Default
Default
Default

Phranc
Winter
Images | Biography

A Little Snow
A Group Show of Small Snowscape Paintings by:

Marc Bohne
Images | Biography
Ann Lofquist
Images | Biography
Robin Mitchell
Images | Biography
Andrea Peters
Images | Biography
Astrid Preston
Images | Biography
Pamela Kendall Schiffer
Images | Biography
Nicole Strasburg
Images | Biography

John Huggins
Aspen
Images | Biography

 

 


November 30, 2013 - January 11, 2014

Reception: December 7, 2013 4-6PM


Phranc, best known as The All-American Jewish Lesbian folksinger, is also a self-described “Cardboard Cobbler,” who fashions cardboard, paper, gouache, and thread into life-size, three-dimensional replications of everyday objects. As a teenager, Phranc attended The Feminist Studio Workshop at The Woman’s Building in Los Angeles, but she traces her obsession with cardboard back to childhood. She says, “From the time I sat in my first refrigerator box submarine, I knew the cardboard sea was for me.” Her first exhibition at Craig Krull Gallery, Phranc of California (Summer of 2011), consisted of hand-crafted beach paraphernalia, such as swimsuits, inflatable rafts, umbrellas and beach balls. For her new exhibition, Winter, Phranc will exhibit painted paper and cardboard snowshoes, ski sweaters, ski pants, lift tickets, and even a shiny new red sled! In these trompe l’oeil re-creations of nostalgic winter items, Phranc remarks upon the reconstruction and idealization of memories.

John Huggins is a master of the challenging and exacting process known as Polaroid transfer (made even more challenging by Polaroid’s recent bankruptcy). This process, in which wet Polaroid emulsion is transferred to another piece of paper, results in a grainy, desaturated image. Huggins then enlarges the transfer into a 30x40” archival pigment print, further enhancing the grain of the image as well as the fiber of the paper, thus resulting in a textured, tapestry quality. All of the photographs in this exhibition were made from the photographer’s gondola on the lifts of Aspen. His compositions of horizonless, snow-covered mountain faces dotted with tiny skiers suggest a Zen simplicity of man in the context of nature. In the most minimal images, it appears as if the tiny figures are actually skiing down the vertical surface of the paper.

To complement these two winter exhibitions, the gallery will present a group show entitled, A Little Snow… This exhibit of small snowscape paintings will include work by; Marc Bohne, Ann Lofquist, Robin Mitchell, Andrea Peters, Astrid Preston, Pamela Kendall Schiffer, and Nicole Strasburg.