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Ray Sell, Hi Ho Silver!,
72” x 52”, mixed media on canvas

Ray Sell, Approach
of a Hero, 30” x 40”, mixed media on canvas

From Parker's Box: Jason Glasser, Motorcycle III, 2006,
collage paper, spray paint, tile primer on primed glass, 15 3/4 x 11 3/4
inches (40 x 29.8 cm)

From Parker's Box, Joshua Stern, Untitled (Beaver on Rock) (from the “Beaver”
series), 2006, mixed media, oil on canvas, 33 1/2 x 32 inches (85.1 x
81.3 cm)

Gotta
Love Kelso of Brooklyn. thats all we pour.
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Leo
Kesting Gallery Presents:
GALLERY 1: RAY SELL - Raise 'Em To Be Cowboys
GALLERY 2: Parker’s Box artists: JASON GLASSER and JOSHUA STERN
Opening Night Reception: Thursday June 19th from 7:00 - 10:00 pm
812 Washington St (at the corner of Gansevoort) New York NY 10014
8th Ave A, C, E and L train Stop or 1,2,3 to 14th Street
Tuesday - Sunday from 11:00 am until 7:00 pm
Admission is free to the public
phone: 917-650-3760 / 917-292-8865 http://www.leokesting.com
ONLINE CATALOG OF RAY SELL ARTWORKS
GALLERY
1: Ray Sell - Raise 'Em To Be Cowboys
Men on horses carrying guns, fathers teaching their sons the joys of the
opposite sex and the seductive curve of a confident woman are the subject
of Ray Sell's first New York solo exhibition, Raise 'Em To Be Cowboys,
a collection of mixed media collages and large format paintings.
In
this exhibition, Ray Sell draws inspiration from pin up magazines, wild
west frontiers and hot rod manuals, to illustrate the hey day of “the
man's man.” One subject of focus is the relationship between father
and son as exemplified in the paintings “Quality Time” and
“Life Lessons”. In “Quality Time”, a father and
son work side by side on a hot rod engine while televisions frame out
imagery that is overtly masculine. This imagery resonates particularly
well, as the engine can be viewed as a symbol of the young boy approaching
manhood. While in “Life Lessons” a father and son work together
on a science experiment while lovely ladies bounce up and down in a circular
view finder, possibly from the microscope the duo are looking through.
It is this imagery that emphasizes the masculine development leading to
the early stages of puberty and male sexuality.
GALLERY 2: Parker’s Box artists: Jason Glasser and Joshua Stern
Trail-blazing is certainly part of the theme of Ray Sell’s Raise
‘Em to be Cowboys, affording both common ground and dialogue with
the work and careers of Jason Glasser and Joshua Stern.
Jason Glasser was one of the founder members of the cult indy rock band,
Clem Snide, and has continually oscillated between making paintings, videos
and rock music. His subjects include recurring hunters, cowboys and motorbikes,
for example, often reverse painted on auto-glass. Glasser explores a love-hate
relationship with what might be the father figure, or the symbol of authority,
government, or even planetary oppression…Joshua Stern first exhibited
his paintings with Colin De Land at American Fine Arts, before beginning
to photograph his own maquettes of bizarre yet familiar psychological
worlds. Stern has recently returned to painting, and a monumental series
of “Beaver” paintings, some of which are presented concurrently
at Leo Kesting Gallery and at Parker’s Box. As Stern’s paintings
testify, the beaver played a key role in American trail-blazing, as the
US economy was founded on trading in beaver skins, a commodity far more
important at the time than oil is today. The resulting resonance of beavers
appears far more often than we may realize, gliding smoothly and surely
into the masculine world that Ray Sell’s work inhabits.
Parker’s Box is proud to have been invited to jump aboard the latest
anti-mainsteam commando operation to be organized by the Kesting/Capla/Leo
trinity- originating of course, in Williamsburg, then hurtling through
the L-train tunnel like a banshee on speed in order to infiltrate the
Meat Packing site of the future Whitney museum- symbolically trail-blazing
ahead of the establishment which will be bringing up the rear sometime
circa 2012…The CK-LK work ethic of doing stuff in order to open
up new territory (for art and artists) is based on generosity, motivation
and passion, and can only be commended and admired.
Ray
Sell's Raise 'Em To Be Cowboys and Parker's Box JASON GLASSER and JOSHUA
STERN opens to the public with a reception for the artists at
Leo Kesting Gallery on Thursday June 19th from 7:00 until 10:00
pm.
From
its origins as Capla Kesting Fine Art in Brooklyn, the Leo Kesting Gallery
launched in 2003 and developed an aggressive campaign to introduce new
figurative artists to collectors and art supporters. Leo Kesting offers
the art viewing public an opportunity to see forthcoming talents in an
intimate setting where undiscovered, cutting-edge artists are presented
to the contemporary art scene.
Leo
Kesting Gallery is located at 812 Washington St at the corner of Gansevoort
in Manhattan's Meat Packing District. A, C, E, or L train to 8th Ave and
14th Street or 1,2,3 train to 14th Street. Gallery hours are Tuesday to
Sunday from 11am until 7pm.




Leo
Kesting Gallery
gallery
is located at 812 Washington St New York NY 10014
phone: 917-650-3760
, at the corner of
Ganesvoort St
8th Ave 14th st A,C, E and L train Stop
http://www.leokesting.com
info

Parker's
Box
http://www.parkersbox.com |