Carlson Hatton in ART LTD Magazine

EXERPT FROM ART LTD MAGAZINE MAY 2014 CARLSON HATTONCarlson Hatton by Carol Cheh May 2014 Flaws In A Victorian Veil 2014 Acrylic and graphite on paper on panel, edged with aluminum 30 1⁄4" x 44" Photo: courtesy of the artist     [divider] It’s easy to get lost in Carlson Hatton’s work. Utilizing a strong backbone of drawing along with elements of painting and printmaking, these complex works on paper blend a multitude of abstract patterns with figurative elements, creating intriguing juxtapositions that seem at once vaguely familiar and utterly fantastic. In one work, a grid-patterned cat sits observing a set of shapes that resemble a mother and child; in front of them, a moaning woman lies prostrate, while behind them, a tree-like pattern disappears into a grassy background. This hypnotic imagery tightly references commonly seen motifs while eluding clear narratives, creating instead a pliable space for the imagination. A native of San Diego with fine arts degrees from Cooper Union in New York and De Ateliers in Amsterdam, Hatton has been living and working in Los Angeles for about a decade. His home, a Silver Lake fixer-upper that he and his wife, an artist and psychotherapist, renovated themselves, reflects the artist’s philosophy that living and working spaces should be seamlessly integrated. A sunny living room and kitchen are at the center of the house, with sliding doors on the side that open onto two studio spaces. Movement among all these spaces is constant and easy. “I find that I take a lot of things directly out of my mailbox that work their way into my studio,” Hatton reflects. “I’ll see something on television, or I’ll notice the way that the mail is stacked up—I find all these accidents that happen in daily life that I want to record right away.” This sense of inspiration taken from everyday life and constant experimentation with materials are palpable throughout the artist’s work, which seem to incorporate a freefall of manifold visual elements. Hatton credits this way of working to a basic collage aesthetic that has informed his work since he was in college. “For a while, I abandoned painting and drawing altogether and focused on collage,” Hatton recounts. “In grad school in the Netherlands, I was given a very large studio and I started making big installations, videos and animations. I’d collect a lot of materials, and they would all filter their way into these projects.” Hatton returned to painting and drawing with more of an editorial mindset, where he mines large amounts of material to create focused individual works. “At this point, I want it to be a collage sensibility, but it has to be resolved on a single plane. If it gets too collage-like, where there are multiple physical layers, I feel like that misses the point, where the work gets filtered through me into a single flat layer. All that information from magazines, photos, wherever—I am filtering it thru my hand, and that enables it to create its own world.” Hatton counts among his influences David Reed and Marlene Dumas, with whom he studied at Cooper Union and De Ateliers, respectively. “Reed makes paintings that are site-specific, somewhat installational. The idea that the paintings belong in a bedroom, I always find kind of fascinating. I liked Dumas’ use of watercolor—the directness of the media and the way that it offers the richness of painting while referencing things that don’t at all have that richness within them.” The dense works of Lari Pittman and Albrecht Dürer are constant sources of inspiration, with books of their work usually present in Hatton’s studio. He is also fascinated by Henry Darger. “I’m intrigued by the flatness and depth that simultaneously occur within his work, and the way he’s creating these bizarre coloring books, essentially, that kind of draw you in because you might recognize something from popular culture, but there’s not a strong enough link to stop it from becoming its own bizarre world.” Hatton’s unique methodology includes washes of watercolor mixed in with layers of masking, stenciling and silkscreening. His technique can be rigorous, and his surprising choice of the fragile medium of paper turns out to be strategic. “It’s true that paper can only take so much, and I like that it has that threshold, that certain point where things won’t work and it’ll get too rippled or too destroyed. Those limitations force me to make decisions and stick with them, rather than layering and layering until things work themselves out, which could be forever, and I find there’s something less brave about that. I like to have some vision as to where it’s headed.” ”Carlson Hatton: Ataxia” was on view at Ruth Bachofner Gallery, in Santa Monica, from March 8 — April 19, 2014. www.ruthbachofnergallery.com “Stupor,” a solo show of works by Carlson Hatton, could be seen at the Santa Monica College Art Gallery, from February 18 — March 29, 2014.

