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About Steve ::
Person :: Art
Favorite Artists
Steve's art collection includes many contemporary
artists, both famous masters and some whose work strikes a chord. David
Hockney, Ed Ruscha, Eric Fischl, Martin Mull, Edward Hopper, and others
are among his favorites. These articles are about
artists in his collection.
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The Toronto Star
3 Mar 2001
Art star's a sell out in best sense
Daphne Gordon
Marcel Dzama's quirky drawings are scooped up as quickly as he can produce
them
It's not often a gallery show sells out before it's even mounted on the
wall.
But it really shouldn't be much of a surprise when it comes to works by
Marcel Dzama, the 26-year-old art star from Winnipeg.
His freaky little drawings have been shown in such major art cities as New
York, Los Angeles, Berlin and Stockholm and been bought up by the likes of
Jim Carrey, Drew Carrey, Nicolas Cage, Steve Martin and Dave Eggers.
And now, Canadians John Oravec and Roy Bernardi can add themselves to the
celebrity-studded list of collectors.
The pair, business partners from Sarnia who describe themselves as obsessive
collectors of Canadian contemporary art, bought up every single piece in a
show of 100 ink-on-paper drawings that's set to launch at the Olga Korper
gallery today.
And they did it before the drawings were even unpacked from the shipping
crates.
"We came in last week to see Olga about something else, on other business,''
says Oravec. ``We'd seen the work before and had talked about a big Dzama
(purchase) . . . We loved it, so we bought it.''
It's an urge that's not uncommon when people see Dzama's work, says Korper,
who first spotted his drawings in Los Angeles three years ago and was struck
with their humour and pathos.
"He appeals to all kinds of people,'' she says. ``Museums collect him,
corporations, individuals from all walks of life and socioeconomic groups.
That's really unusual. So his popularity is built in.''
And it's not unusual for collectors to buy several of his pieces, she
explains, because they're small and priced accessibly at $400 (U.S) apiece.
Each page-sized drawing hints at the peculiar and marvellous world inside
Dzama's head. It's populated by a cast of anthropomorphic bats, kitty cats,
robots and trees, as well as humans, some of whom wear costumes of strange
varieties, including superheros, cowboys, bears and bunnies.
Dzama captures these characters at moments of puzzling drama: A woman
dressed in a Captain America-esque costume has sex with a laughing lion. A
man gently kisses a naked woman emerging from a television. A tree in a tux
puffs on an elegant cigarette holder. A bunny snickers while a young woman
reveals her breasts.
One can only imagine how these bizarre beings ended up in such outlandish
situations, which is part of their appeal.
But while the content is a whimsical flirtation with low-brow pop culture,
Dzama's drawing technique is sophisticated and refined, with a sureness of
hand that Korper describes as ``spectacularly good'' in some pieces.
"Drawing is not unlike handwriting - it's very personal. And when you look
at two or three of his drawings, you can't mistake that they're Dzamas.
There's an odd magic to his work.''
The pieces are interesting as individual works, but even more fascinating
when displayed in a group, where the entire Dzama-esque cast of characters
comes alive. They recur in different settings, apparently roaming around his
little world, bumping into each other, interacting, then moving on to the
next scene.
Oravec and Bernardi, who have been collecting together since they became
business partners in the '90s, plan to do something very unconventional with
their Dzamas. They'll divide them, then display them at their respective
homes just as they were when they bought them - in crates.
The pair hopes to negotiate with the Plug In gallery in Winnipeg to purchase
the large orange crates in which the drawings were shipped to Toronto.
The rest will be stored unframed in drawers, says Bernardi, explaining that
he's running out of wall space in the home he designed for his family in
Sarnia.
He and Oravec share a similar taste and, in their spare time, travel the
world seeking out art. They collect mainly contemporary Canadians such as
Joanne Tod and Paterson Ewen.
Bernardi explains in simple terms why he likes Dzama: "It's fun.''
