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Home FEATURES David Young V Interview

David Young V Interview
Written by Shaun Roberts   
Friday, 08 July 2011 11:28
David Young V is on a mission. Shuttling between two studio spaces in the Tenderloin district of San Francisco— frequently in the dead of night—he engages in the business of recovering fragments from a future world. To hear him speak about the tomorrow he foresees; a world of zealots, martyrs, psychotic orphans and armed bike couriers, one is reminded of Mad-Max… if it had more military training and dabbled in cryptography and linguistics. The hard edged, high contrast, near religious iconography of David’s new work is an encrypted enigma, gnashing it’s teeth at you, challenging you to decipher it. It wants you to look hard. Maybe it will tell you…if you make an effort. — Shaun Roberts

David Young V’s show “Make an Effort” opens Saturday July 9th, 7pm at White Walls Gallery on 835 Larkin St (@Geary), San Francisco.

D Young V, Are you actually the fifth David in your family?

Yeah, my father is David and it goes back five generations, but it got restarted, so it really goes back about eight people. The original David Young III got killed so his brother named his son after this guy. So the son became the first in my line.

Were there a lot of creative people in the Young family line?

No, there wasn’t a lot of artistic people in my family.

Then how did you get involved in art?

It’s all I really know, I’ve been doing art for so long...I’ve always wanted to do it. I’ve been doing it my whole life and I never want to stop. I was always drawing on the backs of my papers and on tests during class. I loved free drawing sessions, I always had fun in art class. I never really liked art projects, I always just liked drawing whatever I wanted to draw. Honestly I don’t think I was ever that good at it, but I just enjoyed it. I didn’t decide to take it seriously until I was in college, I didn’t even know what a fine artist was but if it let me do anything I wanted to do, then I’ll try to be a fucking fine artist.

What was your work like back then?

Well when I was 18 I was doing these Micron pen drawings but they were totally different in nature, they were much more intricate than the work I do now, and they were more fantasy based. After that, I really got into abstract art using charcoals as well as murals. I was really into de Kooning, Pollock, Basquiat, Picasso, Braque, Kandinsky and other 20th Century Abstract art. I was obsessed with that for a number of years and I was just continually making abstract work.

What was it about Abstract that attracted you to it so much?

It was free. There were no rules, I didn’t have to focus on every detail and I could get gestural. Stuff from my subconscious would really come through, I would be thinking of something or feeling something and I would just start drawing that without even realizing it. I’d light up a cigarette and I’d find myself drawing a smoke-like figure without noticing. It was just psychologically very interesting to me. It was bordering on Carl Jung’s stuff too, I was getting into him and his work at that point.

Do you still see bits of that in your current work?

Not as much really, I think now I’m starting to get more into symbols, numbers and codes.

Tell me more about that.

Well if you look at it through the narrative I’m creating, I’m implying the idea of rebuilding language or creating new languages that fit better with the course humanity has taken in this world I’m creating. From an aesthetic point of view I think I’m personally trying to express something that needs to be deciphered and I can’t put it into words or even images.

So is there a message to be deciphered in the work?

Right now, I’m just implying that there’s a code, but it’s not literally a code. However, if I still hold faith in that Jungian subconscious thing then perhaps I *am* actually unconsciously coding something. Maybe it could be broken by somebody else.

What’s the world like in this narrative you’ve been crafting?

I’m creating a world that’s re-creating itself after the world before it fell apart. It’s actually our world 200 years from now that fell apart and, after x amount of generations, the world from my narrative emerged. Humanity would have progressed and created forms of communication that were higher than words to convey meaning. There’s also an element of Orwellian “Newspeak” to it ie the shortening of words to convey a point. In a sense, I see we’re starting to do that with text messages, by abbreviating “Oh my God” to OMG and so on.

