Archive for July 2010 – Page 2

On-camera interview with Artist Sinan Revell, Cella Gallery

Sinan Revell's photos at Cella Gallery

disambiguations – a unique series of self portraits is a collection of stunning and complex conceptual photographs created by Sinan Revell currently on display at Cella Gallery, in NoHo  (only until Sat July 24th).

Full of wit, black humor and social comment, this is an enthralling exhibition of three interconnected bodies of work by this multi-talented artist in her most complete show to date.
Also on view are photographic works from Revell”™s Color/Blind Test series, as well as a display of her distinctive Homeland Security Blankets.

Read a review of the exhibition here. In the meantime, please enjoy our interview:

Cella Gallery

5229 Lankershim Blvd.,

North Hollywood, CA 91601

(213) 291-7908

info@cellagallery.com

HOURS:

Tuesday – Thursday: 12-5pm

Friday – Saturday: 12-8pm

Closed Sunday & Monday

Report by Pauline Adamek

Our diverse stories captured by cameras — Photojournale Connections Across a Human Planet

Photojournale -

Drawing from a stunning collection of photos from some of the world’s finest documentarians, visionaries and front-line photojournalists, some selected images from the Photojournale website are now available in book form, as Photojournale Connections Across a Human Planet.

Featuring photo journal stories and photo documentary from every corner of the world, this remarkable and engrossing book is a companion to the impressive online photo collection.

Photojournale Connections Across a Human Planet is a beautifully unpretentious little coffee-table book that stylishly showcases the contributors and stars of the website by presenting a glimpse of their best work.

From the war-torn regions of Angola (Stephane Lehr), Uganda (Bea Ahbeck), Kenya (Hes Mundt) and Iraq (Walter Gaya); to the scorched and fire-ravaged terrain of California (John Horniblow); to the checkpoints on Palestine’s border (Yaniv Nadav); to the wings, dressing rooms and jails of Thailand, Nicaragua, Spain and Sydney; to the monasteries of India, Singapore and Cambodia and the religious ceremonies of Russia, Turkey, Mexico and Bangladesh; to the exotic urban and simple rural life of Burma and Thailand (John Hulme) – the photos in this elegant collection evoke an astoundingly vast range of emotional responses.

Photojournale - suspected gangland members await trail, Bangkok © Jonathan Taylor

This book is like a fine artisanal sake, the result of a laborious process of distilling the thousands of photographs exhibited on the website. The project’s instigator, and one of the book’s editors and publishers, John Horniblow put together an editorial team with each person representing the Australian, North American, European and Asian perspective. Incredibly, these contributing photographers edited the book virtually, as most of them live on different continents to each other. In fact, few of these artistes behind the lens have even met in person.

While the mission of the website concentrates on developing and digitally publishing – and also promoting – the work of a world-wide community of documentary photographers and photojournalists, the main intention with the publication of these selected works in book form was to create something tangible that complements and contributes value to the virtual product.

Explains Horniblow,Photojournale is a passion that I’ve devoted a lot of effort to for the past five to six years. It’s really all about bringing together photo-documentary stories from all around the world and celebrating the craft of storytelling. The book itself tells a story, as well.

“The collection of photos selected in Photojournale Connections Across a Human Planet are our human stories, our commonalities and our truths.  The selection is not only drawn for their beauty, or their technical excellence, but out of the essence they capture, the universal story they tell, in a captured or latent moment of time, somewhere across our globe. These photos are compassionate, energetic, sometimes fun and celebratory, at other times confronting.”

Adds contributor and co-editor Michael Fox, “From the first time I saw content on the Photojournale website, I was intrigued by the extreme differences, and surprising similarities, shown in photographs from all over the world.  With high quality images being submitted from photographers on five continents, it was fascinating to observe how, in one or more ways, we are all connected – belief systems, personal goals, living conditions, employment challenges, interests, family environments, and outlook, on local and international affairs.  I was delighted to be invited to help edit this book which, I feel, is a first step in effectively representing humanity as it exists without religious, political, or geographic boundaries.”

HIGHLIGHTS FROM THE BOOK:
Photojournale - street child in Angola  © Stephane Lehr

The diverse stories presented by Stephane Lehr focus on the daily struggles of the forgotten children on the streets of Angola’s war-destroyed capital Lobito (above).

