Shio Kusaka + Jonas Wood: Blackwelder - Book Signing this Wednesday, this Wednesday, July 8th from 6 - 8:00 PM!
Join us for a book signing for
Shio Kusaka + Jonas Wood: Blackwelder.
Published by Rizzoli and Gagosian.
Book Launch and Signing this Wednesday, July 8th from 6-8:00 PM.
Shio Kusaka and Jonas Wood draw from each others work as painter and potter to probe the tensions between representation and expression, precision and chance, and influences from art history and life. Kusaka’s porcelain vessels play muse to Wood’s drawn and painted interiors, while conversely their idiosyncratic forms and glazes owe something to his impulsive line. They draw from personal memory and their shared existence as a married couple - his half-objective, half-fictional Los Angeles landscapes and still lifes set in their studio on Culver City's Blackwelder Street, and her painted patterns that allude to their young daughter’s fascination with dinosaurs.
Jonas Wood’s works display overlapping textures and disorienting compressions of space. These intimate settings invoke the work of forebears such as Matisse and Hockney, yet his distorted verdant rooms possess an affectless cut-out appearance that is all his own. In drawings, collages, watercolors, and paintings, outlines of pots and vases frame landscape and interior imagery. Drawn and painted vessels set against neutral backgrounds contain a sprawling green golf course, a coral reef with exotic fish, a lush garden, a painter’s studio - all scenes that end abruptly at the parameters of the object.
Shio Kusaka’s recent vessels take traditions of Japanese stoneware and porcelain as a foundation for historical fusions inspired by Iron Age ceramics, Minimalist repetition, and the silt pottery of Ancient Egypt. These quotations merge with the subtle dimples, pinches, and other surface impressions of her haptic approach, as well as eccentric touches such as long handles in the shape of Brontosauri, or blue streaks suggestive of rainfall. Several works are glazed with imprecise grids in which the artist softens hard geometries by allowing her lines to waver and overlap, while on tall glazed vessels colors ebb from dark green to white.
The two share influences and imagery but embark on autonomous explorations of their respective media. Exhibited together, these symbiotic works reveal the autobiographical roots and layers of cross-pollination that inspire their creation. Shio Kusaka and Jonas Wood's unique collaborative working process and artistic output are beautifully documented in the newly-published Gagosian and Rizzoli monograph Blackwelder.
