Tag: Langdon Graves

My picks for this weekends art events.

Fri, Oct 8th 7-11pm; Sat-Sun, Oct 9-10 11am-6pm, San Francisco: Open Studios

As the largest and first open studios program in the country, SF Open Studios showcases a multitude of artists, styles, and mediums that may lie just around the corner. Explore San Francisco and the Art Made Here each October. The first weekend of the month is dedicated to ArtSpan’s celebratory kick-off events at the SF Open Studios Exhibition, followed by four weekends that feature open artists’ studios. Weekend 1: October 9 & 10, 11am to 6pm  is in Bernal Heights, Castro, Duboce, Eureka Valley, Glen Park, Mission, Noe Valley, Portola Download Weekend 1 Map

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(Click on map to enlarge)

Friday October 8: Art Explosion Fall Open Studios

Art Explosion Studios, the Mission’s largest Artist’s collective is holding its annual Fall Open Studios on October 8th thru the 10th. Come see over 130 artists as they open their studios to exhibit their work. Painters, sculptures, photographers, fashion designers, jewelers and textile artists will be showing so there will be something for every type of art connoisseur. The free opening reception gala will be on Friday, October 8th from 7-11pm. Don’t miss this opportunity to get a first look at all the incredible work that will be on display and enjoy a spectacular night out viewing art.

fallopenstudios2010web3Three Locations:
2425 17th St, SF, CA,  744 Alabama St, SF, CA,    2345 Harrison St, SF, CA
Fri, Oct 8th 7-11pm; Sat-Sun, Oct 9-10 11am-6pm

Friday, Oct 8th (7-10pm): Fecal Face’s 10 Year Anniversary Show Closing Party @The Luggage Store Gallery
This Friday is your last chance to view Fecal Face’s wonderful 10 Year Anniversary group show, and this time we have live music there in the gallery! Not just Tommy Guerrero playing solo, but he’s bringing the full band with keys and drums for a complete set. A special night for FREE (well, can donate at the door if you want)… Complimentary wine shall be served as well.

FecalFace

Saturday October 9: Highly Contagious Closing Party @ Gallery Hijinks

We hope to see you this Saturday night!!! We’ll be drinking Trader Joes Simpler Times and hanging out from 6-10pm.

HighlyContagious_closing

Saturday October 9: Nock Nock @ Needles & Pens

FEATURING WORKS BY:
AJ Fosik, Chris Johanson, Danilo Stankovic,Holly Stevenson, James Benjamin Franklin, Jeff Olsson, Jennifer Muskopf, Johanna Jackson,Keith Shore, Kim Hiorthøy, Malin Gabriella Nordin, Matthew Feyld, Megan Whitmarsh,Misaki Kawai, Peter Larsson, Phil Elverum,Ragnar Persson, Shoboshobo, & a mural by Richard Colman PLUS MUSIC BY: Death Cheetah

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We hope to see you out and about this weekend!

Highly Contagious Closing Party!!!

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Come see the featured works by Christopher Blackstock, Peter Gronquist, Robert Minervini, Sebastian Wahl, Langdon Graves, Andrea Wan, Catherine Ryan, and Jen Mann one last time. We hope to see you this Saturday night!!! We’ll be drinking Trader Joes Simpler Times and hanging out from 6-10pm.

Interview with Langdon Graves

Guest blogger, Karanina Leigh, recently conducted a fabulous interview with New York based artist, Langdon Graves. After receiving three large graphite drawings for the upcoming group exhibition Highly Contagious at Gallery Hijinks, we were all very curious to understand the concepts and motivation behind these amazing works of art.

Langdon Graves Gallery Hijinks drawing

Karanina Leigh: I find myself having a closer, more personalized relationship with the subjects in your latest drawings. What has been your primary consideration in the creation of these new works?

Langdon Graves: My work is always about the body and transformation – aging, degeneration, healing – and the role of belief in these processes. I research a lot for my work in the areas of scientific medicine and religion – two systems we’ve developed to try to understand ourselves – and it leads me down some interesting paths. For this work, I found myself seeking out origin myths and became particularly interested in superstitions & folklore, which is where much of the imagery in these drawings came from.

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Langdon_Graves_Hold_detail

KL: Explain to me the involvement of animalistic imagery in these recent drawings.

