Posts Tagged ‘ David Stein ’

NEW BROW II Opening Sept 1 @PCPA

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New Brow 22nd Annual New Brow show opens Thursday, September 1st, 2011 at Portland Center for the Performing Arts, main floor gallery, SW Broadway and Main. Featuring 50 up-and-coming Portland artists in a variety of media. 5-8 pm. Show runs through September 30th.

PORTLAND ARTISTS include: Ali Schlicting, Angela Gay,Anna Magruder, Beth Myrick, Brenda Dunn, Brent Wear, Brett Superstar, Brin Levinson, BT Livermore, Cathie Joy Young, Chuck Bloom, Chris Haberman, Dan Ness, Dan Pillers, David Stein, Emek, Emily Bates, Erinn Kathryn, Gary Houston, Heide Davis, Heidi Elise Wirz, Helena Gigena, Icky A, Jason Browm, Jason Graham, Jennifer Griffo, Jennifer Feeney, Jeremy Okai Davis, Jesse Reno, Joel Barber, Kelly Williams, Kendra Binney, Kenny Spurlock, Kyle Gossman, Larry Christensen, Malynda Shook, Mario Robert, Matt Leavitt, Matt Schlosky, Mona Superhero, Peach Momoko, Richard Schemmerer, Sam Arneson, Scott Chase, Sean Crogan,  Terence Healy, Tim Combs, Tripper Dungan, Tyler Corbett, Yo Mutsu, Zack Baltzly, Zak Gere

Saturn Returns

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I just wanted to send over an image of the painting I’m contributing to the LAX/PDX show next Thursday at the Together Gallery.

Saturn Returns
18″ x 24″ oil on panel, 2011

Hope to see you next week!

Opening Reception
March 31, 2011 | 6:00pm – 11:00pm
@ Together Gallery
2916 NE Alberta St., Suite A
Portland, OR. 9721
March 31st – April 24th, 2011

DABS MYLA interview for lax/pdx show at together gallery – march 31st

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LAX/PDX
Art installation from Dabs Myla
Group show featuring over 50 artists (see list of artists below)
@ together gallery
co-presented & curated by LA’s thinkspace gallery

March 31st – April 24th, 2011
Artist reception March 31st from 6pm – 11pm

NAME: DABSMYLA
AGE: DABS 32 and MYLA… well… a woman never reveals her age.
LOCATION: Los Angeles
WEBSITE: www.dabsmyla.com
BLOG: www.dabsmyla.wordpress.com
TURN ONS: Each other

* Please talk a lil’ bit about the general idea behind your new install for the upcoming LAX/PDX show opening march 31st at together gallery.
The piece we made for the LAX/PDX show is a new painting in a series of
work where we are trying something a little bit different to our previous
paintings. It’s still very much like what we do, but we have been
experimenting with new compositions and mixing it up a bit. We are really
trying to bring both of our styles even closer together. Over the 6 years
we have been working together we have gradually become more in sync with
our paintings, to a point where they finally really feel like its just one
person, now we are trying to take it a little further again. Building off
each others style to make one entity.
As for the installation, we are also trying something a little different.
When we do painted installations for shows we usually try to make it look
similar to our graffiti, with a twist. For this install we are going to
make it a bit more like one of our paintings, but simplified and on a much
bigger scale!.. its kinda hard to explain.. but you will see what we mean
when its up! (hopefully)

* You are both from LA? how’d ya meet? how’d you end up in there?
We are both originally from Melbourne Australia, but we have been living
here in LA for two years now.
And loving every moment of it.. except for the traffic maybe!
But its worth tolerating to live in such an amazing city.
We met each other in 2005 at art school, we were both studying
illustration there.
While at school, we fell in love and have been together every day since!
We traveled over here to the States about 4 or 5 years ago on vacation and
to see our good friend Logan Hicks, who was then living in LA. We feel in
love with the city, the weather and the general chaos!
So we made a decision to just pack up and head over and see what happens!
It was a real leap of faith! No idea what we would do here, and no visas
to work. We just found an apartment bought two desks and hit the ground
running!
Now we have artists visas.. we are legit!… so i think we will stay here as
long as we can.

* If you had an unlimited budget and time was not an issue, what grand
artistic vision would you look to bring to life?
Painting a whole city block, the outside of the buidlings, the lamp posts,
the post boxes, the inside walls of all the buildings, the ceilings, the
desks, the telephones, the EVERYTHING! Could you imagine it… an entire
DABS MYLA city block!!!!!!
* What’s an average day like for you?
Pretty boring actually. Except for days when we are outside painting
walls! Everyday we wake up around 8, eat oatmeal for breakfast(everyday!)
answer emails for a few minutes then sit at our desks and start painting.
We do that until about 11 or 12 each night, then go to bed and watch a
movie.
The end!!
Then we do the same again the next day.
When we say it like that it sounds kinda harsh, like we never do anything
except work, but we love it, we love to paint and we love each others
company so spending every day doing that is actually a dream come true!

