Doug Harvey is an artist, curator and writer based in Los Angeles. For 15 years he was a freelance arts writer and Lead Art Critic for LA Weekly and during his tenure there was considered "one of the most important voices on art in the city" by editor (at the time) Tom Christie, [1] "an art critic who is read all over the country, is smart, snappy, original, has an independent open eye, a quick wit, is not boring and never academic" by New York Magazine critic Jerry Saltz, [1] and "a master of the unexpected chain-reaction of thought" by Pulitzer Prize winning LA Times critic Christopher Knight. [2]
He was fired from his position there late in 2010 in part because of a dispute about the tone of his review of a William Eggleston exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, which incoming editor Drex Heikes characterized as "academic." [3] But this action was concurrent with the systematic downsizing that had been initiated with the paper's acquisition by New Times Media in 2004. [4]
His writing has also appeared in Art issues, Art in America , The New York Times , The Nation , Modern Painters , ArtReview , and numerous other publications. He has written museum and gallery catalog essays for Jim Shaw, The Institute for Figuring, Jeffrey Vallance, Tim Hawkinson, Marnie Weber, Lari Pittman, Cathy Ward, The Museum of Jurassic Technology, Mike Kelley, Georganne Deen, Gary Panter, Margaret Keane, Thomas Kinkade, The Desert Lighthouse, and many others.
His curatorial projects have ranged from many traditional gallery and museum exhibitions (including the short-lived Annual LA Weekly Biennials at Track 16 Gallery, [5] 2008's Aspects of Mel's Hole: Artists Respond to a Paranormal Land Event Occurring in Radiospace at Santa Ana's Grand Central Art Center, [6] and career surveys of Don Suggs, [7] Michael Arata, [8] and surf art/psychedelic poster and comix legend Rick Griffin [9] ) to CD compilations of sound art, [10] programs of found and experimental films, [11] performance events, experimental radio, [12] artists' comic books and zines, and an LA solo gallery exhibit determined by raffle. [13] In July 2011 his global project (with Christian Cummings) Chain Letter 2011 included work by more than 1600 artists in its iteration at Shoshana Wayne Gallery in Santa Monica alone, [14] shutting down the 10 Freeway exit to Bergamot Station during installation. [15]
Harvey's art work ranges across painting, collage, found objects, film and video, performance, installation, publications, and sound. [16] [17] He has an ongoing series related to a set of found moldy 35mm slides and has exhibited them throughout Los Angeles at art spaces including The Hammer Museum, [11] The Museum of Jurassic Technology, Jancar Gallery, [18] Los Angeles Valley College Art Gallery, [19] another year in LA, [20] and the California Museum of Photography. [21] He received his MFA in Painting from UCLA in 1994 [22] and has exhibited extensively, including over a dozen solo shows at LA galleries including POST, [23] High Energy Constructs, [24] and Jancar Gallery. [25]
Reviewing his solo debut at POST Gallery, St. Sebastian Tom Sawyer Cathy Mishima Expo 67, LA Times critic David Pagel wrote "Harvey's art makes the most outlandish conspiracy theorist look like a stodgy logician." [23] Art in America critic Constance Mallinson said of his October 2010 solo painting show Unsustainable at Jancar Gallery "Harvey's work reeks of rot and decay." [16] On the occasion of Untidy, Harvey's mid-career survey at LA Valley College, LA Times' Christopher Knight commented "the raging torrent of modern media-culture is his medium, and the paintings, collages, drawings and sculpture seem to regard it as a revealing cesspool of bleak but salvageable fun." [2]
Since the mid-1980s, Harvey has worked closely with the improvisational audio collage collective Mannlicher Carcano, facilitating their numerous self-released recordings, video documentation, participation in gallery and museum exhibitions, and, since 1997, the Los Angeles portion of their weekly tele-linked international radio broadcast The Mannlicher Carcano Radio Hour. [26] Other musical affiliations include Tenacious Mucoid Exudate, Fireworks (Flugeldar), The Charles Ray Experience, F (Fauxmish), The New Suicide Revolutionary Jazz Bad, and The Friendliness Happening.
