TIME SENSITIVE

Group Show

Featuring: Sergio Garcia, Joris Ghilini, Max Kauffman
Billy Kheel, Lindsey Kuhn, Gabe Richesson and Paul Rousso

Exhibit runs February 15th – March 7th

Black Book Gallery is pleased to present Time Sensitive, a group show inspired by nostalgia and collective memory. Time Sensitive features gallery artists Sergio Garcia, Max Kauffman, Billy Kheel, Lindsey Kuhn and Gabe Richesson, as well as Joris Ghilini and Paul Rousso, whose work Black Book is excited to introduce to our collectors. The exhibition runs from February 15 – March 7, 2020 and will open on Saturday, February 15th with a reception from 7-9pm that is free and open to the public.

So far, this decade (much like the last one) has been marked by widespread anxiety and unrest – political, environmental, social and economic. Emerging technologies are disrupting aging industries and spawning new ones on a daily basis. International relations seem hell-bent on self-destruction. Entire continents are literally on fire. In this climate of collective upheaval, nostalgia operates as a powerful opiate for the masses, romanticizing where we’ve been while mitigating fears of where we’re heading. Each of the artists featured in Time Sensitive approach the theme of nostalgia differently, but an affection for the cultural relics of decades past – such as teenage idols, retro electronics, brand logos and graphic design – resonates across each of their works.

French artist Joris Ghilini creates wood sculptures and paintings of decaying icons from art history and pop culture. His latest body of work includes a pair of destroyed Nikes and two paintings: “Crying Girl” & “Portrait of Dora Maar” (Maar was a French surrealist and one of Picasso’s muses). By reinterpreting historical objects and personas with cultural cache, Ghilini’s work questions the very notion of iconography. “Things are constantly a work in progress,” he explains. “In this way I don’t hesitate to embrace the ‘déja vu’ or to challenge the myth, the hero or the sacred, to demystify it, divert it, to make it more fragile in order to tell a new story.”

Max Kauffman also memorializes artifacts of the not-so-distant past – such as cassette tapes – but in bronze, a nearly indestructible material that implies a certain grandiosity and is thus an ironic medium for commemorating obsolete technologies. Kauffman’s painting is more personal and references the artist’s homeland and nomadic ancestry. “My family did some DNA testing and found we only had 1-2% Russian background and 48% Ashkenazi Jew,” he says, “They settled in Russia on a stretch called the levant, but were sort of gypsies. This discovery opened up a swath of questions and research into that area of the world- lots of weird stuff happened there including petroglyphs on the scale of the Nazca lines.”

Paul Rousso’s large-scale wall sculptures of vintage currency and candy wrappers evoke strong memories of products that we instantly recognize, but which technically no longer exist – as technology evolves, their material states are being constantly reconstructed. Rousso believes that our devotion to these disappearing brands is calculated by our memories of their packaging, which we associate with our younger, more innocent selves. Currency is also constantly evolving, from paper bills to crypto Bitcoin. Today, the $1000 bill looks practically comical, despite its one-time circulation – a cognitive dissonance that Rousso amplifies through his oversized sculptures.

Sergio Garcia’s oversized sculptures of skateboard wheels pay playful homage to the defining adolescent subculture of the 1990s and 2000s. Garcia views the skateboard wheel as an integral, yet often overlooked, symbol of the skateboarding ethos. To Garcia, once a set of wheels has been used they assume a new significance, representing the places (and surfaces) skated, like a trophy or badge of honor for teenage rites of passage.

Gabe Richesson’s stylized portraits of musicians and professional athletes include both historical and personal references to various cartoon characters, mascots and logos pulled from retro pop culture. In his paintings, Richesson draws inspiration from bands like The Grateful Dead – the epitome of hippie nostalgia – as well as heavy metal antiheroes like Ozzy Osbourne and Black Sabbath.

Billy Kheel’s felt tapestries invoke memories of junior high home ec classes, while tapping into the youthful idolizing of superstar athletes and rappers. Billy was a contestant on NBC’s first season of “Making It” where he brought his love for sports, family and felt to the national forefront. Subjects of this body of work include Wilt Chamberlain, Biggie (on a Shaq jersey) and James “The Beard” Harden – icons of African American pop-culture.

Finally, Lindsey Kuhn’s graphic work draws on the poster art aesthetic of the 1950s and 1960s, when “Reefer Madness” was being propagated as a national public health crisis. Lindsey is colorblind, which is why his posters combine so many vivid colors. His compositions reference prototypical 80’s kid nostalgia – aliens, mass-propaganda, skateboarding and psychedelic culture.