Morgan Hagar’s photo of the hand of a child making a peace sign while clutching a rock, in the shadow of a war zone’s guard tower is especially poignant and chilling.

One of the book’s editors and contributing photographers, Lisa Hogben is a Sydney, Australian-based photographer. Hogben’s photo series chronicles the tensions and dramas of the Sydney City Eisteddfod competition. Featuring seven and eight year old ballerinas, we are reminded of the innocence and beauty of their age. With Little Ballerinas (seen at top), Hogben’s lens captures a tense moment as a young girl’s friend makes a blunder on stage.

SPOTLIGHT ON THE WEBSITE:

Photojournale - ladyboy applying makeup © John Hulme

Recently uploaded to the Photojournale website is Backstage with the Ladyboys of Thailand, a series by UK photographer John Hulme.

This remarkable collection of black and white images offers us a seldom-seen glimpse into the backstage dressing rooms of a unique set of performers as they apply makeup, elaborate costumes or just chill out.

Thailand’s ladyboys, or ‘katoey’ as they are known locally, are male-to-female transgender persons or effeminate gay males in Thailand. They are amongst the most beautiful and convincing transvestites in the world. An estimated 200,000 of this ‘third sex’ are accepted in this Buddhist society, which places a high value on tolerance, compassion and the belief in past lives.

 

BOOK PRESS RELEASE:

The narrative of Photojournale Connections Across a Human Planet follows the concept of cradle to grave; Childhood, education/school, adolescence, work, home, ritual, religion, celebration, sport, art, conflict, aging, sickness, death, mourning and remembrance. It’s an emotional and human journey of images drawn from the documentary stories, captured moments or situations from every continent.

Photojournale Connections Across a Human Planet illustrates the common truths that connect the human experience and is represented by photographers from around the world. The book is drawn as an edited anthology of photo documentary and photojournalism stories that are published on Photojournale.com.

Photojournale Connections Across a Human Planet is printed on premium paper and retails for $73.96 (hardcover) and $50.96 (softcover). Click links to purchase.

For a preview the book, click here or here.

 

Review by Pauline Adamek

BOOK INFORMATION:

Photojournale Connections Across A Human Planet
Softcover Edition
ISBN 978-2-8399-0593-0

Foreword: Ami Vitale
Design: Peter Barwick
Editors: John Horniblow, Lisa Hogben, Michael Fox, and Erica McDonald. Assisted by Santanu Chakrabati.

Cover image: Yaniv Nadav
Back cover: Igor Sherman

Photographers:
Peter A Calvin, Jiri Tondl, Michael Fox, Lisa Hogben, Erik Messori, Alfonso De Castro, Morgan Hagar, Jonathan Taylor, Jaime R Carrero, Jan Sochor, Alex Masi, Teresita Chavarria, Agnieszka Balut, Igor Sherman, Jamie Bailey, Hes Mundt, Alfredo Munoz, Walter Gaya, Rick Carter, Petr Antonov, Sam Bienstock, Ouria Tadmor, Jeroen Leonhard, Gabriela Bulisova, Santanu Chakrabarti, Tyler Freeman Smith, diLuNa, Amir Mahmoodi, Ben Milpas, John Hulme, Tashi Tobgyal, Gazi Nafis Ahmed, Jeff Chouw, Lara Wechlser, Stephen Uhraney, Yaniv Nadav, John Horniblow, Joaquin Gomez Sastre, Jeryc Garcia, Mike Hutmacher (Skippy Sanchez), Jan Bierkens, Alexander von Spreti, Daniel Kaifer, Angelo Cuissi, Anamitra Chakladar, Md.Kabirul Islam, Debasish Aich, Kiên Hoàng Lê, Alex Kotlik, Nilanjan Mitra, Gulbin Ozdamar, Gianfranco Spatola, Pedro Tzontemoc, Supian Ahmed, Saverio Serravezza, Stephane Lehr, Patricio Valenzuela Hohmann, Ertugrul Kilic and Bea Ahbeck.

The photographers in this book are recipients of – and participators in – awards, exhibitions and publications that include (but are not limited to) the following:

Geo Mundo, National Geographic, Time, Burn magazine, 100eyes, Reflex, Peace Reporter, Focus, International Herald Tribune, Vienna Reporter, Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian, Financial Times, Czech Press Photo, Fotoweek, International Colour Awards, Angkor Photo Festival, PDN photo Plus, Russian State Ethnographic Museum, Russian Cultural Centre Bratislava, Tate Britain Gallery, VPRO, BBC, Channel 4, Deadline Press Photos.

