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Archive for February, 2024

EAC One Day Show @ The Shooting Gallery

The EAC, Emerging Artists Collective, is having a one day only show at The Shooting Gallery tonight from 7-11PM.  Artwork from over thirty artists will be on display to benefit the EAC and their mission along with a few murals by D Young V and John Felix Arnold III .  Be sure to stop by tonight to party and support the arts!

Artwork by Hugh Leeman, Jesse Hazelip, Richard Colman, Mike Shine, Steve MacDonald, Aaron Lawrence, Matt Miller, Blackstock, Tandy Kunkle, Thomas Landerman, Rex Waters, Doug Fortin, Jessica Dean Harrison, John Felix Arnold III, Jason Story, Kathrin Feser, Jeremy Novy & more…

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“In a city where community, neighborhoods, culture, and love are top priority the potential for creativity is endless. San Francisco is filled with artists from all walks of life and teaming with a population of dreams. In the fine art world this sense of community and sharing can be stunted by the commercialization of art through galleries. Everyone should have the opportunity to express themselves and have the chance to share their experiences with others. This is the reason why we have started the E.A.C. (Emerging Artists Collective) We want to create a multi-use warehouse for all artists to use for whatever their creative endeavors may be. We want to break down the walls of exclusivity and connect artists through cooperation and ideas rather than money and collectors. This isn’t a statement against established galleries but simply another option for artists to become exposed to a greater sense of connection with the city they love and live in.”

For more information on the EAC visit their website at www.eacollectivesf.com

Aaron Nagel Studio Visit

We just couldn’t wait till March to see Aaron Nagel’s newest paintings, so we headed over to Oakland this week for a sneak peek. His two bedroom apartment serves as a painting studio, photography studio, and even design headquarters for Aaron’s web company. Every inch of wall space is covered with paintings. Although Aaron claims he’s ready to get them into the gallery, we know he miss the company of these stunning ladies. By exploring Aaron’s home we learned of his 10 year stint with punk bands, his grandfather’s WWII hero status, and his version of man’s best friend: a floppy kitty named Ty. Take a look and be sure to stop by the opening reception of Marks: New Works by Aaron Nagel at The Shooting Gallery on March 6th, 2024 from 7-11pm.

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Aaron and Ty

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Aaron Nagel 15

Reference photographs shot by Aaron

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His grandfather’s WWII medals

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Aaron Nagel 12

15 year old Aaron and his punk band, Link 80 (he’s the blond one in the middle)

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Aaron Nagel 13

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His most recent piece, still in progress

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Detail

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Centerpiece of Aaron’s triptych

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The cat that thinks he’s a dog

Aaron Nagel 1

Aaron’s full sleeve by San Francisco tattoist, Grime

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Props

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Original block prints by Masami Teraoka

A big thanks to Mr. Nagel for showing us around his studio. Check out his blog for process shots and writings, and come by on March 6th to meet the artist himself! More pics on flickr.

Press Release: ‘Marks’ by Aaron Nagel

Marks

New
Works by Aaron Nagel

Opening Reception: March 6th, 2024, from 7-11 pm.

Show runs through: March 27th, 2024, and is open to the public.

The Shooting Gallery is proud to present Marks: New Works by Aaron Nagel. This exhibition is a reaction to organized religion, using lusty women to symbolize a new order of saints. Please join us for the opening reception of Marks on Saturday, March 6th, 2024, from 7-11 pm.

Marks is Aaron Nagel’s largest and most cohesive body of work to date. The eleven oil paintings in this series use imagery of youthful women in the nude, often impaled by archery arrows. These figures embody Catholic martyrs such as St. Sebastian, offering atheists and skeptics an alternative to traditional religious symbolism. Although the women are naked and impaled their facial expression and body language is unaffected. Standing tall with transfixed eyes, the figures’ hands are often dripping with black paint to represent a guilty and nefarious past. As Aaron is inspired by the contrast between power and the fragility of the human body, Marks is infused with imagery that is at once calm and violent.

A large part of Nagel’s process is to seek out a model with a distinct look and demeanor. Because he is so selective with his models, he tends to use each one in several different paintings. Aaron photographs the women in his own home studio, later inserting text or graphic elements in a digital comp. He then meticulously lays down the line work onto canvas, taking measurements to ensure that the composition is balanced. The oil paint is then applied in thin layers to reveal a warm, highly rendered figure and stark background. Although self-taught, Nagel has developed a regimented painting process that shows a strong visual bond between his finished works.

Within the past year, this Oakland based artist has exhibited in Florida’s Redletter 1 Gallery and San Francsico’s D-Structure. Nagel is also the man behind Two Twenty Two Design Studio, a web design firm that he founded in 2024.

Please join us for the opening reception of Marks: New Works by Aaron Nagel on Saturday, March 6th, 2024, from 7-11pm. The exhibit will be on view through March 27th, 2024, and is open to the public.

SF Gate Art Adventures

Remi Rough Photo by Matt Petty

Matt Petty of SFGate spent some time at the galleries on Saturday night for the opening reception of Solid Cold by Antistrot and Never a Dull Moment curated by iO Tillet Wright. We like what he had to say:

Saturday night I stopped by Edinburgh Castle for fish and chips, and followed that up with some art at White Walls and Shooting Gallery. White Walls had a group show with photography and paintings. The curator, iO Wright had the artist transform the gallery into a plywood wonderland. Yes, the show has some colorful geometrics, but also features some gritty photography and really nice graffiti stylings from Kofie1. Next door I checked out the art of the Dutch collective Antistrot. They are on this “docudrama” thing, where they meld elements from comics, fashion mags, porno mags, 1970′s war books and other elements. They also had some cool pieces done directly on the walls of the gallery, which I’m always a fan of.