I get a lot of ideas from learning about the Renaissance and how they were building up this new culture by reinterpreting ideas from antiquity. For example the technology to create cement was lost during the medieval era and it had to be rediscovered. I have a feeling people back then filtered out a lot of the old information and only took what was relevant to their needs. So they were reinterpreting a society to create a new society. People from my narrative are doing the same thing, they’ve found some of our literature, our mathematics and have deciphered and reinterpreted us.

I see you’re using more symbols and geometry in your latest work too, what’s driving you to start framing your figures in lines and grids?

I don’t know. Looking at it on one level, it’s an aesthetic choice and it’s something new to play with, it’s afforded me the chance to use new tools like compasses and rulers. I measure everything out now, even the placement of the letters. It’s really fun, I’m using numbers to create the piece and I’m using numbers in the piece. I see it as a natural evolution for me.

From a narrative point of view I’ve made a conscious effort to start fusing symbols, geometry, and shapes that imply order and structure. I’ve been thinking about the necessity of a society to have order, and although that order can be amended, changed and refit to new circumstances you still need to have some sort of structure. Society needs some way of policing people, be it a police department, volunteers or militia otherwise people would go fucking crazy and nothing can be built.

Despite the fact that I’m into punk rock and certain aspects of anarchism, I do value the necessity for government, for police, for military, they’re a part any functioning society. I recognize that order and then I fuse it together with elements of change and rebellion because you can’t have one without the other.

So you’re saying order and chaos are part of the same cycle?

Yeah, I used to talk about it all the time when I was a young boy, the necessity to destroy something in order to create something. In a way I’m exploring the contradictions between military order and anarcho-punk.

Is there something appealing to you about the concept of “starting over”?

Oh yeah completely. I can’t really comment on other countries because I haven’t done that much traveling, but I’m frustrated by how accessible things are in America. There’s this sense of entitlement that I experience a lot when I deal with people, it seems that people don’t really understand the concept of sacrifice any more, I hate to say it but people don’t seem to have any “grit” in their life. It definitely applies to me too, I’ve never had to starve before, I’ve never had to fight for a cause, I’ve never had to kill a person and I’ve never really had any one try to oppress me. Generally people will take the easier solution to any given problem and I think that way of living filters down and manifests itself into a lot of different things in our lives: our art, our jobs, and the way we handle situations. We find ways to rationalize taking the easy way so we don’t need to work hard, we don’t need to work through any frustrations, we don’t need to think.

Give me an example.

IPhones. It’s gotten to the point where people wouldn’t even ask someone for directions, technology connects us to each other but it isolates us too. Yeah I can get connected to some dude that I went to 8th grade with and we can keep up with “what we’re doing with our lives”. I can find out if someone just went to go buy eggs at the grocery store cause they posted it on Facebook. That’s great and all but it makes you miss out on the little important things, say you were walking down the street and you needed to find “54 Market St.” so you whip out your iPhone and you bring it up on the map and it may or may not tell you what you need to know. Really all you needed to do was just ask a store owner or somebody on the street.

It closes you off to good chance occurrences and happy accidents.

Exactly.

There’s also a street art component to your work right? What are your reasons for doing that work?

I see it like a sport. I like the challenge of it. I simply like getting up, I like it when people see the image. It opens up an entirely new method of expression for me. By putting work up on the street it lowers a lot of the restrictions and pressures associated with showing in a gallery and you get your work seen by a far wider audience, which personally as an artist is really rad. It’s not an act of rebellion for me, let’s put it that way. In fact, now that I’m getting more into it I have to realize that I’m associated with this entire group of people that are doing the same thing. In a sense, I do have to conform to certain things: I have to up my game, I need to give them more respect by doing better, more elaborate work. Not only so that fellow street artists take me seriously but to also show that I have respect for the craft. If somebody is doing a dope piece, then you want to do a dope piece. If someone is out there doing easy shit, it lessens the craft.

Who do you work with out in the street?