As Black Book Gallery’s first exhibition of this new decade, Time Sensitive invites you to take a break from our anxiety-laden present and revel in the rose-colored comforts of our collective past.

Max Kauffman (United States)
b. 1981

Architecture factors heavily into my work. As a way to tell a story but also as the basis of things- the walls we form in our minds, the memory of a magic place from childhood, and recently to look at heritage. Using a mental and emotional map of places, people, and sometimes events I create images to the best of my recollection. They appear more as patterns than a concrete thing.

Best known for his outstanding post-apocalyptic folk tales, Max Kauffman is an artist who doesn’t fear taking risks or traveling the longer road to get to an idea for his work. Kauffman’s paintings shift deftly between abstraction and figuration by blurring the distinction between real and imagined, conscious and unconscious. The suggesting and exploding forms presented in his amazing body of work invite the observer’s own imaginative references and conjure the joyful mess of living. Max’s pieces encompass a sense of uncontrollable chaos and a folkloric approach to their subject matter. He investigates how we draw comfort from inanimate objects and habitats that we occupy, letting them shape us.

Kauffman was born in 1981 in Chicago and grew up in South Bend,IN. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Ceramics, with a minor in Anthropology from Arizona State University in 2004. He has participated in solo and group shows across the United States as well as Italy, Canada, Mexico, and Israel. His work has been featured in publications like Boom,Vice, Beautiful Decay, Its Nice That, Hi Fructose and Juxtapoz, to name a few.

He currently lives in Denver with his cat daughter, Lady Drew.

Paul Rousso (United States)

Paul Rousso is an American-born visual artist and innovator. Educated at the California College of the Arts, his work is shown at galleries and art fairs around the globe.

A prodigious perfectionist, his technique has leapt into the future, as his vision and imagination merge to embrace new conceptual and physical technology the moment they appear on the horizon. The artist lives his context and vehemently pursues his objective.

Rousso relentlessly excels at his efforts to evolve as an artist who will put forth an enduring impact on subsequent generations with his life’s work, “Flat Depth.” This concept, which he has been refining his entire professional career, is the logical progression of modern art – to render a flat object three-dimensional, or to collapse a three-dimensional object into two dimensions – and is a fusion of countless complex artistic methods, including painting, printing, sculpting, welding, chemistry, digital manipulation and digital printing.

A student of both pop-art and deep classical culture, as well as the vast interceding spectrum, Rousso endeavors to express his commentary on the human condition while physically, psychically and temporally committing his entire life to the imaginative evolution of his visual artistry. Toward that end, his creative processes are linear and complex, with many pieces developing simultaneously, and painstakingly.

His first summer job – designing the Tribeca loft of Robert De Niro – combined with stints as a Hollywood scenic artist and a brief career steeped in the cosmetics industry as an art director at Grey Advertising on the Revlon account, lend a wry touch to the social commentary woven through his work, and his vast and encompassing worldview flavors everything he creates.

Rousso’s work is held in private collections over North America, Europe, the Middle East and beyond, and numerous public projects of his appear across the United States.

Raised in North Carolina, Rousso traces his inspiration to the paradoxes of the world around him and the work of the artists who began the conversation, as well as every artist through time who has advanced the subject or the art form. His work is deliberately attainable to nearly every viewer, and yet his classical training shines through as time-honored artistic conventions are woven through his work.

Rousso’s fascination with paper – currency, advertising, newspapers, magazines – its history and use, its rise and fall, is an emblematic theme reflected frequently in his compositions. Despite the complexity of Rousso’s artistic output, the character and subject matter of the art is relatable to all citizens of the world, so much so that it practically jumps off the wall, and straight into the viewer’s gestalt.

Gabe Richesson (United States)

Gabe’s imaginative and boldly colorful style has made him a favorite among athletes looking for unique and unforgettable portraits and murals.

As a child growing up in Missouri, he spent hour after hour filling notebooks with cartoons and sketches of the people around him. He also loved to create detailed portraits of his favorite athletes including the local Kansas City Royals. His surreal yet realistic style had already taken shape by the time he attended college and received his first formal training in painting. In his youth, Gabe was also a passionate athlete, eventually playing football at the collegiate level, which provides him with an insider’s knowledge that greatly informs his work to this day.

Since his first painting for DeAngelo Hall in 2006, Gabe has continued to make a name for himself as a painter for the pros. He works closely with each athlete, turning their ideas and requests into one-of-a-kind portraits that capture their personality, as well as athletic prowess.

Gabe has been creating detailed portraits for many celebrated sports professionals, celebrities, and corporations involved in the sports industry for almost 10 years now.