* What do you consider your biggest overall influence?
It would most definitely be each other!

* I’ve notice some repeated imagery in your work, care to explain?
Sometimes we find ourselves with a certain character, and as soon as he or
she or it is made, we both just fall in love with it so much that i think
we always want to bring them back for another cameo because it made us
smile so much the first time around!

* how do you like collabing, do you only work together or also solo?
Could never imagine it any other way!
It can be a hard process collaborating with another person sometimes, but
when it works its the best ever!… and for us it always works.
We never argue or really disagree on anything.
We collaborate on pretty much everything we make. The only times when we
do our own thing is when we are painting graffiti letters. When you are
painting a piece of your name its kinda something that has to be done
solo!
* Do you listen to music while painting/drawing? If so, do you have a
current favorite that inspires?
We listen to a lot of music while we work. Like we said, we are at our
desks pretty much 15 hours a day, so the ipod gets thrashed!
At the moment i think our favourite albums would be Ween ‘all request
live’, Brian Wilson presents ‘Smile’ and the new Radiohead album ‘king of
limbs’.

* what are your thoughts on portland? portland art? have you seen portlandia?
No, we haven’t seen Portlandia? Andrew from Thinkspace Gallery sent us a
link to the first few episodes and told us we need to watch them. But we
haven’t had time this week to get around to it.
We are really looking forward to coming up there though. We don’t know much
about it, but we have heard so many great things from people.
And when the reviews are that hot… its gotta be great!

* coffee, tea, beer, whiskey, kombucha?
Non of the above!… water, water and more water!

* What drew you towards art making, who, what, where, when, why?
We are inspired by colour schemes, hand drawn typography, graffiti
letters, animation artists, illustrators, graffiti writers, Disneyland,
cities and landscapes, 1950′s pop culture… and more! All of this has
drawn us into making art from when we were kids and as we grow older and
learn more we love finding more things that we love and inspire us!
* Interests outside of art making?
It is very very rare when we are doing something that isn’t involved with
art or our work.
When we are not in the studio working, we are out painting walls.
And if we are not doing either of those, we are probably at an exhibition
somewhere. Even when we travel, 90% of the time we are there to paint or
for a show or to gather reference.
We do watch a lot of movies though!!.. so there’s that i guess.
And we love it at Disneyland!.. we try to go there whenever we have a day off!

*Do you make a living off art or what, how do you pay the bills?
We do live off our art. And feel very lucky for that!
We don’t live just from selling paintings though. We do a little bit of
commercial work through out the year. T shirt designs, murals and
installations for different companies and stuff like that. That definitely
helps keep us living comfortably between shows!

* What’s next? Summer plans? 5 year plans? next 5 minutes?
In the next 5 minutes we are going to finish up typing these answers and
our dinner should be ready. Take an hour away from painting and eat our
delicious meal and watch some old episodes of Lost.
This summer we will spend the majority of it with our heads down working
on the paintings for a solo show at Thinkspace Gallery in August.
We are putting 110% into this show, so won’t be room for us to do much more
than that for the next 5 months. But i’m sure we will get out a few times
to paint some graffiti!
We don’t really have a 5 year plan other than to do whatever we have to do
to be able to stay here in LA.

LAX/PDX
Art installation from Dabs Myla
Group show featuring over 50 artists:

Adam Caldwell

Allison Sommers

Ana Bagayan

Andrea Offermann

Andrew Hem

Anthony Clarkson

Anthony Pontius

Brett Amory

Brian M. Viveros

Bumblebee

Caia Koopman

Catherine Brooks

Chet Zar

Craig “Skibs” Barker

Dabs Myla

Dan-ah Kim

David Bray

David MacDowell

David Stein

Dennis McNett

Derek Gores

Esao Andrews

Euth

Eveline Tarunadjaja

Fernando Chamarelli

Ferris Plock

Fumi Nakamura

Gaia

Ghostpatrol

Glenn Arthur

Gustavo Ponce

Jeff Ramirez

Jen Lobo

Jesse Hotchkiss

Jesse Reno

John Park

Jonathan Wayshak

Joseph ’2H’ McSween

Kathleen Lolley

Katy Bisby

Kelly Allen

Kelly Vivanco

Kevin Titzer

L. Croskey

Lesley Reppeteaux

Lindsey Carr

Linnea Strid

Liz Brizzi

Luke Kopycinski

Mr. Jago

Naoto Hattori

N.S. David

Paul Barnes

Peter Taylor

Sarah Joncas

Shark Toof

Stella Im Hultberg

Timothy Karpinski

Tony Philippou

Yosuke Ueno

 

