Travis Louie

Peek inside the artist’s mind to learn what motivated his latest film noir inspired paintings

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As a young boy growing up in Queens, Travis Louie would roam the hallways of his friends’ houses gazing longingly at their vintage family photographs, realizing the lack of pictures of previous generations of his own Chinese-American family. Years later when Louie’s drawing career transitioned into painting characters inspired by film noir and German Expressionism, he realized that in some way he was creating his own virtual family history. Only this family, clad in Victorian and Edwardian garb, had all sorts of ogres, monsters and insects crawling and climbing about.

We spoke with Louie at his studio in upstate New York while he was painting a man with a giant Cane Toad on his head—an image that will soon be on view at the Merry Karnowsky Gallery in Los Angeles, along with several other unique pet-and-owner portraits—and the artist revealed where his love of storytelling, surprise, and humor comes from.

When was the first time you remember getting a reaction for something you drew?

I was in the second grade. They gave me some crayons for some busy work while they were testing other kids. I started drawing. It wasn’t a great drawing, but it was what I drew that kind of freaked the teacher out. I drew my memories of a Senate hearing that I had seen on public TV Channel 13. It was film footage of the McCarthy era. What had compelled me to watch it was that so many of my grandfather’s favorite actors were in there. I drew the people at a table with a bunch of microphones. The teacher asked me, “What is that?” and I said, “That’s the Senate hearings.” Then she wanted to talk to my parents. The drawing did not look like McCarthy, Humphrey Bogart, Danny Kaye, Lauren Bacall or anyone else that was there. I did not know why the hearing was happening, it did not make any sense to me, but I wanted to know what it was all about.

Were you more of a “scared of everything” or “scared of nothing” kind of kid?

I was afraid of people. I remember one time I was on the subway with my mom. While the train was moving, she let go of my hand for a second and someone else grabbed my hand. That was always really creepy to me. My mother lit into this guy like you wouldn’t believe.

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With so much of your work being influenced by German Expressionism, film noir, Victorian portraits, Edwardian times, side-shows, oddities and more, how did your style develop?

Growing up, I used to go to my friends’ and neighbors’ houses. Their families had these great old photographs. I thought, “What’s going on that they had these things?” The reason why we didn’t have any in our family was that Chinese people are very superstitious and did not like having their pictures taken, especially in the 1890s. I don’t know if many cameras were that available. I have not seen that many photos of older Chinese people from that era. I think there was a little bit of envy. So now with my work it’s almost like I am making my own ancestors. They just happen to be monsters.

I love the look of those old movies and am interested in cinematography. I love old German Expressionist films. I did not come across them until later. As a kid I watched whatever was on for the Movie of the Week on Channel 9, which were mostly gangster movies and noir pictures. As I got older, I noticed that the noir directors had been looking at the German Expressionist films. If you look at Citizen Kane there are a lot of shots that look like they came out of the movie Metropolis including the shots of the gigantic door. I started watching more old movies to see were they got the lighting from.

Can you talk about the materials you use and the process you go through to get to the point where it is hard to see any brush strokes?

I use kind of a weird watercolor technique with transparent layers of things, one on top of the other, [and I think about] how far back you can go and how dark it is possible to make something. There are transparent washes of acrylic paint over and over again. A lot of it is rubbed out. Underneath that there is a lot of graphite to create a very smooth, continuous tone. I learned to do that because I used to work for a photo re-toucher.

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Your new paintings feature large-winged insects and spiders on the heads of your portrait subjects. Do you see these monsters, creatures and animals in your everyday life?

Sometimes I dream them up. This particular show was influenced from a photograph that I saw on the back of a book about how to care for tarantulas. I was in a pet store and I came across this book and I thought, that’s kind of odd. I have a pet tarantula at home. I am looking at this book and it’s pretty informative. I flip it over and see there’s an author photograph on the back. It is the weirdest author photograph I have ever seen. He’s dressed in a powder blue tuxedo, like the kind they are wearing in Carrie. Next to him is his pet tarantula in its enclosure with a prize-winning ribbon attached to it. I looked at it and thought, “That is the craziest thing.” There was a pet show with tarantulas in it? How do you judge that? What’s the criteria? That’s when I decided to do a series of paintings of people with unusual pets. The one I am painting right now is of a man with his Cane Toad. The toad is about the size of a small pig.