Billy Kheel (United States)

Using felt and thread, Billy Kheel builds soft sculptures and wall hangings. His approach plays with the concepts of masculine vs. feminine and folk vs. academic in relation to artistic process and intent. By using craft techniques to explore typically masculine subject matter, Kheel’s work is influenced by the impact of shifting gender roles on culture. Regardless of the subject of a given series, a sense of humor and warmth runs throughout his work. This is Kheel’s first exhibit with Black Book Gallery. Kheel has exhibited nationally and internationally and his work has been featured in Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Magazine, KCRW’s Design and Architecture and KCET’s Artbound.

Lindsey Kuhn (United States)

If there is a sublime correlation between art, music and skateboarding Lindsey Kuhn discovered it over 25 years ago. He fused these passions allowing him to embark on a successful career spanning three decades.

He was born 1968 in Evanston, IL then relocated to the Mississippi Gulf Coast at an early age. He started screen-printing t-shirts in 1983 to pay for maintenance of his massive backyard skate ramp (largest in the south at the time). The popularity of his clever and provocative designs propelled him into the first phase of the life of a professional artist.

Within a year of moving to Austin Texas in 1990, Kuhn started printing posters for Southern California based L’imagerie Gallery. L’imagerie financed a print shop in Austin which produced art for Robert Crumb, Ed Roth, Robert Williams, Joe Colman, Frank Kozik , Coop and others. Implementing this invaluable education Kuhn started to design and print posters of his own. He has worked with famous venues across the county like Jabberjaw, CBGB’s, Emos’s, Fillmore, The Metro, as a well as clubs around the world and of course in Denver.

Today, Kuhn is an artist of international distinction. He is best known for his original silk-screened rock posters for a wide variety of bands such as AC/DC, Jonny Cash, Tool, The Pixies, Devo, Pearl Jam, Eagles of Death Metal and hundreds more. His company Swamp, located in Denver, Colorado since 1997 also does custom printing and publishing for other artists.

Kuhn’s work has been featured in many tv shows, movies & books over the years. Most noteworthy are the “Art of Modern Rock” & “Lure of the SWAMP”. “Lure of the Swamp” is the best compilation of the rock posters he’s created throughout his career.

Kuhn’s work has received worldwide acclaim, including noteworthy shows in Japan, France, Switzerland, Germany, Argentina and many prominent galleries in America. He was also a featured artist in the documentary film, “American Artifact: The Rise of American Rock Poster Art” (2009).

His participation in the corporate domain features commissioned work for global entities such as Rhapsody, X-box, Camel, and Oakley. He also toured the SWAMP Art Exhibit with the “Southern Comfort Music Experience” for several years, displaying art & creating on the spot printing for each show.

Through it all, Kuhn was a primary creative force in a movement that gave birth to a new art form. His influence on culture only continues to expand, confront and inspire all that follow.

Sergio Garcia (United States)

We, as humans, are naturally drawn to the unorthodox. I have always enjoyed the use of the unconventional as a base for my artwork. I enjoy creating art that people can relate to and that stimulates the creative subconscious. Not only to create an emotional relationship between art and viewer, but to conjure up questions of how and why. It is this desire to create a connection with the viewer that fuels my creativity.
My passion is creating a perfect balance of light and shadow. Light is the core of my artwork. Without light there is no art. Without art there is no life. Amen, brother.

Joris Ghilini (France)

I was born in 1978. In 1996 I joined the Faculty of Law of Aix en Provence and graduated a few years later in intangible law and new technologies.

I became an intellectual property advisor but I left the profession in 2009 in order to pursue applied research on the concept of iconography and its endangerments.

I live and work in Paris.

PAUL ROUSSO
“A Single G Note”
Media: Mixed Media on Hand-Sculpted Acrylic
Size: 22 x 37 x 6 Inches
55.88 x 93.98 x 15.24 cm
Year: 2019
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $7,500
Availability: Inquire

PAUL ROUSSO
“Justice League Gum & Tattoo”
Media: Mixed Media on Hand-Sculpted Polystyrene
Size: 57.5 x 43 x 7 Inches
146.05 x 109.22 x 17.78 cm
Year: 2019
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $12,500
Availability: Inquire

BILLY KHEEL
“The Beard”
Media: Felt and sewing materials
Size: 20 x 33 Inches
24 x 38 Inches Framed
Year: 2019
Price: $850
Availability: Inquire

BILLY KHEEL
“Slamming Rappers Like Shaquille”
Media: Felt and sewing materials on authentic Mitchell & Ness Orlando Magic Shaq Jersey
Size: 24 x 31 Inches
27.5 x 35 Inches Framed
Year: 2019
Price: $1000
Availability: SOLD

