Untitled - theOMENmag
Transcription
Untitled - theOMENmag
06 Omen Magazine is a showcase for multi-medium International creativity. It is a visual online magazine that is a homage to Art and Fashion that may not be necessarily mainstream. It will be a hybrid of talent from up and coming to famous.The focus is on the image, not the buzz. Omen wants to explore and expose to the cyber world, all the amazing work that is off the commercial radar. www.theomenmag.com Cover Photo - Erez Sabag Concept / Make-up - Jorge Serio 06 Mário Correia - Graphic editor Marcus Leatherdale - Art Director / Art Editor Pedro Matos - Photo editor Jorge Serio - Fashion editor + Art Correspondents: Paul Bridgewater – NYC Amabel Barraclough – London Martin Belk – Glasgow Dan Bazuin – Toronto Patric Lehman – Toronto Jennifer Leskiw –Antwerp Anne McDonald – Prague Muga Miyahara –Tokyo Elizabeth Rogers – New Delhi Hector Ramsay - Florence Andrea Splisgar – Berlin Jorge Soccaras – Barcelona Arturo Toulanov - NYC + Fashion Correspondents: Michael Schmidt – Los Angeles Rebecca Weinberg – NYC Zuleika Ponsen - Paris Jeffrey Fulvimari – NYC Jeffrey Fulvimari www.jeffreyfulvimari.com STEPHEN LACK - NY Rude, crude, a rock in the pond of civilized complacency and still, beauty rears it’s head . Must be the colors. Or maybe it is the meat. In the 80’s it seemed like there was a mission to carry the facts across the corporate wall and remind those in executive positions of what was happening on the lawn of headquarters. The rage and disconnect we internalized came out in sex and bondage while remote wars whispered violence. OK? That was a bit of the backdrop. That’s why wall scrawling became high art and the artscene dilated to accept the new. I worked like I was being chased by monsters and many of these drawings , these oilsticks, were dormant in my studio after East Village movement morphed into the more dry artworld of the 90’s. The energy that informed them is still relevant today and they generate their original agitation even now. The brutality of the meat becomes slightly tamed in the paintings of the automobiles. While I have always done images and sculptures of cars, this series began as a commission for a client whose wayward son was pestering to get the a Ferrari. The ‘Collector’ needed a surrogate to pacify the boy and the commission began a series that continues now twenty years and many exhibitions later. I like to think of these paintings as my ‘denial’ paintings. They do not deal with any overt conflict and are just beautiful objects of beautiful objects. Still, there is a political aspect that may be laminated on to the experience but basically they are excercises in refining formalism, marrying it with the palette of the Fauves, coating it with expressionist strokes, all to portray the solidity of the suburban materialistic popism that is the western ideal while approximating the self contained wonderworlds of Hindu paintings. That is sort of what I am trying to do, but only in retrospect. The departure point is always the car and how it fits in my memory. And I would not be surprised if the goal was eroticism. Certainly ‘power’ comes in there somewhere. Stephen Lack 2011 STEPHEN LACK www.stephenlackart.com LUKE YOCUM – NYC When the canvas is stretched and primed, i go to work . I pour the contents of my soul onto the fabric by painting the grime & grief of urban decay, the brightness of all expectations, and the forgotten dreams of mankind. As a means to accomplish my signature style/look, i practice the "Paranoiac-critical" method. I induce myself into a state of delirium so that i can reproduce the images of a madman without any diminution of my critical faculties. My brush strokes are controlled by raw human emotion and filled by the life beat of the metropolis I live and work in. Colour and concept also play into my work and distorted images as another layer. I Paint the world as i feel it, rather than the way it appears to others, and my works evolve and go through many stages and transmogrifications. I use paintings as a way to explore the realm of modern human life and its juxtaposition to mass media bombardment and hysterics of North American pop culture. The complexity of deliberate advertisement campaigns litter the streets from the ground to high above the skyline. As a society, we live in a visual-overload landfill and are forced to take in this mindless and senseless information. We no longer think for ourselves. We think, feel, act, and buy as we are instructed by the media. I often introduce this scenario into my works, representing it as a cacophony of long strings, non-sequential numbers, and letters that appear to be broken codes or fragmented pieces of foreign languages. I use words in the form of social commentary accompanied, with harshly drawn images and conflicting shapes that uncomfortably share the canvas with each other. It is the randomness of these codes and cyphers that is most important, rather than the actual images. The art I create, is simply a series of modern hieroglyphs. It is a true testimony to what I feel about the forces plaguing society today, who i am and where i have been as both a man and an Artist... Luke D. Yocum LUKE YOCUM – NYC www.lukeyocum.com Joanne Dugan - NYC I have always loved using ordinary things as the subject of my photographs. The use of a provocative or spectacular subject feels like cheating, as often the final image isn’t at all about how the photographer sees, but instead is only about the subject. Often things that are traditionally beautiful can feel empty to me, especially when evoked in a photograph. This group of images is about taking the time to really see the beauty of what is right in front of me. I am interested in evoking a kind of visual meditation about the objects and places of daily life and the resulting transformation that happens when this process is a conscious one. The final images come from a complex and repeated dance I do that combines my camera, lens, a chosen light source, my eyes and the thing or place that sits in front of me. The goal, after many years of working this way, is to make the whole process feel effortless visually. This work also reflects an ongoing search for the authentic, both in my creative work as well as in the way I choose to live my life. In exploring the idea of what “real” looks and feels like, especially in the current complex technological universe, I can stay in touch with what really matters to me. This body of work is also an ongoing visual reminder to myself to never stop looking and that beauty really is in the eye of the beholder. “Now it is time that gods came walking out of lived-in Things…..” - Ranier Maria Rilke BILLY BOY & LALA – Switzerland Presented here is work coming from an important place and space. Billy Boy & Lala have managed to bond some of the most significant contemporary theoretical questions with time honored methodologies to produce a very strong suite of Gesamptkunstwerk primarily in the format of photographs. These works address ideas about haute couture, abstraction, design, art history, identity politics, and figuration with evolutionary fluidity. By incorporating sculpture — an effigy of miniaturized women and men who could be considered as dolls, drawing, collage, painting, and photography with a fluency of mastery of these various techniques, their diversified methods in effect make them a true embodiment of the contemporary artist, able to move laterally with great ease. The work of Billy Boy & Lala speaks volumes about the current state of affairs, about how theory and practice in the arts are no longer binary but in fact can do more than coexist. « Billy Boy & Lala » are a multi-faceted artistic collaboration conceived of since 1982. They pursue their careers both independently and together in Switzerland, and are co-founders of the Fondation Tanagra. C. Kwon Billy Boy & Lala www.fondationtanagra.com Erez Sabag www.erezsabag.com Jorge Serio www.jorgeserio.com Jeffrey Fulvimari www.jeffreyfulvimari.com Stephen Lack www.stephenlackart.com Luke Yocum www.lukeyocum.com Billy Boy & Lala www.fondationtanagra.com Joanne Dugan www.joannedugan.com John Toth www.johntoth.com www.houseoftoth.com