River Styx
Curated by Brandy Carstens and Sara Lee Hantman
January 28 – February 25, 2023
Heidi Lau "Bouquet for ____," 2022 Ceramic 19 x 14 x 7 in
Joseph Elmer Yoakum "Dead Sea near Dhioan in Jordan So East Asia", c. 1970 Ballpoint pen, color pencil on paper 12 x 19 inches
Gretta Solie "Black Bench," 2023 and Mark Laver "Why can't monsters get along with other monsters?," 2021
Mark Laver "Why can't monsters get along with other monsters?," 2021 Oil on wood panel 24 x 30 inches
Gretta Solie "Black Stool" and "Black Chair," 2023 & Erica Mao "Shadow Reality," 2023
Erica Mao "Shadow Reality," 2022 Oil on canvas 16 x 20 inches
Salvo "Novembre a Venezia," 2005 Oil on canvas 11.8 x 15.75 inches
Coco Young "Low Tide," 2022 Oil on canvas 61 x 80 inches
Dan Herschlein "The Cove," 2023 Wood, joint compound, milk paint, wax, graphite, color pencil and epoxy 6.38 x 4.5 inches
Salvo "Un bel Sogno (A beautiful dream)," 1999 Oil on canvas 19.6 x 23.6 inches
Elsa Munoz "Nightshore 25," 2022 Oil on canvas 50 x 35 inches
Dan Herschlein "The Projectionist," 2023 Wood, joint compound, milk paint, wax, graphite, color pencil and epoxy 24.38 x 33.63 in cheese
Jean-Marie Appriou "Oscillation 2," 2022. Aluminium 15 x 13 3/4 x 2 3/4 inches
Erica Mao "Red River," 2022 Oil on canvas 30 x 24 inches
Frank Walter "A Bend in the River," "Along the Bank of the River," & "Trees Before the River," 1973-1985 Oil on back of photograph 12 x 14 inches
Mark Laver "Headquarters Road Nocturne Revisited #2," 2013 Oil on wood panel 28 x 36 inches
Theodora Allen "The Lyre," 2023 Oil on linen 20 x 20 inches
Kelly Akashi "Life Forms," 2022 Lost-wax cast bronze and hand-blown glass 26 x 6 x 6 inches
Etel Adnan "Planète 30" Oil on canvas 13.2 x 8.9 inches
Erica Mao "Edge of Light," 2022 Oil on canvas 30 x 40 inches
“From his bed… he would find himself on a stone staircase, in a meadow of tall grass, in a familiar room. This was the world within, half-remembered, half-suppressed. It was made from faces barely glimpsed in the train, stories skimmed in the newspapers, deep and unspeakable desires. He would touch a leaf, half-draw a curtain, to be sure he had stepped over. The sense of touch would reassure him. Light was murky there, as if underwater; babies were articulate, old-faced and wise; the sea stood vertical, and purple cats appeared when the carpet was rolled back. Sexual obsessions lurked in the folds of the landscape, terror in the floral furnishings of a house, and the dark was the journey from the womb in reverse.”
- Ann Wroe, Orpheus: The Song of Life
Sea View is pleased to open its inaugural exhibition on Saturday, January 28th with “River Styx,” a group presentation of contemporary and historic artists whose works ruminate the mythical landscape and the allegorical crossing of boundaries and time.
Curated by Brandy Carstens and Sara Lee Hantman, the exhibition includes contemporary and historic works by Salvo, Etel Adnan, Theodora Allen, Jean-Marie Appriou, Kelly Akashi, Dan Herschlein, Erica Mao, Mark Laver, Coco Young, Elsa Munoz, Heidi Lau, Gretta Solie, Frank Walter, Joseph E. Yoakum and Coco Young.
In Hesiod’s Theogony, the Styx is one of the rivers that lead to the afterlife, forming a threshold between Earth and the Underworld. It is the setting of the Greek musician and prophet, Orpheus, who would travel from one shore of existence to the other to retrieve his deceased wife, Eurydice. In Freudian psychology, to traverse the Styx is to drift into a dream, a cold plunge into our own subconscious. In Jean Cocteau’s symbolic 1950 film Orphée, it is the moment Jean Marais walks through a liquid mirror into his own reflection in search of love and eternity.
Each interpretation of this imagined landscape is rendered as a physiological yet psychic self-exploration in which the perimeters are slippery and indeterminate. A river is both a median and a conduit, and the works function as such: suggestive, introspective landscapes that replace the seemingly innocuous pastoral with cartographies of hope, desire, pain and pleasure. As Jean Cocteau asserts, “The region that I depict is a border on life, a no man's land where one hovers between life and death.”
Press
Hyperallergic “After 25 Years an Artist's Home Reopens as an Art Gallery"
Cultured Magazine "LA's Ambitious New Galleries to Visit this Month"
Financial Times "Los Angeles is the Home of the House Gallery"
LA Magazine "Meet the L.A. Art World's New Avant-Garde"
Artillery “PICK OF THE WEEK: River Styx”