Eddie Colla primarily. I’ve known him for almost two years now. When I first met him I was doing street art on and off for a while but not as seriously, I’d just go out once a month or once every couple months and put pieces up. I didn’t even have the right equipment to do it, I was just trying to figure it out as I went. Eddie was far more advanced than I was and helped me out a great deal. We became good friends and collaborators and as a result I really have to credit Eddie for showing me not just the ins and outs of the street art world but also the process of how things operate. Everything from how to mix my wheat paste, what tools to use, to the fastest way to put up a piece. Also learning about what I should hit, what I shouldn’t hit, the challenge of doing something or even turning down certain spots and how to look out for police. I absorbed just tons of information that I wouldn’t have gained by going it alone. It was a friendship and collaboration but in a lot of ways it was also an apprenticeship for me.

You’re known for several striking wheat paste graphics, one of them being the “War Nun” image, how did that come about?

She was just this random woman I found online, I put that cloth over her head...I didn’t even intend for her to look religious until some people who saw it in L.A. started calling it “The Nun of War”. I just rolled with that and started to think of her as a character that helped develop the society in my narrative; she is a martyr, she died in order for that world to come into being.

What other street pieces do people associate you with?

I have some other basic silhouettes of soldiers with symbols on them that I’ve put up, I’ve put up images of this guy “Patch” who’s actually a real guy from my neighborhood in the Tenderloin, it was a collaboration with Sean Desmond from The Tenderloin Project.

There was also the “Fashionable” piece I was putting up for a little while, that piece was again dealing with the martyr idea. At the time I was researching about martyr groups in wars, people who commit suicide for a cause. I wondered how it would be like if martyrdom was a cool pop-culture thing to do. So the piece was a guy wearing a suicide bomb vest with a Coco Chanel belt and I had the word “Fashionable” at the bottom in the Coca-Cola font.

What’s the focus of this new body of work and where does it fit in your previous shows?

I see the new work as an evolution of my first pieces shown at Babylon Falling, that work was more Mad Max-ish, punk rock and militaristic, none of the figures had faces, just silhouettes and shapes of bodies and gear. My second show “Neighborhood Watch” emphasized on the vehicles of that world, converted DPT cars, APCs with Tenderloin stickers on them. Then the Gallery Three show began to reveal more recognizable people and the language of that society. So I think this show takes it one step further and starts to incorporate not only more specific characters but also symbols and codes implying elements of belief and faith of that society.

You’re starting to incorporate actual hand prints of models and collaborators into your work as well, what’s the thought behind that process?

I wanted the person being portrayed to be as much of the piece as you or I. It’s a way of adding a part of their identity to the piece and simultaneously their seal of approval to both the concept of the work and their participation in it. I wanted the people taking part in the project to be more then simply a reference.

How many hours have you spent on this new body of work so far?

Fuck dude, I don’t know. Some days it’s like 9 or 10 hours, other days it’s like 2 hours, I could easily go a full day working on this shit though. And not just the drawing, it’s making the canvases, getting wood cut, nailing it all together, doing my matte mediums. And if you include taking on contract jobs to pay for the materials to make the art, then it’s just crazy amounts of hours I put into the pieces. Materials are so costly right now, I need to take jobs repainting apartments in order to fucking buy these frames, so if you include all that, you could say I just work on my art constantly.

Why did you title the show “Make an Effort?”

Three reasons. First off it’s a reference to one of my favorite album titles 'Make an Effort' by DC hardcore band “Government Issue” from the early 1980's. As far as the theme of my work goes, it’s the idea of people working together to form a new society. Third, considering how much effort, time and money I put into this show — its my personal affirmation.

David Young V
“Make An Effort” at White Walls Gallery
July 9- July 30, 2011

Ryan De La Hoz @RVCA through 5/25

Ryan De La Hoz' show in the Upper Haight at RVCA runs through this Saturday... And the next time you're in the Mission, be sure to swing through his new shop on 14th St, Cool Try... We need to get over there soon and do a little photo feature for ya.


Daniel Chen @The Book and Job Gallery (SF)

The Book and Job Gallery (San Francisco) really stepped it up with the opening of Daniel Chen's loveBlast on May 4th. Complete with a doorman, piano player, old fashioneds, and some really nice paintings, I could hardly believe I was at the Book and Job. The paintings varied in size, and the show was balanced nicely between them, the spray-can work on the walls, and the smaller drawings displayed throughout. The kind notes Chen wrote on the walls are certain to brighten your day, and the rest of the work is definitely worth a look. It was a very classy evening and I hope they continue to intersperse shows like these into their schedule in the future


Skull & Sword at FFDG, SF

FFDG opened up the group show featuring original works by the artists of the world famous Skull & Sword tattoo last Friday here in San Francisco. Thanks to the huge crowd who turned out to support these four incredibly talented artists. Here is a taste of the show, and be sure to swing in to view in person. The show runs through June 8th.


Gary Baseman Interview

Gary Baseman's retrospective "The Door is Always Open" at the Skirball in LA opened recently to massive crowds in a huge celebratory opening party. The exhibition is so complex and personal, delving into Baseman's background, family history, and all the layers of prolific work that he has done over the years. After the opening festivities winded down, I caught up with Baseman for an interview. We discussed the underlying meaning to some of the components of the show and how it felt for him, coming from such an honest personal perspective in putting this massive show together.


Mark Mulroney at Ever Gold (+Photos)

Fertile Menace, a new show of Mark Mulroney's (NY) work opened at Ever Gold on May 4th and it's not one to be missed. It is intelligently hilarious, with jokes riffing off sex, Foucault, and the body, and while it makes you laugh it's also going to make you think.


Sanjay & Craig Premieres Saturday

Our buddies Jay Howell, Andreas Trolf, and Jim Dirschberger are hyped as their show, which they've been working on for like 2 years, premieres on Nickelodeon Saturday. From the trailers we've seen so far and from what Jay has told us about, the show is going to be pretty epic. Congrats to those radical fellas.


Skull & Sword at FFDG, Friday (7-10pm)

Here's a little taste of work by the artists of the world famous The Skull and Sword tattoo shop who open their show at San Francisco's FFDG on Friday, May 17th (7-10pm).


Amir H. Fallah Studio Visit

Following his solo exhibition "The Collected" at Gallery Wendi Norris, painter Amir H. Fallah is in the throes of developing more new works for upcoming international exhibits. We spent some time in his studio in Highland Park, Los Angeles recently, discussing his process and inspiration.


Bubi Canal's "Chrystelle" (+video)

We were first introduced to the photography of Spanish born NYC based Bubi Canal when he emailed us his great video Trust in Me a couple years ago. His solo show Special Moment recently ran at NYC's Munch Gallery in February, and he recently released his newest video Chrystelle below.


Michael Garlington & The Metaphysical Fundraiser at 111 Minna

Although I missed the opening of Northern-California photographer Michael Garlington's newest show, Constructed Realities, I was fortunate enough to see the work still up during the Metaphysical fundraiser a couple weeks back at 111 Minna. Metaphysical fundraiser, an auction to benefit Wayne Ernzer. --- The ghoulish photographs in their heavy, hand-made frames are reminiscent of photos from the old west, and the glass crucifixes, complete with fetuses and guns, emphasize the accumulated time within the works themselves. Whether you're looking at the frames, the photos, or both, this show deserves a visit, and a walk through the golden archway Garlington constructed around the front door.


John Felix Arnold III in Japan (Part 3)

Fecal Face contributor Rachel Ralph (rachel(at)fecalface.com) has been profiling this Oakland based painter as he travels about Japan. In this segment, we feature some photos as he prepared for this show and residency at Spes-LaB in Tokyo which opened last weekend. Arnold will be featured in SFMoMA's Minna Street windows on June 8th.


Alex Lukas & Richard Colman @Guerrero Gallery

Last Saturday, here in SF's Mission district, Guerrero Gallery opened two new shows with Philly based Alex Lukas and SF based Richard Colman respectively. Colman's work occupied the project space while Lukas' work and foliage was presented in the main space. Worth getting to if you haven't already.


