Saturday, September 23, 2023

26th Annual Galaxy of Glass Exhibition at Fallbrook Art Center

by Patricia Frischer



Brenda Andrews, director Fallbrook Art Center

CAPTURING LIGHT - ART & NATURE

The current and the 26th! annual glass exhibition at Fallbrook Art Center adds a new dimension to the display of glass by adding geodes which might just be our first fascination with transparent sparkling objects. These are from the Fallbrook Gem and Mineral Society Museum across the street from the art center and are the "nature" part of Art & Nature. Of course, many of these art works from artists in southern California are inspired by nature as well.

Brenda Andrews is the new executive director of the Fallbrook Art Center who curated this exhibition. We all know things change with a new director and that basically change is good. Some might go screaming and yelling into the new direction, but I feel that Ms. Andrews is the perfect candidate to steer this ship into a new era. Originally from New York, she has lived in Los Angeles and studied at California Institute of the Arts. She has experience in the corporate, non-profit, commercial, and academic areas which is so beneficial to an art center and the combination is quite rare. For example, she has worked with Qualcomm, SD Museum of Art, the New Children’s Museum and ARTS A Reason to Survive and these are just a few of her local connections. I found her diplomatic and charming and full of fresh ideas. 

Although she will start with small changes, these are evident in the new sitting cubes (Sit, Stay, Enjoy, Relax), in the new positioning of the gallery shop, in the awareness of placing large works in the window so at night they shine from a distance, and the use of the rear gallery space for experimental and innovative art. There are hopeful future plans for some of the exhibition to travel to other venues in the county which would be an excellent promotion for the local Fallbrook artists.   

The range of work, as always, is considerable.  From the conceptually complex light box by Michelle Kurtis Cole and the clean color pour works of Greg Gomoka and the elegant wings of Tom Marosz to the playful and pet-able creation of Davis and Kazumi Svenson and the narrative chairs and benches by James Stone, technique is often hidden but almost always labor intensive. Fallbrook is a short drive, makes a great staycation, and the art center is a must stop.  Catch this show until Oct 22.

Michelle Kurtis Cole


Michelle Kurtis Cole

Michelle Kurtis Cole, detail

 
Quick gallery tour video

Sit, enjoy, relax, stay - sets the tone for the gallery

Deanne Sabeck - dramatic reflection of light

Susan Hirsch, with geode. Art work absorbs light during the day in order to glow at night. 


Debb Solan - fit for a fairy queen

Carol Rogers wearing Debb Solan necklace

Nic McGuire - glass and gold

Tana Simmons - primary color and subject

Roberto Beltrami, Murano, Italy visiting profession at  Stone&Glass 

James Stone - chairs and benches using a proprietary of combining metal and glass. Many of the benches on display are made by his students. 

Greg Gomoka - poured layered glass slabs.

Greg Gomoka - watch for a new exhibition next year of book art.


David and Christopher Falossi -  glass and onyx

Jon Simpson - best toco ever!

Patty Gray - simple and clean with frosted transparent glass inset. 

Jacob  Barfield - fools your eye into thinking this is 3-D but it is a flat puzzle piece. 

Tom Marosz - elegant and perfectly crafted

Experimental Neon Room


Davis and Kazumi Svenson - pet the lizard!


Davis and Kazumi Svenson

Michael Hernandez

Susan Hirsch from a workshop with Davis and Kazumi Svenson


Geodes  for this exhibition supplied from the Fallbrook Gem and Mineral Society Museum. Watch the quick clip video below of natural florescence in display in the museum. 


Wonderful diorama in the Fallbrook Gem and Mineral Society Museum when dinosaurs roamed  the Fallbrook area

Capturing Light
Sept 23 to Oct 22, 2023
The Janice Griffiths Gallery Fallbrook Art Center
103 S. Main, Fallbrook, CA, 92028
760 728 1414     info@fallbrookartcenter.org

             

 Not enough glass in Fallbrook for you? The Art Glass Guild will be hosting their 2023 Fall Patio Show and Sale on Sat/Sun October 14th and 15th from 10 am to 5 pm at Spanish Village Art Center in Balboa Park. See juried glass that is blown, fused, torch, stained, cast, and etched. More info: Helen Munroe  619-702-8006

 


Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Puppets Add Extra Dimension to Hunter’s Gonzo Dreams at La Jolla Playhouse

 By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt

 

The puppet-making couple at work. (Courtesy Bridget Rountree & Iain Gunn)

What is Gonzo?