Featured Artist - LARISSA BORTEH

  [divider] [caption id="attachment_8150" align="alignleft" width="464"]Act II Oil on canvas 20" x 20" 2013 Act II, Oil on canvas 20" x 20" 2013[/caption] Larissa and I met in New York, on the job so to speak. Many lunches and morning coffees were spent together discussing each others work, what shows we'd seen recently and what had caught our eye. I've always admired her gusto. Larissa now lives in Chicago and I have had the pleasure of watching her work develop from afar. I remember her early works, dark and frenzied with murderous marks, as if she was attacking the canvas or paper with her tools. Dismembered bodies and featureless faces were drawn like comic figures, making the work an unsettling combination of horror and humor. Larissa's early color palette included a lot of red and brown, reminding me of blood, both wet and dry. Fresh wounds mixed with those of the past. Incessant scratchings on the surface, the repetition of similar marks over and over again like some inner torment was being played out on the surface. Great artists evolve, their work informs itself and in time, thoughts become more complete and the artwork more accomplished. Larissa is one such artist. Her work is forever evolving, becoming whole - she'll never rest though, I can't imagine that her work will ever be enough for her and that's what makes her great. [caption id="attachment_8153" align="alignright" width="446"]Echo, Oil on canvas 20" x 20" 2014 Echo, Oil on canvas 20" x 20" 2014[/caption] From our chats I know of Larissa's love and respect for the art that has come before us. Her understanding of modernism is evident in the sophistication of her work. She has selectively stolen a little bit from here, a little from there and made it her own. I see the references, but I also see something exciting and new. These latest paintings invite you into a fresh space, both physical and psychological. The frenzy, aggression and humor are still there, but they have become weaved amongst a sophisticated sense of space and color. I get displaced when looking at her new work. I'm thrown into a territory where I feel multiple sensations simultaneously. Anger, joy, frustration, peace with glimpses of a familiar reality. Her art mimics life, there are no definite answers, just moments of clarity and confusion, comfort and discomfort. Larissa tells stories through her work without being didactic - a condition that plagues contemporary art. Her work is charged by both process and content, a multi-dimensional drama that plays out in two dimensional space. Perhaps what I love most of all is the spatial evolution of Larissa's work - I have spent many hours just sitting in the MoMA looking, marveling really, at The Piano Lesson by Matisse. I think it is a masterpiece, formally and emotionally. It has the power to invite you into an imagined, somewhat abstract space and hold you there. It is this quality that I see in Larissa's paintings. I'm so excited to see where she goes next, because I know it will somewhere exceptional.     [caption id="attachment_8162" align="aligncenter" width="465"]The Administrator Oil on canvas 16" x 16" 2013 The Administrator, Oil on canvas 16" x 16" 2013[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8163" align="aligncenter" width="557"]All Dried Up Oil on canvas 30" x 40" 2014 All Dried Up, Oil on canvas 30" x 40" 2014[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8164" align="aligncenter" width="558"]An Offering (For Basic Necessity) Or Lack Of Oil on canvas 60" x 60" 2013 An Offering (For Basic Necessity) Or Lack Of, Oil on canvas 60" x 60" 2013[/caption]      

