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Don’t Miss: 2014 Summer Mixer @Joshua Liner Gallery until August 27th in the NYC

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Robert Larson
Bloom
Discarded cigarette packaging on canvas
2013
Don’t waste any time, and be sure to check a magical array of eclectic works now on display @ Joshua Liner Gallery until August 27th. The second edition of Summer Mixer, is a group exhibition comprised of artists making their debut offering with the gallery. Providing a fresh narrative to the exhibition space, Summer Mixer artists present traditional and new-media works, featuring painting, weaving, collage, and digital art techniques.
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Andrew Schoultz
Vessel with Flowers
Ink, acrylic, collage, on paper
2014

Andrew Schoultz’s (b. 1975, Wisconsin) paintings and drawings serve as an historical commentary to the contemporary world as he sees it. The artist illustrates a tension between universal entities: the official faction and the opposing individual, the unavoidable clash of the individual versus natural calamity, and the perpetual incongruity of what is rational and irrational. Schoultz recognizes these themes from historical art that still resonate today: “The inspiration for my drawings and paintings come from medieval German map-making from the 14th century and Persian and Indian miniatures. […] A lot of what I see going on in these particular forms of art are the same things happening today, it perfectly illustrates how history repeats itself.”

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Erin M. Riley
Nudes 17
Hand woven wool and cotton tapestry
2014

Erin M. Riley (b. 1985, Massachusetts) creates hand-dyed wool tapestries, woven on a floor loom. The artist transforms images that have been captured in a fleeting moment into detailed works. Riley sources “selfies” and car crashes, devoting about a week’s worth of time to weaving each piece. By investing her time and personal story, these voyeuristic images evolve from what was once transitory into something tangible and substantial: “I grew up with a single mom and three sisters so I was very used to girls and not necessarily sexuality, most of my work is just women, I don’t feel comfortable weaving men. I weave men as these trucks or as symbols—a lot of my automobile work is about how I kind of see men.”

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Guy Yanai
Pink Sky at Night
Oil on linen
2014
47 x 35 inches

Guy Yanai (b. 1977, Haifa, Israel) paints oil on linen landscapes, portraiture of houseplants, home exteriors, and office interiors—bringing new perspective by color-blocking and flattening his quotidian surroundings. By simplifying the landscape in this way, Yanai develops a meaningful narrative between the artist and the object/space as an insider: “In my work I find the flatter I go, the deeper it is. It’s a strange thing, somehow I found out when I pair things down to their absolute essential—of what it would be like for you to kindof recognize something—then some kind of alchemy happens.”

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Kristen Schiele
Miami
Acrylic, oil, on canvas
2013

Kristen Schiele (b. 1970, Texas) combines elements of collage, screen printing, and painting within her signature color palette. Vivid shapes contrast with darker perspective line work, giving the viewer an intimate look into an architectural scene that is simultaneously very human and almost alien: “I use lots of different kinds of processes to cut up the surface, jar the plane and shift the focus in the work. It helps me feel I’m putting time in the piece if not just offering parallel peripheral information.”

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Michael Theodore
v(i)
Scratchboard
2014

Michael Theodore (b. 1968, New York) creates two-dimensional works that have a three-dimensional quality, by utilizing both traditional art-making techniques and digital mediums. Theodore combines free-hand drawing with digitally rendered patterns using a robotic drawing arm—the robot conceived and designed by the artist himself—which carry out visual representations of music, furthering his exploration of perceptual sensations and combining technology with organic elements: “[specific works] explore new possibilities for new art making in a world in which the biological and the mechanical are increasingly enmeshed and entangled.”

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Robert Larson
Red Tessellation
Discarded cigarette packaging on linen
2013

Robert Larson (b. 1968, California) scours the streets for his palette—a sort of urban meditation—repurposing discarded tobacco packaging into meticulously arranged patterns, with each piece hand-cut to form geometric designs. Time and weather act as a natural patina to his palette, the artist explains: “[The paper’s] once identical and uniform surfaces begin to fade and abrade with exposure to the elements—turning them from homogeneity into infinite variety. From this collision of man-made materials and the forces of nature a dynamic palette of weathered hues, tones and textures is inadvertently created.”

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Sam Friedman
Untiled (2)
Acrylic on canvas
2014

Sam Friedman’s (b. 1984, New York) abstract landscapes utilize perspective and proportion. The continuous layering of pulsating colors, their combined effect comes off almost as deletion, obscuring objects from the viewer’s periphery. The lines and shapes seem to be in conversation with one another, creating an otherworldly panorama. Each work inspires something different for each viewer: “Everyone is going to have some life experience that is going to have a connotation for a particular visual thing because, as humans, we are going to look for those connections […] I like the fact that I can create in the viewer’s mind a representation of something that ultimately relates to them.”

Joshua Liner Gallery is located @ 540 West 28th Street, between 10th and 11th Avenues.

To know more about Joshua Liner Gallery go: HERE

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