High 5s: Mexico-Land

Just got back to SF after a little trip south to Sayulita, Mexico. After 10 years without a vacation, me and the Mrs. headed south for some mental time off sitting in the sun, swimming and enjoying the watery Mexican beer. Here are some photos as we get back into the swing of things again.


High 5s: Puttin' The Pee in the Pod

For 13 years I've been blogging up randomness. Here's more of it.


Dimitris Polychroniadis (+Greece)

Athens, Greece based designer, architect and artist Dimitris Polychroniadis emailed over more of his work which consists of mixed media, pop-humorous diorama sculptures that make a comment on the harsh realities my country and much of the world is facing at the moment.


Skull & Sword at FFDG Featuring: Grime, Henry Lewis, Yutaro, and Lango

FFDG will open a group show with the artists from the famed Skull & Sword Tattoo on Friday, May 17th (6-9pm). Artists: Grime, Henry Lewis, Yutaro, and Lango. Below are a series of videos on Grime for Vice's Tattoo Age produced in 2011. Fascinating look at one of the greatest tattoo artists alive today.


ARYZ at Fifty24SF

ARYZ (Spain) opened his newest gallery show at Fifty24SF last Friday and, if you live in the Bay Area, you need to go. This dude can obviously paint, and he doesn't need an entire building to show his impecable skill. The show has lots of small works on paper which contrast his highly-defined line work to his hard-edged painted objects. The contrast between the hard and soft was the most striking thing to me about his work, since I had never seen it in person before, and the washes blend with the thick paint seamlessly. The show also contains a larger work on canvas, a huge head suspended in the back of the room, and a big wood sculpture of a wolf figure. This diversity in such a small space was impressive, and those of us that went to the opening even got to meet the man in person. If you didn't make it out this weekend, check it out before May 31st when it closes and these works will be off to some very happy new homes.


David Bayus @Water McBeer

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Hard Time Mini Mall @The Shooting Gallery

The Shooting Gallery handed over the reins to the Red Truck Gallery (a New Orleans based gallery) which curated their new show, Hard Time Mini Mall and opened the it on Saturday night. This is my favorite show (so far) in the Shooting Gallery's new space and was packed full of art, a mini bar, and cowhide rugs. The Red Truck Gallery chose works with clear craftsmanship and it was easy to see in Ian Berry's denim assemblages and Chris Roberts-Antieau's awesome quilts. The space was completely packed, making it hard to see each piece individually, but this show deserves a second trip anyway. I look forward to spending more time with the chandeliers, automatons, and paintings before the show comes down on May 4th.


"Ayre (of Distances)" by Nathan Cyprys +Toronto

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Alex Ziv & Mario Ayala at FFDG +Opening Pics

Photos from the opening of Going Nowhere featuring works by San Francisco based artists Alex Ziv & Mario Ayala which runs through May 4th at FFDG.


Recent Works by David Lyle

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+London - David Shillinglaw Mural

London based David Shillinglaw who's blogged it up for Fecal Face in the past recently completed this mural in London as he prepares for his solo show at Stolen Space opening on April 26th.





contact FF

Watch Out, Art World: Amazon Is About to Start Selling Art
Wednesday, 22 May 2013 11:05

This day may have been inevitable, but now it's finally here. In its attempt to take over the world - or at least everything that can be bought and sold in the world, Amazon is launching an art gallery.

