Last month, American Art Collector magazine covered two of our exhibitions, Flourish at the Mesa Contemporary Arts Museum and Brain Mashburn’s Axiom in the Thinkspace Gallery project room. You can view the articles in more detail at the following link.
Tag: Axiom
Opening Reception for Seth Armstrong’s ‘Pretty Deep Shit’ & Brian Mashburns ‘ Axiom’
We closed out April with new exhibitions from Seth Armstrong and Brian Mashburn that drew in quite the Saturday night art crowd. Armstrong’s ‘Pretty Deep Shit’ debuted a new body of work that was a love letter to the golden hour and shimmering night lights of Los Angeles. Rich saturated colors and voyeuristic details, Armstrong’s work is truly some that must be seen in person to fully appreciate the sometimes literal cheekiness of his pieces.
In the project room Mashburn’s ‘Axiom’ debuted a new body of work that was inspired by the current political climate and environmental concerns. He continues to take us on a tour of this other world where the clouds are thick and the mountains far in the distance.
Get to know the artists better in our interviews with Brian Mashburn and Seth Armstrong.
Available work from ‘Pretty Deep Shit’ and ‘Axiom’ can be viewed on the Thinkspace Gallery website.
Brian Mashburn’s “Axiom” opening April 29th
Brian Mashburn
Axiom
April 29 – May 20, 2017
Concurrently on view in Thinkspace’s project room are new works by Brian Mashburn in Axiom. Based in Asheville North Carolina, Mashburn creates phenomenally detailed oil paintings of foggy landscapes, in which remnants of the natural world exist uneasily alongside evidence of its all but complete industrialization.
Dark and brooding, the stylized moodiness of Mashburn’s work is inspired by the foggy mountains of Appalachia and the heavy, opaque smogs that descend upon Hong Kong and parts of Southeastern China. Like a tangible veil, the gray film is itself a dark harbinger of the destructive forces of industry. Mashburn’s landscapes are indistinct and seemingly sooty vistas, where spires of human architectures and crags of rocky mountains carve out its backgrounds. Darkly and otherworldly, they share similarities with the tradition of 19th-century gothic landscape and its championing of all things eerie, though they feel distinctly contemporary and surreal in their free mixing of historical and cultural references, architectures, and animals.
Mashburn depicts hyper-realistically rendered wildlife in his foregrounds, often posited in stark contrast to the vaporous looseness of the distances. Whether an owl, buffalo, dog, or elephant, the individual isolation of the creature, its contextual disjointedness, and abrupt displacement, when found in the midst of this caliginous world, is jarring and ominous, particularly when set against the traces of human development which are all too apparent in the beyond. These paintings read as narrative fragments, suggesting a larger story beyond the frame – alluded to but never fully disclosed. Vaguely post-apocalyptic, and beautifully thick with foreboding, they show both the vulnerability and resilience of the natural world in spite of human intervention and “progress.”