Filtering by: light and space

In Conversation: Andy Moses with Curator Peter Frank, Moderated by Art Critic Shana Nys Dambrot
May
30
12:00 PM12:00

In Conversation: Andy Moses with Curator Peter Frank, Moderated by Art Critic Shana Nys Dambrot

At Laguna Art Museum...

Join renowned abstract painter Andy Moses in conversation with curator Peter Frank at the Laguna Art Museum on Saturday May 30th as they discuss Moses’s expansive career, creative process and evolving investigations of perception, light and space. Moderated by art critic Shana Nys Dambrot, the program offers critical insight into Moses’s work within the context of Southern California abstraction and contemporary painting today. The talk will open with a reception at 4:30, and the program will begin at 5:30pm.

Advance tickets recommended.

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Saturday @ William Turner Gallery: Hannah Sloan Art Tours + Pianist Tom Hiel
May
16
12:00 PM12:00

Saturday @ William Turner Gallery: Hannah Sloan Art Tours + Pianist Tom Hiel

This Saturday, May 16, William Turner Gallery is delighted to join Bergamot Station galleries in welcoming visitors from Santa Monica and LA communities for an afternoon celebrating art at the Bergamot Station Art Center Spring Open House. Admission and onsite parking are free.  

12:00 PM - Bergamot Station Art Tours with curator and art advisor Hannah Sloan

RSVP required: hannah@hannahsloan.com

(Please include number of attendees and time of tour — space is limited.)

3:30 PM - Piano Performance by Tom Hiel at William Turner Gallery

Spend the afternoon exploring a diverse range of galleries, exhibitions, and special programming while celebrating the spirit of contemporary art.

About Hannah Sloan:

Hannah Sloan is a Los Angeles–based curator and art advisor specializing in contemporary and photographic art. In 2015, she founded Sloan Projects, a gallery and curatorial platform dedicated to championing women artists and emerging voices in Los Angeles, later expanding its programming to include international artists with a focus on Central America. She now leads Hannah Sloan Curatorial & Advisory, collaborating with galleries, artists, and collectors across Los Angeles and New York.

HANNAH SLOAN

About Pianist Tom Hiel:

Tom Hiel is an award-winning composer and pianist who began his musical journey at the age of four. He is well-known for his compositions for solo piano and his extensive work in film and television scoring. He received an MFA in Music Composition from the California Institute of the Arts.

TOM HIEL

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ROLAND REISS: UNREPENTANT BEAUTY Opening
Apr
25
5:00 PM17:00

ROLAND REISS: UNREPENTANT BEAUTY Opening

Santa Monica, CA  - William Turner Gallery is pleased to present Roland Reiss: Unrepentant Beauty, an exhibition of late paintings by Roland Reiss (1929–2020), opening April 25, 5-8PM and on view through June 20, 2026.

A pioneering figure in postwar American art, Reiss spent more than six decades redefining the possibilities of painting. From his early explorations of abstraction and representation to his groundbreaking sculptural works and miniature environments, his practice consistently expanded the boundaries of the medium.

This exhibition focuses on a remarkable development in his final decades: a series of vibrant, dynamic flower paintings that challenge long-standing assumptions about beauty and subject matter in contemporary art. Historically regarded as decorative or peripheral, the motif of the flower becomes, in Reiss’ hands, a site of formal and conceptual innovation. The artist approached these works with full awareness of their cultural baggage, describing the act of painting flowers as requiring “a leap of faith.”

About these paintings Reiss stated, “Flowers are the vehicle for putting everything I have learned about painting into my work.” The resulting paintings move fluidly between abstraction and figuration, combining bold color, gestural energy, and spatial complexity. Rather than depicting flowers, Reiss uses them as a framework for exploring perception, materiality, and the enduring power of visual experience.

The title Unrepentant Beauty reflects the artist’s unapologetic embrace of beauty as both subject and strategy. In contrast to earlier generations for whom beauty was often viewed with suspicion, Reiss’ late work asserts its relevance with clarity and conviction.

At the end of a long and influential career, Reiss produced a body of work that is at once playful, rigorous, and deeply resonant—offering a powerful reconsideration of what painting can be.

Roland Reiss studied at the American Academy of Art, Mount San Antonio College and at UCLA. He taught at UCLA, the University of Colorado, and Claremont Graduate University, where he served as Chair for 30 years, from 1971 to 2001. In 2009 he received the College Art Association Award for the Distinguished Teaching of Art. At CGU he held the Benezet Chair in the Humanities and in 2010 an endowed chair in art was established in his name. He was also the director of The Painting's Edge residency at Idyllwild Arts.