Skip the dictionary definition and go straight to the source: Hunter S. Thompson, the one-of-a-kind writer whose over-the-top brand of journalism blazed through the late 1960s and early ‘70s…and beyond. His writings were factional bizarreries, one man’s booze-and-drug-fueled recountings of his trips through the real world and its wildly beyond-real possibilities.

Now an unauthorized musical version of his story is onstage at the Playhouse, and it’s a pretty wild experience.

To get a clue of what went on before this month’s world premiere of The Untitled Unauthorized Hunter S. Thompson Musical, I spoke with Bridget Rountree & Iain Gunn, aka Animal Cracker Conspiracy Puppet Co., who were originally invited to take part in a workshop version of the show three months ago. 

The idea, they were told, was Hunter’s Consciousness, and they were encouraged to do what they love: collecting and disassembling bits of flotsam and jetsam to make kinetic new things. For the workshop, they had two weeks to build five rough puppets, including the ones you see in the photos below and a super-sized shocker that’s way more exciting onstage in motion than you can tell from an Instagram shot.

   

BATS—but no belfry (Courtesy La Jolla Playhouse)
 

Ultimately, they created nine different puppets for the final show, and each of the puppets ended up going through multiple iterations.

“We were part of the whole production,” Iain said. “Usually we work with our puppets ourselves, but this time there were actors who had to learn how to work with the puppets, and we had to keep reworking things so they’d work best for the actors.”  

“We really love the performers and we love working with the crew at La Jolla Playhouse,” said Bridget. “It was a thrill to have a seat in the room with so many talented people. And it’s so gratifying to build a puppet without knowing quite how it’s going to be used and then see an actor really bring it to life.”

  

Wings, but no angels...though there are Hell’s Angels elsewhere in the show (Courtesy La Jolla Playhouse)

“Between the two of us, we must have seen 25 rehearsals and 18 performances,” Iain said.

“It’s a fabulous production,” Bridget added.  “Everyone should come see it!”

And my husband and I did—after two weeks of head colds that messed with our heads but left us totally ready to get down with Hunter at a Sunday matinee. And it was definitely a one-of-a-kind experience.
 
The theme is not just one life-story—it’s a deep dive into competing versions of the American Dream. Though mostly set in the Nixon era, it is still, as I heard someone seated behind me murmur: “so relevant.”
 
And there’s plenty of music—no songs you’ll walk out singing, but lyrics that give you something to think about and great, throbbing beats that make you want to get up and move.
 
Will Hunter be Broadway-bound?  You bet! I only hope they’ll give the puppets a bit more time onstage!
 
Walking out of the theater, I caught up with a couple to ask if I could photograph the T-shirt he was wearing—a memento of Hunter’s attempt to run for office. See the image here…and better yet, go see the show.  

(Photo: Maurice Hewitt and Lonnie Burstein Hewitt)


 The Untitled Unauthorized Hunter S. Thompson Musical runs through Oct. 8.
Info and tickets: La Jolla Playhouse 

And for more about Bridget and Iain’s adventures in puppetry, join their newsletter at   Animal Cracker Conspiracy  

 

Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net

Rebirth and Beyond: A Visit with Alessandra Moctezuma

 by Lonnie Burstein Hewitt

 

Alessandra Moctezuma with Rebirth, her steamroller print. (Maurice Hewitt)

 

Professor of Museum Studies, gallery director, and a notable member of the San Diego art community, Alessandra Moctezuma was also a notable part of the September 2nd ENVISN Urban Art Takeover in Logan Heights, where Mesa College Art Gallery presented a Steamroller Printmaking event.

My husband and I had our first Steamroller experience at Mesa in 2021, watching the painstaking but thrilling process of using a vehicle meant to facilitate roadwork to make hand-carved woodcuts into large-scale fabric artworks. And this time, Alessandra and Jenny Armer, her gallery coordinator and steamroller driver extraordinaire, were among the contributing artists.

 

Jenny Armer, gallery coordinator, with her steamroller print. (Maurice Hewitt)

  Alessandra’s piece, Rebirth, had taken her 10 hours to carve.

“It was very cathartic,” she said. “I challenged myself to reimagine myself, to climb out of the grief I have felt since my husband’s death in October 2022. There are two figures—male & female—and there’s a mirror with my lips and nose—and there’s a ladder leading out of my grief.”

 

Alessandra with her husband Mike Davis, historian/professor/social activist, in the Italian Alps two decades ago. (Photo: Courtesy of Alessandra Moctezuma)

 

“I’m lucky,” she went on. “I love my work, I have a great team at Mesa, and I love teaching. But still…we were together for 27 years, and it’s very hard losing the one person who knows you most intimately. Yet now, after Rebirth, I’m ready to get back to my art. I started out as a printmaker, and I always thought my artwork was too personal, but now I see you can make art out of personal, painful experience and find joy in it, and others can appreciate it too.”