What else are you working on?

I also have a bust coming out by Shinbone. We will have one at the gallery during the show. It comes in a wood crate. From the back it looks like Beethoven and when you flip it around it’s my Uncle 6 Eyes.

Travis Louie’s show opens on 12 November and will be on view at the Merry Karnowsky Gallery in Los Angeles until 10 December.

170 S. La Brea Avenue
Los Angeles, CA 90036


Ed Wood Sleaze Paperbacks

The most extensive collection of lewd literature by the infamous author

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Slandered as a deviant and provocateur in some circles and worshipped as a cult figure in others, the work of director Ed Wood left a legacy of infamy. Although best-known for his abysmally applauded oeuvre, Plan 9 From Outer Space, which earned Wood the Golden Turkey Award for Worst Film Director, it was Wood’s idiosyncratic behavior of directing in drag, shoestring hustle and entourage of misfits—including his friendship with vampiric icon, Bela Lugosi—that has most fascinated fans and critics alike.

Characterized by his love of angora and kooky affability—eccentricities celebrated in Tim Burton’s film homage—Wood’s fetishistic proclivities soon gave way to the sleazy underbelly of pornographic pulp novels. Authoring such titles as Black Lace Drag and Orgy of the Dead, Wood countered his depraved plots by inter-splicing them with what a press release describes as “lengthy philosophical, sociological and psychological discourse.” Often writing under numerous pseudonyms and issuing erratic re-publications, the obscurity and sensationalism of Wood’s novels have both captured and eluded the attention of dedicated antiquarian collectors.

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Now, curators, Michael Daley and Johan Kugelberg of NYC’s Boo-Hooray art gallery have amassed the most extensive collection of Ed Wood pulp novels known, debuting as the upcoming exhibition, Ed Wood’s Sleaze Paperbacks. Evolving from a core collection acquired from the science-fiction editor, Robert Legault, Kugelberg explains how Legault unveiled the mystique behind Wood’s evasive trail of aliases, “In the pre-Internet days when information was scarce he ‘discovered’ a couple of Ed Wood Jr. novels issued under pseudonyms by noticing similarities with other titles that were published under Wood’s name.”

Although the pseudonym debacle provided a “bibliographical mess that came out of the fly-by-night climate of sixties sleaze-smut publishing,” says Kugelberg, the significance of the collection impressed Cornell University, who purchased its entirety for their rare library. “The man is the art, and his strange personal narrative—World War II hero, transvestite, horror movie director, sleaze author—is endlessly fascinating,” surmises Kugelberg.

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Ed Wood’s Sleaze Paperback opens at Boo-Hooray gallery with a reception, Wednesday, 2 November from 6:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. The show will run through 4 December 2011. 250 copies of the collection’s deluxe catalogue will be available.

Boo-Hooray
265 Canal St. #601
New York, NY 10013


Core77 Photo Gallery: Vienna Design Week 2011

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Vienna Design Week celebrated it’s fifth year with exhibitions, venue-specific installations, talks, and workshops throughout the capital. In an effort to differentiate itself from the numerous design festivals taking place in Europe the same month, Austrian organizers focused on showcasing emerging local designers and the flourishing scenes of Central and Eastern Europe.

The theme of food dominated this year with several installation/performances exploring topics of food waste, food design, and urban gardening. On a similar tangent, we loved the theater behind Alfred Burzler and Thomas Exner’s ice stool Ljod (Russian for ice) presented in a refrigerated room where visitors borrowed jackets to enter and viewed the piece with flashlights.

Many of Austria’s old school manufactures—often family-run businesses that have operated for generations—took the opportunity to invite contemporary designers to reinterpret their products for exhibition. The most successful of these collaborations was designer Philippe Malouin’s Hourglass for Lobmeyr. His piece features a series of measurements; the amount of time it takes for the sand to reach each increment mirrors the exact amount of time it took the artisan to engrave the line—nice!

