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IN THAT FAR CORNER

Julia Haft-Candell, Dan Levenson, Minoru Yoshida

Opening Saturday, April 1st, 4-7 pm

On view through Saturday, May 13, 2023

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Minoru Yoshida, Untitled, c. 1965, oil on canvas, 6-1/4 x 9 in (15.9 x 22.9 cm)

IN THAT FAR CORNER

Julia Haft-Candell

 

Dan Levenson

 

Minoru Yoshida

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Dan Levenson, SKZ A3 Format Student Painting Storage Box, Room 215,  painted plywood, hardware, oil and graphite on linen. This piece is a set of 8 A3 size oil on linen paintings that come in a sculptural wooden box.

Political events, two World Wars, changing social dynamics, and innovative new artistic movements all led to the purported conclusion of Modernism in the 20th century. However, despite this rumored demise, the evidence suggests these concepts have tenaciously remained woven into ongoing discourses. There are unfinished threads and possible avenues never pursued. In the hands of the right contemporary artists these ideas feel entirely fresh and relevant; alluding to the past but fully part of their own milieu. For others the artistic achievements of the past can loom as something to rally against or comment on. This is an exhibition about analyzing the past and then taking what parts might still be useful in both addressing the current moment and in thinking about the future.

 

In referring to Los Angeles of the 1920s architect Frank Lloyd Wright emphasized the region being then a remote place, “that far corner” of the continent. This exhibition examines how two artists working in Los Angeles in the 21st Century, and one working between Japan and Los Angeles, in the 1960s, adroitly engage with the history of Modernism, doing so while working in geographies, social settings, and art scenes far from where Modernist ideas originally developed. Using this phrase in the context of a visual art exhibition is also a nod to Sigmar Polke’s 1969 painting Höhere Wesen befahlen: rechte obere Ecke schwarz malen! (Higher Powers Command: Paint the Upper Right Corner Black!). A work taking the wind out of the strict authoritarian rules of early Modernism, the firm systems of Malevich and Mondrian.

 

Clay, bronze, marble dust, paint, jewelry, and drawn lines are put to work researching their own contradictory states: fluid or fixed, malleable or memorialized, in Julia Haft-Candell’s artworks. She continues to introduce new forms across a breadth of materials. The intangible and physical are connected, and the messy irregularities of this process are left visible as part of the narrative. The works are contemplations on the constantly changing nature of the universe, nothing truly remains the same. Materials and ideas are forever in flux. Clay is thought to be set and finished once fired, but Haft-Candell continues to add elements, re-fire, and scrape away. The sacrosanct Modernist grid is applied over organic, three dimensional shapes in her recent sculptures. The grid immediately loosing its rigid hold, unraveled by the entropic forces first of gravity and then of heat. The grids concede their sharp lines to the forms they rest on and become part of them. New patterns emerge in blue pigment or are dug out with a sharp tool to reveal depth. The components of the grid are still technically there, but the form has been destroyed and dismantled, the remaining elements transformed into something novel.

 

Dan Levenson makes work drawn from a completely fictional narrative about a group of Swiss art students in a generic Modernist past. The fictional State Art Academy, Zürich (SKZ) is the protagonist of the story. The paintings, furniture and performances Levenson makes in his LA studio all represent imagined artifacts from the school; projects crafted by students, lesson plans, and objects from the scholastic environment. The paintings from this Bauhaus-esque institution are executed following the rigid formalist pedagogy of the academy. The accompanying sculpted furniture follows similar rules of strict logic in their “form follows function” simplicity of design and standardized proportions. All is made to look old: damaged, faded, cracked, in part to mirror the aging of Modernist utopian ideals. The objects become a vehicle for Levenson to raise questions about the germination of new artistic ideas and their spread into the world, as well as about art education’s often inherently flawed goal of attempting to teach creativity. Examining the past allows for a perhaps a neutral model for discussing contemporary issues. The mechanics of who has access to enter our systems of art education now, how they are taught, the pathways and processes of becoming a professional artist from academia to a global art market, and the ability of art to address and effect larger social and political dynamics.

 

Minoru Yoshida (b.1935 Osaka ,d.2010 Kyoto) is known for his performances and the corresponding video documentations as well as kinetic sculptures, producing renowned examples such as Bisexual Flower (1969) and Electric Car (1970), both exhibited at World Expo ’70 in Osaka. Bisexual Flower was most recently exhibited in 2013 at the Guggenheim Museum in NY. He was a second-generation member of the Gutai Art Association, joining in 1965 at the invitation of Kazuo Shiraga. He was an active member and essential to the avant-garde group’s development. He also made paintings starting the mid-1960s. He was initially focused on blue forms that grew from from observations of organic shapes. As the 60s progressed they became more simplified, with harder edges and additional bold colors. Still inspired by organic motifs, but further removed from any sources. Fusing the fluidity of nature with industrial aesthetics of the era. They echo the firm geometry of Mondrian and Malevich, but were something new and vibrant. He moved to Los Angeles for a pivotal period in 1970, staying in the home of a LACMA curator, before moving on to New York to work though most of the next decade. He was an active participant in downtown NY’s performance scene, staging events in his Synthesizer Jacket. He was a regular in the New York Avant-garde Festival curated annually by Charlotte Moorman, and also performed at venues like Artists Space.

