Thursday, May 15, 2008

Joe Goode Lecture at DNJ May 17th

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DNJ Gallery Lectures: Saturday, May 17, 2008


We are pleased to announce two lectures taking place in conjunction with the Miracle Mile Art Walk and Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s Muse Art Walk. Admission is free.

On Collecting Photography by Andrew Schwartz at 11:00 A.M.

Andrew Schwartz will present a lecture on collecting photography which will include examples of the photographic medium from its inception to the present. Mr. Schwartz has been a member of the Modern and Contemporary Art Council and the Photo Art Council at the Los Angeles County Museum. He is currently a consultant to DNJ Gallery.

Joe Goode’s Art Talk and Walkthrough at 3:00 P.M.


Joe Goode will discuss his work in the exhibition "Ashes" which is on display at DNJ Gallery through May 24th. This show in particular revisits a curiosity Goode has always sought to examine—that of creation, destruction, and re-creation. It is a bold example of Goode's observations of life through art.

Click here to download Map and Gallery Listings

During the day (12 pm–8 pm) . . .

Experience more than 40 galleries and museums in mid-Wilshire.
Enjoy discounts at a variety of local restaurants.
Expand your knowledge with artist discussions and collection seminars.

Visit LACMA's website for more info on Muse Artwalk and After Party

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Michael Eastman Featured in St. Louis Magazine

Artist, Michael Eastman is also featured in the May 2008 issue of St. Louis Magazine. To read the article, please click the link below.

Eastman's Eyes By Stephen Schenkenberg

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Michael Eastman Book Reviewed in LA Times

This past Sunday's Los Angeles Times also featured a review of Michael Eastman's new book from Rizzoli, Vanishing America. Eastman's show Vanishing America opens at dnj gallery May 31st, and Mr. Eastman will be signing copies of his new book. The book, Vanishing America is for sale through dnj gallery. Below is a link to the LA Times article
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At the end of the road
A photographer captures the emptiness of the countless little Main Streets we've left behind. By Douglas Brinkley

In my time, I have journeyed through many small towns across America. Recently, I spent some time in Jordan, Mont. -- the Garfield County seat -- which prides itself on being the lonesomest town in the world. Blessed with no natural resources or historic tourist sites, located 175 miles from the nearest airport and 115 miles from the nearest rail depot, Jordan has very little to offer except solitude.

The county population density is 0.3 people per square mile. Perhaps because modernity has left Jordan alone, you can gaze at a forlorn bank building and tiny grain elevator and see faded storefront advertisements for Sioux City Sarsaparilla and the long-defunct Sellman's Motel. "No Loitering" signs are posted from long ago, when the cattle drives from Texas to Montana used to let off right here at Big Dry Creek.

Appearances aside, Jordan is not really a ghost town. And there are in fact thousands of similar offbeat places that have just receded from national consciousness. Chances are that each one of us holds a place like Jordan in our distant memory. Though photographer Michael Eastman has never been to Jordan, his images evoke its spirit for me just the same. Though each of the photos in his forthcoming book, "Vanishing America," shows a specific town, all of the photos evoke that same particularly American loneliness.

Virtually in all 50 states, cobwebbed symbols of our small-town past lurk behind the shiny newness of our fast-food junctions and interstate exits. The sheer thrust of American dynamism has left Main Street unloved. But if your eyes gaze at these neglected roadside monuments long enough, you can be transported back to the time when Main Street was the epicenter of most communities.

Eastman captures the hard-core essence of blue-smoked architectural loneliness better than any new artist I've encountered. I feel qualified to make this claim because loneliness has been my niche since youth. Where some might find gloom in these anti-Rockwellian photographs, I find a liberation from the glaring rat race of American life. In Eastman's images, a scent hangs in the air like that before a thunderstorm -- a time when another Chapter of Life is being closed with the slam of a screen door. Darkness is falling, but a red-brick afterglow lingers in Eastman's work so you can still marvel at another crumpled calendar page being tossed away, just as Thomas Wolfe and Edward Hopper would have liked it.

Photographs like these may someday be taken in downtown Los Angeles or the Vegas Strip or Suburbia U.S.A. Nothing lasts forever. But visages don't fade away without a fight.

Douglas Brinkley, a professor of history at Rice University, is the author of numerous books, including "The Great Deluge: Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans, and the Mississippi Gulf Coast." He also wrote the introduction to Michael Eastman's book of photographs, "Vanishing America," which is being published by Rizzoli this month.

Friday, May 2, 2008

Joe Goode Featured in LA Times

The Joe Goode exhbition Ashes is featured in this Sunday's Los Angeles Times Calendar section. Copies will be available in limited release Saturday and everywhere Sunday. You can also read the article online at the link below. Joe Goode's show, Ashes will close May 24th. Please stop by.


After the fire, Joe Goode finds a new passion,
By Anne-Marie O'Connor

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Holly Andres in art ltd. Magazine

Artist, Holly Andres is featured in the May 2008 issue of art ltd. Magazine. The article, "Young at Art: 15 Artists Under 35" is shown below, and can be found on page 50 in the magazine. Pick up a copy, on stands now.

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Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Joe Goode Opening Reception Photos

We had a great turn out at Joe Goode's opening reception, Ashes. Take a look at the photos below. If you were unable to attend the opening, please stop by. The show is on view until May 24th.


Saturday, April 5, 2008

Joe Goode: Opening Reception tonight

Please join us tonight between 6-8 pm for the opening reception of "Ashes"- new work by renowned Los Angeles painter, Joe Goode. This exhibition is a culmination of three of Goode's latest series using both photography and painting.

Click here for directions to DNJ Gallery. We hope to see you this evening.