Travis Head Sent This


Travis Head sent me some jpegs of a drawing he, David Dunlap, and Dan Attoe have all collaborated on. I really like this drawing. It is probably one of my all-time favorites. I like the composition, and I like the subject. The drawing is about all the cars all three of the artists have ever owned.

Besides being by three of my favorite artists, this drawing offers so much, and the subject matter of cars they have owned reminds of very good exposition in creative writing. The viewer is allowed to piece together the puzzle, and have their own feelings. I can’t say enough about this drawing.

Culturcide

This is Culturcide, a Houston based punk band from the 1980s. This song is an attack on the Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney song Ebony and Ivory. Culturcide’s thing was deconstructing popular songs by singing the opposite of the original lyrics, well not exactly the opposite, but something that would undermine the whole pretense of the original song. Mark Flood was in this band, and he shows his paintings now at Peres Projects. He sent me a book of his writing maybe a year ago:


Clerk Fluid is a cool treasure I have stuffed into my bookshelf, next to a book about Titian, Rocks and Minerals, The Shakers, and the techno-apocalypse The Singularity. It has some really funny critiques of the Houston art establishment, and gets into some really weird and fragmented writing including half finished essays and single sentences. Peres Projects published this and it is a rare and strange type of book. Dan Attoe told Mark about me, and that’s how I got the book.

Bill’s Year in Review 2008 – 09

Dan Attoe @ Peres Projects, Sept 12th Opening



Here is Dan’s statement:

EVERYTHING STARTS AS SOMETHING YOU DON’T UNDERSTAND

All my paintings and neon come from a process of creating a new image every day. For seven years I did a painting every weekday, now I do daily drawings. This is partially out of respect for all of the people I know who work regular jobs, because I don’t consider myself different from them. It’s also partially out of an enjoyment of the freedom I have in my practice and a desire to push myself and see what I can come up with next. Finally, it’s because I have an interest in maintaining a record of my intellectual development, for myself, and for anthropological purposes.

As part of my commitment to all of these things, it’s my opinion that honesty plays an important role in choosing the images I make. What I take to be “honest” is a matter of paying attention to things that I’m genuinely interested in. To me this means listening to my biological and intellectual needs without worrying about looking socially unacceptable, smart, out of touch or pandering to my conscience. From any given series of ideas to draw or paint, I’ll choose those that have a certain “electricity” to them, that hold my attention and get me excited or engaged.

In order to maintain vitality my process has to remain flexible. I can’t hold myself to any one line of thought, a style, or subject matter. At the same time, I’m a slow learner, and there are certain things that seem to be limitless in their value to me, such as: wilderness landscapes, sex and violence. These particular subjects are due to things I imprinted on in my rural childhood, things I have attraction to as a male human and things related to social and cultural anxieties.

At this point in the evolution of this daily process (I’m about at the twelve year mark) most of the images that hold my attention come from a place that is best described as “peripheral”. These are things that my deliberate mind is a little too dumb to run into on its linear path, but it can sometimes help out. Often, it’s hard to recreate these images because it’s like they’re in the corner of my eye, and if I look directly at them, they change shape. Sometimes, I watch them roll through my head right before I go to sleep.

Dan at the Tar Pit Museum in LA

Almost all of my images are entirely invented. I only use photographs or other source materials as reference (in most cases), the way a writer would use a dictionary. It’s my belief that invented images contain more nuanced information related to development. In addition, there’s a pure rush of excitement that comes from making an image that didn’t exist in the world before.

Over time, these peripheral images have gotten more complicated. Things like atmosphere, depth, dimension and details in character of people and places have gotten more specific and increased in their range of complexity (some of them are still pretty simple). The result is that I’ve broadened the spectrum of art that I look at to inform my painting. My painting process owes much to early American artists like Thomas Moran, Frederic Edwin Church and Albert Bierstadt, as well as other “traditional” painters like Frederic Remington, Caspar David Friedrich, Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth. I feel a huge respect for their facility with paint, and I respond to their ability to create an environment and convey character.

Of course, the meat of my work is actually very little about standing on these men’s shoulders, or even about relating to the art world at all. Far more important to maintaining vitality and “usefulness” to myself, and anyone else who may be interested in the development of someone from this time and place is the part of my process that I call “Field Research”. By this I mean just going out and participating in the world the way a guy my age, of my upbringing, who lives where I do, would. This part of my job is pretty hard to do wrong. I just get to do the things that I want to do: hiking, surfing, taking road trips, spending time with friends, etc. The things that set my work apart from someone such as Thomas Moran, other than my interests (some might say quality), are in many cases simply products of my time: I can travel places in shorter time than he could, I have access to technology that allows me to see the world in different ways, maintain dialogs with many people easily and offer insights into things that might never have occurred to me otherwise, I also have an awareness of the changing of the world socially and environmentally – all of this contributes to the sensibility of my work. I understand that the information in my work will be received in varying degrees by different viewers, but I hope that some usefulness can be obtained by anyone.

“I’m done worryin’ about shit.” will be on view at Peres Projects (2766 S. La Cienega Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90034) through October 31, 2009. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, from 11:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M and by appointment.

For further information or reproductions please contact Javier Peres or Richard Lidinsky at tel. + 1 310 559 6100 or via email at Javier@peresprojects.com or Richard@peresprojects.com.


