Looking at (but not listening to) Sonic Youth

Perhaps we all come to this… On one side we have a difficult truth: ART’s inadequacy of manifesting what was without stoking the sentimental and nostalgic. On the other is a longing, or perhaps expectation, that ART can unleash a profundity beyond language from its storehouse of images, something so great, so vast and often … Read more

Cal State L.A. Welcomes Weisman Foundation Formalism

When asked, I tell people, mostly visitors to LA, that the Norton Simon Museum has by far the best collection in Southern California if not the West Coast. But I now must qualify this. If you just want to see twentieth century art, there is nothing that rivals the Frederick R. Weisman Foundation. Located in … Read more

Lena Moross: Empathy Against the Machine

Normally, August is a slow month in the art world. But last week’s late-summer tedium was disrupted by a certain Jason M. Allen of Pueblo West, CO, winning in the Digital Arts/Digitally Manipulated Photography division of the Colorado State Fair. Allen’s piece, one of three he entered, was not your typical third-rate painting or photograph … Read more

Chapter 6: Reciprocity

Blinds were drawn behind the glass door, darkening the background. On the surface, white lettering: Parkers Sydney Fine Art Supplies, Custom Picture Framing Since 1918. Ten feet to the left, a roller door opening to the workshop. Inside, power leads were strung across ceiling beams. To the left, a wall of tools and a long timber workbench. In the centre a large, sturdy worktable … Read more

Charlie Finch – Three Tales of Madness Near Art

Truth be told, Charlie Finch was an obscenely cruel man, psychopathic with his verbal abuse and gratified most when humiliating people. But nobody that I know of benefitted from their relationship with Charlie more than I.  Charlie was introduced to me by a mutual friend in the summer of 1992 and he wrote for the … Read more

Kent Twitchell at 80

There is something beyond language in the feeling one gets when a childhood encounter with art is repeated later in life. It is a combination of familiarity and time travel, the reincarnation of what was loosening the grip of the continuum that brought us to our present; loosened if only for a moment. It isn’t … Read more

Chapter 5: Connect the Moving Dots

In between projects I like to deliver completed works, then clean and de-clutter the studio. It’s a good time to re-assess where I’m at and my direction from here. Recently I watched the Andy Warhol Diaries documentary. I’ve read the book. I was more interested in footage of Warhol’s studio set up, including a handmade wall chart … Read more

Antonio Lechuga FENCES in Fort Worth

Author note: One week after submitting this article for publication, artist Antonio Lechuga was shot while jogging outside of his studio. He survived and is in stable condition. A GoFundMe has been set up to assist his family:https://gofund.me/f68b9e8f (With a quiet rage that threatens to consume him.)– Fences by August Wilson, Act Two, Scene Two … Read more

Is Walter Robinson Just Dying to Enjoy Painting?

New York painter Walter Robinson has been exhibiting since the early 1980s. There is a whole mythology of the East Village Scene™ among New York Baby Boomers that took place in the late seventies and early eighties. While it did give us Haring, Scharff and most importantly Basquiat, the proof it was little more than … Read more

Down and Dirty with Picasso at LACMA

Pablo Picasso, Creator/Destroyer as the title of one of his many biographies observed. Pablo Picasso, selfish prick or genius… or both? If any artist of the twentieth century “contained multitudes” in the way Walt Whitman observed about actualizing the many lenses of human potential, it was Picasso. The Los Angeles County Museum of Art has … Read more