BILLY KHEEL
“Wilt Chamberlain”
Media: Felt and sewing materials
Size: 30 x 41 Inches
34.5 x 46 Inches Framed
Year: 2019
Price: $1500
Availability: Inquire

GABE RICHESSON
“Black Sabbath, Sweet Leaf”
Media: Acrylic on canvas
Size: 36 x 36 x 1.5 Inches
Year: 2019
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $3,400
Availability: Inquire

GABE RICHESSON
“Grateful Dead, Dark Star”
Media: Acrylic on canvas
Size: 36 x 36 x 1.5 Inches
Year: 2019
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $3,400
Availability: Inquire

SERGIO GARCIA
“Baker 95A”
Media: Foam, resin and automotive paint
Size: 12 Inch Diameter / 30 cm Diameter
Year: 2020
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $1000
SOLD
Contact us for a commission

SERGIO GARCIA
“Powell Rat Bones”
Media: Foam, resin and automotive paint
Size: 24 Inch Diameter / 61 cm Diameter
Year: 2020
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $3200
Inquire or Purchase

SERGIO GARCIA
“Slime Ball Pink 2”
Media: Foam, resin and automotive paint
Size: 12 Inch Diameter / 30 cm Diameter
Year: 2020
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $1000
SOLD
Contact us for a commission

MAX KAUFFMAN
“Floater”
Media: Bronze, paint and wood
Size: 10 x 10 x 3 Inches
Year: 2019
Signed
Price: $750
SOLD

MAX KAUFFMAN
“From Russia With Snub”
Media: Spray paint and gouache on paper
Size: 16 x 16 Inches – Framed 20 x 20 Inches
Year: 2019
Signed & Dated: Yes
Price: $940
Inquire or Purchase

MAX KAUFFMAN
“Cloud Tape”
Media: Bronze and paint
Size: 8.5″ Tall with 3.5″ x 3.5″ Base
Year: 2019
Signed
Price: $350
SOLD

MAX KAUFFMAN
“Perchmate”
Media: Bronze and paint
Size: 5 x 4.5 x 3 Inches
Year: 2019
Signed
Price: $500
Inquire or Purchase

LINDSEY KUHN
"Idle Hands"
Media: 5 color serigraph on paper
Size: 26 x 40 Inches
Year: 2014
Edition: 41 - Signed
Price: $150
Inquire or Purchase
LINDSEY KUHN
"The Dancer"
Media: 4 color serigraph on metallic paper
Size: 20 x 40 Inches
Year: 2014
Edition: 23 - Signed
Price: $100
Inquire or Purchase
LINDSEY KUHN
"A Guiding Light"
Media: 4 color serigraph on paper
Size: 26 x 40 Inches
Year: 2008
Edition: 49 - Signed
Price: $100
Inquire or Purchase
LINDSEY KUHN
"Progress Through Destruction"
Media: 10 color serigraph on heavy gloss paper
Size: 24 x 18 Inches
Year: 2014
Edition: 40 - Signed
Price: $150
Inquire or Purchase
LINDSEY KUHN
"America's Savior" (Red)
Media: 2 color serigraph on paper
Size: 26 x 40 Inches
Year: 2019
Edition: 25 - Signed
Price: $40
Inquire or Purchase
LINDSEY KUHN
"Artifact"
Media: 3 color serigraph on paper
Size: 26 x 40 Inches
Year: 2009
Edition: 31 - Signed
Price: $100
Inquire or Purchase
LINDSEY KUHN
"Flower Child"
Media: 6 color serigraph on natural paper
Size: 12 x 36 Inches
Year: 2019
Edition: 37 - Signed
Price: $75
Inquire or Purchase
LINDSEY KUHN
"GrrrL Power" (Ice Gold)
Media: 5 color serigraph on natural paper
Size: 12 x 36 Inches
Year: 2018
Edition: 15 - Signed
Price: $100
Inquire or Purchase

JORIS GHILINI
“Nike Air”
Media: Distressed Nike shoes, wood, mixed media and plexiglas
Size: 9 x 12 x 14 Inches / 30 x 36 x 25 cm
Year: 2018
Signed & Dated: Yes
NFS

JORIS GHILINI
“Crying Girl”
Media: Wood, acrylic and plexiglas
Size: 11 x 11 x 1 Inches
Framed: 15 x 15 Inches / 38 x 38 x 8 cm
Year: 2019
Signed & Dated: Yes
NFS

JORIS GHILINI
“Portrait Of Dora Maar”
Media: Wood, acrylic and plexiglas
Size: 9 x 11 x 1 Inches
Framed: 12.5 x 14.75 x 2 Inches / 37 x 32 x 8 cm
Year: 2019
Signed & Dated: Yes
NFS