Greetings!

 

Each summer serious young artists seeking to strengthen and enhance their art, design or creative writing skills, as well as students with limited training are invited to participate in Summer of Art, an intensive, four-week, pre-college program at Otis College of Art and Design.  

 

Classes are small ensuring personalized, otissoain-depth learning. Rigorous course work includes hands-on studio classes and labs in both a chosen Area of Concentration and Foundation Studio. Courses are taught by award-winning instructors who are practicing professionals, many of whom teach in Otis' Bachelor of Fine Arts and Master of Fine Arts programs. Contact with these instructors provides a unique glimpse into the working lives of professional artists and designers, and an introduction to many career choices in art, design and related fields.

 

For a young artist, I couldn't think of a better way to spend a summer than a Summer of Art. 

 

For more information click here>

 

To read this week's issue of Artweek.LA go to: (www.artweek.la)

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This Artweek.LA : Our Huffington Post blog | Here's what we are featuring on our Huffington Post blog, This Artweek.LA, for the week of May 21, 2012.  

 

wilcoxEdward Walton Wilcox: Though You Slay Me | If one squeezed the collected works of Edgar Allen Poe hard enough to transmute words into paint and meld this essence with the stark piety of the Dutch masters, then you'd have something fairly close to Wilcox's vision for Though You Slay Me. Thematically and actually, darkness is all pervasive. It saturates his palette of amber tints, ember reds, sulfur yellows, decaying sepia tones; it manifests itself in the form of dilapidated windmills, the looming mortality of skeletons, and beautiful things rendered unsettlingly.

 

Edward Walton Wilcox: Though You Slay Me opens May 26 at Merry Karnowski Gallery

  

Allison Schulnik: Salty Air | Showcasing her distinctively schulniktextured canvases, ceramics, and works on paper, Salty Air stages a narrative born of the wistful sailor's tale - its characters loyal to the tragic, farcical beauty consistent within Schulnik's evolving cast. Yielding to the capricious plight of her unlikely protagonists, Schulnik embraces their trials and imperfections through dignified portraiture, a ceremonious haven in an otherwise inhospitable world.
  

Allison Schulnik: Salty Air opens May 26 at Mark Moore Gallery    

 

vielmetter

 Karl Haendel | A complex installation of walls, doorways and backrooms reconfigures the flow of the gallery's architecture and serves as a backdrop for a psychologically layered exhibition. Revolving around emotions of insecurity, doubt and regret, the works in the exhibition respond to larger socio-economic shifts that are changing both the relationships between the sexes and the generational roles of parents and children. Haendel's film "Questions to my Father", a key work in the exhibition, features a range of young men asking questions that they would have liked to ask their fathers but never did. Carefully constructed, the film features these men head on, each asking one question at a time, in clustered groupings of questions that relate to each other. As the film progresses, a more coherent impression both of the sons and their fathers emerges. The film feels both honest and awkward at times as topics that are transcending the personal turn into a seismograph of a larger social and political framework.  

 

Karl Haendel opens May 26 at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects    

 

cooke

Melissa Cooke: Surfaced | Her powdered graphite on

 

paper works explore themes of beauty, fantasy, violence, vulnerability and identity, with the artist casting herself as subject in a myriad of thematic scenarios.

 

"Surfaced acknowledges the relationship between photography, painting and drawing in portraiture," notes Cooke. "I take photographs as I paint and pour liquids onto myself, using my face as a canvas. The photo shoots reference the practice of drawing and painting; then the final graphite drawing references photography. The boundaries between the mediums are broken down and the processes are interwoven."

   

Melissa Cooke: Surfaced through June 16 at Koplin del Rio  

 

bercea

Marius Bercea: Concrete Gardens | Bercea belongs to the generation of Romanians who grew up under Ceausescu's regime, and saw their country's rapid transformation after the dissolution of the Communist Bloc. In some of his earlier paintings, the artist tackled real and imagined childhood recollections: the formulaic school photographs, games, and picnics of faceless kids, wrapped in the yellowish, noxious air that hung over Eastern Europe after Chernobyl's nuclear disaster.

 

With this new series, described by the artist as a "collective urban portrait," Bercea deals with what happened immediately after 1989, with the arrival of Western capitalism; neon slowly taking over the cityscape, its fluorescent hues slapped on the decaying concrete, the shifting sense of what is normal, what should be aspired to, and how it could, or should, be obtained.

 

Marius Bercea: Concrete Gardens closes May 26 at François Ghebaly Gallery 

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Advertise in LA's Best Read Online Art Magazine | In just one year Artweek.LA has gone from the new kid to the most read online magazine dedicated to the Los Angeles art scene (based on the Alexa Traffic Rankings). So if you really want to get the word out about your next exhibition, there is no better way to reach more qualified art enthusiasts than with a banner ad in Artweek.LA.

Plus, we can develop custom programs that will give you the exposure you need to stand out among the hundreds of art events each month. Let us help you create the right plan.

 

For more information or to place an ad, contact me at: bill@gramercypartners.biz or (310) 962-1866.  

 

Sincerely,

Bill Bush
Publisher, Artweek.LA


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