Harvey has taught at UCLA's graduate school and Cal Arts, where he initiated classes in Outsider Theory and 'patacritical Interrogation Techniques. In 2013 AC Books published Harvey's 'patacritical Interrogation Techniques Anthology Volume 3, a collection of 'patacritical writings and research with contributions from Peter Blegvad, Craig Baldwin, Clayton Eshleman, Christine Wertheim, Richard Shaver, steve roden, Edward Lear, Jerome Rothenberg, and others. [27] Harvey currently teaches Studio Art and Art History at West Los Angeles College. [28]
The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is an art museum located on Wilshire Boulevard in the Miracle Mile vicinity of Los Angeles. LACMA is on Museum Row, adjacent to the La Brea Tar Pits.
The Hammer Museum, which is affiliated with the University of California, Los Angeles, is an art museum and cultural center known for its artist-centric and progressive array of exhibitions and public programs. Founded in 1990 by the entrepreneur-industrialist Armand Hammer to house his personal art collection, the museum has since expanded its scope to become "the hippest and most culturally relevant institution in town." Particularly important among the museum's critically acclaimed exhibitions are presentations of both historically overlooked and emerging contemporary artists. The Hammer Museum also hosts over 300 programs throughout the year, from lectures, symposia, and readings to concerts and film screenings. As of February 2014, the museum's collections, exhibitions, and programs are completely free to all visitors.
Michael Kelley was an American artist whose work involved found objects, textile banners, drawings, assemblage, collage, performance, photography, sound and video. He also worked on curatorial projects; collaborated with many other artists and musicians; and left a formidable body of critical and creative writing. He often worked collaboratively and had produced projects with artists Paul McCarthy, Tony Oursler, and John Miller. Writing in The New York Times, in 2012, Holland Cotter described the artist as "one of the most influential American artists of the past quarter century and a pungent commentator on American class, popular culture and youthful rebellion."
Rick Castro is an American photographer, motion picture director, stylist, curator and writer whose work focuses on BDSM, fetish, and desire.
Marnie Weber is an American artist who lives and works in Los Angeles. Her work includes photography, sculpture, installations, film, video, and performances. She is also a musician.
Robert Standish is an American artist.
Sue Spaid is an American curator and philosopher, currently based in Belgium.
Eric Wesley is an American artist. Wesley was born in Los Angeles, California, where he continues to live and work. He has held solo exhibitions in galleries internationally as well as at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and Foundation Morra Greco, Naples, Italy.
The Richard Kuhlenschmidt Gallery was a contemporary art gallery originally located in Los Angeles, California, USA. It played an important part in setting the stage for Los Angeles' emergence as an international art center in the 1980s. It opened in 1982 and eventually closed in 1993 but it was preceded by Jancar Kuhlenschmidt Gallery that put down most of the ground work for what would follow.
Rachel Lachowicz is an American artist based in Los Angeles, California. She is primarily recognized for appropriating canonical works by modern and contemporary male artists such as Carl Andre and Richard Serra and recreating them using red lipstick.
Ilene Segalove is an American conceptual artist working with appropriated images, photography and video. Her work can be understood as a precursor to The Pictures Generation.
Shirley Tse is a U.S. contemporary artist based in California. Her art is often installation-based, employing sculpture, photography and/or video that may function as stand-alone works or in relation to one another. She explores conceptual themes including plasticity, multiplicity and multi-dimensional thinking, balancing attention to the physical attributes of raw materials, craft, form and socio-political issues such as global mobility, social negotiation and sustainability. Critic Doug Harvey wrote that Tse has "continually produc[ed] elegant and idiosyncratic artifacts that engage the audience formally, while producing a convincing mash-up of late modernist sculptural concerns and something between identity politics and autobiography."