Dan with chainsaw on Fairfax Ave, at Paintallica’s Country Club Proj Performance

(Photo from Bruce Labruce’s LA Zombie wrap party) Unknown, Deadlee, Francois Sagat, Bruce LaBruce, Dan Attoe, Javier Peres

Videos. Paintallica

Jeff D put together 2 new videos in the last two days. You can see them on Paintallica.com or here is one of them (There is offensive stuff):

Jeff is a surprisingly good video editor. I think he uses a free program that comes on Apple computers called iVideo or something like that. I’m a PC user. Both of the videos have an emotional arch, and Jeff does his best to provide a context for what is happening in complete chaos – using cut aways to let the viewer in on jokes, etc…

The August 2009 Los Angeles Paintallica started in Portland Oregon about a week and a half before the show. Mostly everyone (including Jeremy Tinder, photo, – who didn’t come down to LA because of his job) went to Portland first, that is sort of our headquarters because Dan Attoe lives there. Paintallica drove a 300lb log, plus a lot of tools, including the infamous street chainsaw and ratty cardboard boxes packed with markers and spray paint, down in pickup trucks painted by Paintallica with skulls and boners, and pictures of the woods with spooky clouds.

I was at my sister’s wedding when they were in Portland, so I met them in LA. Which worked out, because I had a rental car that was empty and clean and good for going places like the airport. I went from tuxedo wearing Episcopalian to a spray painted Dionysian Pagan in one flight.

The Country Club Projects people could not have been nicer to us. The space was pristine, and very white wall gallery looking, so we were all a little nervous that when we starting flinging paint and using power tools while drinking that they would stop us, but they were down with the program. Christian Strike was there, and his bull dog was chasing a soccer ball and leaving paint footprints all over the gallery.

While we were there, in L.A., Bruce La Bruce (Bruce’s twitter, Peres Projects twitter) was shooting a gay zombie (or maybe alien), bloodbath skin flick at Peres Projects. He finished shooting, and they had a party afterward. Paintallica was invited. Javier Peres, click here for a shitty cell phone pic I took, showed up to the bar wearing a tshirt that had the Metallica emblem with the screaming skull from Iron Maiden underneath. Javier is charismatic, he has a knack for making everyone feel comfortable and shocking them at the same time, so he is fun. The only break in the conversation where I wasn’t laughing, was when Dash Snow came up, and Javier was trying not to cry.

After the party I packed up my clothes from my motel room (Rodeway Inn) had to catch a red eye flight back to New York. I got home and had some severe Paintallica withdrawl, but I got my ass in the studio and made some new paintings, that helped.

Paintallica in Los Angeles

Paintallica is going to tear it up for one night in LA.

Travis Head and Dan Attoe Drawing

The Woods have been Logged, and are now on Fire


Dan Attoe is so fucking good. Jesus. Spend some time with this painting, Mr. Attoe’s first of 2009. It’s oil and 3×2 feet.

The Woods have been Logged, and are now on Fire


Dan Attoe is so fucking good. Jesus. Spend some time with this painting, Mr. Attoe’s first of 2009. It’s oil and 3×2 feet.

Mark Flood, Clerk Fluid



This came in the mail unexpectedly. Signed by the artist, Mark Flood, who has a group show based around his work up at Peres Project’s L.A. Chinatown gallery right now, Sack of Bones , and a solo show at Peres Project’s new space in Culver City, Entertainment Weakly. Dan Attoe told me about Mark Flood and Clerk Fluid, and that I would like his work, last week on the phone. Interestingly I think M Flood goes by a few names, because I have heard him called Mike Flood, and he signed the book Clark Flood.

update: I look a little dumb for saying that Clark Flood was an alias, because it is Mark Flood’s brother (even though it is weird that it rhymns and sounds like the title to the book Clark Flood/Clerk Fluid). Here is what the Peres Projects site says about the book:

Clerk Fluid
CLARK FLOODClerk Fluid, written by Clark Flood (Mark Flood’s brother), consists of essays originally published online on Glasstire.com in his blog Objects in the Mirror, plus related photographs, images of works by Mark Flood, and an ungainly mass of unpublished, unfinished and unedited drafts dumped straight out of Clark’s hard drive.Paperback, 575 pages6 x 9 inches (15.2 x 22.9 cm)35 Euro, $50 USD

This was a show card inside the book, note that the bloodied hand in the picture belongs to neither of the two people pictured.

this is Mark Flood

The package also contained a quarterly magazine, click here, that has a really very good interview with M Flood (and an article about swingers which contains a lot of pictures of very normal looking people having sex). He gets into his thoughts behind his practice, and said some things I identified with too (especially about sticking out and trying to maintain a normal apperance, and reading Dave Hickey essays), who knows if you will identify with him, see if you can get a copy. I have to dig into Clerk Fluid now, and I think this is going to be interesting. Getting this in the mail was an awesome Christmas surprise.

I don’t know if Dan was behind it, but I am guessing he was, so I sent him a swiss army knife. I don’t see any other way for M Flood to find out who I was. Dan is a great friend. Dan’s most recent painting was posted last week on Ink Stained Hands, click here.

Retro-Spektro – 1998 – 84×48
acrylic and laserprint on canvas