Length x Width x Depth at Conrad Wilde Gallery

For the last eleven years Conrad Wilde Gallery in Tucson, Arizona has hosted an annual exhibition devoted to works created from encaustic. This years Encaustic Invitational, Length x Width x Depth was terrific. Miles Conrad always does a great job of finding artists with unique voices, telling unique visual stories and he chooses works that are often surprising and engagingly tactile. And this years Invitational was no exception.

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For more information about Conrad Wilde Gallery please consult their website at http://www.conradwildegallery.org

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Sue Stover, Musings, 6 Pieces, Titles Various, 2015

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Winston Lee Mascarenhas, Cardboard Study 8, Encaustic on Cardboard, 10″ x 10″ x 3″, 2014

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Kathleen Cosgrove, Spiral with Antlers, Encaustic, Mixed Media, 9″ x 4″ x 4″,  2015

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Katie Gutierrez, Heliopora 1, Encaustic Sculpture, 19″ x 7″ x 20″, 2016

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Katie Gutierrez, Heliopora 3

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Alison Golder, Best Cocao, Wood, Metal & Encaustic, 15″ x 9″ x 5″, 2014

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Sue Katz, Moth Construct, Encaustic, Mixed Media, 35.5″ x 26″ x 3″, 2016

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Alison Golder, Processed and Pasteurized, Wood, Metal & Encaustic, 13″ x 5″ x 3″, 2014

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Alicia Forestall Boehm, The Power of Place , Encaustic, Fiber, Wire & Twine, 14″ x 9″ x 2″, 2014

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From Left to Right: Alicia Forestall Boehm, Jane Allen Nodine & Deborah Kapoor

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Jane Allen Nodine (Detail), Collected Oscula, Ablated Offerings & Selected Offerings,  Encaustic on Paper & Encaustic and Fiber, Works: 50″ x 4″ x 1″, 54″ x 4″ x 3″  , 48″ x 2″ x 2″, 2015

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Deborah Kapoor, Grief Diary, Paper, Cording, Encaustic & Fabric, 12″ x 12″ x 1″, 2015

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Beata Wehr, Letters From The Desert, Encaustic, Paper & Found Objects, 13″ x 17″, 2014

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Dietlind Vander Schaaf & Jennie Frederick

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Dietlind Vander Schaaf, Between, Encaustic, Oil and Graphite on Panel, 12″ x 12″ x 2″, 2016

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Jennie Frederick, Beached, Kozo Fiber, Encaustic & Zip Ties, 48″ x 11″ x 8″, 2014

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Deborah Winiarski and Milisa Galazzi

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Milisa Galazzi, String Theory – WD Four, Paper, Thread & Encaustic, 48″ x 24″ x 9″, 2015

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Deborah Winiarski, Lines Written III, Encaustic and Fiber on Panel, 37″ x 32″ 4″, 2015

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Kay Hartung, Orbs 1 – 6, Encaustic Mixed Media, Dimensions Variable, 2013 – 2015

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Kay Hartung, Orbs (Detail)

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Helen Dannelly, Untitled, Encaustic on Paper, 6″ x 6″ x 8″, 2013

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Laura Moriarty, Cleaved, Pigmented Beeswax, 24″ x 8″ x 4″, 2014

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Howard Hersh, Pulse, Encaustic on Panel, 21″ x 13″ x 3″, 2012

Nick Theobald: With Honey From The Rock at Richard Taittinger Gallery

There is a particular sensation that comes with rain. Time slows and one’s tactile appreciation of touch, sound and smell is heightened. One luxuriates in that sensation as the perception of time slows with the elongated drumming pause that accompanies the steady fall of liquid from the sky. I felt that sense of suspension while viewing Nick Theobald’s almost reverential solo at Richard Taittinger Gallery on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. The works present in the gallery slow one’s sense of time and bathe the viewer in their tranquil, organic materiality like rain.

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More information about Nick Theobald and Richard Taittinger Gallery can be found on their websites below. With Honey From The Rock runs through December 12th. Richard Taittinger Gallery , 154 Ludlow Street, New York, NY.

Home

http://nick-theobald.com

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Art Los Angeles Contemporary 2014

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The element of surprise is a rare commodity these days, but Art Los Angeles Contemporary always hold surprise and this year was no exception. The sun was out and rainbows were shining on a pot of art fair gold in Santa Monica.

Simon Evans

Simon Evans, Jack Hanley Gallery, New York

http://www.jackhanley.com

Art Los Angeles Contemporary takes place every February at the Barker Hanger at the Santa Monica airport in Santa Monica, California. The show has a much more contemporary vibe than the more staid and at times weezingly grey LA Art Show. ALAC presents 70 established and emerging galleries from around the world. Each year I am introduced to new galleries and artists at this fair and its easy relaxed vibe is consistently punctuated with moments of  visual “wow” and a few moments of dumbfounded “what the *@$#”. Both are good things.

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Obtaining information at ALAC is a mixed bag. I like to get to the fair early in the day and as a result some galleries are unattended and in others the gallerist may be busy or shockingly aloof. Wallcards are present at some booths and at others non-existent so it can be difficult to gather information about the work itself. I have included as much text as possible with the images that follow. In most instances I was able to include the name of the artist and the gallery. I have included materials, dimensions, date and some background information or links to more background information in cases where I was able to engage the gallerists directly and ask about the work.