Oravec agrees that the appeal is simple, describing the work as "fresh and
new.''
The international art world seems to agree.
Dzama's show last year in New York sold out, and critics have gone googly-eyed,
gushing about him in such publications as the New York Times and Art In
America.
"We like supporting Canadians, and he's making it internationally, so he's
the best of both worlds,'' says Oravec.
Dzama, who is scheduled to drop into the gallery today, was surprised when
he heard his show sold out before it was even mounted.
"I've sold out before, but never before a show opens. It's kind of crazy,''
said the artist in a phone interview just after he returned to Winnipeg from
Stockholm, where a show of 120 of his drawings just opened.
Since he began drawing these small works about four years ago, the
University of Manitoba graduate has done about 5,000 pieces.
As demand for his work gains momentum, Korper is glad he's prolific. She was
able to procure about 50 more drawings, in addition to the ones in the show,
to satisfy other buyers interested in Dzama's work.
Some of the additional drawings were done very recently, Korper noted,
guessing that Dzama's trip to Stockholm inspired a piece that includes a bit
of Swedish writing.
"Wherever he goes and whatever he experiences becomes his source material.
His everyday life feeds the content.''
Dzama, who has also done illustrations for Saturday Night magazine and will
design an upcoming cover for the offbeat American literary quarterley
McSweeney's, says comic book artist Jack Kirby has had a big impact on him.
He has also looked to the simplicity of Inuit art for inspiration.
But he can't really say where the absurd images come from.
I usually don't like my explanations of my own work. I like to listen to
other peoples','' he says. ``They usually have some weird twist on it that I
find interesting.''
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San Francisco Chronicle
Friday, April 3, 1998
Leah Garchik's Personals
MARTIN MULL'S SAN FRANCISCO SHOW
Leah Garchik
Martin Mull would wince at a news release about his new show of dreamlike
figurative paintings at the Rena Bransten Gallery in San Francisco that says
he's ``best known as an actor.'' Mull, who lives in Los Angeles, has
bachelor's and master's degrees in fine arts and has taught painting on the
college level. ``Of all the things I could see myself doing,'' he said this
week, ``painting is the only thing that is a lifetime commitment.''
Most painters are forced to support themselves with other jobs, ``teaching,
cab driving, frying shrimp at HoJo's,'' says Mull. ``As long as I have to do
that, too, I couldn't ask for a better job than playing in show business two
or three times a week. It's the best cab-driving job that I can think of.''
Although he's proud that his New York dealer signed him on without knowing
anything of his show business career, Mull admits there are advantages to
Hollywood connections. ``My compatriots are some of the few people I know
who are depression-proof. They can buy art and tend to do so.'' Well-known
art collector Steve Martin, for example, owns 31 Mull paintings. ``He's my
own private Lorenzo Medici.''
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The Atlanta Journal and Constitution
June 21, 2001 Thursday, Home edition
Features; Pg. 6D
Photos take Atlanta native on sensational ride to fame
Catherine Fox
When Tierney Gearon's photography exhibition opened Wednesday at the
blue-chip Gagosian Gallery in New York, it was the latest milestone in a
sometimes nightmarish fairy-tale career.
In the past year and a half, the one-time model and fashion photographer has
sold her pictures to actor Steve Martin out of the trunk of her car in the
Caribbean island St. Bart, had her first exhibition at the prestigious
Saatchi Collection in London and seen her nude photos of children Emilee and
Michael in the tabloids as alleged child pornography.
In a conversation from New York, where she was preparing for her show,
Gearon seemed slightly dazed by it all.
"It's quite shocking," said the 37-year-old Atlanta native, who has lived in
London for a decade. "I never went to art school. I never thought any of
this would happen to me. Basically I was just documenting a project on my
family."
Always a creative spirit, Gearon "fell into photography taking Polaroids of
friends," said her father, retired real estate developer Mike Gearon. From
there she became a fashion photographer. A few years ago, she made the
unusual move of using members of her extended family, who had gathered at
Sea Island, as models for an Italian Vogue spread.