» Checkout our gallery for more highlights!

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Kenichi Yokono: Rise of the Underground

Woodblock printing, skate decks and cult horror come together in a new show at the Mark Moore Gallery

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We’ve been following Kenichi Yokono for a while, and we’re continually impressed by the ingenuity the Tokyo-based artist brings to the table. Working in the tradition of Japanese woodblock printing, Yokono weaves anime and horror film influences into the classic form. His stark red and white woodcuts are immediately distinguishable, both for their boldness, and their unflinching depiction of death, sexuality and the paranormal—not to mention some are made from skateboard decks, a nod to his love for American skate culture. In part an expression of rage against the concept of kawaii (cuteness) in mainstream Japanese culture, Yokono’s raw figures devour the Hello Kitty stigma.

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Yokono returns to the Mark Moore Gallery after his 2009 showing, with a new, partially-autobiographical exhibition, “Rise of the Underground,” alongside San Francisco artist Jeremy Fish, who has produced his own set of woodcuts. Fish’s work is vibrant and playful, using animal figures to communicate tales from popular folklore and myth. The highly-stylized wood paintings show influences from pop art and skate culture, pairing well with Yokono’s focus on contemporary life.

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Yokono’s new work shows a lot of range, moving from the conventional to the cutting edge. “Falling Flower” is a traditional circular landscape, modernized with the presence of a highway. An intriguing set of woodblocks looks at scantily-dressed women in a dilapidated backyard, evoking feelings of confusion, lethargy and dislocation. Whatever the subject, Yokono is uncompromising in his attention to detail and dedication to the emotional integrity of the piece. “Rise of the Underground” will be at the Mark Moore Gallery in Los Angeles from 29 October-17 December 2011.


Core77 Photo Gallery: London Design Festival 2011

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Put the coffee on, close your email, and brace yourself!

We just finished uploading our mega-photo coverage from this year’s London Design Festival—truly our favorite design event amongst the many happening globally this season. While 100% Design is still very much at the festivals heart, it get’s bigger every year with design destinations including; Decorex, designjunction, Tramshed, Tent, Origin, Designersblock, Brompton Design District, The Dock, Oxo Wharf Tower, V&A, and The Design Museum.

Checkout the highlights for 2011 in our comprehensive gallery and don’t miss this crazy Lego Greenhouse, the impressive wooden entrance to the V&A, some stunning new work from design outfit gt2p, this remarkable ball of floorboards installation, and the tribute show to Alan Fletcher.

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The Conditions of Winter

Rinat Voligamsi reimagines found photographs of Russian military life

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Drawing on his experience in the Red Army,
Rinat Voligamsi
paints from photographs of early Russian military life to reinterpret the bleak conditions in his current show “The Conditions of Winter.” The exhibition opens today at London’s Erarta Gallery, an outpost of the largest non-governmental contemporary art museum in Russia, exploring themes of humanity in the face of power and authority.

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Though he paints with nearly mathematical precision, Voligamsi is no photorealist. Deft surrealist alterations range from tiny, exquisite details—burning cigarette embers create the Great Bear constellation—to major transformations, like figures that are cut in half, duplicated or inverted.

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By manipulating the photographs while staying true to the look and feel of the originals, the resulting distorted scenes seamlessly merge the documentary reality with the artist’s vision, blending fact and fiction to make powerful statements.

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Voligamsi’s altered figures seemingly come to life, suggesting the absurdities of living under tyranny as well as the potential for resistance to spin powerful metaphors about what happens to people under state supression.

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The Conditions of Winter runs through 19 November 2011.

Erarta Galleries London
8 Berkeley Street
London W1J 8DN


Core77 Photo Gallery: Oregon Manifest 2011

Photography by Ray Hu & Stephen Li for Core77

The second biennial Oregon Manifest has come and gone, but the spirit of the competition to build the ultimate utility bike lives on in our photo gallery from that whirlwind weekend in Portland. In addition to the high-profile creative collaborations—IDEO × Rock Lobster‘s “Faraday,” Fuseproject × SyCip‘s “LOCAL,” and Ziba × Signal‘s “Fremont“—30 teams from across the country put not only their bike-building prowess but also their creativity to the test. Standard offerings included a variety of dynamo-powered lights and custom stowage solutions throughout, while the far end of the spectrum saw innovations from a retractable kickstand and fenders (Student winner U. of Oregon) to Ziba’s flip-down sidecar.