This summer Amazon is planning to launch a Fine Art Gallery where customers will be able to purchase original artwork offered by a select group of invited galleries via Amazon.com. ~continue reading

 

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Wednesday, 16 June 2010 17:39


“INSIDE OUT” SHOWCASES THE EYE-POPPING STREET ART THAT AIMS TO CHANGE THE WORLD, ONE FACE AT A TIME
Tuesday, 21 May 2013 10:43

A new HBO documentary looks at the work of street artist JR, whose giant portraits force people in troubled areas to confront the humanity that's all around them... On the day JR found out he'd won the $100,000 TED Prize, the French pasteup artist found himself in China being questioned by police for doing his thing on the streets of Shanghai. ~continue reading

Street artist JR HBO documentary premiered yesterday, May 20th

 

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Wednesday, 25 April 2012 11:56

 

Art Basel to bring international flair to Hong Kong
Tuesday, 21 May 2013 10:37

Art lovers, collectors and gallerists will gather on Thursday for Hong Kong's inaugural edition of Art Basel, sealing the city's status as an international art hub and Asia's leading art destination... Hong Kong has surged to third place in the global art auction market behind New York and London and Western galleries are falling over each other to open franchises in the former British colony. ~continue reading

 

Ferris Plock Friday at Benny Gold
Monday, 20 May 2013 11:07

Our buddy Ferris Plock opens a small show of drawings at Benny Gold on 3169 16th St this Friday, May 24th (7-10pm) featuring 31 drawings priced at 75-140 bucks.

Ferris also released the video Fingered! he produced with animator Jim Dirschberger. View it

Ferris Plock Friday at Benny Gold in SF

 

SFAI's MFA Show "Currency" Opening Friday
Thursday, 16 May 2013 09:00

Wowzas, there's a lot of art happenings this weekend, and while you're making the rounds, be sure to stop at SFAI's MFA show Currency opening Friday, May 17th at the beautiful old SF Mint Building (88 5th Street).

SFAI's 2013 MFA graduates—working in painting, photography, printmaking, film, sculpture, installation, digital media, performance, and across media—will present work that embraces the Institute's signature spirit of experimentation and conceptual risk-taking.

Opening reception: Friday, May 17, 7–9 pm & running through Sunday 11-6pm daily. -- complete details


 

Pedro Matos Friday in Los Angeles
Wednesday, 15 May 2013 11:52

London based Pedro Matos opens the solo show Building Castles Made of Sand this Friday in Los Angeles at the Martha Otero Gallery featuring a new series of oil paintings on canvas and azulejo panels - a traditional Portuguese medium of hand-painted, tin-glazed, ceramic tile work.

view a little taste

Pedro Matos Friday in LA


 

CCA's MFA Show Thursday
Tuesday, 14 May 2013 17:14

San Francisco -- CCA opens their 2013 MFA Thesis Exhibition this Thursday, May 16th at their SF campus. Every year another graduating class produces steller work. One of the best SF art events worth getting to, but be sure to get there early as there's always a long line. ~details

CCA opens their MFA show Thursday, May 16th

 

Skull & Sword at FFDG
Friday, 03 May 2013 11:37

FFDG will open a group show with the artists from the famed Skull & Sword Tattoo on Friday, May 17th (7-10pm). Artists: Grime, Henry Lewis, Yutaro, and Lango. ~RSVP on Facebook

 

Um, I'll Have The...
Thursday, 02 May 2013 09:00

From our buddy Eric Wollam

 

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Wednesday, 25 August 2010 12:50


 


 

 

  
 *Tag your Flickr photos: FECALFACE

 

 

 


 

Ryan De La Hoz @RVCA through 5/25

Ryan De La Hoz' show in the Upper Haight at RVCA runs through this Saturday... And the next time you're in the Mission, be sure to swing through his new shop on 14th St, Cool Try... We need to get over there soon and do a little photo feature for ya.


Daniel Chen @The Book and Job Gallery (SF)

The Book and Job Gallery (San Francisco) really stepped it up with the opening of Daniel Chen's loveBlast on May 4th. Complete with a doorman, piano player, old fashioneds, and some really nice paintings, I could hardly believe I was at the Book and Job. The paintings varied in size, and the show was balanced nicely between them, the spray-can work on the walls, and the smaller drawings displayed throughout. The kind notes Chen wrote on the walls are certain to brighten your day, and the rest of the work is definitely worth a look. It was a very classy evening and I hope they continue to intersperse shows like these into their schedule in the future


Skull & Sword at FFDG, SF

FFDG opened up the group show featuring original works by the artists of the world famous Skull & Sword tattoo last Friday here in San Francisco. Thanks to the huge crowd who turned out to support these four incredibly talented artists. Here is a taste of the show, and be sure to swing in to view in person. The show runs through June 8th.