Petty also posted a few nice flicks from the night. Check them out with the full “Art Adventures” write up at SFGate.

Antistrot in SF Chronicle 96 Hours

Today’s San Francisco Chronicle features Antistrot in the 96 Hours Visual Arts section (see the web article here). Mary Eisenhart writes:

Formed in 1997 by six Dutch art students, the art collective Antistrot is notable for its collaborative style. Instead of taking turns on a project, they all work on it together, in real time. Because they favor emotionally charged, chaotic images drawn from pop culture and reassembled with no discernible context, things get intense in this series, which the artists call “docudrama.”

96 Hours

Solid Cold opens this Saturday, February 6th from 7-11pm at The Shooting Gallery. As The Chronicle puts it, Don’t Miss.

Antistrot in the House

In the House

Silas Schletterer and Johan Kleinjan are here in SF representing Antistrot, the group of six Dutch artists showing with us this month. The two jet lagged artists quickly got to work on the gallery walls going floor to ceiling in their signature style. They rely on a stack of 8×10 black and white photos for inspiration, including bits of Diane Arbus photography, science book scans, and dog pictures. As the artists climb up the ladder they move the little photo along with them. Johan and Silas spend a great amount of time on the hard black detailing, turning two flat colors into a graphic comic style character. Be sure to spend the evening of Saturday, February 6th at The Shooting Gallery to get into the nitty gritty of Antistrot’s paintings and chat with the amazing artists who make it happen.

Click here for more information on Solid Cold by Antistrot.

More inspiration

Inspiration

Johan from a distance

Johan painting

Johan Kleinjan

Johan getting into the detail

Silas painting

Silas Schletterer

Silas and the lady

Silas from the streets of the Tenderloin

Check out more flicks at flickr!

Exclusive Interview: Antistrot

In anticipation of Solid Cold by Antistrot

Opening this Saturday, February 6th from 7-11 pm at The Shooting Gallery

The boys of Antistrot have a sense of humor, this much we know for sure. Their paintings are action packed and often biting, moving between political commentary, soft porn, and pop culture satire on a single canvas. With six artists working on the same piece at once, what else could we expect? You may never guess that Antistrot were more than one busy mad scientist. But if you take the time to trace the styles between each painting, you will notice six distinct hands emerging from the chaos. Two of Antistrot’s members will be in San Francisco this February for the opening of Solid Cold, but in the meantime we nabbed a word with the group over email. And now, Antistrot.

De Vrienden van de Amstel

How did you all become friends?

Art school. Willem De Kooning Academy, class of 1995. Or wait, does that mean we graduated in ’95? In that case, class of ’99. Either way, some of us started a DIY fanzine filled with dubious content in 1997. Sooner or later, every current member of Antistrot contributed to this publication, and before you knew it, we were sitting down at a table in someone’s home, all working on the same drawings and paintings together.

Have you ever argued over a painting?

Would you believe us if we said no?

How are you able to predict what the other group members will like and not like?

Through years and years of experience working on gigantic murals and tiny drawings, there’s a certain level of familiarity with each other’s tastes, likes, dislikes, hopes and dreams…even though we work as one, individual preferences and egos are still very much apparent within the collective. So predicting what a certain member will love or hate is not that hard.

Je Homofiele Broertje

How does working in a group change your creative process?

It’s pretty much the opposite of working alone, so all the things you’re used to doing when working by yourself are met with sometimes apprehension, sometimes enthusiasm of the other contributors. So basically you always have to be aware of the ultimate goal: achieving something together.

How much time do you spend together?

Right now, not a lot, seeing how we pretty much reached our maximum number of paintings for a while. That said, we’re going for drinks tonight at Noordereiland, Rotterdam’s most authentic neighborhood. Wanna join?

How do you choose the color palette for each painting?

It’s all in the stars.

Duplo Doom

If you were to create a comic, who would the main character be?

We did create a comic once, but I don’t know how sensitive you are regarding racial slurs and gay porn, so I will leave this one to the imagination. Unless you’re able to hunt down VICE Magazine‘s comic issue from a few years back.

Does Professor Strot know that you made an artist group to defy him?

He likes to play it off like he doesn’t, but he does. Our fan base of current Willem de Kooning students never ceases to remind him of this slightly misinterpreted fact.

Best thing about The Netherlands.

It’s the capital of Scandinavia, you can’t beat that.

Fotolog Is Dead

Best thing about the U.S. (so far).

It’s huge. Have you ever been there? Never a dull moment in the States, that’s for sure. Super big country, definitely recommended.

Do you each do individual art outside of Antistrot?

Of course we do, and how. We are all artists in our own right, dabbling with illustration, photography, fine arts and music for the most part. We are all very visually inclined individuals, and it’s not like we have “regular jobs” next to working in Antistrot.

Do you still do performance art?

Whenever we have a crisis idea and there’s an opportunity. But at the moment half of the performance-core is on a divorce world tour, so no performance-hell in San Francisco this time.

What is the purpose of art?

The purpose of art is to give you erotic pleasure in a non-erotic way.

Be sure to come by The Shooting Gallery this Saturday, February 6th

from 7-11pm for the opening reception of Solid Cold by Antistrot.