January 25, 2019

Listen: Curtis Lowe Debut EP “Sad Bangers Vol.1”

Cutis Lowe’s new E.P “Sad Bangers Vol. 1” just came out and it’s a foot-tapping good time. Conor Cook, the N.Y.C/ L.A bi-coastal based producer behind it, who is also in VHS Collection, wanted to make something that was a bit out of the norm for him. Working more on the production side with a lot of collaboration for the vocal side. The list of contributors is a stacked one, Cook, plays guitar on every track but the collaborations include vocalist Naomi Wild, RCA artist TOMI, Ben Duffy of the UK band Fenech-Soler, and James King of Fitz and the Tantrums. Also, Leif Podhajsky, who has created album art for Tame Impala, Foals, and Bonobo among others, provided artwork for the project.

“I wanted the project to be more electronic, and work with different singers and have me be more a part of the project. I was most excited about collaborations. I’ve been in LA writing with so many different people and it’s just awesome. That early stage of getting the idea and working with someone else on it is just so fun” Cook said about the project.

When you listen to this album you’ll hear influences that take you back a bit, that are a bit more relaxing, but also tracks you can still party to. Cook explains this method and how he got these influences.  

“I wanted to work with more 90’s song references. More classic house as opposed the more mainstream American EDM. A lot of it was just me alone in my apartment for weeks playing with different ideas, and synths, just pacing around my apartment for months trying to get these ideas down how I wanted them. With VHS it’s three of us and a producer, this was just me wrestling with it by myself.”

There was a goal of individuality that Cook tried to get out of “Sad Bangers” as he mourned over this album for months on months alone in his apartment. It’s so easy to get swept away in house music of today, but Cook did not want to be a part of that wave. “There was something about it that I found cooler than most electronic music that I am into. A lot of house records do sound similar just based on the process, but there are others that are trying to branch out and do their own thing. I kind of wanted to go down that path on my own. Within house music, there are things that you can branch out on.”

The lyricism played an important role in the overall process for Cook, he didn’t want just some corn stuffed lyrics to be thrown in there, he wanted music to dance to with some party in there. But also,he wants you to be able to be swept away in the story when listening to it alone in the car. “The songwriting I wanted to be legit, I didn’t want this to be based around stupid lyrics with singers that don’t know what they are doing. I hope the songs connect with people and also I just want the songs to connect with people and have it still be party music. I’m not trying to invent my own genre, I want to just put my own spin on it. What I care most about is a good record and a good song that a lot of effort was put into making it.”

The summer seems to be stacking up well for Cook and his future projects, with a lot more coming down the pipeline. “I have a lot more ideas and music that I’m going to release in the summer. I just kind of chip away at stuff, work on something for a whole day and then come back to it in a few days. Definitely putting out a lot more music in the future. It’ll be a mix, with some pop songs and then some other stuff that’s a bit longer and whatever comes naturally to me. It should all be.”

February 12, 2019

Noise Pop Music and Art Festival

The start of every year always has its highlights, that new pep in your step, an increase in motivation, that drive inside that makes you want to get out and get it. One of our favorite things about the new year though is the end of February, where our good friends at Noise Pop throw their annual festival. And for those few weeks, the city comes alive, we finally get up off our asses and touch some road, ales and cameras in hand. Running around town trying to catch as many shows as we can. This year’s Noise Pop fest is looking to be yet another banger of a time. Browse this lineup below and try not to spend your whole savings account on tickets….. Or do, it’ll be worth it.

October 18, 2018

Treasure Island Music Festival

This past weekend was the Treasure Island Music Festival put on by our friends at Noise Pop and Another Planet Entertainment. We went over the bridge to the little island to check out the scene and man, what a fucking time it was. Check out the enjoyable chaos that was Treasure Island below.

 

July 6, 2018

Agenda Long Beach 2018

June 29, 2018

Artist Feature: Alexandra Rubinstein

Photo Credit: Ida Tietgen

Russian born, New York-based artist Alexandra Rubinstein’s work makes you double take. Your thumb jerks back up as you scroll past it on Instagram, it’s intriguing, draws you in. To some it’s electrifying, others may find it offensive. But Rubinstein doesn’t care about that. She just wants to keep creating. Her work puts pressure on people; it challenges the status quo. It doesn’t matter to her whether you are a sensitive liberal or conservative republican. She creates work that has a message, broadens views, it puts one in an unfamiliar situation that forces recognition. But most importantly there’s humor in it. Rubinstein is a big believer in humor being one of the most important ways in which people connect. One can either see an uncomfortable image of John Hamm looking up at them starry-eyed and be disgusted or giggle at the pope smiling between a pair of legs seeing the play on power dynamics and societal sexual views. Either way, it’s hard not to smirk a bit. We love what Rubinstein’s doing and want her to keep it up. See for yourself below and if you aren't already following her, start to, @therubinstein.

