It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood...

HAPPY PRESIDENTS DAY

Sign Spinner, Abraham Lincoln, AKA Troy Holmes, 24, advertises Lincoln Pipe’s President’s Day Sale at Lincoln Blvd. on Saturday, February 19, 2011.

Posted on Monday, February 21, 2011 at 08:10AM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz in , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

THE BACKBONERS

Suzy Williams (right) and Ginger Smith from the Backboners perform during the Santa Monica Farmers Market on Sunday, February 20,  2011.

Posted on Sunday, February 20, 2011 at 02:39PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz in , , , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

The Battle of Conception

Artist Debbie Han discusses her installation entitled "The Battle of Conception" during the opening reception of her exhibit “The Eye of Perception" at Santa Monica College's Pete & Susan Barrett Art Gallery on Saturday, Frbruary 19, 2011.
 
"The Eye of Perception" is an exhibit of ceramic sculptures and large digital photographs that investigate the concepts of cultural identity, authenticity and perception. Taking the familiar and universal beauty icon of Venus, Han turns it into a powerful metaphor that captures contemporary cultural dynamics.
 
“The Eye of Perception” has been traveling around the world since last fall to galleries in Munich, Germany; Seoul, South Korea; and Hong Kong. Han – a Korean-American from Los Angeles who studied at SMC, received her B.A. in Art from UCLA and a Master’s of Fine Arts from Pratt Institute in New York – is an award-winning artist whose work has been displayed in dozens of galleries and museums throughout the world.
 
Han’s new work explores cultural conceptions and misconceptions of beauty while raising questions about traditional standards of who women are perceived from an eastern and western point of view.
 
One of the pieces in the exhibit – “The Battle of Conception” – is an excellent example of how Han plays with concepts of beauty. Consisting of 32 pieces of Venus busts installed on a large table in a chess game format, the busts have faces featuring random mixes of diverse races and ethnicities – for example, slanted Asian eyes with a flaring African mouth on one face and a hooked Jewish nose with an extremely thin Caucasian mouth on another.
 
Han says the heads are made not in traditional sculptural materials but in an ancient Asian ceramic type named Celadon. Han took up the challenge of exploring this material in Korea, and the project took seven years to complete.    
                                                                          
The exhibition also presents larger sized Venus busts with reconstructed faces in another rare ceramic material named White Porcelain, shimmering with a mysterious tinge of blue. Due to the technical difficulties of firing these large-sized asymmetrical forms, the artist toiled through 130 pieces before successfully firing a set of 10 in three years. The evidence of enduring through hard labor imbues Han’s works with a haunting presence that captivates the viewer. The sense of “beauty’ that engulfs the viewer here is almost antithetical to the academic notions of beauty subscribed through education. The work confronts the question of the meaning of beauty as a way of perception.
 
Han’s exploration of the role of perception as a shaping force of one’s reality culminates in the new photo series titled “The Eye of Perception,” which presents in each image several different faces superimposed together in a masterful way so as to allow viewing of each of the different facial features simultaneously with the multitude. Contemporary photography as an innovative expression of the day is proven in Han’s acclaimed photo series, “Graces.”  The artist photographs actual bodies of Asian woman and combines them with Western heads of classical Goddess sculptures. Then the entire skin texture of each figure is digitally rendered in extreme details to achieve marble-like smoothness. Each ”Grace” is caught in the midst of an everyday act, set against a dark background. The illusive nature of these figures brings together elements of the past/present, East/West, human/ideal. At the same time, they leave a wide room for individual interpretations and perceptions.
 
Han’s works have been shown internationally, including 13 solo shows in the United States, Korea, China, Germany, and Spain and more than 70 group exhibitions throughout the United States, Asia and Europe.
 
Han was awarded The Sovereign Asian Art Prize in 2009 and was the recipient of The Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant in 2007. She was invited as a resident artist at numerous international art organizations including ARCUS Project in Japan, Youngeun Museum of Contemporary Art and Gyeonggi Museum of Art in Korea, Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts in Nebraska, and Schinkel Progressive Residency in Berlin. Han’s works were exhibited at Santa Barbara Museum, The Saatchi Museum, Seoul Museum of Art, and Kunstlerhaus Bethanien. She currently works in Seoul and Los Angeles.
 
 The exhibit runs through March 19.

Posted on Sunday, February 20, 2011 at 12:01AM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz in , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

WHALE WATCHING

Ken Ahern and his two sons Matthew, 6, and Oliver, 4, look through binoculars in search of  Pacific Gray Whales during Santa Monica Pier Aquarium's, "Whale of a Weekend" on  Saturday, February 19, 2011.

Posted on Saturday, February 19, 2011 at 02:02PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz in , , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

CATCHING AIR

A man kite surfs at Santa Monica Beach on Wednesday, February 16, 2011.

Posted on Friday, February 18, 2011 at 07:29PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz in , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

WHERE'S CHARLIE?

A flyer offering a reward for Charlie, an 811 year old male Unicorn is posted at Santa Monica Ocean Front Walk on Monday, February 14, 2011. The flyer reads:
 
Please help me find my missing unicorn. He wondered off from his meadow on 2/05 and hasn't returned yet.
 
He has a grayish coat and his horn is a bit longer than average, around 2.5 cubits. He weighs around 1,500 kilograms and is about 8 feet tall. He likes to sleep in grassy meadows and can be quiet grumpy if startled. Contact: Sir Clifton Writingham, Phone (424) 209-2979 Email: Bitawesome@gmail.com

 

Posted on Thursday, February 17, 2011 at 11:00PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

SAVING LIVES

Youth Coordinator from the American Red Cross of Santa Monica - California Safe Corps, Jun Kim,  demonstrates Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) techniques during the Santa Monica Chamber of Commerce's monthly mixer at the Red Cross on Wednesday, February 16, 2011.

 

Posted on Wednesday, February 16, 2011 at 09:21PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz in , | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

SOFA SURFING AT THE PROMENADE


World's Longest Red Sofa - Images by Fabian Lewkowicz

People lounge on BoConcept's world's longest red sofa at the Third Street Promenade on Monday, February 14, 2011.  The sofa was featured for the world's longest sofa speed-date on Valentines day. The couch is 213-foot long and weighs 2.17 tons.

Posted on Tuesday, February 15, 2011 at 12:03AM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz in | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint