Propagations, a
multi-media art show at Johansson Projects, explores the conjunction of
natural, cultural and technological forces that foster unexpected
artistic transmissions, replications and disseminations.
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 20th 6-9 pm
The gallery transforms itself into a breeding ground for its latest perspective-shifting show. Propagations highlights five
artists whose original and brazenly eclectic imagery spawns and sprouts
its way into the viewer’s subconscious. Children, giant insects, war
zones, entire cities and indeed the gallery itself are appropriated,
reconfigured and reconstructed. Tokyo-born New Yorker, Tadashi Moriyama,
in his Bay Area debut, produces animations and intricately detailed
aerial views of post-apocalyptic landscapes. Overcrowded,
over-systematized metropolises sprout consumptive organs; his breeding
buildings evolve into chaotic knots of life-sustaining connective
tissue. Moriyama, MFA University of Pennsylvania, has exhibited in
Japan, Ireland, Italy and across the USA.
San Francisco’s Paul Hayes creates large
surreal installations of paper that may suggest pixilated smoke; they
swirl like schools of fish, and hover like an invading flock of birds.
Stand among them and you may imagine the swarm is reproducing. Hayes, a
Rhode Island School of Design graduate has developed
site-specific installations for the Exploratorium, Alcatraz, and the
theater at SOTA. New Yorker Kiersten Essenpreis piles teeth around children’s beds and drops spiders onto inexplicably
smiling schoolgirls. Her disarming pop-art style subverts the clichés
of American childhood: parochial, pink-cheeked children find themselves
entangled in dark narratives. Essenpreis, who studied at Pratt
Institute, has made art appearing in the New York Times, GQ, Wired,
Boston Globe, and Nylon. From her home in Paris, Rebecca Whipple composes
meticulous modern versions of the medieval illuminated manuscript, text
enlivened by painted imagery, in her case, humorous reactions to
political events or comments on the impact military invasions have on
our environment and culture. Whipple earned her MFA at San Francisco
Art Institute. In the painted universe of San Franciscan Alexis Amann every inhabitant seems to spring to life, galvanized by swirling,
beckoning tentacles. Her works teem with girls, fish, zombies, and
other flora and fauna, all driven by the fierce forces of love and
water. Amann earned her MFA at San Francisco Art Institute.