Saturday, November 23, 2013

Self Publishing Makes Everything Easy!

I'm proud to offer my first original publication, Hotdog in a Banana Costume, made available to the public with the help of self publishing. The 52 page book features artworks from 2002 to 2010 with an essay by Timothy Hawkinson. I plan on a second book release in January 2014 for my exhibition at 106 Green, located in Greenpoint, Brooklyn. You can order a copy of Hotdog in a Banana Costume by clicking the tab below.

Support independent publishing: Buy this book on Lulu.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Variety in Greenpoint

I've been rotating artworks in this coffee shop for a few months. I like the space with its white walls and unpolished fixtures and trim. It reminds me a lot of my old studio space, Arts Tropical.

Variety
145 Driggs Ave.
Brooklyn, NY 11222
8AM - 4PM

 






Dirty Fingers

Cinders Gallery and FLA Present:

DIRTY FINGERS

May 25th - June 9th 2013

Opening Saturday May 25th 6 - 10pm

See.Me Exhibition Space
26-19 Jackson Ave. Long Island City, NY



Swoon, Elisita Punto, Maya Hayuk, Xander Marro, Taylor McKimens, Micah Daw, Anders Nilsen, Sto Len, Frederic Fleury, Leif Goldberg, Rob Doran, Jungil Hong, Brian Chippendale, Conrad Carlson, Megan Whitmarsh, Morgan Blair, Dessarae Bassil, John Orth, Dave Kinsey, Edie Fake, Langdon Graves, Chris Duncan, Jim Houser, Mike Taylor, Mark Todd, Esther Pearl Watson, Matt Furie, James Moore, Michael Velliquette, Jesse Ledoux, Kelie Bowman, Stephanie Hutin, Aidan Koch, Florencio Zavala, Alexis Anne Mackenzie, Allyson Mellberg, Jeremy Taylor, Brian Willmont, Anna Hellsgard, Christian Gfeller, Suzy Poling, Mark Cross, Eli Lehrhoff, Albert Reyes, Andrew Guenther, Andrew Jeffrey Wright, Ron Rege, Karl LaRocca, Sammy Harkham, Tim Harrington, Rachel Nelson, Erik Zajaceskowski, Ian Vanek, Alex Lukas, Monica Canilao, Wolfy, Le Dernier Cri


These days we are consuming an overwhelming amount of images through a computer or cellphone screen. Reality is becoming digitized as our experience with the world at large is increasingly filtered through technology. It is all starting to sound like any dystopic sci-fi novel about the future that you read as a teenager.

We here at Cinders want to remind you to get away from the computer and check out a group of artists who are still getting dirty and making things.

Dirty Fingers is a large group exhibition focusing on various forms of printmaking which include silk-screening, etching, stenciling, stamp and woodblock printing. The immediacy and accessibility of printmaking creates a medium that can be produced in multiples and sold affordably. The process of hand-printing also adds the distinction of the human hand at work, revealing its slight imperfections and laborious effort in the final piece.

Join us for a showcase of our favorite print makers from around the world.

The gallery will be open Saturday and Sunday, 1 -7pm and by appointment. info@cindersgallery.com

Prints from the exhibition are available online here: https://cinders-gallery.myshopify.com/collections/dirty-fingers

www.cindersgallery.com

Exhibition space provided by See.Me

Monday, May 20, 2013

Bong Hampton T-Shirts!

You don't have to deal with messy travel plans for your weekend destination! Follow the link below to order yourself a shirt. Those cravings you have are totally natural!



Order one HERE!!!

Monday, March 18, 2013

Art on the Weekend: Mary Ann Aitken and Helmut Smits

I usually reserve Sundays for little other than donuts. After my search for the East River dolphin, I visited two adjacent art shows. I started with a visit to the site of my former studio, now occupied by the art gallery Cleopatra's. The softly lit space is hung with small toothy oil paintings by the artist Mary Ann Aitken.  I'm continually drawn to abstraction right now and at this contemplative scale the paintings did not demand attention despite their heavily worked surfaces.




My second stop was a relatively new gallery, called Beginnings, sharing the same address as Cleopatra's. The small space is packed with mostly digital prints by the artist Helmut Smits. He uses motifs of strained capitalism while embedded in a computer-centric culture. To a humorous end in Dead Pixel in Google Earth, he depicts a square patch of lawn scraped down to the soil. In Real Life Photoshopping No. 1 and Real Life Photoshopping No. 2, he has manipulated trivial elements in the scene with the help of Photoshop such as adding green to dried leaves or removing low-hanging branches from unmanicured hedges. I think my favorite work from the group is a series of photo-copy documents created by rolling a six sided die on the glass bed of the machine.



http://cleopatrascleopatras.blogspot.com/
http://www.beginnings-nyc.com/

Both galleries are located in Greenpoint at 110 Meserole Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11222
*check the websites for hours of operation

East River Dolphin

On Sunday I read about a wayward dolphin swimming in New York's East River. With a naive hope that I would catch a view and possibly meet this misguided animal, I headed through the village of Greenpoint to the bank of the East River. My first stop was the recently opened WNYC Transistor Park. Unfortunately the pier was fenced off and with unwavering anticipation I continued on to the ferry dock at the end of India Street. I spent about half of the hour watching boats pass and looking for signs of movement in the water. From memory I could match buildings in the distance to images pictured in the news article and remained hopeful. Birds gathered off in the distance and I thought maybe dolphins fed on the same things the birds looked for. Several years ago I was on a boat in Hawaii and the guide explained that dolphins are curious by nature and often play in the wake of tour boats. As a ferry pulled up to unload passengers, I carefully watched the trailing water. I imagined a dolphin splashing and playing in the turbulence but the wake was a white cloud of emptiness. With nothing to show for my endeavor I decided to leave. As I retreated, I looked back several times to see if something would appear in the gray water.





New Bike Racks in Greenpoint, Brooklyn!