Twombly House: Ephemeral Museum

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The Twombly House: 4449 SW Twombly, Portland, Oregon
Open Reception: Friday, October 15, 2010 / 4 – 9 p.m.
Open for viewing: October 16 – 28, 2010 — Hours: Tuesday – Sunday 4 – 8 p.m., Closed Monday
for more info please visit: aliciabluegallery.com and nwmodernshow.org

Twombly House: Ephemeral Museum

Alicia Blue Gallery and Designform Studio, in collaboration with Living Room Realtors, is pleased to announce a special exhibition of modern art and design. The exhibition presents a mid-century ranch house which has been appropriately renovated into a contemporary dwelling; this project demonstrates the idea that art and design can be accessible and coexist in a living situation.

For two weeks this conducive space will be transformed into an ephemeral museum. The curating of this home will be well executed, down to the finest detail. The exhibit entails a complete spectrum of the finest collections – fine art, product design, and home décor. Design curators Giovanni Castillo (Designform Studio) and Trisha Guido (Relish Design) along with fine arts curator Alicia Johnson (Alicia Blue Gallery) will join forces to orchestrate this uncommon exhibition.

Artists:
Angela Baker / Caryn Baumgartner / David Boekelheide / Ryan Bubnis / Kevork Cholakian
Meredith Dittmar / Carlos DonJuan / Katherine Dube / Colleen Flaherty / Karen Florek
Lisa Gronseth / Renee Hartig / Junko Iijima / Timothy Karpinski / Lisa Kowalski
Jennifer Lee / Christine Nguyen / Saule Piktys / Heidi Schwegler / Micki Skudlarsky
Curtis Speer / David Stein / Kevin Taylor / Lien Troung / Samantha Wall / Bryan Wolf / Wes Younie

Designers: ALTURA FURNITURE, AMANDA WALL-GRAF, BRIGHT DESIGNLAB AND HAMMER & HAND, CALLUM CLARK, CRAFTED SYSTEMS, ESQUE STUDIOS, GRAIN, JASON ANDREW DESIGNS, JEFFMADE, JEREMY ALDEN, THE JOINERY, JONATHAN LANGSTON, LAND • LINE DESIGN, LEAH NOBILETTE, LORI MASON, Made, MAGMAX DESIGN, MARK DIAMOND, MERKLED STUDIO, MOLLY PURNELL, MOUFELT, NAMUH, NICHOLAS MICHEELS, PABLO PARDO, SCOTT SCHROEDER, SPACE DESIGN, TERRY BOSTWICK, TLAGG, TUFENKIAN ARTISAN RUGS, WILL ULLMAN

Host: Jenelle Isaacson, Living Room Realtors — jenelle@livingroomrealtors.com
Living Room Realtors have the master copy when it comes to knowing Portland’s inner urban neighborhoods. Their superb eye for living quarters spans from vintage, historic, mid-century modern architecture to green building. Living Room Realtors are being branded the purveyors of modern art-space homes.

Design Curator: Giovanni Castillo, Designform Studio — giovanni@designformstudio.com Designform Studio is a design studio specializing in commercial and residential interior renovation and design, with modern design and methodology at the core of their design practice. Designform’s collaborative approach ensures that imagination, expertise, and reality come together to produce exceptional projects.

Design Curator: Trisha Guido, Relish Design — trisha@relishstyle.com
Relish is a lifestyle, a mentality, a philosophy. It is the idea that everyday objects should be beautiful, functional and affordable. It is the zone between individuality and mass production. A carefully curated collection of emerging designers from around the globe inspires, elevates and touches our senses.

Fine Arts Curator: Alicia Johnson, Alicia Blue Gallery — info@aliciabluegallery.com
Alicia Blue Gallery is an online contemporary art gallery. We represent a balanced integration of emerging and mid-career level artists offering them favorable circumstances for promotional and creative maturity. Our vocation is to bring into being the imagination and technicality of passion, educate the eager and celebrate the arts.

“I Am, There For I Think” #4 with “Drink and Draw” showcase at The Goodfoot

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“I am, therefore I think 4″ at The Goodfoot. It’s part illustrative memoir, part social commentary. The work displays imagery any were from praying to beer to genetic engineering. There are over 75 artists with over 300 works, and a varied of mediums (etching, painting, mixed media, photography, etc).

