Tuesday, March 16, 2010

10:00 AM  
 
EXHIBIT OPENING: Danyol @ W SF

  

image: 'Tami Fox Likes Knee Sox' 2006 Mixed Media Collage 48 x 24

DANYOL 

THE SECRET LIVES OF CHAVS

A Retrospective at W SAN FRANCISCO

MAR 16 - JUN 15

W SF / XYZ Restaurant
181 3rd St, SF

danyol's mixed media collage works juxtapose the idyllic innocence of 50's era fashion iconography with a modernized mischievousness contained in the underlying layers.  danyol has always nourished himself on a a steady diet of pop art, cubism, and sarcasm.  danyol's use of his own life and surroundings combine to form a dizzying combination of colors, patterns, and textures.  While using equal parts nostalgia and current events together, danyol's pop-influenced works explore the liminal spaces between surface and emotion, gender role, responsibility and reality; along with other inconsistencies in our fragile social fabric.
 

RECEPTION: THURSDAY, MAR 18 6 - 8P
rsvp by Monday, Mar 15:  info @ mckinleyartsolutions.com
 
 
libations for the event featuring 1800 TEQUILA
 
danyol was selected as one of 1800 TEQUILA's Essential Artists for 2009.  To celebrate this achievement, 1800 TEQUILA will be providing 1800 Silver Agave tequila for the opening reception which will feature tequila-inspired concoctions, of course!
 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 


12:00 PM  
 
EXHIBIT CLOSING: 'Angels and Demons' Andrew Ogus @ Moby Dick

  

ANGELS AND DEMONS

Mixed Media Drawings by ANDREW OGUS

venue: Moby Dick
 
4049 Hartford St. (x. 18th) SF

"I was born in Washington D.C, and grew up in a Maryland suburb. This ordinary life was punctuated by my father’s occasional work for the United Nations, which twice brought us to Israel to live. The Suez Crisis of 1956 – 57 flung foreign dependents out of the country. With our beloved dog (who had come with us from America) we were sent to Greece and then on to Rome. 
After five and a half months we were reunited with our father. En route home we visited the remains of Pompeii, where the adult men were shown certain mysterious murals while women and children waited in the ancient street. My circumspect father never told me what they were. 

Years later I saw Fellini’s Satyricon in Boston. I rode home to Cambridge on a tiny borrowed bicycle. There I was on a weird machine in a fabulous darkened city. Just like the movie.  I often think about the Greeks and Romans, for whom the ancient world was modern. The people who come to us in broken statues and mosaics, faded murals, and scraps of text. What will remain of our lives in two thousand years? Which of our stories will remain?  

When I began this work it was to celebrate the iconic beauty of men. It is also an attempt to preserve those unseen Pompeiian paintings, those vanished lives, and our own. " - A. Ogus

Examiner article about 'Angels and Demons'

Exhibit on view through MAR 16, 2010