Culver City Public Theatre announces its 2010 season

CCPT -  King Midas - Photo Credit: Culver City Public Theatre Archives

Culver City Public Theatre (CCPT) presents its 12th season of free theater in Carlson Park for families and theatre fans of all ages.

Founded in 1998, CCPT (a non-profit organization) is a premier professional theatre company based in Culver City.

This year”™s exciting season opens with the 12:00pm, July 17th world premiere performance of The True Story Of Jack And The Beanstalk, written by long-standing CCPT member and current company President, Heidi Dotson. This marks the fourth consecutive year that Ms. Dotson has penned the Children”™s Popcorn Theatre show, which is the show offered every season specifically aimed at a younger audience.

Ms. Dotson will also direct the clever retelling of this beloved fairytale, which features an unlikely character as the narrator. Children and adults alike will thoroughly enjoy the Children”™s Popcorn Theatre productions.

CCPT”™s first main stage show of the season is a classic Shakespeare play with a modern twist, The Merry Wives Of Windsor (New Jersey), opening on July 17th at 2pm. Mike Peebler directs this timeless tale of small town gossip, artfully set in modern day New Jersey. Mr. Peebler joins CCPT for the first time this season, though he is no stranger to outdoor productions, having worked extensively with Will Geer”™s Theatricum Botanicum.

CCPT concludes this year”™s season with Sir Arthur Pinero”™s The Enchanted Cottage, opening August 7th at 2pm, which is directed by CCPT member Nicole Nelson.

As the title suggests, this is a charming and magical play, made famous by the 1945 film adaptation starring Robert Young and Dorothy McGuire. Though seldom performed, CCPT proudly presents this story that explores the true meaning of beauty.

CCPT - Shrew - Photo Credit: Stephen Moore

Culver City Public Theatre — Season 2010

The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk written and directed by Heidi Dotson

Dates:      Saturdays & Sundays only, July 17-August 22

Time:       12:00pm

The Merry Wives of Windsor (New Jersey) written by William Shakespeare and directed by Mike Peebler

Dates:      Saturdays & Sundays only, July 17-August 1

Time:       2:00pm

The Enchanted Cottage written by Sir Arthur Pinero and directed by Nicole Nelson

Dates:      Saturdays & Sundays only, August 7-August 22

Time:       2:00pm

WHERE:

Dr. Paul Carlson Memorial Park

cnr  Motor and Braddock

10420 Park Ave, Culver City, CA 90232

Shows are FREE (donations accepted) and open to the Public

[ photos displayed are from previous CCPT productions]

Report by Pauline Adamek

FULL LIST of performance dates & times:

“¢   Saturday 7/17 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Saturday 7/17 at 2:00pm The Merry Wives of Windsor (New Jersey)

“¢   Sunday 7/18 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Sunday 7/18 at 2:00pm The Merry Wives of Windsor (New Jersey)

“¢   Saturday 7/24 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Saturday 7/24 at 2:00pm The Merry Wives of Windsor (New Jersey)

“¢   Sunday 7/25 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Sunday 7/25 at 2:00pm The Merry Wives of Windsor (New Jersey)

“¢   Saturday 7/31 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Saturday 7/31 at 2:00pm The Merry Wives of Windsor (New Jersey)

“¢   Sunday 8/1 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Sunday 8/1 at 2:00pm The Merry Wives of Windsor (New Jersey)

“¢   Saturday 8/7 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Saturday 8/7 at 2:00pm The Enchanted Cottage

“¢   Sunday 8/8 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Sunday 8/8 at 2:00pm The Enchanted Cottage

“¢   Saturday 8/14 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Saturday 8/14 at 2:00pm The Enchanted Cottage

“¢   Sunday 8/15 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Sunday 8/15 at 2:00pm The Enchanted Cottage

“¢   Saturday 8/21 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Saturday 8/21 at 2:00pm The Enchanted Cottage

“¢   Sunday 8/22 at 12:00pm The True Story of Jack and the Beanstalk

“¢   Sunday 8/22 at 2:00pm The Enchanted Cottage

MAGIC AND ILLUSION at THEATRE WEST – “CARNEY”™S WONDERS”

Carney poster
This weekend ONLY John Carney, Hollywood Magic Castle”™s most honored magician, will present a thrilling and astonishing show that”™s suitable for all ages; Carney”™s Wonders, at Theatre West on Cahuenga.