Opens Last Thursday, Sept 30th from 5-11pm, show up until Oct 26th, 2010.
The Goodfoot
2845 SE Stark, Portland, Oregon

Artists include:
Abigail Vanghan
Adam Ciresi
Adam Sheppard
Ania Palinska
Anna Todaro
Ashley Costa
Azad Sadjadi
Ben Wilson
Beth Myrick
Brad Hamers
Brent Wick
Casey Rae Wickum Olsen
Chris Haberman
Chuck Bloom
Dan Ness
Derek Olsen
EMEK
Erin Nations
Furturtle
Gary Hirsch
Gary Houston
Gene Hannon
Guy Burwell
Harry Moritz
Heidi Elise Wirz
Hunter Armstrong
Ian Rodger
Icky A.
J. Shea
Jason Graham
Jason Wells
Jennifer Mercede
Jeremy e Schultz
Jesse Reno
Joel Barber
John Gajowski
John Graeter
John Howard
Johnny Tragedy
Jon Smith
Jonathon Hill-Jacquard
Justin Hampton
Kendra Binney
Kerisene Rose
Kevin Fitz
Larry Christensen
Lea “Luna” Littleleaf
Luke Dolkas
Mario Robert
Matt Schlosky
Michael Costello
Mike Fields
Mike Klay
Nate Luna
Neil Perry
New Colony
Nicholas Orr
Richard Schemmerer
Ronni J
Sam Arneson
Sandy Fields
Scott Chase
Summer Hatfield
Tessa Hulls
Tim Combs
Todd Hinchman
Todd Slater
Tripper Dungan iii
Zach Baltzly
Zag Adams

ONE NIGHT ONLY. CASH AND CARRY.  All 200 plus DRINK and DRAW works are framed and most are sold for $25!!! (larger works are a bit more, but not too much).  Proceeds from show to benefit the publication of a Drink and Draw book.

D AND D HISTORY:  Drink and Draw has been a Sunday night ritual at the Goodfoot for two years, a relaxed “all skills welcome” type of evening.  After two years of submissions, a cycling of ARTIST HOSTS, lots of paper (or whatever we could draw on), The Goodfoot decided to have a show and try to make a book out of this “doodle” why you drink community event.  Started by Michael Fields in 2008, and then assisted by artist/curators Jason Brown and Chris Haberman in 2009, Drink and Draw now has a crew of artists, hosts and helpers and a following.  All works framed by PO BOY ART GALLERY AND FRAMESHOP (1421 SE Stark).

Participating DRINK AND DRAW Artists in this show:
Alexandra Becker-Black, Amy Stoner, Anna Todaro, Ben Pink, Bill Garison, Chris Cank, Charlie Brown, Chris Haberman, Chuck Bloom, Corey Poonacha, Danielle Kirby, Dave Walker, David Stein, Donny Kunzer, Gellella, Guy Burwell, Greg Bond, Hunter Armstrong, Hayley Cassatt, Hugh Gallagher, James Sitzer, Jasmine Star, Jason Brown, Jesse Reno, Johanna Becker-Black, Joey Arneson, Joel Barber, John Gajowski, Karah Bruce-Larkin, Kendra Binney, Kenny Spurlock, Keenan Havens, Kirsten A. Moore, Kory Quinn, Laura Buchan, Liana Norton, Malynda Shook, Marshall McLean, M@ Leavitt, Matt Schlosky, Michelle Renee Tuffias, Michael Fields, Mike Morley, Ms. Zenda, Natasia Chan, Nicole Linde, Peck, Petro, Roscoe Hall II, Ryan Bodiroga, Sam Arneson, Scott Chase, Sienna Morris,  Stephen Polczynski, Summer Hatfield, Teresa Garber, Virginia Driscoll, Willow D’Arcy, Yvon, Zack Baltzly

David Stein’s Wonderland at Compound Gallery

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David Stein oil painting at Compound Gallery in Portland, Oregon

“Paper Cut” show
Art by David Stein

August 5th – 31st, 2010 @ Compound Gallery, Portland, OR.

As we walk through life
In the wonderland of our mind
Searching for signs and clues
A bottled message arrives
Imprisoned, we try to break free
Seeking truth and self

Words by H.E.

