Posts Tagged ‘event’

Malice In Wonderland

Friday, July 9th, 2010

I had the pleasure of curating a show for UrbanLightStudios at the Greenwood Collective July 9th. For the show I was able to amass an extremely talented group of Seattle’s best street artists who are simply ‘killing it’ in the Pacific NW. Myself along with 14 other local artists are bringing the surreal this coming weekend.

Like a requiem of forgotten worlds, characters, and legends comes a collection of Seattle’s local street artists who bend the lightwaves of fixed reality. A mash up of styles and media that coalesce abrasive textures, demented beings, and unadulterated underground scenarios comes full throttled in a tricked out menage . This assortment of artists include some of the NW Pacific’s most prolific muralists, illustrators, cartoonists, tattooists, inkers, painters, and culture creatives who truly push through the looking glass and bring back pieces of layered dreams.

Where there is tentacles, beaks, bikers, and skulls there is an alien wonder and strange velvety familiarity. Regurgitating the links to childhood memories and make believe is merely the catalyst for propagating and producing worlds of mystery, urban mutations, and righteous nougat of the soul. Reaching into the inner depths of contemporary visual science while armed with paint cans, brushes, and warped genius this whimsical yet hard edged cartel has amassed the chimera of sub-pop underground culture. If you follow the white rabbit he will lead you right into the peculiar embrace of this eclectic exhibit.

Malice In Wonderland

+ Greenwood Collective

Artists Reception /Art Walk

July 9th 6-10pm

8537 Greenwood Ave Suite 1

Seattle,WA 98103

Artifakt – A Valentine’s Art & Music Themed Event

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

I had a great experience being an artist for February’s 2010 Artifakt – A Valentine/Anti-Valentine themed event that took place at LoFi Seattle the weekend of Valentine’s Day. This salon style event was a mega-bash of super sweet works in a variety of media that spanned the theme of love and well love/hate. Myself along with other local greats Chani Murat, Dear Earthling, iamintricate, Grym, BurnOne, Dave Bloomfield, Keger, Rob Ripley, and Crystal Barbre hung our “hearts” masterpieces. The evening kicked out a huge crowd who also showed up for musical mayhem from Lost Boys vs. HitGirl! (Sean Majors & Marty Mar vs. Miss Funk & Mixtress) http://www.hitgirl.net/, Bryan J. Furious vs. Venus, and Goner vs. B.Fly.

Artifakt - Valentine's themed art and music event.

The piece I chose to do for the show was an amalgamation of media. As I love to get tight with a lot of my illustrative style works the process is a daunting one that involves laying down a full rendering in graphite, inking with some sienna india inks, oil paint washes, and then redefining through the use of sharp color pencils to inflict contrast. The result is an eye-pleasing, three dimensional look that is nothing short of extremely unique.

Fragment Heart

This particular piece titled Fragment Heart was my take on the effect of broken hearts and how one copes with the trials and tribulations of love. It involves a sexy, medusa-like, animaesque-shiva female who holds the radiating pillowy heart which is the icon of love. She grips it close to her chest with snakes writhing from her hair and a look of dispair. Precariously gripped in her hand is a needle which is on the hinge of poking the “Valentine” to blow up the love that once was. It is also a sort of play on voo-doo and what a jilted lover might choose to do when love has gone wrong. She sits on a sinewy blanket of folds that creatively spell L-O-V-E. She is no longer taking what love has to offer…time to move on…time to put love in it’s place…time for revenge!

Here is a breakdown of the creative process:

Graphite Layer

Beginning with a sketch I build upon the image rendering it with graphite pencils to create contrast and depth.

Ink Layer

After fully rendering the piece in graphite (which looks black and white) a thin layer of clear acrylic spray is applied. Once dry, a mid-tone layer of ink is applied to accentuate details in the drawing.

Oil Rub Layer

After ink dries, another thin layer of clear acrylic spray is applied. Next, oil paint is rubbed into the surface of the image. Highlights are pulled out of this layer by means of eraser to create form through contrast and layered depth.

Color Pencil Layer

The tone is now set into the piece with the hue of the first layer of oils. After another layer of clear spray another hue of oils is added. In this case the piece turns from a ochre/sienna hue to a warmer red/rose. Erasing is repeated to create more depth between tones throughout the piece.

The last layers are the rose oil paint rub and black color pencil to reinforce clarity, depth, and contrast making the end product vibrant and 3 dimensional. The full piece before adding the red/rose tint and color pencil pictured on the left. Final pictured on the right above.

Agents of Dawn Post Opening

Monday, September 14th, 2009

It was extremely fun putting together this show for Urban Light Studio. Kevin Law and his wife Julie were an amazing help and the space was the perfect compliment for the semi-grittiness that is inherent in my oil work. The gallery was filled through the night with a great mix of art enthusiasts and urban night-lifers who came out to partake in the social-art environment. The other spaces in the Greenwood Collective were also filled with an eclectic mix of works from various local Seattle artists. It was a “Bad-ass” event to say the least.

