We ask some of our favorite artists to describe another artist’s work as best they can, with only their words and sounds. Produced by Compound Yucca Valley, an art and event space near Joshua Tree, CA.
"It all starts with the line after all, that magic line that flows from the mind to the hand into the pencil and across the blank page. That's when it hit me that Sillman knows how to utterly transpose raw imagination, which was a skill I'd been chasing after using only my intuition." Multimedia artist, writer, and musician Ayin Es is known for their unusual oil paintings, drawings, collages, and Artist's books. In this episode, they describe their encounter with Elephant by Amy Sillman.
In this episode, we've invited Elena Yu to share her experience with Kenneth Tam's The Founding of the World, which she experienced in summer 2023 at the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Elena is an interdisciplinary artist and community organizer from Los Angeles, where she received her BA in Art from UCLA. She moved to the Morongo Basin in 2016, where she founded two artist-run alternative art spaces, The Firehouse and Sun Spot. She also worked as Assistant Director of Programming for High Desert Test Sites and as Program Director for Arts Connection, the Arts Council of San Bernardino County. She recently relocated to Charlottesville, VA where she is an Incubator Artist at McGuffey Art Center. Elena co-curated our exhibition ‘Emergence,' featuring the Mojave Artists of Color Collective, with support from the California Arts Council. On view at Compound YV from September 9 through November 5, 2023, It was the first-ever public exhibition of works by MACC artists as a collective, aiming both to stabilize and uplift the group.
Allegra Pacheco is a Costa Rican multidisciplinary artist best known for her 2021 documentary film about white-collar workers in Japan, Salaryman, which won Best Documentary and Best Composer (James Iha) at the Los Angeles Documentary Film Festival the same year. A Renaissance woman who works across cultures and media to tell stories through film, immersive installations, sculptures, paintings, and more, she is equally at home in her art studio in Escazu, Costa Rica — where she is currently preparing work for Compound YV's Spring 2023 show, Imaginary Landscapes (title and concept courtesy of Allegra). The work she describes in this episode is: Tadao Ando (Japanese, 1941-) and James Turrell (American, 1943-) The Art House Project: Minamidera 1998-1999 Naoshima
Eric Nash is a California artist working in oil and charcoal. His subject matter focuses on icons and scenes inspired by Los Angeles and the California desert. His highly realistic images are pared down to their idealized essence often conveying a film still or a memory. He works in series, some of which go back decades. Eric is a lifelong artist who began with community sponsored art classes at age 5. He went on to receive a BFA from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on a talented student tuition waiver. He is represented by art galleries in Los Angeles and Palm Springs where he has had numerous solo shows over the years. His work is in collections internationally including well-known Hollywood names, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs and corporations such as Delta Airlines. He has been the subject of numerous media articles and his work has been collected or featured at The Hilbert Museum of California Art, Tucson Museum of Art, Laguna Art Museum, Riverside Art Museum and Palm Springs Art Museum. He currently lives and works in the high desert town of Yucca Valley, CA near Joshua Tree National Park. The painting he describes is: Jean Michel Basquiat (American, 1960–1988) Boy and Dog in a Johnnypump 1982 Oil on canvas 96” x 164” Art Institute of Chicago Gift of Ken Griffin
Matt Wessen (born in Los Angeles in 1982) is a photographer, filmmaker, and art director currently based in Ojai, California. In his current Compound YV exhibition, Rise/Set, Wessen captures the moods and movements of two occurrences we all have the opportunity to witness every day: the sunrise and the sunset. Typically thought of as either impossible to capture in a way that's true to the experience — or else clichéd and sentimental — Wessen instead uses abstraction to organize this daily ritual into a show that is colorful, bold and graphic, more akin to a PANTONE color book than nature photography. Matt and C.YV Program Director, Caroline Partamian, chatted via Zoom as Caroline spent time in the gallery with Matt's work.
Luis Cobelo (b. 1970, Venezuela) holds a degree in Philosophy from the University of Zulia in Venezuela. He was raised between Venezuela and Spain, where he became a photographer. Beginning in 1993, he participated in numerous international photography festivals and solo exhibitions. Working independently across borders since 2001, Luis has developed documentary projects in the Americas, Asia and Europe, and has been published in magazines and newspapers worldwide. He is based in San Francisco, California. The photographs he describes are from the series, Christ in New York (1984), by Duane Michals (American, 1932). Gelatin Silver Print each sheet: 8”x 0”; each image: 5” x 7”
Akari Uragami lives and works in Tokyo, Japan. Using soft sculpture, she expresses the universality of humans as organisms, depicting their internal and external phenomena. Akari graduated from Musashino Art University as a textile major and ESMOD fashion school in 2012. Her work has been exhibited in Korea, London, and California. The work she describes in this episode is by cobird: 「3 minute experience」 Cyanotype on paper & Lightjet print on photo paper 745mm x 490mm 2018 She also mentions a collaboration with Ninja Tune, accessible here: Cobird Ninja Tune Tee x Sasquatchfabrix tees https://ninjatune.net/release/ninja-tune-x-sasquatchfabrix/ninjabushi-t-shirt-white https://ninjatune.net/release/ninja-tune-x-sasquatchfabrix/ninjabushi-t-shirt-black photo: Masayuki Saito
Alisha Sofia (b. 1987) attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, completing her degree at Art Center College of Design in 2009. She currently lives and works in Los Angeles. The painting she describes in this episode is: Hagop Hagopian (b. Alexandria, Egypt, 1923-2013, Yerevan, Armenia) A Woman with a Mirror 1969
Nick Nazmi (b. Chicago, 1991) creates an array of paintings and drawings in which apparitions, lost souls, and characters in a book are stuck in their nostalgia for a time and place that is no longer accessible. His work is influenced heavily by Persian folklore and the poetry of his father and grandfather from Iran. Nazmi lives in Brooklyn, New York. The paintings he describes in this episode are: Grant Wood (American, 1891–1942) Death on Ridge Road 1935 Oil on masonite 32 ⅛” × 39 1/16” × 1 5/16” Williams College Museum of Art Gift of Cole Porter Stone City, Iowa oil on wood panel 30¼ x 40” Joslyn Art Museum Gift of the Art Institute of Omaha, 1930.35; Art © Estate of Grant Wood/Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY