VON LINTEL GALLERY

Friday, June 24, 2011

"Driven to Abstraction" | TimeOutNY Review

Andrea Belag
Shift, 2011
oil on linen
22 x 30 inches
"Eight contemporary women artists—mostly painters—offer differing approaches to a kind of abstraction that seems to make no distinction between geometry and gesture, or for that matter, between recognizable imagery and pure form. Works by Andrea Belag, Dannielle Tegeder and Carrie Yamaoka, among others, are included."

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

John Chiara's camera obscura captures big picture | SFGate Review

John Chiara's photo of the Bay Bridge, part of the "Here" exhibition, was taken using the camera obscura, which fits in a large foam box and prints the image directly on the positive.
Thursday, June 16, 2011

"When John Chiara photographs the Golden Gate Bridge, he hauls his gear out to the Marin Headlands, sets up facing east, then climbs inside the camera and pulls the trapdoor closed behind him.

An hour later, he climbs back out with an image vast and deep enough to capture both bridges plus the skyline and the hills, set against a foreground of shimmering bay water. The picture cannot be reproduced, and neither can the camera, which fits in a black wood and foam box 8 feet wide and 5 feet tall. A lens the size of a magnum Champagne bottle is at the front, and a giant sheet of color photography paper is at the back, with room between for Chiara, who is 6 feet 2 and 220 pounds, to squeeze himself in like the Great Houdini.

The Big Camera, as he calls it, is a 21st century version of an 18th century camera obscura, and he drags it around like a 19th century portrait maker. Instead of a horse-drawn wagon, the Big Camera rides on a truck-drawn flatbed trailer. Once he's parked, the camera stays on wheels as Chiara sits in complete darkness manipulating light filters to get the shade and mood he wants.

"The way it functions is very much like a daguerreotype box camera," says Chiara, 40. "It's like shooting and doing the darkroom work all at the same time, rather than separating them."

To make each picture takes half a day, plus another half day to process it in a drum the size of a small concrete mixer. To see each picture takes an appointment at Pier 24 Photography, the enormous gallery beneath the Bay Bridge on the San Francisco waterfront.

"Here," the show that opened in late May and runs at the gallery until Dec. 16, features work by just about every important photographer who either lived in the Bay Area or shot it. Represented are Robert Frank, Robert Adams, Diane Arbus, Dorothea Lange, Garry Winogrand and Lee Friedlander, mostly from the vast collection of Andy Pilara, the gallery owner and photography benefactor. Among the 642 photos by 34 artists, the four photos by Chiara are the most mysterious."

Read full article @ SFGate

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Driven to Abstraction | NY Sun Review & Art Pick of the Day

Contemporary Abstract Painting at Von Lintel
Catherine Howe
Night Painting (phoenix)
2011, oil and beeswax on linen, 40 x 40 inches


By FRANKLIN EINSPRUCH

"A reception opens at 6 PM this evening at Von Lintel Gallery for "a group show of eight contemporary abstract artists who represent a diverse range of entry points into abstraction," according to the gallery. The artists included are Andrea Belag, Lisa Corinne Davis, Amy Ellingson, Catherine Howe, Rebecca Smith, Dannielle Tegeder, Canan Tolon, and Carrie Yamaoka."

Read more @ The NY Sun

DRIVEN TO ABSTRACTION | GROUP SHOW: CARRIE YAMAOKA

Carrie Yamaoka
30 by 13, 2010
mylar, urethane resin and mixed media on wood panel
30 x 13 inches




Driven to Abstraction
 Featuring work by

Andrea Belag
Lisa Corinne Davis
Amy Ellingson
Catherine Howe
Rebecca Smith
Dannielle Tegeder
Canan Tolon
Carrie Yamaoka


June 9 – July 23, 2011
Opening reception: Thursday, June 9, 6 – 8 PM


CARRIE YAMAOKA
STATEMENT

My work runs a certain gamut of form, riding a fine line between painting and sculpture. I have been working with a ground of reflective silver mylar film, encapsulated in layers of resin for the past 15 years. The resin is sometimes tinted with color, sometimes clear. A piece may hang on the wall like a painting; at other times it may start on the wall and drape down onto the floor, extending into the room—becoming more of a sculptural entity. My interest in the almost alchemical qualities of process, chemistry and photography have led me away from traditional painting media and towards the use of unconventional materials.

Process and a controlled negotiation with chance play a central role in the way that I make the work. Air bubbles, and tiny bubbles created by the curing resin form a layer of incident forged in the making of the piece. Imperfections punctuate the surface and become information to be taken in. I am interested in the mutability of materials, color and light.

Photographs of the work can be misleading– there is no painted image. My work is emptied of pictorial content, but full of incident. Because I am working with a reflective ground, the image or picture arrived at, in any given moment, is contingent upon the viewer’s stance in relation to the work, and her/his navigation through the space that the painting occupies and reflects. The picture is not static; it is constantly shifting. The viewer makes and re-makes the picture(s) from the conditions that I’ve set up. The viewer becomes both subject and object. Or, the viewer within the space in which the piece is being viewed, becomes the subject. To extend that idea further, the exigencies of how one views and interacts with the work becomes the subject.

 
CARRIE YAMAOKA
Bio








Wednesday, June 8, 2011

DRIVEN TO ABSTRACTION | GROUP SHOW: CANAN TOLON

Canan Tolon
Untitled, 2011
oil on canvas
20 x 16 inches



Driven to Abstraction

 Featuring work by

Andrea Belag
Lisa Corinne Davis
Amy Ellingson
Catherine Howe
Rebecca Smith
Dannielle Tegeder
Canan Tolon
Carrie Yamaoka


June 9 – July 23, 2011
Opening reception: Thursday, June 9, 6 – 8 PM


CANAN TOLON
STATEMENT


Space is the main subject in my work. I am interested in the way we visualize it, the way we treat it, politicize, imagine, and remember it. I use a technique that is as random as it is premeditated and studied. My paintings are formally as precise, rhythmic, and structured as they are evasive, accidental and fluent. Although I do not use print or collage, I use a technique in my paintings that imitates photographic prints, using tools like straight edges and knives to produce an effect of instant reality, where evidence alluding to places and events are implied. It is only upon closer inspection that the “photographic reality” falls apart, and the painting’s illusion revealed. Monotone paintings are visually closer to photography, and therefore visually closer a realistic documentation as our eyes are trained to consider photographic images as true testimonies. I work with fragmented compositions and figure-ground arrangements, and I construct perspectives of conflicting views locked in the painting’s multiple glazes. It takes time to see through the superimposed layers–just as it takes time for the eye to conjugate the overlapping fragments. Multiple-eye levels that range from plan-view to panorama, and focus from close-up to remote, cause a dispersal of information in the composition. My aim is to produce paintings in which spaces are recognizable yet elude description.
           

CANAN TOLON
Bio