Your work is very leveled, touches on a lot of things, some people may find it offensive, some find it empowering. Do you think about that when creating, pushing buttons and taking people to that uncomfortable place they may not like?

I’m in a bit of a bubble in New York and rarely think about my work pushing buttons. And in the context of art history and the art world, I don't think it’s offensive. That said, in work and personal life, I don’t like to adhere to expectations placed on me by society. So even within this liberal bubble, there is still discomfort around a woman creating work that plays around with power dynamics and sexuality through the objectification of men. Which is good, that is part of the problem I’m trying to address. We need to stop equating sexuality and beauty with women’s bodies, because that’s what’s perpetuating the societal pressure for us to look and behave a certain way, inevitably leading to oppression.

What drives you to keep creating? The people who view and buy your pieces want to be stimulated, but what keeps you stimulated creatively?

I feel most fulfilled and confident when I’m making work. The more I make, the more ideas I get, the more stimulated I am to create. More often than not, ideas organically pop into my head shaped by things I’m reading, seeing, going through, and they develop over time. I think visually, but language is a big part of my work as well. It’s most obvious in titles of the pieces. Reading tends to be one of the most stimulating past times for me. I’m a big fan of sociological books, autobiographies and personal essays — understanding people, how we operate and why.  

 

What are you working on lately?

The Dream Come True is the most known series that I’ve been working on since 2015. It seemed to resonate with people and I’m always exploring different ways I can connect it to our current climate and keep developing the idea further. So I have a couple of pieces for it in the works. Repetition is also a recurring theme in my work, I think it’s powerful in a similar way that scale is, and more so when you’re using a social media platform to distribute images. No one subject is too important, they function as a group.

Another series I’ve worked on recently is a collection of pieces centered around Jon Hamm as a distant muse. Drawing on his on-screen persona, I used his image to invoke a male idea and explore female fantasy and desire. One of the pieces I was particularly excited about - Hammered, was a 3 dimensional, interactive painting that pulls the sex scene from Bridesmaids between Jon Hamm and Kristen Wiig and displays it in a boardwalk cutout format. With Wiig’s character’s face removed, anyone can enter the scene and be entered, or “Hammered” by Hamm. The added partition mimics the movie screen, inviting an audience and spotlighting the staged union. This cutout format, originally known as a comic foreground, invites play and brings lightness to human sexuality. It dismisses the passive role traditionally assigned to women. Along with the Thirsty series, I’m interested in making more work that’s interactive and lends itself to video, creating a more immersive experience.

  

I know that you support and donate some of your profits to Planned Parenthood — why Planned Parenthood?

Planned Parenthood is the best-known organization that provides women with affordable reproductive care and with government pulling its funding, it has come to represent the attack on women’s bodies in the current political climate. I do donate specifically to the South Texas branch because it's one of the least funded. So I’m using it for its visibility, giving people an immediate idea of priorities and stance. That said, I’ve also used proceeds to donate to the Puerto Rico relief, and have other causes I donate to personally.

 

What do you want to say in your work, what do you want people to take away?

I want to challenge old notions of gender, power, and intimacy, and explore how culture shapes and perpetuates these stereotypes. To reframe the heterosexual female perspective as underrepresented, playful, assertive, and also visceral - drawing attention away from our appearance and onto men. I want people to enjoy looking at my work and be entertained by it. I want some pieces to make people laugh and I want them to resonate and hopefully broaden their perspective. I also want to highlight the biased reaction people may have to my work because of my gender.

 

 

 

 

June 7, 2018

Nailed It: Astral People @ Sydney Opera House

The whole thing was on point. 🎯

Natasha Diggs by Tim Da-Rin

Astral People’s Studio Party at the Sydney Opera House during Vivid humored the sleek and satisfied the genuine.
Stepping inside at the mezzanine level after getting a properly pink wristband, the floor cruised along to Natasha Diggs' nu funk sounds. Followed by Danny Krivit pumping OG disco house through the warm hazy room, the environment sure instigated a good horizontal hustle — I tell ya.

