younginvGroundspace Project is pleased to present 365 a solo exhibition by Los Angeles artist, Young An.  An exquisite diary of 365 small paintings plus works on paper, Young An’s new body of work is a continuation of  the “Candy Series,” which she began in the mid ’90s.   Each painting is a delightful composition of form and color, with a touch of sweetness. The works in this exhibition create a playful punctuating pace from afar, drawing the viewer in close for a slower, more contemplative reading.

Young An explains, “I am the block of wood and all the elements I put on each block are 365 moments of my life.”  

Please join us for the opening reception for Young An: 365, Saturday, May 4, from 6:00 to 9:00 pm.  The exhibition runs through May 18.

Groundspace Project is an alternative exhibition space located in downtown Los Angeles.
Gallery hours are Friday and Saturday, 1 to 6 pm or for an appointment call 310 614-3351.
Groundspace Project, 1427 E. 4th St. #4, Los Angeles, CA 90033  – groundspaceproject.wordpress.com

 

hkinvHK Zamani: “Performing”
Opening Reception:  Saturday, March 23, 7:00 to 10:00pm
Performance:  Saturday, March 23, 9:00 pm
Exhibition Dates: March 23 – April 13, 2013

Please join us at Groundspace Project for the opening reception of HK Zamani: “Performing” an exhibition of performance and performance-based videos.

There will be a live simulcast performance and collaboration with Tomas Ruller during the opening reception at 9pm at Groundspace to coincide with 6am in Prague.
Tomas Ruller will be performing with the support from Institute for Intermedia (www.iim.cz)
and here is the link to the streams:
http://www.post-la.com/stream/
There are two streams, one is the Tomas Ruller/Prague stream, and the other is the HK Zamani/ LA stream. It’s good to watch both simultaneously.

Performing at Groundspace Project by HK Zamani

In 6th grade while growing up in Iran I became a singer of the Koran. My assignment with regularity was to sing a few minutes of it for the early morning assembly. Ten years later while going to art school in LA I joined a band.  My first art performance Laurence Knack #7 was in 1981 at the Only Open Sometimes Art Gallery in Manhattan Beach. In graduate school I did a few performance but was mainly a painter.

Being an occasional performer separates me from most of my fellow painters. But perhaps we are all performers. Perhaps all artworks are performed. My performances used to be emotionally motivated. Communication through performance is very different from painting.

I have described my work as being within the extended field of painting allowing me to do more than paint with traditional media. For thirteen years I made fabric and armature paintings. Most of my performances, such as EastWest, Blue, Dotman, White on White, face to face, Fashion of the Veil, Eros, Thanatos, all have direct or indirect associations with painting. In the last three collaborations with Tomas Ruller while at two separate and distant locations through the use of technology, space and time, physicality and virtuality, are questioned—a similar line of questioning is addressed in my fabric and armature paintings.

David Joselit in his essay Signal Processing (on abstraction then and now) argues that painting lends itself more and more to the temporal arts in the course of the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.  As I personally remember, it was always noted that Pollock performed a dance ritual while in the act of painting. Joselit examines Abstract Expressionism and its action painters’ work as containers of Convertible Signs, and having Passage and Transmission. He suggests that these paintings have multiple semiotic layers, that they have particular Formal Configurations and Time Signatures, as well as Movement. He differentiates Abstract Expressionism from today’s abstract painting and contends that now painting can be described as a broadcast medium, and that abstract gesture now marks the transfer of information.

“Painting as model” is how Yve-Alain Bois once put it.  But Joselit elaborates that in the case of much recent abstraction, it is a model of how information travels and a method for measuring the distance – geographic, temporal, social, and psychic – between enunciations of the same picture. In painting, the space of transmission can itself be, as Rosenberg contended with regard to Abstract Expressionism, “an arena in which to act.”

I can imagine that as different as my performances are from my current paintings, the similar are my interests in appropriating the language of the past and present, addressing current concerns partially guided by the medium of each gesture.

There will be a live simulcast performance and collaboration with Tomas Ruller during the opening reception at 9pm at Groundspace Project to coincide with 6am in Prague.