LG: It started with hares. I read a North American Indian myth about a hare who tricked a woman into becoming pregnant with twins, and in anger she struck his lip and split it. There are many versions of the story, but in all of them the hare represents duality. I was already making some drawings with twins and doubled imagery, so I was attracted to these stories. The hare shows up often throughout folkloric and religious art and literature from all around the world, symbolizing fertility, lunar cycles, even the Virgin Mary. The use of animal symbolism is logical – animals are close to us in that they think and feel, but lack the consciousness to process those experiences, which puts us at a safe distance from which we can blame or worship them for our actions, appreciating them as an imperfect reflection. I started a birds series this summer, which has been fun to research.

Langdon_Graves_the_lovers

KL: I’ve read in a recent interview that you have an interest in epigenetics and quantum physics. Can you explain to me what your relationship with these fields of study has been/is?

LG: Well, I mostly relate through endless fascination with what little I can get my head around. What these sciences represent for me is the ongoing search for truths – or the dismantling of what we thought was true – that continues to generate theories about energy, matter, higher consciousness, and how we make meaning.

I listen to the radio a lot while I draw and one of my favorite programs is To the Best of Our Knowledge, which is like a bibliography for more reading and listening. Through this program I came across the research of Bruce Lipton in the field of Epigenetics, which proposes that our genetic code is not as static as we thought, but that it’s susceptible to its environment – like we are – and that our bodies can be altered at the cellular level in reaction to changes made at other levels. What I enjoy so much about Lipton’s research is the parallel he draws between the affects on cells by their surroundings and how our bodies are affected by our day-to-day surroundings, which we create and control. One of his suppositions is that there is a measurable correlation between mind and body, which is a step into murky territory science shares with philosophy and religion. Honestly, I don’t have the right kind of brain for this stuff – it wanders too quickly. Luckily I’m in a profession that permits me to make poetry from it.

Langdon_Graves_Sister

KL: How do you portray your interest in these subjects through your works, specifically in your drawings?

LG: Big ideas are fed from smaller streams and within those are the personal accounts and human factor. Though I want to communicate universal ideas, it’s the individual narratives that make them real. In order to relate to anything we need to be able to empathize, and I want the subjects in my drawings to deliver empathy. Art has always served as a cultural illustration, so in a way I’m contributing to the tradition of using it to externalize and objectify our beliefs and values. But beyond presenting ideas and symbols, I’m interested in applying them directly and perversely to the human body to signify the power of belief to create and alter reality.

Langdon_Graves_Monstrae-no.4

KL: How long does it normally take you to execute a new work?

LG: Depending on the size and complexity of a drawing, it could take a week, two weeks, three… Sculpture is all over the place – I might make a piece in a week but sit on it for two months before deciding it’s done. I like to work in series, so the pieces feel more complete when they are surrounded by one another.

KL: What is the reasoning for keeping so much negative space in your drawings?

LG: The white space around the subjects in the drawings is meant to isolate them. It also creates a clinical environment for the imagery, since I often think of the subjects as patients.

Langdon_Graves_Never_Forever

KL: Have you been working with any new materials or colors lately with either your sculptures or drawings?

LG: A lot of the new work features a faded aqua green, which is a departure from my usual palette of more bodily hues – pinks, reds, beiges, yellows, whites. It’s a nice contrast. Color is powerful and conjures immediate associations, which can steer a viewer into the wrong direction. My sculptures tend to be more colorful than my drawings because there’s a good relationship between the textures and colors of the materials I work with. I use color with a lot of restraint in my drawings because it feels like a different language than the graphite. I use it when the graphite can’t communicate what I want to say.

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KL: Are there any upcoming projects you are involved in that we should keep an eye out for?

LG: I’m going to be collaborating with a friend who is a product designer on a project in Sweden early next year. I like the thought of blending our two practices and playing with definitions of art, design and function. And I like Swedish meatballs.

To see more of Langdon Graves work please join us for the opening reception of Highly Contagious at Gallery Hijinks this Saturday, September 18th 2010 from 6-10pm.

Gallery Hijinks · 2309 Bryant Street · San Francisco, CA 94110-2810
All content & imagery are copyright © Gallery Hijinks 2013 & its artists.
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