Carney”™s Wonders blends mind-blowing sleight of hand with intelligence, style and wit to conjure up a unique evening of pure entertainment. As Carney”™s approach is smart, engaging and often hilarious, it promises to delight and surpass your typical “magic” show expectations.

Careny with cards

Carney”™s off-beat mysteries include: producing fruit and refreshing beverages from a portable black hole; plucking hundreds of dollars from thin air; playing cards that float through the air, shrink to microscopic size and then magically dance around his body.

All these astounding feats are accomplished using nothing but Carney”™s wit, skill and charm.

Hollywood’s Magic Castle has bestowed upon Carney more awards than any other magician in their history, and he remains the only performer to be honored in every category.

John Carney has performed in casinos in Atlantic City, Lake Tahoe and Las Vegas, and has made appearances on The Jerry Seinfeld HBO Special as well as feature appearances on Spin City and Two and a Half Men. He has served as spokesman for MasterCard, performing magic for their national television commercials.

Carney”™s Wonders – a show of extraordinary magic and illusion.

WHERE: Theatre West, 3333 Cahuenga Blvd. West, in Los Angeles, CA 90068.

This is close to Universal City, North Hollywood and Studio City.

FREE parking in a lot across the street.

WHEN:

Sat. July 17, 2010 at 8 p.m.

Sun. July 18 at 2 p.m.

ADMISSION: All seats $15.

RESERVATIONS: (323) 851-7977

ONLINE TICKETING here.

Report by Pauline Adamek

Stunning conceptual photography – “disambiguations” by Sinan Revell at Cella Gallery

Revell 1

***

Currently on display at Cella Gallery, in NoHo (until the weekend of July 24th), is an enthralling exhibition of three interconnected bodies of work by multi-talented artist, Sinan Revell, in her most complete show to date.

disambiguations – a unique series of self portraits is a collection of stunning and complex conceptual photographs, full of wit, black humor and social comment. Also on view are photographic works from Revell”™s Color/Blind Test series, as well as a display of her distinctive Homeland Security Blankets.

BIOGRAPHY:

Chinese-born (in Chungshan, Guangdong Province) and Australian-raised, Sinan Revell is a brilliant and multi-disciplined artist whose works encompass fine, conceptual and performance art.

Revell graduated with a degree in Psychology from Sydney University, Australia, and later studied art at the Julian Ashton Art School in Sydney. Her love of the performing arts led her to study drama with renowned Aboriginal teacher, Bryan Syron, and to several television and film roles.

Additonally, Revell spent several years as a performing and recording artist and band member with the avant-garde industrial rock group, SPK, touring Europe, the UK and the USA.

After moving to Los Angeles in 1991, Revell returned to art making and also furthered her studies with Renee Amitai in California.  She began working in various media such as oil and acrylic paintings, photography and performance art.

Revell’s work has been exhibited in London, Australia, France as well as many galleries in Los Angeles. She currently lives and works in Los Angeles.

During her over twenty-year career as a painter, she has explored the diverse media of oils, ink and watercolors, even creating jewelry and ceramic works, such as her strange ceramic shoes that draw from her Chinese heritage. Revell explains, “The clay shoes are symbolic of the bound foot silk shoes that were unwearable except for the maiming of the wearer. The first Cinderella was Chinese.”

Other works include the spectacular mixed media Butterfly paintings that were created with seeds, spices and text, as well as real butterflies and moths sourced from China.

CURRENT EXHIBITION:

PART ONE – the disambiguations photographic series

Revell has now turned her focus to the medium of photography for her confronting, amusing and thought-provoking conceptual series of “self portraits.”

For the disambiguations photographic series, also known as DoppelgANGER, Revell worked with photographers in Sydney, New York and – for the most part – Los Angeles to create these staged images in which she is every person present in each photo.

Examining both the social and political media landscape, this photographic series cleverly blurs the boundaries of the genre of self-portraiture. Revell clarifies her intent with the statement, “I put myself into all these pictures to show how we are connected.”