Roland reiss, #1031 unrepentant flowers: Indigo blue, 2018, oil and acrylic on panel, 64” x 52”

Reiss was the recipient of four N.E.A. grants and of numerous prizes and awards. His work is included in many important public and private collections, such as the Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Hammer Museum, among others.

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Mar
19
5:00 PM17:00

Mark Steven Greenfield Artist Lecture and Symposium

A symposium between Greenfield and PCC history professor Dr. Fanon Wilkins about the historical impacts of the subjects of Greenfield’s paintings and how it relates to history and culture in LA and the world.  The symposium will be on March 19 from 5-7 in the Westerbeck Hall.

mark steven Greenfield, annunciation, 2023, Gold leaf and acrylic on wood panel, 30” x 48”

Westerbeck Recital Hall
1570 E Colorado Blvd
Pasadena CA, 91106

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JIMI GLEASON: VAPOR WAVE
Apr
5
5:00 PM17:00

JIMI GLEASON: VAPOR WAVE

Santa Monica, CA - William Turner Gallery is pleased to present Vapor Wave, a solo exhibition by Jimi Gleason,  opening April 5 and running through May 31, 2025.

Vapor Wave is Jimi Gleason’s most ambitious body of work to date. Utilizing a rich vocabulary of materials and styles, Gleason has built up gossamer thin layers of iridescent paint to create a series of paintings that are engagingly enigmatic. They confirm an artist at the height of his talent, confidently exploring the power of nuance and understated expression.

In this new series, vaporous ribbons of color play across lustrous surfaces that morph and shift as one engages them. The effect elicits a sense of unexpected revelry - much like the kind one might experience gazing across a lake in a predawn moment, captivated by the growing light as it caresses and undulates across the water’s surface.

And like water, Gleason’s surfaces are quietly in motion, their iridescent paints subtly shifting in hue as light plays across them. In some of the canvases, sharp diagonals bifurcate the compositions, providing dramatic structural rifts to these ethereal surfaces. The effect is a hypnotic and prismatic visual structure, where light, color and form intersect in ever-changing play. Gleason has a uniquely personal connection to water: he grew up surfing, and took up rowing in college. When he talks about his work he also talks about, “the way the light looks underwater,” and early mornings rowing when the calm water reflects the sky at dawn. 

Like many artists working in the Light and Space arena, materials and their catalytic visual effects are essential to their work. In Gleason’s case, he employs silver nitrate and pearlescent paints to activate his surfaces, which catch and reflect surrounding light, further engaging one’s sense of the surrounding space. Gleason is a leader in that next generation of Southern California artists to work in the Light and Space ethos, carrying the dialogue forward and using his work of art to explore the phenomenological properties of perception.

Born in Newport Beach, CA, Gleason received his BA from UC Berkeley in 1985. He studied printmaking at the San Francisco Art Institute before relocating to New York City, where he worked as a photo assistant and technician. Returning to California, Gleason was employed in the studio of Ed Moses for five years. Combining the disparate technical and compositional skills developed during his exposure to printmaking, photography and mixed media painting, Gleason is now the subject of considerable curatorial and critical attention. 

Gleason’s work is exhibited in significant public institutions, including the Hammer Museum, the Frederick R. Weisman Foundation, the Long Beach Museum, the Seattle Art Museum, and the Tucson Museum of Art.The artist’s paintings are actively collected by a growing number of major public and private collections around the world.

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"Numina" Closing Reception Featuring the Music of Tom Hiel and Poetry of Robert Sobul
Mar
22
4:00 PM16:00

"Numina" Closing Reception Featuring the Music of Tom Hiel and Poetry of Robert Sobul

William Turner Gallery invites you to join us in celebrating the closing reception and catalogue-signing for Numina on Saturday March 22 from 4 to 6pm. The last day to see Casper Brindle's solo show, Numina, is Saturday March 29!

The reception will feature performances by two Los Angeles-based creatives: pianist Tom Hiel and poet Robert Sobul. Tom Hiel is a pianist and composer, specializing in composing and producing for film and television. Hiel received an MFA in Music Composition from California Institute of the Arts. Writer Robert Sobul studied film at UCLA and screenwriting at the American Film Institute. His reading will include both new and archival work.

Refreshments will be provided!




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The Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation & William Turner Gallery Present
Feb
21
5:30 PM17:30

The Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation & William Turner Gallery Present

The Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation & William Turner Gallery look forward to your joining us for a special evening celebrating Frieze Art Fair and Casper’s Brindle’s stunning solo exhibition, Numina, with cocktails, music & hors d’oeuvres, Friday, February 21, 2025, 5:30 - 7:30 PM at William Turner Gallery. 

The Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation is renowned for their exceptional collection and preservation of art by some of the 20th Century’s most beloved artists. Currently, under the direction of Billie Milam Weisman, the Foundation continues to make the collection available through loans to museums worldwide, docent tours at the Los Angeles estate, exhibitions in public-art venues, and the funding of several art museums.

CASPER BRINDLE NUMINA
&
FRIEZE ART FAIR

With Cocktails, Music & Hors D’oeuvres
5:30 - 7:30 PM
Friday, February 21, 2025

At

WILLIAM TURNER GALLERY
Bergamot Station
2525 Michigan Ave, E1
Santa Monica, CA 90404

RSVP TO:

turnergallery@gmail.com
T 310-453-0909

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CASPER BRINDLE: NUMINA - Opening January 25, 2025
Jan
25
5:00 PM17:00

CASPER BRINDLE: NUMINA - Opening January 25, 2025

JANUARY 25 - MARCH 22, 2025

OPENING RECEPTION
Saturday, January 25, 5-8PM

Numina (ˈnu mɪn, ˈnyu-)  n. pl:  divine or supernatural power or presence, especially as associated with a particular place or object

Santa Monica, CA - William Turner Gallery is pleased to present Numina, Casper Brindle’s first solo exhibition at the gallery in four years, excitingly delayed by numerous national and international exhibitions, including an extensive exhibition in 2022 at The Luckman Gallery, Cal State LA. Numinawill run from January 18 - March 15, 2025.

Numina, presents two bodies of work, Light Glyphs and Veils, each of which involve dramatic investigations into light, color and the fluid, ever shifting nature of perception.  The exhibition ranges from painting to sculpture, and exemplifies Brindle’s restless experimentation and evolving modes of expression. The works are poetic, sensual and spatially dynamic. Utilizing automotive paints and pigmented acrylic, Brindle has created works that reflect and diffuse light in ways that are nuanced and engaging. 

Brindle’s Light Glyph’s, are luminescent and mercurial sculptures, constantly shifting in hue as the viewer moves around them. Absorbing and reflecting light, they have a meditative quality that calls one’s attention to the moment, and the subtle shifts within that moment. The word Light, in the series’ title, references perception and the power of light to illuminate, to inspire, and to guide. The glowing vertical bands in the center are the Glyphs, which act as mantra-like focal points for the viewer. The Glyphs also reference ancient, pre-linguistic  modes of communication, where symbols or marks were carved in relief to convey ideas in lieu of words. This exhibition introduces new extensions to the series, where, in addition to single works, the Light Glyphs are  presented now in various groupings, which foster a rhythmic, jazz-like interaction to one’s experience. 

The Veils introduce Brindle’s newest series, where diaphanous washes of color float on elegantly suspended sheets of acrylic. Painted in layers from the back of these sleek, crystalline surfaces, the paintings are bold and captivating. For Brindle, they are an abstracted homage to those moments of awe, where we find ourselves in nature’s thrall. Unsurprisingly, Brindle cites his love of nature, and the ocean in particular, as major sources of inspiration, where the artist has spent innumerable hours studying the sensory effects of light across its constantly changing surfaces.

Numina also presents Brindle at the dynamic leading edge of a dialogue, between artwork and viewer, that began in Southern California in the late 60s and early 70s and became known as Light & Space. The shift that began it all was as subtle as it was profound. The idea and purpose of the artwork shifted; from object to catalyst; from looking “at" the artwork to our experience of “perceiving” the artwork. Artist’s like Robert Irwin, James Turrell, Helen Pashgian, Fred Eversley, and many others, began to explore this notion of how their work could heighten one’s experience and perception.

For Casper Brindle, that initial sensibility has been embraced with an adventurous spirit, leading in boldly new and exciting directions.

Born in Toronto in 1968, Brindle’s family relocated to Los Angeles in 1974 from the United Kingdom, and he has called the city home ever since. By Brindle's early twenties he moved to the burgeoning art scene in Venice CA, where many of LA’s cutting edge artists had studios. It was there that the artist became immersed in the ideas of Light & Space, with which he has worked ever since.

Casper Brindle’s work has been exhibited across the United States and internationally. His work is held in numerous prominent private and museum collections including the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation, The Laguna Art Museum, the Lancaster Museum of Art and History, and the Morningside College Collection in Sioux City, IA.

