Water & Flower: Curated by Michael Slenske
Alex Becerra, Billy Al Bengston, Theodore Boyer, Virginia Broersma, Lily Clark, AJ Collins, Chris Cran, Gerald Davis, Francesca Gabbiani, Edward Givis, Robert Gunderman, Olivia Hill, Salomon Huerta, Jasmine Little, Matthew Nichols, Jackie Rines, Ben Sakoguchi, Moral Turgeman, Liz Walsh and Sterling Wells
Summertime in Los Angeles invites us to explore that perpetual dialogue between the mundane and the majestic, the essential utilities. Or, as Angelenos know them: Water & Power. Summer is the season we are most reliant on the utility companies and the time when they are most prone to failure, sometimes leading to man-made/natural disasters. Drawing inspiration from active water systems, land art, the tradition of Southern California pool painting, and the Dutch Golden Age, where artists like Jan van Huysum and Rachel Ruysch transformed floral still lifes into allegorical tapestries of life’s fleeting nature, the passage of time, sensuality, the afterlife, and the dance of light and shadow, Water & Flower at Wilding Cran Gallery revisits these themes through a modern prism.
Curated by Michael Slenske, Water & Flower underscores the transient beauty of our constructed environments amidst an era of decline. Through narrative watercolors, the reckless allure of floral constructions and deteriorating waterways are unveiled, portraying them as spaces of folly and failure. Oil paintings and ceramics envision fantastical flora and fauna emerging from utopian, dystopian, and Pop landscapes. The exhibition also captures the essence of SoCal pool culture, reflecting on how these repositories of leisure and introspection simultaneously embody desolation and decadence in a period of drought and fire.
The exhibition also features totemic and kinetic sculptures with open and closed water—and sound—systems that serve as mediums to contemplate alternative realities for these vital resources. As Mike Davis astutely observed, "The best place to view Los Angeles of the next millennium is from the ruins of its alternative future." Between the spaces of those future ruins, Water & Flower is a vantage point to re-examine our life-sustaining utilities, contemplating LA’s abundant yet scarce resources so intricately linked with the overburdened systems that support us. In doing so, it beckons us to look at the delicate balance between human ingenuity and the natural world, the sacred and the sublime, urging us to find harmony in the chaos of our post-modern existence.
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Salomon HuertaDesert Pool, 2024Oil on canvas70 x 50 inches
177.8 x 127 cm. -
Alex BecerraTree, 2024Oil on canvas, custom art frame48 3/4 x 36 3/4 inches
123.8 x 93.3 cm. -
Alex BecerraIGLOO, 2023Lemon tree, ceramic planter, foam and acrylic paintDimensions variable
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Francesca GabbianiSurvivor (2), 2024Acrylic, ink, watercolor, salt, and colored paper on paper16 x 20 inches
40.6 x 50.8 cm. -
Chris CranYellow/Red Still Life, 2014Acrylic on canvas28 x 22 inches
71.1 x 55.9 cm. -
Sterling WellsPrincess and the Interceptor, 2023Watercolor on paper60 1/2 x 40 1/2 inches
153.7 x 102.9 cm. -
Virginia BroersmaTurn On, Tune In, and Drop Out, 2023Oil and acrylic on canvas84 x 66 inches
213.4 x 167.6 cm. -
Jackie RinesThis Bird Has Flown, 2024Clay, Glaze, mixed media96 x 48 x 48 inches
243.8 x 121.9 x 121.9 cm. -
Ben SakoguchiSolar Winds Brand, 2021Acrylic on canvas10 x 11 inches
25.4 x 27.9 cm. -
Billy Al BengstonHonolulu Watercolor, 1982Watercolor collage20 x 14 inches
50.8 x 35.6 cm. -
Billy Al BengstonHonolulu Watercolor, 1982Watercolor collage35 x 16 inches
88.9 x 40.6 cm. -
Moral TurgemanTogether We Dance, 2024Cement, steel, plastic, water pump36 1/2 x 17 1/2 x 15 1/2 inches
92.7 x 44.5 x 39.4 cm. -
Lily ClarkCassini, 2024Stoneware ceramic, resin, pump components, stainless steel, water24 x 15 x 15 inches
61 x 38.1 x 38.1 cm. -
Matthew NicholsI Me My (look look), 2019-2024Oil on panel & canvas, walnut & wood stain66 x 80 inches
167.6 x 203.2 cm. -
Alex BecerraWater cart in the studio, 2024Oil in canvas, custom art frame20 3/4 x 16 3/4 inches
52.1 x 41.9 cm. -
Gerald DavisSnap Dragons with Gold Scarabs, 2024Oil on canvas79 x 55 inches
200.7 x 139.7 cm. -
Robert GundermanDrop, 2024Oil on canvas72 x 60 inches
182.9 x 152.4 cm. -
Olivia HillPicnic Table With the Sprinklers On, 2024Oil and acrylic on canvas36 x 48 inches
91.4 x 121.9 cm. -
Theodore BoyerQueechy Summer, 2023Casein on dyed canvas74 x 66 inches
188 x 167.6 cm. -
AJ Collinsterminal-console (Marginal Man in 4D), 2024MDF, plywood, sapele, steel, mineral-fiber-ceiling-tile, plaster, glass, acrylic, pvc, polyester, sand, Manila paper, audio cassette tapes, 24 hour audio recording, clock, various paints, rocks, shells, wires and electronics72 x 16 x 16 inches
182.9 x 40.6 x 40.6 cm. -
Jasmine LittleA Child's Garden of Taxonomy, 2024Oil on canvas92 x 66 inches
233.7 x 167.6 cm. -
Francesca GabbianiVortex Flower (iris), 2016Colored paper and gouache on canvas36 x 40 inches
91.4 x 101.6 cm. -
Edward GivisTwo cups ice water, 2024Oil stick on linen24 x 36 inches
61 x 91.4 cm. -
Ben SakoguchiCoyote X-ing Brand, 2011Acrylic on canvas10 x 11 inches
25.4 x 27.9 cm. -
Liz WalshPool in the Valley, 2024Gouache on canvas48 x 36 inches
121.9 x 91.4 cm. -
Lily ClarkDew Point II, 2024Stoneware ceramic, pump components, stainless steel, water5 1/2 x 13 x 13 inches
14 x 33 x 33 cm.