Revell - reproduction of Allens' "Execution of a Viet Cong Guerrilla 1968"

LA-based photographer Brad Cooper was her main collaborator in staging, shooting, re-shooting and photoshopping the intricately composed stills. Several of the subjects are Revell”™s reproductions of infamous scenes, many of which are burned into our memories. Images such as the videotaped Rodney King beating in 1991, with Revell posing as Sgt. Stacey Koon and his colleagues as well as the victim; the haunting image of the 1968 execution of a suspected Viet Cong man just as he is about to get his brains blown out during the Vietnam War; and the torture and prisoner abuse committed at Abu Ghraib prison.

Revell - LA Shooting

Other photographs present invented scenes, such as a glossy magazine-style portrait (topmost image) of the trappings of luxury in which a privileged woman lazes on the grassy expanse of her Malibu-manse while her hard-working gardener looks on in envy.

LA Shooting (seen above) refers to the shooting of African-American teenager Latasha Harlins by a female Korean grocery store owner, a contributing factor to the rioting in Los Angeles in 1992.

We see Revell”™s mischievous, dark humor come to the fore, especially with set-ups that depict a gory school shoot-out, a well-groomed woman in the throes of an excruciating bikini wax and a sexy schoolgirl tantalizing a businessman. Employing this photo-composite technique permits this insightful artist to lay bare the connection we have to parts of ourselves and our world, especially those connections that we often prefer to deny or ignore.

According to the artist, “These photographs are a response to the bombardment of media images on our lives”¦ I admire the work of many artists including Mona Hatoum, Shirin Neshat, Louise Bourgeois and the many nameless artisans and folk artists from around the world.”

Revell”™s experience and background in performance, both as a performance artist and as the lead singer of the cult Industrial band SPK, contributes to her candid comment on the diverse social and political issues that affect us all. More importantly, her capability to take on these roles goes beyond mere make up, wigs and costuming, as evidenced by her emotive facial expressions and posing when caught in these frozen frames.

PART TWO – the Color/Blind Test series

Upstairs in Cella Gallery are several works from the Color/Blind Test series. These photographs depict the “invisible” people in societies, yet they are partially obscured by a vinyl dot screen that mimics the classic colorblind test given by medical practitioners.

Revell - Colorblind test

These abstractly rendered photographs represent people who have been marginalized, disenfranchised or dehumanized. Objectified and rendered invisible within our fast-paced society, these are people we choose not to see, those on the edge of society, such as a starving woman in Darfur, an elderly, wheelchair-bound woman, a prison inmate, and a woman clad in an oppressive burkha.  In this way, Revell compels us to snap out of  our usual complacent oblivion and observe this hidden, forgotten population.

Explains Revell, “These people, ignored by society, no longer “count”. They are not rich, famous, powerful or celebrities. We have control over who we wish to acknowledge or not, but almost involuntarily, as a symptom of our self-gratifying desires, we become COLOR/BLIND.“

PART THREE – the Homeland Security Blankets

Alongside several of the photographs downstairs is the third component of this exhibition, a handful of Revell”™s Homeland Security Blankets. Several of the most startling images, including the Abu Ghraib torture scene and an illegal immigrant being held at gunpoint by a “˜minute man”™ border patrol agent, have been woven into large cozy blankets and hung so that they can be handled by gallery visitors.

Again demonstrating her wit and playfulness with language, Revell creates immediate tension between her subject and the way it is presented. Normally, the function of a blanket is to bring warmth and protection from the elements, and blankets are imbued with connotations of snuggling and comfort.

Artist”™s statement:

“By contrast, the Homeland Security Blankets are designed to bring discomfort, to prevent one from falling into a relaxed, smug somnabulistic state. These blankets bring to mind the woolen blankets handed out by the first American settlers to the native Americans. Supposedly to protect, they ended up being carriers of deadly disease and thus were instrumental in the genocide of a people.

“We cannot afford to wrap ourselves in the luxury of political subterfuge. We need to look at the ugly truths that are so often glossed over. These blankets do not give the cuddly, “feel good” images of puppy dogs or one’s “favorite things.”

“Like the tapestries of old, which recorded historical events, the Homeland Security Blankets record images of things we’d rather forget or ignore.”

This challenging and witty three-part exhibition by Sinan Revell runs until Saturday July 24th, 2010.

Cella Gallery

5229 Lankershim Blvd.,

North Hollywood, CA 91601

(213) 291-7908

info@cellagallery.com

HOURS:

Tuesday – Thursday: 12-5pm

Friday – Saturday:  12-8pm

Closed Sunday & Monday

Report by Pauline Adamek