are stunning.
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Ad Hoc Art
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 231
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March 2008
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Ad Hoc Art on Nov 19, 2008 20:44:44 GMT 1, Hi all. Just in time for the holidays we will begin to make a series of prints available from our upcoming Brooklyn Block Party exhibition.
First up...ELBOW-TOE.
Info and image below. This one will probably go fast (as it is a limited edition of only 5), so please let me know soon if you would like one. Take care.
Andrew
artist: ELBOW-TOE title: tba by the artist size: 19" x 26" medium: block print on archival paper, individually HAND PAINTED edition: limited to only 5, signed and numbered by the artist price: $350.00usd (plus s&h and/or VAT charges where applicable)
Hi all. Just in time for the holidays we will begin to make a series of prints available from our upcoming Brooklyn Block Party exhibition. First up...ELBOW-TOE. Info and image below. This one will probably go fast (as it is a limited edition of only 5), so please let me know soon if you would like one. Take care. Andrew artist: ELBOW-TOE title: tba by the artist size: 19" x 26" medium: block print on archival paper, individually HAND PAINTED edition: limited to only 5, signed and numbered by the artist price: $350.00usd (plus s&h and/or VAT charges where applicable)
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by iwouldfollow youanywhere on Nov 19, 2008 20:49:34 GMT 1, I'll wait for another of his fantastic collages i think.......
I'll wait for another of his fantastic collages i think.......
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romanywg
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 4,093
๐๐ป 36
October 2006
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by romanywg on Nov 19, 2008 20:53:14 GMT 1, I was hoping it would be one of his wonderful faces or the bluebird. I'll pass for now.
I was hoping it would be one of his wonderful faces or the bluebird. I'll pass for now.
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Ad Hoc Art
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 231
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March 2008
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Ad Hoc Art on Nov 19, 2008 21:10:48 GMT 1, Thanks so much for the honest feedback. ELBOW-TOE works in a variety of mediums with a variety of images. I think it's good for him to get solid feedback from real people on what he is doing. Also, in case anyone is interested there are 2 left. Take care.
Andrew
Thanks so much for the honest feedback. ELBOW-TOE works in a variety of mediums with a variety of images. I think it's good for him to get solid feedback from real people on what he is doing. Also, in case anyone is interested there are 2 left. Take care.
Andrew
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Deleted
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January 1970
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Deleted on Nov 19, 2008 21:25:08 GMT 1, Jesus that was a genuine surprise!
I actually really like this, it reminds me of an old illustration. BUT l suspect that we were all waiting for more of a trademark distorted figure from a this very talented artist. I applaud his confidence in choosing this image though and I think that in a Victorian frame (nick one of Pure Evils) it would look fantastic.
Jesus that was a genuine surprise!
I actually really like this, it reminds me of an old illustration. BUT l suspect that we were all waiting for more of a trademark distorted figure from a this very talented artist. I applaud his confidence in choosing this image though and I think that in a Victorian frame (nick one of Pure Evils) it would look fantastic.
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Ad Hoc Art
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 231
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March 2008
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by Ad Hoc Art on Nov 19, 2008 21:38:44 GMT 1, I agree that this one would be stunning in a Victorian style frame. It has been great to watch ELBOW-TOE grow and evolve as an artist, moving through these different mediums and images. I have had a lot of people telling me how much this image surprised them. It's like they enjoy the image but are not sure how to handle looking at it after seeing all the figurative works. It will be interesting to see what originals he comes up with for his 2 person show (with Armsrock) opening soon at Thinkspace Gallery in LA. (www.thinkspacegallery.com)
Andrew
I agree that this one would be stunning in a Victorian style frame. It has been great to watch ELBOW-TOE grow and evolve as an artist, moving through these different mediums and images. I have had a lot of people telling me how much this image surprised them. It's like they enjoy the image but are not sure how to handle looking at it after seeing all the figurative works. It will be interesting to see what originals he comes up with for his 2 person show (with Armsrock) opening soon at Thinkspace Gallery in LA. (www.thinkspacegallery.com)
Andrew
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stickee
Artist
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,128
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June 2008
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by stickee on Nov 19, 2008 23:27:01 GMT 1, not my cup of tea, reminds me of a picture my mum bought in the 80's from marks and spencers for the kitchen
not my cup of tea, reminds me of a picture my mum bought in the 80's from marks and spencers for the kitchen
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walters
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 691
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December 2007
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ElbowToe ๐บ๐ธ Brian Adam Douglas โข Woodcuts โข Stencil Artist, by walters on Nov 19, 2008 23:36:34 GMT 1, i think that looks great,and good value at$350.
i think that looks great,and good value at$350.
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