Category Archives: Philadelphia Abstract Art

Non-representational art in all media including drawing, painting, photography, sculpture, prints, video, on-line, writing, etc.

Tim McFarlane @ Bridgette Mayer Gallery

Tim McFarlane has been painting for a long time, along the way becoming a color specialist, conceptual context conneuseur and sure handed painter. Each panel displays the passage of time, speeded down and slowed up, sometimes painting wet into wet, other times letting the layers build creating a completely different temporal distortion.

Bridgette Mayer tells DoN, “I saw something in Tim’s work I really enjoyed and knew that he could develop further. He’s one of those artists that have natural spirit and intensity of purpose.” McFarlane’s one-person show is powerful and full of ideas to steal – like using the grainy wood panels on thin boxes and just painting with a joyous hand.

Tim McFarlane

Twist, acrylic on panel by Tim McFarlane @ Bridgette Mayer Gallery.

Tim McFarlane

Little Speaker Groove, acrylic on panel, Tim McFarlane.

Tim McFarlane

Gravity’s Architecture by Tim McFarlane @ Bridgette Mayer Gallery on beautiful Washington Square.

Burnell Yow! – Dolls of the Apocalypse @ Outsider Folk Art

In Philip Dick’s dystopian future sci-fi classic, Dr. Bloodmoney, Happy Harrington, a deformed mutant with telekinetic powers trundles around in a wagon pulled by a donkey and gleans from the post-nuclear highway with his robotic prothetic “arms”. Yow! takes DoN to that future place when transmogrified beings wander Earth looking for charms, spells and spare mother-boards. Tapping into the zeitgeist that trash is future treasure, these dolls represent the Apocalypse that has already happened all around DoN is slo-mo without him really noticing. Dolls of the Apolalypse incorporate actual Barbie Doll body parts – using a terrific technique, Yow! tricks the eye into believing the work is cast metal. Plastic is the new Apocalypse.

 

burnell yow! doll

 

Burnell Yow!, Dolls of the Apocalypse in The Philadelphia Dumpster Diver Show @ Outsider Folk Arts in Reading, PA.

outsider arts

Dumpster Divers 17yo

The Dumpster Diver Gallery @ 734 South Street held a gala in honor of their 17th anniversary as an anarchist art collective dedicated to making art from cultural refuse. Like the gleaners in a Millet painting, this disparate group sifts through the remnants of contemporary culture creating junque, elegant objects, witty pronouncements, versatile visions as if gathering potatoes in a French field.  Ellen Benson‘s mixed media constructions from old books and Lincoln Logs throb with vague dreams of lives past; each anthropomorphic object has a funky little personality all it’s own, Benson is on a mission to create 1000 dolls, she’s approaching 500.  

Randy Dalton has recreated the Blue Grotto in the back of the sprawling space;  DoN LoVeS seeing funky old computers like the Mac blue-and-white monitor being used as an art object like some retrofitted Neuromancer future style.  DoN‘s blue-n-white glowed purple and made a zapping sound early in the morning a while back but it’s still in the basement, too beautiful to throw away.  Neil Benson‘s lamp made of stacked tin boxes is a museum piece; each box filled with memetic waves forms depending on the pattern printed on the thin folded metal.   The Dumpster Divers on South Street is like William Gibson‘s future city built on the remains of the Golden Gate Bridge after the grid goes down and a whole society develops meeting every need from noodle soup to watch repair.  

Artists are taking the city over from City Hall to South Street, Kensington to University City, Rittenhouse Square to Pretzel Park; art is more than just on the surface, it’s being built in. 

 ellen benson

Ellen Benson with her dolls @ Dumpster Divers on South Street.

randy dalton

Randy Dalton’s Blue Grotto @ Dumpster Divers. 

 

 

Alecia D’Alonzo @ Milkboy

Alecia D’Alonzo is landing @ Milkboy Coffee in Ardmore this Friday with her exuberant paintings and drawings; Alecia & DoN collaborated on her new website – www.DalonzoAart.com.  

alecia

Fantasy 1 by Alecia D’Alonzo.  Alecia is bursting back onto the art scene with neo-expressionist paintings and mixed media drawings in the great showcase @ Milkboy.  

Carol Prusa @ Stedman Gallery

carol prusa

Carol Prusa draws the pattern on the surface of the dome then highlights with paint, drills holes and installs fiber optics that change pattern.  So spacy!  Prusa spends hours meticulously drawing the hypnotic patterns.  The passage of time and space is inherent to the work on view @ Stedman Gallery on the Rutgers Campus in Camden.