Danny Krivit by Tim Da-Rin

Music and venue: two thumbs up.
The outdoor scenery was a helluva treat, too.

Photo by Gareth Mordue

The entire Sydney Harbor lights up end to end for Vivid which is a fucking rad sight to behold. Just across from the Opera House, the Museum of Contemporary Art was projected with artwork by Sydney’s own talented Jonny Niesche in collaboration with Mark Pritchard were especially sweet, considering we were fortunate enough to catch a studio visit with Jonny.
mca-jonny-niesche-5-of-6

Museum of Contemporary Art facade by Jonny Niesche

Added bonus: Getting to stop by Sarah Cottier Gallery to view Jonny’s work in the group show titled “CHROMA.”

Jonny Niesche + Brendan Van Hek, But Still I Wait, 2018, mirror, dye-sublimation print on polyester voile, acrylic mirror, brass

Nice meeting you, Ashley and Sarah — thanks again for the book.
Cheers,
Vic

June 1, 2018

Review of “Noonday Dream” the latest from Ben Howard

Ben Howard’s new album, “Noonday Dream,” dropped today and we got a sneak peak. Read on for contributor Haley Killam’s thoughts on the record.

Howard’s album sees way more diversity than his previous ones by way of instruments with “Nica Libres at Dusk” ending in piano and “Someone In The Doorway” starting off with only drums and vocals. This album continues what he does best — painting landscapes, both physical and emotional spaces, through instrumentation and his cathartic lyrics.

“Noonday Dream” seems to rely far less on Howard’s singing capabilities than his past work. His voice is almost exclusively there to tell a story, in the low and humbled tone of someone who has been through some shit. In his past albums, he has used his vocals as more of an instrument — howling throughout “The Wolves” and harmonizing with the guitar strings in the intro of “Old Pine,” all while also telling universal yet individual stories through his lyrics. This third album picks up where “I Forget Where We Were” left us — in a chaotic place — and Howard creates that space for the listeners through the syncopated drums and almost dizzying synthesis of high and low frequencies that makes for an emotionally immersive listening experience.

Photo Credit; Roddy Bow

Favorite song - The Defeat.

Highlight tracks;

“Nica Libres at Dusk”

Howard opens the album with this song, letting us know right away this album is a culmination of his first two. While “Every Kingdom” relied almost entirely on acoustic fingerpicking and “I Forget Where We Were” on harmonious electric guitar synths, “Noonday Dream” is a melancholic layering of the two.

“Someone In The Doorway”
Got some Isaac Brock of Modest Mouse type singing going on here with some vibrant violin that we heard in “Every Kingdom,” with heavy electric guitar riffs carrying throughout.

The drums, WTF, so awesome — never heard a Howard song with percussion like this one.

“Murmurations”
Really haven't heard this side of Howard before. The raw rock drum percussion against the synthy and layered distorted guitar really shows how far he has come as an artist from his heavily acoustic roots.

Touring the summer in Europe, Howard won’t be stateside until the end of September. Get on those tickets though, they're going fast.

May 2, 2018

LeRoi Johnson Brings A Primitive Contemporary Twist to Superfine! NYC

 

From "The Disciples"

“I paint for me, the things that have gone on in my life, I like to paint stories that I may be thinking about or things that I see. And Sometimes the things aren’t really there but I will paint it anyway. Sometimes I paint historical idea but I like to make it about my life.”

Contemporary artist LeRoi Johnson has seen it all. Not just as an artist, but as a lawyer, and also as his brother funk legend, Rick James' manager. His art is a reflection of what he has experienced through his varied life, with a primitive twist. He paints electric colored historical figures juxtaposed with a contemporary influence.

His work draws inspiration from modern influences of Picasso, Dali, Jacob Lawrence and Pippin all the way back to the ancient artists of cave drawings, works from the ‘nameless primitives.’

“The nameless primitives are famous because their work has lasted tens of thousands of years. No one knows their name, it’s just based on the work. You know why too by just the rawness of them and to think about how they did their work,” he said. “Each group represents something else, classic, contemporary artists represent freedom. Unrestricted. Each one of them tells me what you can do as an artist.”

