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Aris Moore, Lucas Grogan & Shaun O'Dell

February 10 – March 3, 2012

Gallery view of abstract pieces
Installation view from group show
Individual view of bluescale abstract
snake and man tapestry
Disfigured face portrait

Aris Moore / Lucas Grogan / Shaun Odell

February 10 - March 10, 2012

 

The Jack Hanley Gallery is pleased to present works on paper by Aris Moore, Lucas Grogan and Shaun Odell. Despite stylistic differences, the artworks share an uncertainty of form that enables a dreamy ambiguity of content. The spacey eccentricity of these artists, after all, can only be partially revealed in the works themselves. An artwork is like a postcard sent out on holiday - you fit what you can hope to convey in a given space, and leave the rest to the imagination.

 

Aris Moore is a New Hampshire based artist working on her MFA at the Art Institute of Boston. Rendered in hazy, smudged graphite and colored pencil, her figures blur childhood and adulthood as well as what is seen versus what is felt. Her work has recently been shown at the Art Los Angeles Contemporary fair and Boston University. The current exhbition will mark her first inclusion in a major small group show in the United States. 

 

Living and working in Melbourne, Lucas Grogan uses techniques both traditional and radical to develop psycho-spiritual drawing, painting and needlework that is at once attractive and off-putting. He has exhibited extensively in Australia, Hong Kong and the United States. Works by Grogan are included in the collections of Artbank, Deutsche Banke and Newcastle Region Art Gallery.

Shaun Odell was born in Beeville, TX and currently resides in San Francisco. He works in a variety of media to explore the intertwining realities of human and natural orders. He has exhibited nationally and internationally. His work is included in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art New York, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, M.H. deYoung Memorial Museum and the Berkeley Art Museum. He is the recipient of the 2006 Diebenkorn Teaching Fellowship from the San Francisco Art Institute, 2005 Artadia Award, 2004 SECA Award from San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. He is currently teaching at University of California, Berkeley and California College of the Arts.