Gearon met influential collector Charles Saatchi through a friendship with
his wife, Kay, and he saw and fell in love with Gearon's work. (He owns the
works in the controversial "Sensation" exhibition that inflamed New York
City Mayor Rudolph Giuliani at the Brooklyn Museum of Art in 1999.) Saatchi
bought 19 pieces and featured her in a group show, "I Am a Camera," in
February along with such notables as Nan Goldin and Hiroshi Sugimoto. Some
of the photos depicted her children, now 6 and 8, romping naked.
The tabloids had a field day spreading reproductions of her photos across
their pages. Gearon was afraid she might go to jail. She got famous instead.
Interest piqued by the commotion, Gagosian representatives went to see the
Saatchi show.
"We were immediately excited about it," said Courtney Plummer, Gagosian's
exhibition coordinator. "We thought it was an opportunity to work with
someone fresh and new. We thought the work was important and intriguing
enough to warrant a show at our New York gallery."
Unschooled in the art world, Gearon said she's gotten advice from Atlanta
dealer Jane Jackson.
"I would love to show her work," Jackson said. "I think she's pulling on a
lot of different people, but it's very fresh. It's very different from Sally
Mann (who also photographs her children) --- less formal and also a lot
freer. It has a loose documentary feel to it. It has a weird edge to it."
"My photographs are about the moment, not the person," Gearon said. "I don't
crop. I don't pose. I wait for something to happen."
This is Gearon's moment. Clearly something quite amazing has happened to
her. ON THE WEB: More on Tierney Gearon: www.gagosian.com "Untitled, 2000"
by Tierney Gearon
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http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nyt/20010624/en/
the_restless_american_on_ed_ruscha_s_road_1.html
Sunday June 24 08:31 AM EDT
The Restless American: On Ed Ruscha's Road
Amei Wallach, The New York Times
For more than four decades, the artist Ed Ruscha has been taking the pulse
of the America that lives at the outskirts of cities and at the edges of the
American dream.
MIAMI -- IT'S an odd thing about Ed Ruscha. His cowboy charisma has done as
much to muddy his artistic contribution as the fact of the place in which he
has chosen to make it, Los Angeles. If you were going to cast an L.A. artist
in a movie, you'd cast Ed Ruscha, even before you'd cast his old pal Dennis
Hopper. Then you might look at the work.
If you were interested enough, you'd have traveled around the country for
the last year investigating its intricate facets, and you'd have junked the
simplistic L.A. modifier, along with a lot of the others that irritate Mr.
Ruscha, like Pop, Western, Conceptual, hip. For more than four decades, he
has been taking the pulse of the America that lives at the outskirts of
cities and at the edges of the American dream.
The road runs through all his work, muse and metaphor for the all-American
restlessness that makes Mr. Ruscha, now 63, one of a handful of
triple-threat artists as fluent in printmaking and photography as painting.
He virtually invented the artist's book in its cheap, mass-produced American
form (as opposed to the luxury livres d'artistes of Matisse and Picasso). It
was 1962. He was spending a lot of time driving back and forth on the old
Route 66, between Oklahoma City, where he grew up, and Los Angeles, where
he'd moved in 1956 and begun attending the Chouinard Art Institute (now Cal
Arts) about the time Jack Kerouac published "On the Road."
"Today the route is more supersonic, it's such a giant shopping experience,
but then it was much more primitive, you could drive for miles and miles and
not have to see anything," Mr. Ruscha told me when I caught up with him at
the Miami Art Museum, the most recent stop for his traveling retrospective
of paintings and artist's books.
He doesn't like the sound of his own voice, "too Okie," he says, but it's
part of the package, which is laconic. You can see why with his down-home
charm he'd be good at opening-night dinners. He met Magritte and Duchamp,
knows Steve Martin, and his name has been linked with starlets and models.