Nevertheless, the culmination of the competition was as much an occasion for looking back as it was for looking forward to the future of the utility bike. We’ve said it before, but congratulations to everyone who participated in the Oregon Manifest 2011—who knows what you’ll come up with in two years?

» View Gallery; see full coverage here.

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Core77 Photo Gallery: Valencia Disseny Week 2011

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Returning for it’s third year, Valencia Disseny Week (VDW) anchored by the international trade show Feria H&#225bitat hosted numerous satellite shows, workshops and events throughout the city. In an effort to raise awareness of design in this region which is dominated by Spain’s larger cities Barcelona and Madrid, VDW also serves as a platform to connect designers with industry and the business community.

Highlights this year included the exhibition Nude at Feria H&#225bitat showcasing work from a few dozen emerging (mostly) Spanish designers, a tour of the LZF Lighting factory, group show Omelette-ed, and an exhibition of work by graphic designer Esteso Augustine.

Checkout the rest of our selections from VDW here.

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Core77 Photo Gallery: The Impossible Project Factory Tour

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Take a look behind-the-scenes at the The Impossible Project Factory located in Enschede, a small industrial city in the far east of The Netherlands. In 2008 Impossible brokered a last-minute deal with Polaroid to purchase all the machines and equipment used to make instant integral film just before they were scrapped, and set up shop in Building Noord (North) of the former-Polaroid plant.

For those not familiar with the back story, getting the new film to market was not without it’s difficulties, it was nearly impossible as Polaroid closed the chemical plant that produced their secret colored dyes almost two years earlier in anticipation of shuttering their analog business. In fact they only started dismantling the factories once all the reserves had been used up. The real challenge for the Impossible team — aside from figuring out how to modernize production — was finding a partner that could produce the chemicals necessary to make the magic of instant film work.

In March 2010, the first Impossible film — PX100 and PX600 — made it’s debut, much to the relief of analog photography enthusiasts who had been stockpiling expired film in case they could never shoot their vintage Polaroid cameras again. Today the film range offered has expanded considerably with various monochromatic shades and colored blends available but the Impossible team are still hard at work perfecting the PX integral film formula. There are plans to resurrect the popular 8×10 format using the last intact production machine which was shipped from the US in late 2009, and they have started designing their own camera which will no doubt take strong cues from the iconic SX-70.

To keep our factory tour authentic, the first three quarters were shot on Impossible film and if you want to learn more about how the film is made, check out this great video from the Science Channel we posted a few months ago.

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In All Our Decadence People Die

An NYC exhibit displays 3,000 works from English punk band Crass’ seven-year reign

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Though London’s famed punk venue The Roxy is now a decidedly sober Speedo Swimwear outlet, in the late ’70s and early ’80s, the U.K. was in the midst of a royal cultural battle between the Thatcherite establishment and a new breed of shock-and-awe artists and musicians. At the forefront of the movement, the English band Crass’ two-chord rant Banned from The Roxy was somewhat of an anthem for the times.

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Preserved for posterity are 3,000 fanzines, flyers, posters, manuscripts and original works of art sent to the band between 1977 and 1984. These punk artifacts have been collected and cataloged by visual artist Gee Vaucher, who collaborated with the band and still resides at Dial House, a collective in the Essex countryside.

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These works have crossed the Atlantic for a special viewing from 30 September-20 October 2011 at Boo-Hooray in NYC. The gallery has also published a limited edition (250 copies) catalog along with 500 pressings of a 7-inch vinyl recording featuring Crass’ Penny Rimbaud, with cover art by Vaucher.

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An opening reception will be held from 6-9pm Friday, 30 September 2011. RSVP online at Boo-Horray. See images in the gallery.