She invited us to come to the art gallery, where she was sure we’d enjoy the current exhibit—The Resistance of the Echo & La Eco-Resistencia—a multimedia installation by Francisco Eme which would be ending the following week. 

 She was right. We did enjoy stepping into the darkened space where the artist had created a multi-sensory experience for visitors by re-imagining the wildlife he’d come to know in a canyon near his home. Combining video, sculptural elements, and a soundtrack of soothing music, birdcalls, and wind rustling through the foliage and flowers, he gave us a chance to escape the noisy world in which we spend much of our time.

It was a space meant to encourage meditation, not photo ops, but we did photograph an involved visitor contemplating a long list of all the living things that were shown in the video.

 

A contemplative visitor at Eme’s installation. (Maurice Hewitt)


Next up at the gallery is Glimmers of Grace, a retrospective of the almost 40-year career of artist Grace Gray-Adams, whose work brings the roles, bodies, and spiritual power of women to life. 

 

Gather Miracles and Build a Legacy by Grace Gray-Adams.  (Photo: Courtesy of the artist.)

Glimmers of Grace: (Grace Gray-Adams) will be on view from October 2-26, with an opening reception October 5. For more information, see www.sdmesa.edu/art-gallery

“I buy a piece from every artist we exhibit,” Alessandra said. “We want to encourage collecting as a personal endeavor, not just for the wealthy, but for everyone.” A fine thing to think about, as the gift-giving season approaches. And she left us with a gift, a poem to accompany her Rebirth.


Carving away, is just the beginning                 
By Alessandra Moctezuma, September 16, 2023

Carving away, each stroke methodical yet loose.
I whittle away grief that is shaped in so many ways. 
The birch wood like skin, the incisions like cuts. 
Tiny and deep, or long like gashes. 

Partners stand close, comrades in life.
Two figures connected in so many ways.
An arrow points, a circular embrace. 
We build together…a house in Papaaloa, 
Children and escapades to faraway places, 
Islands attract us, Newfoundland, Hawaii, Ireland, New Zealand.
Maybe because they seem abandoned in the middle of the ocean.

Twenty-seven years and you are gone.
I make a large woodcut, 3 x 4 feet. Organic gears
Turn and images emerge like automatic writing. 
Didn’t surrealists love lobsters? Freud hypothesized that
Artmaking is a great alternative to neurosis. 

Not a fun time, but I know I have to begin anew
The ladder right in the center, to climb out of the sadness.
A mirror, my lips closed, not saying or exclaiming, or shouting.

A pod descends and a tendril extends to plant new seeds. 
A rebirth, maybe, definitely a forced one. 
Floating in the arid landscape, a nautilus shell,
The hard shield that we build around us and 
That hides a vulnerable self. 

I want to be fearless, like I was 27 years ago. 
But then I realize that we are flotsam. 

 

Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net

Hands On - Kelly Akashi: Formations at MCASD, La Jolla

By Patricia Frischer



I am starting this series of images from the Formations exhibition by Kelly Akashi with her series of hands because her methods of working is so intently dependent on what the materials tell her they want her hands to do. Everything in the show, no matter how natural it looks, it actually constructed.  Akashi works with wax, glass, metal and rope to name just a few of the mediums she is drawn to besides the photography for which she was originally trained. Currently she is exploring stone which is the last work in this body of work. .

The presentation of the created items is an essential part of the art. A pounded dirt pedestal is as vital and telling as the hands and caste metal branches on top.   Works are spiraled, stacked and layered which creates a rhythm and propels you through the rooms. It almost seems as if the works are speaking to each other. The relationship between the installations becomes chapters in a book building a story.

The tree shapes and branches are actually a big part of the story as that is all that was left in the landscape of an interment camp that her relatives occupied during the war. She says, “The tree is a witness.” That mystery of time progressing, spiraling and even frozen are all themes she explores. Leaving time to let all of these objects speak to you will increase your own experience. 








 











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This is the third stop for the exhibition that started in San Jose and traveled to Seattle. Although it is the first museum show for the artist, many of these works are now in the collections of museums.

This was the fourth and final show for the first year of the new space at MCASD. All four shows featured one-woman exhibitions. But next year, there will be more group shows including one on the Caribbean diaspora and for Pacific Standard Time themed Art and Science this year, the exhibition will be about the human body.