Intricate & Intimate - The Art of Ben Pritchard

American painting has long embraced the philosophy that bigger is better. From Jackson Pollock to contemporary artists like Mark Bradford, large scale works have been a consistent part of the modern American tradition. [caption id="attachment_8091" align="alignleft" width="301"]© JAMES SIENA, Untitled 2009  19-1/4" x 15-1/8"  Courtesy PaceWildenstein, New York © JAMES SIENA, Untitled 2009
19-1/4" x 15-1/8"
Courtesy PaceWildenstein, New York[/caption] Lately though, there has been a shift. I noticed it first in the younger artists studios and then in the work of well known contemporary artists like James Siena. Instead of making epically scaled paintings, these artists are making work that is smaller, painterly, intimate and inviting. It was through my interest in James Siena's painting that I discovered the work of Ben Pritchard, a Brooklyn based artist creating small, heavily labored drawings and paintings. Siena included Pritchard in two exhibitions that he curated, first at the Atlantic Center for the Arts in 2009 and again at DC Moore Gallery in New York City in 2010. The surfaces of Pritchard's paintings are quite heavy and evidence layers of under painting. Gone is the grand format and familiar clean canvas edge. Instead, Pritchard's paintings are human scale and sit on awkwardly shaped surfaces where the forms appear to wrestle with the uneven edges. The intense workmanship and elegant simplicity of the final image combine to make Pritchard's work both charming and compelling. Ben's drawings are also intimate labors of love. Although in his drawing there is no layering or masking of the work involved. The detail sits on the surface and the finished image is an intricate concoction of marks that conform to a set of rules established by the artist at the outset of the drawing. All this work is squeezed onto a piece of paper not much larger than your average A3 sheet. Again the forms appear to wrestle within the asymmetrical edges of the paper to create intriguing, dynamic compositions. Pritchard's work represents a beautiful shift towards intimacy. He has stepped away from the massive, bold 'look at me paintings' of the past while skillfully preserving that certain something in painting that compels the viewer to take notice - only this time, it is not from a distance. To view more of Ben's work, visit his website or his TWFineArt print portfolio. [caption id="attachment_8138" align="aligncenter" width="494"]Oscar Fate, Ben Pritchard 2009-14, Oil on canvas, 24/28" Oscar Fate, Ben Pritchard 2009-14, Oil on canvas, 24/28"[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8135" align="aligncenter" width="542"]Title Unknown, Ben Pritchard Title Unknown, Ben Pritchard[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8093" align="aligncenter" width="405"]Santa Theresa, Ben Pritchard Ink on Paper, 2011,48/65cm Santa Theresa, Ben Pritchard Ink on Paper, 2011,48/65cm[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8094" align="aligncenter" width="429"]Potatoe (Rhizome) Ben Pritchard Ink on paper, 25.5/19.5, 2012 Potatoe (Rhizome) Ben Pritchard Ink on paper, 25.5/19.5, 2012[/caption]          

Art, Sex and the Taboo

WARNING - ADULT CONTENT In high school I painted my first female nude. I was a young kid in a conservative catholic school celebrating the female form whist also exploring my own sexual desire and identity. My art teacher put that painting front and center at our end of year exhibition, I'm sure she did it to create a bit of a stir and to challenge the schools more conservative agenda. I loved that she did! Recently there has been press associated with the ‘scandalous’ work of Milo Moire and her performance art. Moire stands on elevated planks and drops paint filled eggs from her vagina to 'give birth' to her splat paintings. Whether or not the work is good is another debate, what's intriguing is that thousands of years since the first nudes in art, we as a culture still have issues with art that explores sex, sexual organs and sexual identity. Why do we find sexual imagery in art so confronting? Perhaps it's art's rawness that has the power to confront us with our own mortality - after all, we owe our existence to sexual arousal and desire. Always one for a bit of controversy, I thought I’d revisit some notoriously sexual artworks that have caused a major scandal throughout history. [divider] [caption id="attachment_8075" align="aligncenter" width="400"]The Origin of the World, Gustav Corbet 1866 The Origin of the World, Gustav Corbet 1866[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8071" align="aligncenter" width="514"]Olympia, Edouard Manet 1865 Olympia, Edouard Manet 1865[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8074" align="aligncenter" width="350"]Self Portrait Masturbating, Egon Schiele 1911 Self Portrait Masturbating, Egon Schiele 1911[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8076" align="aligncenter" width="424"]The Visit, Willem DeKooning 1966 The Visit, Willem DeKooning 1966[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8072" align="aligncenter" width="260"]Artforum Add, Lyndat Benglis 1974 Artforum Add, Lynda Benglis 1974[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8073" align="aligncenter" width="346"]Man in Polyester Suit, Robert Mapplethorpe 1980 Man in Polyester Suit, Robert Mapplethorpe 1980[/caption] [caption id="attachment_8078" align="aligncenter" width="262"]Big Blonde Jerking Off, Lisa Yuskavage 1995 Big Blonde Jerking Off, Lisa Yuskavage 1995[/caption]