David Stein oil painting at Compound Gallery in Portland, Oregon
David Stein oil painting at Compound Gallery in Portland, Oregon

Chuck Bloom, David Stein, Keenan Havens & Michael Fields: art opening @ Goodfoot

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Last Thurs, April 29th from 4-11pm.  Up until May 25th, 2010

The artists this month are Chuck Bloom, David Stein, Keenan Havens & Michael Fields
The goodfoot: 2845 SE Stark Portland, OR 97214
open daily 4-2:30

Chuck Bloom say’s about his work “Before the painting is finished, the vision is already fading to memory.  I can only hope that I’ve understood enough of the message to help me further along this tiresome trek.  Most of the time these “visions” are not complete – just bits and pieces of things, like symbols.  The paintings themselves are very organic in nature.  They all stem from my established visual vocabulary, but evolve in ways that are not premeditated or even foreseeable.  In this way, I work very closely to André Breton’s notion of automatism, which he believed must be present in works of art or writing in order for it to remain in the sphere of Surrealism.  It is mandatory as a Surrealist that artwork explore a mental space outside the field of normal awareness, in a place where consciousness, unconsciousness and all things possible and impossible exist as one.  At the nexus of my work is a concern and philosophy about the environment and man’s place in it.  Global warming, overpopulation and the breakdown of basic human communication and the resulting “fractured humanity” we endure are at the forefront of my concerns; however, elements beyond my conscious knowing seep in. Many elements in my paintings are of the seemingly familiar or mundane, but evade a total accessibility and a clearly defined meaning.  In this way I speak in a kind of “visual metaphor,” or perhaps what some have called “enigmatic poetry.”  Doorways and windows are passages from the outside to the inside, from one place to another, that is their definition and I use them no differently.  They can be bricked or boarded up, open to darkness, a stormy horizon, an idyllic interlude or even a source of water for things in one world from another.  Depending on how they are depicted they can represent the hope of another unspoiled world or a reminder of what is left behind or avoided.  They are opportunity or the lack of opportunity.  Opening the windows of minds, tearing open the locked doors of our rationalism creates endless possibilities for the future of humanity.  This manipulation of subject matter is natural and balanced.  Ultimately, the psychological state of events is for you, the viewer, to extrapolate – the results of which you may find you least expected. My ultimate goal is to walk right into one of my canvases and never return, but the door opens and the door closes in a blink of the eye.  The barriers are endless and the map I followed getting here is torn and unreadable.  Perhaps I’ve pretended to know where I was all along just to feel more comfortable, but it doesn’t make it any less real”

David Stein was born in Chicago and grew up in the Midwest.  He is a self-taught artist, and inspired by an overactive imagination.  David’s childhood plays a strong role in some of the more recognizable qualities of his drawing and painting style, such as the reoccurrence of fantastical creatures, anthropomorphic animals and his attention to fine detail.  He say’s about this body of work entitled “Can You Fake A Smile?  or A Series of Friendly Interactions With Pazuzu” “This particular body of work follows a series of friendly interactions where the negative internal dialogue and thoughts of the characters are exposed.  When I was younger I was told that there were chemicals in the water of our public pool. When activated by urine the chemicals would turn into a dark purple cloud and surround the culprit. It’s kind of like that. Only in this series I’ve replaced the dark purple cloud with snakes. To an untrained scout many snakes may appear to look similar, however, the results of their bite differ dramatically. Much like our words and thoughts. Even the seemingly harmless ones could strangle the weak.”

When Keenan Haven approaches a new drawing, he starts by planting a circle in the void of the picture plane. Using this circle, Keenan begins to add on drawings, slowly building the image. He works without an end product in mind. Instead, he is engaged in a constant interaction with the piece, trying to assess what the next step is. The image is finished when he deems it to be complete. When working on an image that is not preconceived, the artist is given absolute freedom. Yet Keenan finds himself following a set of standards and rules that he unconsciously impose upon himself, causing each image to hold a familiar quality to the last. Keenan interpret this familiarity as a clue into his own state of consciousness. Each and every choice he makes within his images comes to reflect a certain unconscious thought process that he engaged in at that moment, and the more frequent he makes the same choices, the more it suggests to be a significant part of his being. The images Keenan have created in the past and the images he has create in the present share a strong familiarity, yet slowly shift in such elements as subject matter, compositional preferences and image flow. These qualities of his images are reflective of  his progression through time, and the simultaneously unchanging and fluctuating manner of his own consciousness.

Michael Fields is a self-taught artist based in Portland, Oregon. His work is the product of personal reflection.. “When I paint, I contemplate the world as I know it: situations and people of past, present and future come into focus and it is my reaction to these concepts that dictates what emerges onto the canvas.” Michael’s work is born not of planned composition, but inner dialog, often challenging the viewer to decipher messages both on the surface and buried deep within it’s structure.