Gary Baseman Interview

Gary Baseman's retrospective "The Door is Always Open" at the Skirball in LA opened recently to massive crowds in a huge celebratory opening party. The exhibition is so complex and personal, delving into Baseman's background, family history, and all the layers of prolific work that he has done over the years. After the opening festivities winded down, I caught up with Baseman for an interview. We discussed the underlying meaning to some of the components of the show and how it felt for him, coming from such an honest personal perspective in putting this massive show together.


Mark Mulroney at Ever Gold (+Photos)

Fertile Menace, a new show of Mark Mulroney's (NY) work opened at Ever Gold on May 4th and it's not one to be missed. It is intelligently hilarious, with jokes riffing off sex, Foucault, and the body, and while it makes you laugh it's also going to make you think.


Sanjay & Craig Premieres Saturday

Our buddies Jay Howell, Andreas Trolf, and Jim Dirschberger are hyped as their show, which they've been working on for like 2 years, premieres on Nickelodeon Saturday. From the trailers we've seen so far and from what Jay has told us about, the show is going to be pretty epic. Congrats to those radical fellas.


Skull & Sword at FFDG, Friday (7-10pm)

Here's a little taste of work by the artists of the world famous The Skull and Sword tattoo shop who open their show at San Francisco's FFDG on Friday, May 17th (7-10pm).


Amir H. Fallah Studio Visit

Following his solo exhibition "The Collected" at Gallery Wendi Norris, painter Amir H. Fallah is in the throes of developing more new works for upcoming international exhibits. We spent some time in his studio in Highland Park, Los Angeles recently, discussing his process and inspiration.


Bubi Canal's "Chrystelle" (+video)

We were first introduced to the photography of Spanish born NYC based Bubi Canal when he emailed us his great video Trust in Me a couple years ago. His solo show Special Moment recently ran at NYC's Munch Gallery in February, and he recently released his newest video Chrystelle below.


Michael Garlington & The Metaphysical Fundraiser at 111 Minna

Although I missed the opening of Northern-California photographer Michael Garlington's newest show, Constructed Realities, I was fortunate enough to see the work still up during the Metaphysical fundraiser a couple weeks back at 111 Minna. Metaphysical fundraiser, an auction to benefit Wayne Ernzer. --- The ghoulish photographs in their heavy, hand-made frames are reminiscent of photos from the old west, and the glass crucifixes, complete with fetuses and guns, emphasize the accumulated time within the works themselves. Whether you're looking at the frames, the photos, or both, this show deserves a visit, and a walk through the golden archway Garlington constructed around the front door.


John Felix Arnold III in Japan (Part 3)

Fecal Face contributor Rachel Ralph (rachel(at)fecalface.com) has been profiling this Oakland based painter as he travels about Japan. In this segment, we feature some photos as he prepared for this show and residency at Spes-LaB in Tokyo which opened last weekend. Arnold will be featured in SFMoMA's Minna Street windows on June 8th.


Alex Lukas & Richard Colman @Guerrero Gallery

Last Saturday, here in SF's Mission district, Guerrero Gallery opened two new shows with Philly based Alex Lukas and SF based Richard Colman respectively. Colman's work occupied the project space while Lukas' work and foliage was presented in the main space. Worth getting to if you haven't already.


High 5s: Mexico-Land

Just got back to SF after a little trip south to Sayulita, Mexico. After 10 years without a vacation, me and the Mrs. headed south for some mental time off sitting in the sun, swimming and enjoying the watery Mexican beer. Here are some photos as we get back into the swing of things again.