Agents of DawnOriginal Artist’s Statement:

AGENTS OF DAWN

This particular series deals with alternate pasts, unforeseen futures, depravity of humanity,
mechanical objects, foreign landscapes, and the sequestration of progressive human intentions.
We live in a world bound by connectivity which is almost always fortified through invention and
technology. Evolution and our process of sensing our surroundings is merely incubated in all
catalysts of technical development. Although our mind-shape is expanding through vibrations of
cause and effect, science, as well as the cosmic, macro and micro we are experiencing our
surroundings numbified by our constant installment of so called technological advancements.
Through time and space we transcend in our intuitive and delicate nature via the hub of
conciousness that is today. Planets, virtual epochs, archaic meditations, and dubious psuedomutations
all align to create tones of irreal but nonetheless naturalistic strands of reality. Our
pragmatic interventions on unrefined countenance brings our blindsighted shortcomings straight
into parallel with the toxic and perforated multi-verse that is expanding all around us at every
moment. Here today, gone tomorrow, but imprinted on the veiny pulp of existence.
There is an end to every beginning. Domiciles of lost tribes protrude through the terrain like
insentient megaliths constructed by a wavering society of unholy and illegitimate union. The sky
turns tepid and cracks to reveal the displacement of our sins. Ageless is the world we live in.
Passive is the response of immortality. Time to let the stained hovels of our currency become
one with post-apocalyptic aeons and return to the sand and dust from which our mineralized
bodies came. Fashion the tourniquet of falsehood and let our prophets vapor.
Octopoid locust sapping life of a quasi-autonomous golem. The android of industrial youth now
a cold, rusting fixture of placid galactic ambiance. We came to seek. They came to assist. The
long hard journey is behind us. The past is repeated. Rescuing our master was no easy task.
Beyond all hope is adrift. The orb like chitonous shell contains the fragments of a fossil that can
only have come from the ethereal borders of time. All is dry and grows dark in a sea of
cantankarous bile. The ship has landed and no one is on it. The odyssey ends.
A product of retro-contemporary passage through the enigmatic, capacious, piousness of man…
N. Beery

Photos of the arrangement and space prior to the opening:

Death Retires / Dredge / Black & Blue / Apocalyptician

Death Retires / Dredge / Black & Blue / Apocalyptician

Agents of Dawn Oil PaintingsTapping into the nether worlds and parallel dimensions through the culmination of time, ageless
forms, and beguiled minstrals this show of work percolates the tingling sixth sense . Vividly
surreal landscapes, twisted characters, and dripping textures coalesce to create a wild
integration of soul and strange beauty which invites all viewers to consume and envelope a
host of visual suggestions that break through the ego-shell of humanity.
This particular series deals with alternate pasts, unforeseen futures, depravity of humanity,
mechanical objects, foreign landscapes, and the sequestration of progressive human intentions.

Autonomous Ordinance / Maelstrom Harts / Cosmic Orb

Autonomous Ordinance / Maelstrom Harts / Cosmic Orb

Passion.Heart.Deliverance (Triptych) / Smokin Soul / Tentacular Slumber

Passion.Heart.Deliverance (Triptych) / Smokin Soul / Tentacular Slumber

The rawness of this historic building was the perfect backdrop for the show.

The rawness of this historic building was the perfect backdrop for the show.

This show was a smattering of past and new works. The oil paintings and illustrations chosen worked beautifully together. We had a great time hanging these pieces. The illustration walls focus was enhanced through the 45 degree angle at which the pieces were hung and cast a nice drop shadow from the direct overhead lights. It really made the work “pop”!

Here is my statement regarding the process involved for the illustration works:

The Illustrious Illustration

A moment to reflect on the martyrs, the blind beings, the bastards, and the omnifarious intellect…
Portraits of passion and reverence come into light particularly when the passing of a trend, a
jet-setter, a conscientious objector, or a so-called role model is eliminated from the mainstream.
Documenting the indelible qualities of such idiosyncratic individuals is necessary to properly file
and tuck away cherished memories, mysteries, and legends. Time is the essential factor on all
sides of any one life. Whether the spark burns fast and hot or whether the flame resides eternal
is only a matter of the muted dust settling after the ash has blown over.
The illustrations you see before you are originals from the holy-banded library of Nick Beery. To
better serve the question of “how was that achieved?” here is a breakdown of the process and
media which is so required of the artist to produce an aged aesthetic and visual mystique :
It all begins with the board. A cold press illustration board is the “blank canvas” which becomes
the richly colorful image before you. Once a board is selected and the subject matter is identified
Nick moves on to picking up the cornerstone of all artist’s repertoir, a pencil.
Graphite takes it’s place and an under-drawing is rendered to the board. After a few coats of a
spray fixative to hold down the graphite a base color is selected. A typical base hue selection
Nick uses is a natural burnt sienna tone. A layer of oil paint with the said pigment is rubbed into
the precious graphite drawing and board leaving an even mid-tone coating which resides just
on top of the original rendering.
Upon rubbing in and wiping excess oil from the surface the next step is to define the highlights
that give form to an otherwise two-dimensional sketch. A strategic blending and lifting of the oils
then ensues with the use of a kneaded eraser. The face now begins to show volume and life.
After pulling out all the highlights and allowing the paint to dry the final measure is to redefine the
drawing and form by reinforcing the contrast and adding color. Shadows are burned with dark,
organic hues while crisp highlights are redeemed and softened through the touch of a pencil.
Full color palettes reinvigorate the image giving vitality to anatomy and focusing in on intricate
details. Finishing touches may include the use of acrylics , gouche, or watercolors to add smoky
effects or smooth finish. The end result is a grainy texture that gives a vintage look to the work.

Dolomite / Triclops / Tears I / Tears II / Busta / Roach Beauty

Dolomite / Triclops / Tears I / Tears II / Busta / Roach Beauty

Dolomite / Triclops

Dolomite / Triclops

Tears I / Tears II

Tears I / Tears II

Busta / Roach Beauty

Busta / Roach Beauty

The grand view will suck you in!

The grand view will suck you in!

Kevin Law (studio owner) and Nick Beery (BeeryMethod)

Kevin Law (studio owner) and Nick Beery (BeeryMethod)