Category Archives: Drawings

DoN LoVeS drawing.

Justin Duerr: Song-Story Images in Black and White @ St. Asaph’s

Justin Duerr: Song-Story Images in Black and White  (and some Red) @ St. Asaph’s Gallery, presented by Coalition Ingenu is a tour de force in magic realistic drawings.  Duerr’s marker drawings, some huge and involving, some small and dream-like, fill the Gothic room with Bosch-ian imagery of bird-men, crawling words and psychedelic thought forms.  The presentation by Robert Bullock of Coalition Ingenu is pristine, with simple framing with glare-free plexiglass, permitting the viewer to delve into the mind of Justin Duerr.

justin duerr

Cake decorated by Justin Duerr for his opening party at St. Asaph’s gallery.  One of Duerr’s first jobs was working in a bakery where he learned to work with frosting.

justin duerr

Gallery view of the Justin Duerr installation @ St. Asaph’s Gallery, 27 Conshohocken/State Road, Bala Cynwyd, Pa.

justin duerr

“Ghost Born Free From Cages and Jails”, drawing by Justin Duerr.

justin duerr

Justin Duerr @ St. Asaph’s Gallery through April 5, 2009.

MLMME5 – The 5th Annual Mary Liz Memorial Masters Exhibition.

Paintings by Bob Arufo in his fourth and final major retrospective paired with Bob Jackson‘s life drawings is beautiful and inspiring.  Arufo’s paintings are luminous and speak of a period in time – vaguely Vargas mixed with Edward Hopper – the sence of immediacy and liveness is refreshing.  Jackson’s use of humble materials, ball point pen and typing paper or drawing paper, shows a singular vision, a practiced hand and a studious mix mark marking and seeing, each drawing framed with thought and restraint.  Shoshka and DoN soaked in the vibe of Dirty Frank’s: a long haired man in a Matrix style leather coat drank cocktails with a green-haired girl, Bob’s wife knitted with light up knitting needles, old Bowie songs playing on the jukebox, and sipping whiskey at an ancient wooden table.

arufo

Bob Arufo @ Off the Wall Gallery in Dirty Franks, 13th & Pine.  

arufo

Bob Arufo @ Off the Wall Gallery in Dirty Franks, 13th & Pine.   

jackson

Bob Jackson, president of the Plastic Club, in the 5th Annual Mary Liz Memorial Masters Exhibition @ Off the Wall Gallery in Dirty Frank’s.  Jackson’s drawings are impeccable. 

 

Gus V. Sermas @ Blue Streak

Disappearance – Remembrance”  The Myth of Persephone works on paper.

gus sermas

 Gus V. Sermas @ Blue Streak Gallery.

gus sermas

 Art party for Gus Sermas @ The Blue Streak Art Gallery, Wilmington.

gus sermas

 The myth of Persephone was the closest the Greeks came to resurrection.   Sermas chooses to tell the tale with bold mixed media drawings, combining natural shapes with machine overtones.  Demeter, goddess of the Earth, was Persephone’ mother; Persephone’s father was Zues.  Gus told DoN, “Persephone went to the Underworld, everything dies so she can come back.”

Blue Streak Gallery is @ 1721 Delaware Ave, owner Ellen Bartholomaus is an old freind of DoN’s, it was wonderful re-connecting with an influential art person from the past.  

 

 

Introductions ’09 @ The Galleries at Moore College of Art & Design, Widener Foundation Memorial Gallery

Introductions ’09 at The Galleries at Moore College of Art & Design, Widener Foundation Memorial Gallery, 20th Street and Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia is just so amazing – lot’s of wild mixed metaphors, deep narrative streams of consciousness and memes within memes within memes.  Brenna K Murphy’s “Roots #3” is a prime example of an artwork weaving multiple meanings of normal images, encountered daily, into an interesting story that plays in your mind like a movie.  Brenna’s “roots” are wrapped in human hair, completely encasing real tree roots, which are arranged lovingly on a large white wall.  DoN asked Murphy about the origins of the work, “Wrapping the roots is about home and the body  Growing up as a nomad, to Brenna the hair represents the body as home.  Donald Carter, who is rooted in Philadelphia, asked Brenna how she would sell the work.  Good question: the piece has already been exhibited at Eileen Tognini’s house but hanging from the ceiling, so the piece is growing and changing all the time.  Time, growth, security, luxury and fun all swirling together like twisted dreadlocks, representing culture and sub-culture, luxury and lunacy, safety and insanity all wrapped up in hair.  “Roots #3” is an adventurous idea, realized with meticulous craft, enthusiasm and industriousness – what more can we ask of art?  

Brooke Hine’s ceramic mixed media sculpture also has slippery hidden narratives, “These are a Few of My Favorite Things” is composed of ceramic, slip, stains, glaze and whiskers.  Real cat whiskers. 

Daniel Traub’s large format c-print is hyper-realism with a hypnotic story to tell about Chinese “Cities Edge”; the incomplete skeletons of future luxury housing is occupied by industrious people gleaning the pervasive demolition of old China and reselling to the secondary market.  An amusement park is on the horizon while stacks of doors and windows, each a metaphor, lean against the concrete.  Fabric and plywood fill the vacant windows like layers of pages from a book. 

moore 

 Diane Savona, “Sewing Bag Number One“.

moore 

 Brenna K Murphy, “Roots #3“.

moore  moore  

Brooke Hines sculpture, Danielle Bursk, drawing. 

moore 

Daniel Traub, photograph.

 

ben volta 

Ben Volta @ Introductions ’09. 

Eli VandenBerg @ The William Way Art Gallery

The William Way Gay Community Center for the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgendered Community seeks to encourage, support, and advocate for the well-being and acceptance of sexual and gender minorities through service, recreational, educational, and cultural programming.  The lobby of the center at 1315 Spruce Street is an art gallery currently hosting an outstanding one-person show of drawings in pen and ink and woodcut prints by Eli VandenBerg.  The art is contemporary in style with topical themes of gender identity, cultural confusion and urban isolation.  The strong, expressive lines impressed DoNthe dark, sloppy drips serving to express the emotional context of the exhibit, which runs through 2/27. 

The staff at the center is very friendly and helpful and provides important services not just to the gay community but also to the benefit of all who need help, guidance and support.  The Barbara Gittings library is a unique source of information relating to gay history.

VandenBerg has shown in international and national exhibitions including the National Queer Arts Festival. His work has also appeared in books and magazines including the anthology “Self-Organizing Men: Conscious Masculinities in Time and Space.” VandenBerg will exhibit drawings from two series: “Passing” which explores gender transition and “Place and Home” which focuses on discovering and rediscovering origins. (WayGay website) 

eli vandenberg

When You’re Sitting, Spread Your Legs. Take Up Space.”  Eli VandenBerg @ William Way Gallery. 

eli vandenberg

New Body, Pholio“, woodcut, Eli VandenBerg

 eli vandenberg 

Eli VandenBerg @ William Way Community Center Art Gallery.