High 5s: Puttin' The Pee in the Pod

For 13 years I've been blogging up randomness. Here's more of it.


Dimitris Polychroniadis (+Greece)

Athens, Greece based designer, architect and artist Dimitris Polychroniadis emailed over more of his work which consists of mixed media, pop-humorous diorama sculptures that make a comment on the harsh realities my country and much of the world is facing at the moment.


Skull & Sword at FFDG Featuring: Grime, Henry Lewis, Yutaro, and Lango

FFDG will open a group show with the artists from the famed Skull & Sword Tattoo on Friday, May 17th (6-9pm). Artists: Grime, Henry Lewis, Yutaro, and Lango. Below are a series of videos on Grime for Vice's Tattoo Age produced in 2011. Fascinating look at one of the greatest tattoo artists alive today.


ARYZ at Fifty24SF

ARYZ (Spain) opened his newest gallery show at Fifty24SF last Friday and, if you live in the Bay Area, you need to go. This dude can obviously paint, and he doesn't need an entire building to show his impecable skill. The show has lots of small works on paper which contrast his highly-defined line work to his hard-edged painted objects. The contrast between the hard and soft was the most striking thing to me about his work, since I had never seen it in person before, and the washes blend with the thick paint seamlessly. The show also contains a larger work on canvas, a huge head suspended in the back of the room, and a big wood sculpture of a wolf figure. This diversity in such a small space was impressive, and those of us that went to the opening even got to meet the man in person. If you didn't make it out this weekend, check it out before May 31st when it closes and these works will be off to some very happy new homes.


David Bayus @Water McBeer

Water McBeer is please to announce its latest exhibition "Precious" a solo exhibition by David Bayus (April 6 - May 4, 2013) -- David Bayus born 1982 holds his BFA from the Savannah College of Art and his MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. David lives and works in San Francisco and is a founding member of the basement collective. This will be his first exhibition with the world renown Water McBeer Gallery highlighting his most recent achievements with paint and digital media. David Bayus will be exhibiting 5 relatively large-scale mixed media works along with a collaborative object featuring Hungarian sculptor H.R KOONS.


Hard Time Mini Mall @The Shooting Gallery

The Shooting Gallery handed over the reins to the Red Truck Gallery (a New Orleans based gallery) which curated their new show, Hard Time Mini Mall and opened the it on Saturday night. This is my favorite show (so far) in the Shooting Gallery's new space and was packed full of art, a mini bar, and cowhide rugs. The Red Truck Gallery chose works with clear craftsmanship and it was easy to see in Ian Berry's denim assemblages and Chris Roberts-Antieau's awesome quilts. The space was completely packed, making it hard to see each piece individually, but this show deserves a second trip anyway. I look forward to spending more time with the chandeliers, automatons, and paintings before the show comes down on May 4th.


"Ayre (of Distances)" by Nathan Cyprys +Toronto

Toronto based photographer Nathan Cyprys emailed to let us know about his newest series "Neighbour State", and we were about to post it when we spotted this series on his site entitled "Ayre (of Distances)" and had to post this one instead. After you view this one, view "Neighbour State" on his site. Both are visually enjoyable.


Alex Ziv & Mario Ayala at FFDG +Opening Pics

Photos from the opening of Going Nowhere featuring works by San Francisco based artists Alex Ziv & Mario Ayala which runs through May 4th at FFDG.


Recent Works by David Lyle

Working from found photographs, Lyle's paintings are created through a reductive painting process where each piece is rendered using only black paint and turpentine. Lyle begins this process by priming a panel with white gesso. He then paints a thin, rich, oily black veneer over the primed panel, slowly and systematically developing his images by removing some of the black paint with a cloth. In doing so, Lyle renders layer upon layer of various values of black paint resulting in his signature-style of luminescent works.


+London - David Shillinglaw Mural

London based David Shillinglaw who's blogged it up for Fecal Face in the past recently completed this mural in London as he prepares for his solo show at Stolen Space opening on April 26th.


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