 

Julia Haft-Candell (b. 1982, Oakland, CA) received an MFA from California State University Long Beach and BA in Studio Art and International Relations from University of California Davis, and is an alumni of Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture. Recent solo exhibitions include Candice Madey, NY; Night Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Parrasch Heijen Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; and group exhibitions at Canada Gallery, New York, NY; Klaus von Nichtssagend Gallery, New York, NY; Bushel Collective, Delhi, NY; 12.26, Dallas, TX; Inman Gallery, Houston, TX; Grand Central Art Center at California State University, Fullerton CA; the Craft Contemporary, Los Angeles, CA; Interface Gallery, Oakland, CA; Franklin Parrasch Gallery, New York, NY; among others. Her work has been written about in Artforum, Surface Magazine, East of Borneo, The New York Times, and The Los Angeles Times. She lives and works in Los Angeles and will have a solo exhibitions at Night Gallery and Pitzer College in the fall of 2023

 

Dan Levenson has exhibited at The Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Vielmetter Los Angeles; Honor Fraser, Los Angeles; Praz-Delavallade, Paris and Los Angeles; de boer Gallery, Los Angeles; PARTICIPANT INC, NYC; LAXART, Los Angeles; White Columns, NYC; and Vox Populi, Philadelphia, PA. Most recently he had a solo exhibition with James Fuentes Gallery, NY in the fall of 2022. He is the recipient of a Pollock/Krasner grant and Yaddo and MacDowell Fellowships, among other awards. He has taught performative drawing lessons at the Hammer Museum, American Jewish University, USC’s Roski School of Art, and the Saas-Fee Summer Institute in Berlin, Germany. He received an MFA for the Royal College of Art, London and a BA from Oberlin College, Ohio.

 

Minoru Yoshida was born in Osaka in 1935 and graduated from Kyoto City University of Fine Arts, Kyoto, Japan in 1959, studying painting. Yoshida joined the legendary post-war Japanese artists collective Gutai Art Association in 1965 at the invitation of Kazuo Shiraga. In 1970 Yoshida left Japan to live in Los Angeles briefly, and then live and work in downtown New York. He returned to Kyoto in 1978 and continued to produce works that bridged performance and art. Yoshida’s works are in the collection of Ashiya City Museum of Art and History, Hyogo, Japan; Ohara Museum of Art, Okayama, Japan; Takamatsu Municipal Museum, Kagawa, Japan; Niigata Prefectural Museum of Modern Art, Niigata, Japan; National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan; and The Warehouse, Dallas, TX. In the fall of 2022 he was included in two major museum exhibitions in Japan: “Into the Unknown World - GUTAI: Differentiation and Integration” held at the Nakanoshima Museum of Art in Osaka and the National Museum of Art, Osaka. His exhibition history and past awards include: Performances in New York, Ulterior Gallery, New York, NY (2020, 2019, 2018, 2017); Curatorial Studies: Minoru Yoshida’s Paintings 1964–1967, The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan (2014); Gutai: Splendid Playground, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY (2013); Possible Futures: Japanese Postwar Art and Technology, Inter Communication Center, Tokyo, Japan (2005); Fluorescent Chrysanthemum: Contemporary Japanese Art, ICA London, UK (1968); Gendai no Kuukan ’68: Hikari to Kankyou [Contemporary Space ’68: Lights and Environment], Kobe Sogo Department Store, Hyogo (1968); Nihon Kokusai Bijutsu-ten [Japan International Art Exhibition], Ohara Museum Purchase Prize (1967), Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum, Tokyo and Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto, Japan; Mainichi Gendai Bijutsu-ten [Mainichi Contemporary Art Exhibition], Concour Award (1966).

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Julia Haft-Candell

Hands/Feelers/Nothing/Everything/Torus: Soft Grid, 2022

fired clay, glaze, bronze, jewelry and glass

15 x 15-3/4 x 8-3/4 inches

Julia Haft-Candell
Infinity Knot: Soft Grid, 2023

Fired clay, glaze, bronze and jewelry

15 x 15 3/4 x 8 3/4 inches
 38.1 x 40 x 22.2 cm


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Julia Haft-Candell
Kick: Soft Grid, 2023

Fired clay, glaze, bronze and jewelry 10 1/2 x 17 1/4 x 6 inches
 26.7 x 43.8 x 15.2 cm

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Dan Levenson

Erwin Karrer, 2018

oil and graphite on linen

Size: A3, 16.5 x 11.75 inches (42 x 30 cm)

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Dan Levenson
Reto Hagemann, 2021
oil and graphite on linen

Size: A3, 16.5 x 11.75, (42cm x 30 cm)

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Dan Levenson

Juerg Zwingli, 2021

oil and graphite on linen

Size: A0, 47 x 33 inches (118.9 x 84.1 cm)

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Dan Levenson

Roesli Haggenmacher, 2018

oil and graphite on linen

Size: A3, 16.5 x 11.75 inches (42 x 30 cm)

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Dan Levenson

Florina Morf, 2018

oil and graphite on linen

Size: A3, 16.5 x 11.75 inches (42 x 30 cm)

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Dan Levenson

Bettina Uster, 2023

oil and graphite on linen

Size: A0, 47 x 33 inches (118.9 x 84.1 cm)

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Minoru Yoshida
[Title unknown], c. 1965
oil on canvas
21-3/8 x 35-5/8 inches (54.3 x 90.5 cm)

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Minoru Yoshida
Untitled, c. 1965
oil on canvas
6-1/4 x 9 in (15.9 x 22.9 cm)

SMALL YOSmi-023_circa1965_detail copy.jpg

Minoru Yoshida

Untitled, c. 1965

oil on canvas

6-1/4 x 9 in (15.9 x 22.9 cm)

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