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Alex Hubbard, Standard (OSLO)

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Alex Hubbard (detail)

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Aaron Garber-Maikovska, Standard (OSLO)

http://www.standardoslo.no/en/home

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Despina Stokou, Bad Curating, 2013
oil, spray paint, marker, oil crayon, charcoal, pastel chalk, collage on canvas
98.4375″ x 78.75″, Derek Eller Gallery, New York

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Despina Stokou, Bad Curating (detail), Derek Eller Gallery, New York

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Despina Stokou, Ruin Art (red), 2013
oil, spray paint, marker, oil crayon, charcoal, pastel chalk, collage on canvas
98.4375″ x 78.75″, Derek Eller Gallery, New York

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Despina Stokou, Ruin Art (red), (detail) , Derek Eller Gallery, New York

http://derekeller.com/index.html

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Kendell Carter, Monique Meloche Gallery, Chicago, Illinois

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Kendell Carter (detail)

http://moniquemeloche.com

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Shezad Dawood, MGH 09, Acrylic on vintage textile, 2013, Paradise Row, London, UK

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Shezad Dawood, MGH 09 (detail)

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Shezad Dawood, MGH 07, Acrylic on vintage textile, 2013

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Shezad Dawood, MGH 07 (detail)

http://www.paradiserow.com/artists/31-Shezad-Dawood/overview/

There was, as the above and some of the following images attest, lots of great work. One of the themes percolating this year were works that were, in small or not so small ways, decaying or in some cases, partially erased. The following work was not a particular favorite of mine, but it does indicate  one of the present structural themes at the fair. Some of the works literally looked like they were falling apart, and the conservator in my head was taking note of the delicate state of much of the work and especially the fugitive nature of the materials themselves. The ephemeral nature of things and it’s translation into materials, process and the object itself is a story I am seeing from a lot of artists these days. Myself included.

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JPW3 (J. Patrick Walsh 3)  Night Gallery, Los Angeles

I’m pretty sure the above painting is wax based. The gallerist wasn’t terribly forthcoming with information on this artist. There are links below to the gallery’s website and an interesting interview with J. Patrick Walsh 3.

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JPW3 (detail)

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JPW3, Night Gallery, Los Angeles, California

http://www.nightgallery.ca

http://doeasyart.com/artists/studio-visit-and-interview-patrick-j-walsh-iii-los-angeles/

Robert Davis’ works were some of the more striking pieces to utilize not so common painting materials. Many of his organic yet strangely modern linen canvases were colored with rabbit skin glue or coffee.

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Robert Davis, Picture of Silence, Rabbit skin glue and oil stick on linen, 2013, 72″ x 48″

Bill Brady/KC, Kansas City, Missouri

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Robert Davis, Picture of Silence (detail)

http://www.billbradykc.com

https://artsy.net/artwork/robert-davis-picture-of-silence

There were also many works that were striking in their pared down simplicity.

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Dan Bayles, François Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles, California

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Dan Bayles, Strip Study, Photo and acrylic on panel, 2013, 20″ x 16″

François Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles, California

Exhibitions

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Alain Biltereyst, Untitled, 2013, Acrylic on plywood

Jack Hanley Gallery, New York

http://www.jackhanley.com

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John Houck, Creased archival pigment prints, On Stellar Rays Gallery, New York

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John Houck

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John Houck

http://onstellarrays.com/artists/john-houck/

http://www.johnhouck.com/work/history-of

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Imi Knoebel

From left to right, An Meine Grüne Seite C12-5, An Meine Grüne Seite B 12-8, last work same artist but unidentified.

All works Acrylic on aluminum, acrylic on plastic-coated paper and aluminum shelf

Galerie Christian Lethert, Cologne, Germany

Homepage

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Lisa Williamson, Tif Sigfrids, Los Angeles, California

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Lisa Williamson, Tif Sigfrids, Los Angeles, California

Home

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Ry Rocklen, Dilation Disco, Crewel embroidery, copper and nickel plating, 2013, 17.5″ x 14.5″

Thomas Soloman Gallery, Los Angeles, California

http://www.thomassolomongallery.com

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Juan Capistran, Nothing Everything, Archival Pigment Print

Thomas Soloman Gallery, Los Angeles, California

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York Chang, Greene Exhibitions, Los Angeles, California

http://www.greene-exhibitions.com/Winners_Main.php

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York Chang (detail)

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York Chang (detail)

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Jennifer Nocon, Wool felt and ceramic, Tracy Williams, Ltd., New York, New York

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Jennifer Nocon (detail)

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Jennifer Nocon (detail)

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Mike Pratt, Terracotta Olive, Workplace Gallery, Gateshead, UK

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Mike Pratt, Terracotta Olive (detail)

This last image takes a bit of explaining. When I walked into the booth I saw the plastic jug on the floor and took a photo of it. The friend that I was with had some doubt about the jug being art. I said I thought it was because the placement was so deliberate. When the gallerist returned to the booth we asked, and yes, the jug was indeed a work. It was created by the artist Sean Raspet. Sean often creates sensory environments with signature scents and this jug was one of them. When the gallerist opened the jug I leaned down to smell it. Honestly I couldn’t smell much, but I liked the idea behind the work. Ideas were the highlight of this years ALAC. There were some great conversations about the works themselves and in most instances the conversations illuminated the works in ways that were unanticipated. Another eye-opener from a fair that never lacks for surprises.

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From left Josh Kolbo & Sean Raspet, Société, Berlin, Germany

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Sean Raspet (detail)

http://www.societeberlin.com