Clare Graham's repurposed soda cans @ MorYork Gallery (Photo courtesy of MorYork Gallery)

One calls himself a tinkerer. One likes the public anonymity of his day job. One calls his creations “a manifestation of obsessive compulsive order”.  All are artists who delight in detritus and dabble in discards.   Travel around town to meet these kings of controlled chaos.

Clare Graham and MorYork Gallery:  Astonishing is the only word for Clare Graham‘s elaborate creations assembled from the artist’s collections of things small and usually overlooked.   Graham’s not-for-profit MorYork Gallery is a fixture on the NELA 2nd Saturday gallery crawl (This Saturday,  see artist Jason Manley‘s concrete sculptures).   When MorYork visitors make their way back to Graham’s cavernous studio (a former Safeway market and a roller rink), jaws drop at the expansive emporium of artful effluvia.   Chandeliers of soda pop tops and buttons drip with eerily organic form from the ceiling next to flying skeletons.  Furniture assembled from tin cans huddle beneath towering sculptures created from yardsticks and Scrabble tiles.   Graham’s collection of found objects, such as doll’s heads and tiny skulls, are displayed in glass counters  around the room, which underscores the feeling of being inside a giant Cabinet of Wonders.  Graham was a senior art director at Disneyland for years…but the Haunted House has  nothing on the MorYork.  Go to see: a genius unleashed on the everyday.

Salvaged: Aaron Kramer and the Secret Life of Objects @ the Craft and Folk Art Museum. (Photo courtesy of CAFAM)

“Trash is the failure of imagination” according to Aaron Kramer whose first solo show at the Craft and Folk Art Museum underscores his assertion with its mix of the stately (elegant gourds and soignee vases), the functional (a spunky chair constructed from corks), and the whimsical (the “Little Boy Machine”, which consists of a frame, a crank, and a darning egg with extreme personality).  The artist-inventor, who spent a year riding around the U.S. on his bicycle while making collages, describes his work as a combination of  “Fine Craft” and “extreme basket making”.  “Part-time alchemists” rejoice: on August 29, Kramer will lead a “Kinetic Kreations” workshop (one of CAFAM’s “Curiosity Sessions”).  All you need is $40 ($30 for CAFAM members), a tin can, and two wire hangers.   (Joan Crawford be damned!)  Go to see: a playful, impressively skilled artist with an inspiring message of sustainability.

Bill Concannon's "Bill's Bottle Shop" @ the Museum of Neon Art (Photo courtesy of MONA)

Recycled, Reclaimed, Reinvented: the Neon Art of Bill Concannon @ the Museum of Neon Art.

Bill Concannon, who has been teaching, speaking about, and creating neon (both as art sculpture and commercial signage) for decades, has assembled “Bill’s Bottle Shop”, a recreation of an old roadside stand, for MONA‘s Recycled, Reclaimed, Reinvented.   Concannon utilizes corrugated metal, cupid’s heads, plastic bags, and vintage glass bottles to compelling effect; the contrast of the installation’s rough materials and lush, inviting light are simultaneously seductive and unsettling.   Concannon, who consistently creates with discarded objects, says, “…for a long time, it’s tickled me that glass is at once a very precious (pound per pound) fine art medium and also a thoughtless, throw-away material: no deposit – no return.”  Go to see: a found objects master at the top of his game.

Ready?  U Know U Want 2 Go Go….

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Bill Concannon shines on @ Museum of Neon Art

It’s one thing to recycle your Motley Crue t-shirt into a kerchief for Fido.  It’s quite another to recycle myriad, vintage glass bottles  into a mad scientist’s steampunk show of literate light elixirs.

Bottom line, Go Go’ers, don’t try to capture lightning in a bottle at home; leave it to experts like neon artist Bill Concannon and his hand-chosen band of merry pranksters whose work will be featured in a Museum of Neon Art group show as F.O.B. (“Friends of Bill”) in conjunction with Concannon’s solo, featured show, “Recycled, Reclaimed, and Reinvented”.

Per the show’s title, Aargon Neon founder Concannon, who teaches neon sculpture at the Art Academy University in San Francisco, collects to create, using found and discarded objects such as plastic bags, corrugated metal, and the aforementioned glass bottles to comment on “consumerism, politics, and the erotic psyche”.   Concannon’s installation “Bill’s Bottle Shop” features bottles flickering with neon messages such as “Love and Hate”.  (No hint as to whether Concannon was inspired by Night of the Hunter, Do the Right Thing, or both.)

The F.O.B. group show features work by nine artists including Concannon’s mentor Larry Albright (whose neon work is in theme and amusement parks all over the world),  Shawna Peterson (whose company, Peterson Neon, is restoring the Castro Theater sign in San Francisco), and colleagues such as Stuart Ziff (who has created neon props for Star Wars, Jurassic Park, and Total Recall.) Expect Jerico Woggon‘s installation to sweep you into the gallery on a wave of black light neon; it’s the perfect time to break out those summer whites, Go Go’ers.

MONA takes you cruisin' with the top down on 6/26.

For a double dose night of neon, get to the gallery at 7:30PM to check out the show, nosh, and imbibe, then keep the glow going with MONA’s 8:00PM Neon Cruise.  (Buy tix beforehand, Go Go’ers, so you’re not disappointed; the tours almost always sell out.  NOTE: Your cruise ticket includes entry to the reception.)  Eric Lynxwiler (who was just dubbed “Mr. Saturday Night” in the L.A. Weekly‘s “60 Most Interesting People in Los Angeles” issue) is your loquacious and erudite Cruise Director as you navigate L.A.’s neon signs at bird’s eye level from the top of the double-decker bus.  The bus pit-stops at neon-fabulous Chinatown and Canter’s Deli but don’t count on enough time to order chow mein or chopped liver.

Lynxwiler has occasionally been known to stop at the Frolic Room to wet his whistle so he can continue to wax eloquently to rapt cruisers but the regular tour doesn’t make dedicated bar stops like the now-discontinued Poet’s Beat Neon Cruise of yore.  If you need a nightcap after navigating the neon jungle, stop by the Broadway Bar whose expansive, but restrained neon sign and alluring, dimly lit interior hint at hushed conversations and discreet assignations.

Perfect for getting to know that special someone you met under the red neon “Jesus Saves” sign.

Ready?  U Know U Want 2 Go Go….

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