His story on how he got into art is an unusual one. As a young kid, LeRoi was seriously injured in a bus accident. Not being able to attend school due to his injuries. He was stuck at home and the two things he took to were drawing and reading and he never stopped either.

“I was bedridden for a number of years and the only thing I could really do was study or draw. And I did a lot of drawing, and a lot of painting,” he said. “That was really the only thing I did, draw and then study. I did that every day until I was about thirteen. In the end, it sounds a lot worse than it was because I was able to focus on art and school, which I probably would not have been able to do.”

After a year at a technical high school where he studied Industrial Design, LeRoi left to a regular high school. It wasn’t until his senior year in college where he switched back to studying Urban Design where we learned the structural side of creating. From then on, LeRoi would live a life of many paths. “I just got used to doing multiple things. I was doing a lot of traveling in the early eighties when I was managing my brother so I wasn’t able to actually make the art I wanted to. I just didn’t have the time. But I went to about every city in the states and all over Europe and when I did I would go to all the galleries and museums in each. So I didn’t lose anything, I actually gained a lot.”

LeRoi’s journey has brought him across the globe, experiencing art in all communities. His excitement for being apart of Superfine! resembles that.“I am excited for this new community of people to see my work and see something different and also be able to show with all of these younger artists and have my work be all the wall along theirs.”

Superfine! NYC open May 2nd and runs through the 6th.

 

 

August 25, 2017

Cheyenne Randall

Having spent most of his twenties coming in and out of San Francisco, appropriation artist Cheyenne Randall (@Indiangiver) recently visited for a week to work on a few projects. GRØSS got to catch his install of a piece in the Mission at the soon to be opening Fox Sister and instigated his rants about trying to be active, Instagram and not talking about the uncomfortable shit.

Randall is well known for his shopped tattoo series — taking pictures of celebrities and giving them some traditional ink. Lately, he has been getting into more motion and 3-D art as well as getting involved in music and a film titled “Warrior Women” with Christina King and Dr. Elizabeth Castles.

His work isn't supposed to make you feel warm and comfortable — It makes you double take, pushes your buttons and dances on that thin line of right and wrong. Being Native American and an artist, he feels like it is his responsibility, now that he is gaining recognition, to become more active especially in today’s world of social media and he isn’t afraid of speaking his mind about it, “You kind of have this responsibility to decide like am I going to be this dude just posting pics of me ballin' with a blunt hanging out of my mouth or am I actually going to get involved... The Native community is kind of dead, people don’t even know we exist." He blames a lot of this lack of knowledge on the education system and how Native American history is barely taught in schools. But it isn’t just problems with his heritage — it’s everyone, all races, and how there is this obliviousness that is all too common. “I do everything I can to stand up for every race. You get some these fucking hippies man, that live in this fantasy land where everything is nice. Nobody wants to talk about the uncomfortable shit and in the meantime, all this crazy shit happens because people aren’t willing to talk about it.”

Randall’s frustrated with this new general public status quo of everything being alright. “People just don’t really care because their fucking phones aren’t loading fast enough. My friends are more excited about the new iPhone or whatever coming out than they would be if they found out something like stem cell research can be used to cure cancer. There’s just not enough public interest.”

Like most artists today, Randall has to rely heavily on Instagram to stay current —
uploading posts at certain times, using keywords and hashtags, trying to keep coming up at the top of people’s feeds. These things are necessary to be able to keep doing what he is doing but it definitely infuriates him.


“It makes me feel kind of sick and narcissistic sometimes because I’m not like that. I’m not a big hashtagger or really fuck with any of that shit really because I think it’s all teenage bullshit. It feels so fabricated, and in a lot of ways, it is. It’s like this neurotic bullshit that you are feeding to this part of society. There’s like algorithms and shit to it that you have to follow which just feeds that bullshit narrative.”

One aspect of this social-media-crazed public that freaks Randall out is how people think they know someone based on just their accounts and what they post. To be friends with them, to feel like they know a person based on their posts and how easy it is to appear a certain way through social media. “It’s weird sometimes, I think people meet me sometimes and are disappointed because I’m not who they think I am based on my Instagram. They think I am this well put together Instagram page. It’s annoying but at the same time, it’s a game that I somehow put myself in it. But I make it fun and still post a bunch of goofy shit. You can’t take it too seriously, but it’s hard not to.”

Randall will be part of the Life is Beautiful festival in Las Vegas Sept. 22-24, doing a show called Crime on Canvas with a number of other artists. One of the other artists is Randall’s hero, Ron English. “Ron was one of the first guys to really attack a wall and I have always looked up to him. Just to have my name near his is an honor.”

Peep his Instagram here: @indiangiver 

June 1, 2017

Samo©… Lives — A Resurrection of Diaz X Basquiat

Unite Gallery Error:

Gallery with alias: samo not found

Artist Al Diaz is releasing three photographic prints that he took in 1976 of his childhood friend and partner in starting the SAMO©... movement in New York, Jean-Michel Basquiat. Diaz, with the help of Instagram—SAMO©... and Massachusetts-based House of Roulx, has recently been bringing back the presence of the iconic SAMO©... a movement that overtook the streets of New York during the late seventies—spreading his work and SAMO©... across the globe to places himself and Basquiat never could have reconciled. The prints that are being released feature two portraits of a young Basquiat and photo of the two of both Diaz and Basquiat. (below)

Basquiat & Diaz - House of Roulx

Basquiat & Diaz - House of Roulx

Uncovered from digging through his old photographs in his basement on request from a friend, Diaz stumbled upon a side of Basquiat not many have seen—young and before he would rise to stardom. “These are pictures of him when he was a more innocent human being; a less damaged soul,” he says. Diaz briefly chatted with us over the reintroduction of the SAMO©... movement, social media and the release of moments between a dear friend of his and himself from a long time ago.

What are your motivations for resurrecting SAMO©...?

I started a few hours after the [recent presidential] election. I went out and started doing [tags] and haven’t stopped since. I have been doing it out in public places usually at subway stations, but this time around, being that it’s 2017, I’ve been using social media to get them out there. They don’t usually last long much in these days on the subway, they buff them really quickly. You have about a day. But the social media is how really people are seeing it, Instagram, Facebook, etc.

 

Are you a fan of all these necessary social media methods you have to use today?

I am not a huge fan. I’m not an advocate. I’m not going to deny its existence or anything. I am going to utilize it because it's a whole new generation and audience. It’s very useful. You know, I never had a cell phone when I was a teenager or in my twenties or through my thirties. It was never part of our culture. But I’ll be 58 in June and I have had a cell phone since 2001, so to me it’s not completely shocking of a thing.

Do you think people miss the emotion trying to be expressed seeing it through a screen as opposed to on a subway?

Yes, it’s not the same experience. Certainly not. When you see something live, in person, it always has a much more effect. I mean how many times have you seen certain great art works, you know? Take something like Guernica or like the Mona Lisa. I never saw the Mona Lisa, but I bet when I saw it, the real one, I would be like, "Oh shit, I’m feeling being in the presence of this iconic and powerful object," or whatever. But it’s cool that you can see it at least in social media. It reaches an international audience. I get requests from people from Norway and Australia; by the standards of which myself and Basquiat were active that was totally inconceivable, the idea of people being that far away knowing what we were into.

How did this whole thing with the photographs start?

Through a friend who has a company called Street Art Direct; he came to a show of mine in 2015. He knew who I was and was asking me if I had any old photographs because he was interested in maybe making a few copies. I went through my old negatives but couldn’t find anything but. I did find prints and that’s when I found the portraits. It took us about a year and a half before we even did something. It was through Street Art Direct where I got together with the Gendron Brothers at House of Roulx and they were willing to work with the old black and white 4x4 snapshot prints and enhance them to 18x24 images. It took some time but now they are very handsome prints.  

Basquiat 1976 by Al Diaz - House of Roulx

Basquiat 1976 by Al Diaz - House of Roulx

Why are these photos important?

They are important because there are not a lot of them, really and they are actually pretty decent portraits.  Because there are a lot of images out there of later Basquiat, theses are the few of Basquiat before 'Basquiat' was 'Basquiat' in a sense. These are pictures of him, he is a more innocent human being, a less damaged soul.

Basquiat by Al Diaz - House of Roulx

Basquiat by Al Diaz - House of Roulx

Diaz also has a personal show coming up in New York in the Meatpacking district at a pop-up gallery called Red Bird with artist Ron English and possibly Shepard Fairey.

Stay tuned.

Vintage SAMO©... photos via Henry Flynt

Basquiat photos by Al Diaz via House of Roulx