You think he's attentive, but it's an evasion tactic: he's really off
somewhere else inside his head. He shows up "with my lunch pail," as he
calls his painting regime, then acts surprised by all the attention.
Lately there has been a lot of it. A painting retrospective opens next
Sunday at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, through Sept. 30, when it
moves to Oxford, England (it was jointly organized by the Smithsonian
Institution's Hirshhorn Museum and the Museum of Modern Art, Oxford).
Through Oct. 7, at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in San
Francisco, a selection of Mr. Ruscha's prints celebrates the Fine Arts
Museums of San Francisco's acquisition of the entire archive of Mr. Ruscha's
325 prints and 800 working proofs. The museum bought the archive and
negotiated for impressions of future prints with a $10 million gift from the
Phyllis Wattis Purchase Fund. Just disbanded is an exhibition celebrating
the catalogue raisonné of Mr. Ruscha's books and prints, organized by the
Walker Art Center, which has been on the road since 1999.
At art school Mr. Ruscha studied commercial design and typography. In the
middle of the night during one of his endless Oklahoma commutes, he decided
he'd make a book called "Twentysix Gas Stations," and so, he says, "I
started photographing gas stations."
"Twentysix Gasoline Stations" was printed in 1963, the first of his dumb,
deadpan photographic essays that debunked hierarchies and have been so
influential in Europe and America. "I consider my books to be one of my most
important statements, and a rather deep statement," Mr. Ruscha says.
His books went on to catalog "Every Building on the Sunset Strip," "Thirtyfour
Parking Lots," motel swimming pools, the banality, glamour and Edward Hopper
bleakness of the everyday landscape, as encountered from a car. From
beginning to end, Mr. Ruscha has been an artist of the American landscape,
with the bravura of the Hudson River painters, although his take comes out
of layout, design and signs seen passing obliquely at 60 m.p.h.
His America has buried its heart in the unlovely strips that were swallowing
flat land and farms in the post-dust-bowl, postwar boom town of Oklahoma
City. Billboards and suburbs sprouted overnight, hazing the big, flat sky
with neon, and there were only the movies, hillbilly music and jazz to tell
stories about what things meant or how they felt. "There was an emphasis on
money- making futures and not enough on poetry or inner thinking," Mr.
Ruscha recalls. For him, the promise of California was "a vibrant music
scene, art scene, theater scene, the movie business, architecture."
The summer before he printed his first book, he made a painting of the 20th
Century Fox sign, klieg lights behind it, in hard-sell graphic diagonals. "I
liked the exaggerated cartoon perspective," he says, standing in front of
the painting in Miami. "It seemed to have some kind of, maybe, goofiness to
it, or simplicity, that I wanted." The next summer he painted "Standard
Station, Amarillo, Texas" in the same huge, diagonal format; at roughly 5
feet by 10 feet it has the proportions of a Cinema- Scope movie screen or a
19th-century panorama.
"I wanted to have some trumpets in there without hearing or seeing the
trumpets," he says. "So there's some kind of glory that this may suggest and
something about the notion of traveling from one place to another and seeing
new things. It's a way of exploring."
MR. RUSCHA grew up Roman Catholic. "I was an altar-boy wannabe," he says,
deploying the throw-away Midwestern humor with which he defuses seriousness.
He's familiar with icons and he's made his share, including "Standard
Station."
"I kind of spring from Catholicism. I felt like I had this perspective from
the church and going to mass that was an early childhood base for a lot of
my thinking," he says. "Some of my work comes out of a quasi- religious
thing. I was a believer for a while and then I began to see the hypocrisy."
In his signs and scapes, the glory is reduced to its commercial value, like
life growing up in Oklahoma City, where "people would turn up the air
conditioners in their cars and roll the windows down."
