Paintings, drawings, stencils, skate decks, screen prints, and posters on display. Hailing from South Africa, Ohio, Ukraine, California, and New Zealand, the artists in this exhibition depict imaginary worlds of dreams, beauty, fantasy, and violence.
Carmichael Gallery of Contemporary Art is pleased to announce
Anything Could Happen..., featuring new artwork by Faith47, Johnny
Yanok, Joulu, Mike Kershnar, and Misery. There will be paintings,
drawings, stencils, skate decks, screen prints, and posters on
display. Hailing from South Africa, Ohio, Ukraine, California, and
New Zealand, the artists in this exhibition paint five extraordinary
worlds of dreams, beauty, fantasy, and violence. The possibilities
for exploration and discovery are endless within their wondrous
scenes; though some sparkle with hope and others are tinged with a
dark pain, all are lit with a magical spontaneity that leaves you
wondering: whatever could happen next?
Faith47
The people in Faith47’s world are angry, and they have every reason to
be: “Today is a day of violence and today is everyday” is scrawled
beneath the image of a girl kneeling and clutching a bleeding heart,
stubbornly oblivious to the knives, guns, and bombs that encircle her.
Faith47 can speak with assurance on such a subject; this is the life
she knows and lives herself as a prominent voice on the perilous Cape
Town graffiti scene. Aware of the seductive power and potential of
artistic expression, Faith47 utilizes her work as a platform to voice
her disgust with bureaucracy, war, the inequality of world economics,
and capitalism - “the only words we know are more, more, and more.”
In spite of this deeply ingrained pain and frustration, however, there
is an awe-inspiring beauty in each canvas, design, and wall she
paints, an imperative call for rebellion, love, and liberation.
Faith47 has showcased her work in Sweden, Amsterdam, and the US, and
painted the streets of Ireland, South Africa, Germany, Kenya, Prague,
and England.
Johnny Yanok
There’s a blue squirrel, a drunken man asleep under a blanket of
newspapers, a rabbit-toothed blob sporting a fedora, and a
turtleneck-wearing, pole-swinging dragon all jamming away in a subway
car to the music of a raccoon playing a violin (well, all except the
man). Welcome to the delightfully quirky world of Johnny Yanok.
Tucked away in a haunted house in the woods of Ohio with his wife and
their menagerie of pets, Johnny divides his time between ghost busting
and creating magical scenes inspired, in part, by the cartoons and
storybooks of his childhood, Halloween, Disneyland, and the kitsch he
collects at flea markets. It is hard to admire Johnny’s works without
a smile appearing at the lips, the sheer magical, wonderful silliness
of them transporting viewers to a place of child-like innocence and
joy that often feels so terribly far away. A member of the Art Dorks
Collective, Johnny has exhibited his paintings and sculptures in
galleries all over the world. He is also a successful freelance
illustrator, with clients including Disney, the Cartoon Network, Fruit
of the Loom, and Toyota.
Joulu
Irena Zablotska, aka Joulu, is a talented graffiti artist from the
Ukraine who has participated in exhibitions throughout her home
country and in the USA. On the streets and on paper, her unique voice
comes alive through her intriguing characters, bizarre beings who come
together to dance, play, sob, and share secrets. Depending on how you
yourself are feeling when you look at them, different ideas and
meanings present themselves as to just who these mysterious
individuals are, their faces and bodies overwhelmed with energy and
emotion. Sometimes Joulu herself doesn’t have words for what she is
trying to express in her intensely personal pieces, but through
drawing, she gives the paper a voice all of its own. Some of the
beings in her work resemble humans, while others look like nothing
ever seen before, yet they all share a fleeting air of merriment
coupled with an acceptance of suffering, a strange dichotomy that
characterizes the entrancing alternate universe of Joulu’s creation.
Mike Kershnar
“My artwork humbly seeks to be a signpost pointing the way towards the
earth, to purpose, to vision, to healing, and to a more fully awakened
state of being,” explains Californian artist Mike Kershnar, who is
also a lifelong skateboarder, UC Santa Cruz grad, and rock poster
designer for bands including the Beastie Boys, Morrissey, The Marley
Brothers, and the Grateful Dead. He has also created board graphics
and clothing designs for skate brands such as Element, Baker, and
Obey. Influenced by 1980s skate graphics, artists Robert Crumb and
Jean-Michel Basquiat, and indigenous art forms that identify closely
with the natural environment – Aboriginal Dreamtime, Mexican Huichol,
and Northern Formline to name a few – Mike creates astounding
representations of North American wildlife which transcend the images
themselves in their depth of understanding of the spiritual
relationship between man and the creatures he shares the earth with.
Mike extends his passion and gratitude for life through his work for
the non-profit, youth-based Elemental Awareness, which he co-founded,
an organization that promotes self-esteem through the avenues of
skateboarding, the wilderness, and art. As well as showcasing his
work in numerous group and solo exhibitions,
Mike has been profiled in publications such as Juxtapoz, Thrasher,
Happy, and Mass Appeal.
Misery
Captivating New Zealander Misery was just fifteen years old when she
began to exhibit her work. Through some pivotal introductions, the
then high school student quickly established herself as one of the
premier female graffiti artists in her country. As a child, the
enigmatic Misery zealously scribbled away in her numerous sketch
books, drawing detailed characters and dreaming of the complex magical
lands in which they lived. These youthful sketches became the
blueprint for the twisted fantasy world she has gone on to create and
become renowned for today. For Anything Could Happen… Misery has
created a series of paintings on plywood with layers of sanded back
wallpaper and washes of translucent color and lacquer. Lost in
landscapes of the unknown, the Misery girls and their fellow creatures
revel in the haunting beauty and sadness of their environment. Misery
has traveled to and exhibited her work in the USA, UK, Europe, and New
Zealand. In 2006, an award-winning film documented the success of her
Auckland solo show and first toy range at the Taipei Toy Fair.
Complementing her success in the art world are her fashion endeavors;
working with Illicit Streetwear, her name fast became a global brand,
and 2004 saw the opening in Auckland of Misery Boutique.
Opening Reception: Saturday, March 22, 2008, 8 PM – Midnight
Carmichael Gallery
1257 N. La Brea Avenue - Hollywood
Gallery hours are Tuesday through Sunday, 2 p.m. to 7 p.m., and by appointment.
Free admission