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PHENOMENA - PST ART: ART & SCIENCE COLLIDE
Nov
16
4:00 PM16:00

PHENOMENA - PST ART: ART & SCIENCE COLLIDE

Phenomena features a range of work, from representational depictions to abstract expressions,  celebrating the power and visual splendor of the natural world as a resource for creative expression and investigation.  For centuries, artists have pictorially documented their observational studies of natural phenomena and the world around us. Manuscripts such as Natural History (77 CE) by Pliny the Elder and The Book of Miracles (1552), chronicled divine wonders and horrors in illustrations, often serving as warnings of the consequences of human deeds upon their environment and the mysteries of the natural world. Utilizing these extraordinary codexes as a genesis for Phenomena, the exhibition explores related themes.

In the 16th century, “cabinets of curiosities” or “wonder rooms” in Europe served as spaces to showcase collections curated for the artistic and scientific interests of their patrons and served as precursors to museums. With missions to both amuse and enlighten, “cabinets of curiosities” functioned as sources for entertainment and educational resources, thus intersecting art and science. In the late 19th century, scientific inquiry shifted from museums to university laboratories bifurcating the two discourses. Phenomena merges the two disciplines as they once had been integrated in the cabinets of curiosities.

Artists in Phenomena: Charles Arnoldi, Natalie Arnoldi, Ryland Arnoldi, Kelsey Brookes, Alex Couwenberg, Franco Defrancesca, Lawrence Gipe, David Lloyd, Ed Moses, Jeff Overlie, Melanie Pullen, Jennifer Wolf

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PST ART: ART & SCIENCE COLLIDE - Presented by Getty
Sep
14
4:00 PM16:00

PST ART: ART & SCIENCE COLLIDE - Presented by Getty

LIGHT MATTER

PST ART: ART & SCIENCE COLLIDE
September 14 - November 2, 2024

Opening Reception: Saturday, September 14, 4-8PM   

William Turner Gallery, Santa Monica, California - is pleased to present Light Matter, the first of two exhibitions in partnership with the Getty’s PST ART: Art & Science Collide, which explores the intersections and influences between art and science.

Light Matter explores the influences of scientific research on artistic process and intention, and builds on a collaboration that began with LACMA’s innovative Art & Technology program, a collaboration between artists and industry that ran from the late 60s to early 70s. For a number of artists, this unique program led, unexpectedly, to a significant new way seeing and thinking about the purpose of a work of art. Enter Light & Space in Southern California, where the emphasis shifted from looking at art as “object”, to art as “experience”.

Artists in Light Matter continue to expand on this notion, experimenting with the possibilities of their materials, often through scientific research and innovation, to achieve heightened visual effects that engage the viewer in the wonder of the phenomenology of perception. They utilize materials and approaches that inspire the viewer to reflect - not only on “what” they are perceiving, but “how”. Many of the pieces require the viewer to interact with the works in unexpected ways - either by encouraging unusually active movement around, or stillness before, their works. The act of viewing engages the senses and heightens our sense of perception.

Light Matter includes work by Dawn Arrowsmith, Larry Bell, Casper Brindle, Shingo Francis, Jimi Gleason, Eric Johnson, Jay Mark Johnson, Peter Lodato, Andy Moses, and Roland Reiss.



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Bergamot Winter Open - Yuki Shibamoto Interprets the Art of Shingo Francis - Saturday @ 3PM
Dec
9
3:00 PM15:00

Bergamot Winter Open - Yuki Shibamoto Interprets the Art of Shingo Francis - Saturday @ 3PM

YUKI SHIBAMOTO

Yuki Shibamto is a multilingual Japanese actress who has performed in 7 movies and 29 television shows in Japan and Taiwan. Yuki has performed and recorded music on the recorder for over 25 years.

Please us this Saturday for a short performance by Yuki Shibamoto. Yuki will be performing a an original composition inspired by the art of Japanese American artist Shingo Francis currently on view at the gallery.

REFRESHMENTS AT GALLERY - 3:00 PM
YUKI SHIBAMOTO PERFORMANCE - 3:30 PM

 
 

We are thrilled to announce the Bergamot Station Arts Center WINTER OPEN is scheduled for Saturday, December 9th, 2023. This day-long experience will feature a diverse array of exhibitions, performances, and interactive experiences across multiple galleries, making it a must-attend event for art enthusiasts!

For nearly thirty years, Bergamot Station Arts Center has stood as a dynamic nucleus of artistic expression in the heart of Santa Monica. As we approach this year's WINTER OPEN, anticipate an immersive voyage into the realms of creativity and the collective spirit of our community.

Parking Information: Parking is available on-site, and overflow parking can be found at Kite Pharma, 1800 Stewart Street.

 
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