Such excess made as little sense as the biblical exhortations trumpeted from
the local pulpit Heaven, Hell, Evil all words he has used in his work. In a
commission for the Miami-Dade Public Library, he decorated the rotunda with
a line from "Hamlet": "Words Without Thoughts Never to Heaven Go."
There's a lapsed Catholic's moral sting there, but in his enigmatic,
slippery art he plays on the senselessness. "Well, I've always felt that
absurdity and paradox is really where it's at," he says. "Nonsense can end
up helping you make sense of things."
Very early, words took the place of objects in his paintings: "Boss,"
"Spam." In 1968 he made a silk- screen print of the back of the Hollywood
sign, which he could see from his studio. "I used it as a smog indicator,"
he says. "If I could read that sign, the weather was O.K." He placed the
sign against a murky bronze sky, an apocalyptic vision of the end of the
rainbow. Nine years later, he made it into a painting.
Printmaking, long a boring academic medium in mid-century America, was
suddenly very much alive again by the 1960's, with the appearance of
innovative print studios on the East and West Coasts. Mr. Ruscha has worked
in most of them. He'd found his way out of painting the soul-baring
instinctive gesture of Abstract Expressionism by "pre-planning and
pre-conceiving images," as he puts it. But in printing, he doesn't always
have an idea when he accepts an invitation to work with a printer.
"Sometimes the result will be a surprise," he says. In 1967, he began
painting words that looked as if they were made with something other than
oil paint (beans for "Adios," jelly for "Jelly"). But they weren't.
Then in 1969 came a breakthrough: he made an edition of paper stained with
substances that disappeared (Los Angeles tap water, acetone, engine spot
remover) and those that did not (Clorox, sperm, gunpowder, beer, chocolate).
He packaged "Stains" in a box lined with silk moiré and stained with his own
blood. This led to the 1970 silk-screen portfolio, "News, Mews, Brews, Stews
& Dues," in which raw egg, chocolate syrup, caviar and so forth were
squeezed through the screen like ink.
And that in turn led to the stained paintings of the 70's like "Very Angry
People" (cherry stain on moiré), "Sand in the Vaseline" (equalized egg yolk
on satin) and "Various Cruelties" (blueberry extract on rayon crepe).
Mr. Ruscha began showing at the legendary Ferus Gallery in Los Angeles in
1963. He had his first New York show in 1967 and joined the Leo Castelli
Gallery in 1970. Castelli paid him a stipend, only rarely able to sell
anything. It wasn't until a 1986 exhibition at the Robert Miller Gallery of
Mr. Ruscha's spray-gun silhouette paintings that he sold out a show. The
paintings of the early 90's, with the grain of old black-and-white film
stock, recast his obsession with the overlooked mediums that deliver the
messages by which so many Americans live in this case the scratchy film of
his childhood.
By then the art market had crashed, and with it the print market, which has
never recovered. Mr. Ruscha chose that moment to open his own print studio.
Hamilton Press, named after its master-printer, Ed Hamilton, makes
lithographs with artists like George Condo and Raymond Pettibon.
In San Francisco for the opening of his print archive earlier last month,
Mr. Ruscha made seven new etchings at Crown Point Press. They are grids of
San Francisco streets overlaid on the streets of Los Angeles. L.A. grids
have been the subject of recent paintings, like minimalist maps of a teeming
world. In other paintings he has superimposed those street names on
improbably majestic mountains, escapist transcendental fantasies for the
urban overwhelmed.
These days, Mr. Ruscha regularly drives the San Bernardino Freeway from his
Los Angeles studio to a desert home two hours to the east. "Ten years ago
the drive had scenery," he says. "Now it's all big auto malls." He keeps a
pad by his side; he jots down ideas. They become prints and paintings,
bulletins from a road that's always going someplace else.
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http://www.waterman.co.uk/pages/ngt0002.htm
Nicolas Granger-Taylor b. 1963
Standing Nude 1994
oil on canvas
16 X 12 inches
The Steve Martin Collection, USA
Click the picture to enlarge |
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