September 2010 Archives

Attitudes of the Few

David Planka likes symbols. He likes ambiguity. He hates false realities, but he likes to ponder them. In his paintings, he catapults pictographs against the canvas, waiting to see what sticks, what sparks a dialogue. A yellow telephone sits contently next to a revolver and the caduceus. He lets us fill in the gaps. I recently asked Mr Planka a few questions about his process, his iconography, and his life beyond art in anticipation of his upcoming show at the AS220 Empire St Gallery, on view from October 3 to October 30 (and come to opening reception! October 3, 4PM-7PM!) 

(images courtesy of Mr Planka, from http://www.plankomatic.com; most have been cropped for space)

So maybe we can start out basically. Why are you an artist? 

Being an artist is a natural inclination for who I am as a human being. Growing up, my grandparents, both my parents, and my sister were always drawing. I always had that natural proclivity to draw, that need to draw. To express myself visually like that. I was always drawing. If I wanted to say something or I wanted to reflect, or make any type of comment or whatever. It's just who I am as a being. And then I got to the point in my life when I asked myself, "what do I want to be and what do I want to contribute to society?" What better way than something that comes naturally to me? It's something I derive pleasure from. It's kind of a selfish thing, but I enjoy making images and semantically that's how you label artists. It's just who I am.

Self Portrait as a Schizophrenic 

Can you tell us a little bit about your process as an artist? Where does your iconography come from and how do you choose what to incorporate? 

I really like Basquiat, Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, anybody who's making comments on mainstream culture or making commentary on something. I think that affects them personally, somehow making comments on what they think is important. So I am very into counterculture, conspiracy ideas. I work towards choosing separate ideas and juxtaposing them and thinking about how I can bring them together to derive meaning. It's based on stuff that I'm into, that I read, that I'm exposed to in day-to-day life. 

We live in the twenty first century here and we're bombarded with imagery. Even in the last fifty years, we're bombarded with some sort of visual information at a steady rate. Some of those things that I look at, I kind of combine all those ideas together. A lot of the things that I make are based on a single idea or thought. How can I convey that thought in a way that makes sense to me? My paintings have a main theme or idea and I'll transform things and adjust to help me convey that information visually, whether it's through swapping out words or the actual iconography I'm using to suggest an idea. You know, it's basically social political commentary, no different than Basquiat, any of those guys. I'm just commenting on what I see, what I think someone should pay attention to. 

I was interested in you talking about Guy Debord and Jean Baudrillard in your artist statement [for your upcoming show at AS220]. In your paintings you use these little dotted lines to connect all the disparate symbols, and it really reminded me of Debord's Pyschogeographic map of Paris. What's the relationship between your work and the idea of Spectacle and Simulacra that those guys were getting at? Do you feel like you're trying to subvert it? Document it? What's that relationship? 

I don't know about subvert...I guess there's a little subversion going on there. The main idea of those guys is almost a sort of nihilism, in a way. Whatever you're looking at is not even what it is; it's the representation of the idea of what it is. A lot of that stuff gets pretty far out when you're reading some of it, but it's a lot like Joseph Kosuth when he presents that chair. He has a definition of a chair, a real chair, and a picture of a chair. What is the chair? It's been told to me that that's what it is. 

For your health

In the bigger scheme of society and the social systems and how it all interacts in a big kind of microcosm/macrocosm sort of semiosis, it's about how all these things relate. And there is a connection between everything. Looking into transcendental meditation or quantum physics - I'm not a quantum physicist, but I've read a lot and learned a lot - you see that at the subatomic level everything is connected. There is no difference. So what I get from these books here is that everything is intertwined. At the same time, it's label this or label that, but it's all based on historical information, this Hegelian kind of idea where I only understand these things based on my previous experiences. So I mean, without getting too in depth, I'm picking an image that I think best represents the idea that I'm trying to say, but that idea that I'm representing is already iconography, it's already a symbol that has been pre-made, it's already there. It's a way that I think people can relate to that idea or that thought. 

In some images I had weapons. What do weapons signify? What do they mean? They mean aggression, protection, it all depends on you. But regardless, the symbol of the weapon, of the gun, of violence or control, is a bunch of those things and it's up to you when you look at it to decide what meanings best suit you. I'm focusing you on one of those meanings. I'm contriving the information on the board based on symbols that I think relate to everybody. 

Image is everything, and image is nothing. Image is a Sprite commercial. Reading Baudrillard and Debord and those guys, you come away with despair, despair that it really means nothing. I like what those guys talk about, and it makes sense with what I do and it fits the mold of what I'm trying to talk about. It's something that relates to my work. The way I place the stuff on the actual surface, I'm looking towards advertisements and how they put symbols down. I'm looking towards hieroglyphics. The way I compose the piece is dependent on how I think about it. Some of the pictures look random, but it's a specific randomness. It looks chaotic, but there is a place for everything. Everything is in an order. It mirrors our society: it's chaos, but it's ordered chaos. 

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Are you an artist who goes through phases? If so, where are you now? Where have you come from? 

It's interesting you ask. When I went to school, I went for illustration, because I knew I wanted to focus in on rendering and being able to be the best draftsman and the best at capturing likenesses. I grew up on sugary cereals and Mad Magazine and the Smurfs, and that's what I relate to. A lot of this stuff is very influenced by that. The other day I was looking over drawings that I had done as a kid, in high school, and the composition is very similar to what I do now. It's kind of arranged and placed in a kind of space, but they're all placed so that each image has a separate little area for itself, even while they're all intertwined and connected. 

I think that I've stayed the same, but I've also developed in how I do arrange the images and the way that I look at the space. Now I'm more informed, and more specific as far as what goes in. And it fits the kind of drawings I'm doing. If I was doing a landscape, the compositions would change. Even with the Fucked Series that I'm working on now, the composition of each drawing is individual and organized, but I arrange them on the wall almost like I arrange a painting, except I'm putting it on the surface of the wall. The idea of arrangement is there. I've been developing that idea since I've been a kid.

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What are some of your interests outside painting? 

I'm into living life. I like music a lot. I'm big on family, that's important. Just experiencing life. Going out there and dealing with day to day things while trying to stay positive. I like coffee a lot. I like hanging out with buddies and having coffee. I like to read a lot. I like to pay attention to what's going on. It helps influence me. I teach too. I'm a teacher, so I like to think about how to better articulate and better convey ideas. Just like everyone else, I'm just trying to find happiness and trying to find a way through the daily grind, you know what I mean?

--

David Planka's new works will be on view at the AS220 Empire St. Gallery from October 3 through October 30 alongside Abby Test's Portraits. Please join us for the opening reception on Sunday October 3, 4-7PM.

Brief words and interview by Gan Uyeda.

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October 3-30, 2010

opening reception (free admission)

Sunday, October 3, 4-7pm


AS220 Main Gallery

Portraits by Abigail Test and 

New Paintings by David Planka


Open Window

Simulatum Corpus 

new work by Peter Gemei


AS220 Project Space (93 Mathewson St.)

NIGHT FOR DAY 

Mickey Zacchilli and Natalja Kent

artist talk October 29, 5:30-8pm at the Project Space


Youth Gallery: Street Art Installation! 


October brings an amazing line up of art work in diverse styles and practice. Abigail Tess's new series, Portraits, is inspired by Georgia O'keefe, "...to see takes time, like to have a friend takes time." The paintings are intimate portrayals of friends relaxed at home and are of those that know the artist best. David Planka's paintings reflect the chaos and instability of our commodity culture that drowns us in visual stimulation and instant gratification and herds us en masse over the edge. Peter Gemei, a glass artist practicing  "Lampwork", pursues visual representations of the body and its relationship with technology. NIGHT FOR DAY is a collaborative installation/exhibition by Mickey Zacchilli & Natalja Kent - be prepared for  a visual experience of Lovecraftian proportions that just may unhinge your mind in time for Halloween. 


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SUNDAY SUNDAY SUNDAY September 12th 4-7pm at the AS220 Complex

This Sunday at the AS220 Complex all is in a whirl wind of art & wonder & its all free to see!

Start at the AS220 Main Gallery at Empire St. , and preview the 200+ Prints of the Print Lottery & be sure to buy your ticket to win! win! win! 200 prints, $100 a ticket and every ticket is a winner! The Print Lottery is a benefit for the AS220 Community Printshop that showcases works on paper by 200 artists from all over the world. We're asking you to show your support for the shop with a $100 donation. In thanks, you recieve a ticket redeemable for artwork on display during the 2nd Biennial Print Lottery on September 25th, 2010. In keeping with AS220's mission of accessibility and equality, and for the purpose of having fun, all artwork in the show is won by a blind lottery system.

All through the month of September, the AS220 Community Printshop will be presenting lectures and workshops culminating on Saturday the 25th with the Print Lottery. More info here! and a complete schedule of events here. While your at the Empire st. be sure to hop up to the 2nd floor YOUTH GALLERY and check out the t-shirts and prints the studio has been making at the Printshop. Hot! Hot! Hot! the future is now!

Next skip on over to 131 Washington St. the Mercantile Block, AS220's newest addition to the family! Take a tour, visit the studios and apply to move in! While on the tour visit Studio 308. Montana Blanco has curated the living space/show room with work from local New England artists, including work by: Cara Blaine, Ben Blanc, Joe Buzzel, Jill Colinan, Serena Elston, Joshua Enck, Fredericks and Mae, Corey Grayhorse, Chloris Lowe, Alee Peoples, Meg Turner, Matt Underwod Ben Watkins and Pippi Zornoza. ....drinks & h'orderves to be served. more info here.

Next Stop the Twentieth Century! The AS220 Project Space present "Welcome Back to the Twentieth Century" new letterpress prints by Dan Wood & "DWRI+TS=" Three Years of collaborative prints by Dan Wood and Tiny Showcase. Dan Wood presents a new body of work that has simmering for a long time, work that has been lost and then found, recycled and renewed. Dan welcomes us back to the 20th century, our recent past that still casts a shadow over us.

In addition to Dan's new work the Reading Room features work from Dan's three year collaboration with Tiny Showcase. Lots of little letterpress wonders to feast your eyes upon, and to sigh heavily over, if say you perhaps missed the release, for instance, "Inside Shed 4- Gramphone Store" by Nigel Peake and its lost to you forevermore...sigh Well, don't let it happen again, for on Sunday DWRI & Tiny Showcase will be premiering a super secret new release available only at the AS220 Project Space! Think back, past the 20th century, into the mists of time, to the dawn of a new age, back to the beginning of MAGIC! I can say no more, other than: yes it will be very affordable.

Checkout the new AS220 Project Space Facebook page for a preview of "Welcome Back to the Twentieth Century" and a hint about the the super secret new print release!

Yeah!