Read more about HK Zamani here:
http://www.kcet.org/arts/artbound/counties/los-angeles/hk-zamani-mixed-media-groundspace-project.html

Group 4.5: Dawn Arrowsmith, Daniel Brodo, Ann Mitchell, Robin Parsons & Rafael Serrano
Closing Reception: Saturday, March 9, 4:00 to 6:00pm.

HK Zamani: “Performing”
Performance:  Saturday, March 23, 8:00 pm
Opening Reception:  Saturday, March 23, 6:00 to 9:00pm
Exhibition Dates: March 23 – April 13, 2013
HK Zamani sees his work within the extended field of painting.
His performance-based videos address issues of vulnerability and power.

“He who is subjected to a field of visibility, and who knows it, assumes
responsibility for the constraints of power; he makes them play
spontaneously upon himself; he inscribes in himself the power relation in
which he simultaneously plays both roles; he becomes the principle of his
own subjection.” (Foucault)

group4.5Group 4.5: Dawn Arrowsmith, Daniel Brodo, Ann Mitchell, Robin Parsons & Rafael Serrano
Opening Reception: Saturday, February 16, 6 to 9 pm
Exhibition Dates: February 16 through March 9, 2013

Groundspace Project is pleased to present Group 4.5: Dawn Arrowsmith, Daniel Brodo, Ann Mitchell, Robin Parsons & Rafael Serrano.  Join us for the Opening Reception, Saturday, February 16 from 6:00 to 9:00 pm.

Group 4.5 is the fourth in a series of exhibitions of Los Angeles based artists curated to be an unthemed collision of artists and art practices.  Nevertheless, an engaging pattern of relationships has emerged, centered around painting and photography.   From the traces of mild explosions to waking musings, live painting to studied contemplations, the art work in this exhibition is cerebral and sensual, and each artist passionate in their individual practice.  Group 4.5 promises to be a visually striking and thought provoking exhibition.

Dawn Arrowsmith’s recent paintings investigate memory and place.  Mapping is the basis for interrogating a psychology of time and space, while grounded in deeply personal experience, her paintings speak to everyone.

Daniel Brodo uses firecrackers to apply paint directly on the gallery wall. They are violent and chaotic events, deploying a controlled and contained firecracker blast to generate a painting. This work is a continuation of a battle between Chaos and Control that Brodo exploited in the ‘lottery ticket’ pieces.  In each case, an indexical image – the true face of chaos – is left behind like a kind of thumbprint.

Photographer, Ann Mitchell, writes, “There’s always been a strongly charged experience with beds – their sense of intimacy, privacy, sexuality -and I’ve always loved the sensual quality of the beauty of light on sheets. In Unmade, these images function as a bridge between our first moments of consciousness and our return to the world.”

Robin Parsons is an artist who performs live painting at various events including Burning Man. Viewers are given a special insight on the art making process by this engaging performer.  At Groundspace Project, Robin will install a loop 30 feet of linen.  At the Opening Reception Robin will ‘live paint,’ drawing from the energy of the audience as she works.

Painter and photographer, Rafael Serrano writes, “I’m still fascinated with much of the painting produced at the turn of 20th century Europe.  And what soon followed in the way of DADA and Surrealist movements.  Max Earnst, Duchamp, Paul Klee and Man Ray are significant influences in me…”.

Groundspace Project is an alternative exhibition space located in downtown Los Angeles.
Gallery hours are Friday and Saturday, 1 to 6 pm or for an appointment call 310 614-3351.
Groundspace Project, 1427 E. 4th St. #4, Los Angeles, CA 90033  – groundspaceproject.wordpress.com

Geographically Incorrect, Dan Van Clapp & Rolo Castillo Closing Reception: Saturday,  4 to 6 pm, February 2.

Group 4.5: Dawn Arrowsmith, Daniel Brodo, Ann Mitchell, Robin Parsons, Rafael Serrano
Opening Reception: Saturday, February 16, 6 to 9 pm
Exhibtion Dates: February 16 – March 9, 2013

1427 E. 4th St. #4, Los Angeles, CA 90033
Gallery hours are Friday and Saturday, 1 to 6 pm or call for an appointment, 310 614-3351.