Human Resources Los Angeles (HRLA) is a non-profit exhibition and performance space located in Los Angeles's Chinatown dedicated to supporting interdisciplinary, performative and experimental art practices.
Eileen Cowin is a Los Angeles–based artist known for photography, video and mixed-media installations that draw on the language of mass media and art history and explore the relationship between narrative, fiction and non-fiction, memory and experience. Associated with the 1970s Los Angeles experimental photography scene and the Pictures Generation artists, her work combines familiar human situations and carefully chosen gestures, expressions and props to create enigmatic images whose implied, open-ended stories viewers must complete. Cowin has exhibited in more than forty solo shows in the United States and abroad, including at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Museum of Contemporary Photography, Armory Center for the Arts and Contemporary Arts Center. Her work is included in more than forty institutional collections, including LACMA, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Brooklyn Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), and Smithsonian American Art Museum. She has been recognized with awards and commissions from the National Endowment for the Arts, LACMA, the City of Los Angeles (COLA), Public Art Fund, and the Sundance and USA film festivals. New York Times critic Andy Grundberg wrote that her multi-image work "sets up a tension between the familiar and the mysterious, creating a climate of implied danger, sexual intrigue and violence" in which clues abound to intimate various narratives. Jody Zellen observed that Cowin "manipulates the conventions of photography, film, and video to tell a different kind of story—one that explores where truth and fiction merge, yet presents no conclusions. Cowin's work provokes."
Thomas John Jancar, Contemporary Art Dealer - Jancar Kuhlenschmidt Gallery (1980-1982) and Jancar Gallery (2006-2016) located in Los Angeles, CA.
Jancar Kuhlenschmidt Gallery was a contemporary art gallery located in Los Angeles, California, that was open from May 1980 through June 1982.
Victor Estrada is an American artist living and working in Los Angeles.
Daniel Joel Tull is a contemporary American painter, sculptor and musician who lives and works in Los Angeles.
Lynn Aldrich is an American sculptor whose diverse works draw on a wide range of high and low cultural influences and materials. Her work can range from what art writers describe as "slyly Minimalist meditations" on color, light and space to whimsical "Home Depot Pop" that reveals and critiques the excesses—visual, formal and material—of unbridled consumption. Critics Leah Ollman and Claudine Ise of the Los Angeles Times have described Aldrich's art, respectively, as a "consumerist spin on the assemblage tradition" and a "witty and inventive brand of kitchen-sink Conceptualism" LA Weekly critic Doug Harvey calls her "one of the most under-recognized sculptors in L.A.," whose hallmarks are the poetic transformation of found/appropriated materials, formal inventiveness and restless eclecticism. Aldrich has exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Hammer Museum, Santa Monica Museum of Art, and venues throughout the United States and Europe. She has been recognized with a Guggenheim Fellowship (2014) and public art collection acquisitions by LACMA, MOCA Los Angeles and the Portland Art Museum, among others.
Steven Hull is an American artist based in Los Angeles. His projects cross boundaries typically drawn between personal and collaborative work, disciplines like painting, sculpture and installation art, and artistic fields including writing, music, art, illustration, design and performance. In his personal work, he frequently creates immersive, multimedia tableaux and exhibitions that Los Angeles Times critic Christopher Knight described as "carnivalesque hybrids of painting and sculpture whose chief aim is to turn visions of the conventional world upside down." He often mixes opposing artistic styles, irreverent conceptual strategies, and tones that range from playful to alienated or politically pointed. His collaborations include several artist-writer publications, including I’m Still In Love With You (1998–9), Song Poems, and AB OVO (2005); he also co-founded the artist-run space La Cienegas Projects and established Nothing Moments Press, which produced and published "Nothing Moments" (2007), a set of 24 limited-edition book collaborations between writers, artists and designers. These projects have been presented at MOCA at the Pacific Design Center, Rosamund Felsen Gallery, and Festival Supreme, among other venues. Hull has received a Joan Mitchell Foundation award for painting (2009) and a Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation award (2001). He is married to artist Tami Demaree.