Tag Archives: Los Angeles
Documentary: Hollywood in the Beginning
Art: Don’t Turn Back (Two Versions)
Don’t Turn Back (Final Version)
Don’t Turn Back (First Version)
Here’s the little art problem I’ve been working on for the past few weeks. It’s one of those things where I have no theory or rule to fall back on in order to make the decision. Aside from some small touches like removing the Sergeant stripes from the figure’s shoulder, I was mainly trying to decide whether the right side of the image should be dark or light. Ultimately, after scrutinizing the picture from a distance time after time, I decided that it was more dramatic if it depicted a night scene and if the figure was moving away from a more painterly zone toward a more digitized one. I also made the road on the left a little more defined. But canvas isn’t that expensive and I might just decide to hang both versions right next to each other in a gallery.
My own favorite part of the picture is right around the figure’s legs where you can see through to the landscape with that slight glow on the ground and how the shrubbery overlaps the neon line of the leg. The image is about fear. It is also connected directly to Jean Cocteau and the myth of Orpheus. The figure looking back is from a single frame of video I shot of a store sign while walking along Hollywood Boulevard at night. The road is a sharp bend in Laurel Canyon Boulevard near Mulholland Drive above Los Angeles that I shot through a windshield. The background landscape is a shoreline I shot from a moving car near Rehoboth Beach, Delaware. The dark palm fronds hanging down are from some throw-away footage I shot in high winds. The pixelation is the product of blowing up a frame of a digital copy of decomposed celluloid film until the digital artifacts became pronounced. I made all of these things individual layers and then went in with a digital pen and worked on a trial and error basis to make things come out the way they did. What is interesting to me about making such an image is how I begin with an initial image – the glowing figure – and shuffle parts of other images on top of and underneath it to build a new image. It requires an extreme confidence that you will know what you need exactly when you see it. So you start going through piles of video or photos both on screen and in your head and pull out the pieces that snap into place for a new picture. It’s like walking up to a leaf on a tree and taking it as the basis for a painting. You know that from the leaf you will be able to connect to other things and end up with exactly the right final result.
This print measures 68″ x 38″. It’s an original work created from elements used in my film Yellow Plastic Raygun.
Art: Don’t Turn Back
Don’t Turn Back
This is my next large canvas print. I’ve been making original artist prints through a gallery in Los Angeles. They measure 68″ x 38″. They are original works created from images used in my film Yellow Plastic Raygun. They are not exact frames from the film, but rather artworks based on segments of the film.
Art: Digital Prints on Canvas
I Was Thinking
I’ve been making large original artist prints of these images through a gallery in Los Angeles. They measure 68″ x 38″. They are original works created from images used in my film Yellow Plastic Raygun. They are not exact frames from the film, but rather artworks based on fragments of the film. I make the film, then I mine it for artworks that will stand on their own. So the film becomes a sort of a paintbox or a scrapbox that I dig through and manipulate. I could go on working like this forever. It’s an endless trove to explore.
Wave Rider
I Was Thinking hanging on a wall:
The Cool School: LA Art Scene Film
This video is from a PBS Independent Lens documentary about the Ferus Gallery that shaped much of the Los Angeles art scene in the early 1960s. It’s short but it conveys some of the sense of LA’s wild, nervy, uncontrolled art attitude that is still in force today. I love the zoom in on Andy Warhol who’s standing in front of one of his works and he just says, ‘Oh.’ LA still has that sense of offering the individual artist the clear opportunity to walk into a gallery, shake hands, say ‘How’s it going?’ and end up with an art showing a few weeks later. It’s a city of entrepreneurs. New York is a city of deeply knowledgeable and experienced people who understand that there is a system in place that’s been there forever. That’s why people walk fast in New York. They’re all trying to stay on schedule so the system keeps running. In LA, everyone is throwing crowbars into the system and breaking it so that they can make their own. The gallery scene in downtown LA is really interesting these days. You can walk for blocks, stopping in at the galleries for a wide variety of offerings. There are a couple of galleries that have copped an arrogant New York attitude and they are the ones I stay away from. In general, you get a real feeling of the art being right there and totally accessible to you. Everything is for sale. The artists are interested in your money. It’s very simple and healthy. When I buy a piece of art in LA I feel like I’ve pulled a fast one on the art world somehow. I feel complicit in something with underground tones.