Wednesday, March 26, 2008

POP-UP @ THE PARKER



Taylor De Cordoba presents:

POP-UP @ THE PARKER

featuring new work by:
Kimberly Brooks, Frohawk Two Feathers, Kyle Field, Charlene Liu & Jeana Sohn.

Saturday March 29
Sunday March 30

Le Parker Meridian
118 W. 57th St.
New York, NY 10019

To schedule a viewing appointment contact Heather Taylor
310.413.7665
heather@taylordecordoba.com

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Mike Quinn Opening at Perry Rubenstein Gallery


Friend of the gallery Mike Quinn opens his solo show at Perry Rubenstein Gallery in New York this thursday.

Mike Quinn
Winning is Not For Everyone
Opening Reception: Thursday, March 27, 6-8PM

@ Perry Rubenstein Gallery
534 West 24th Street between 10th and 11th Ave.

Saturday, March 1, 2008

Frohawk Two Feathers review in Los Angeles Times



Los Angeles Times
Friday February 29, 2008

AROUND THE GALLERIES
by Holly Myers
A chapter from colonial times

"In the Court of the Crimson King" is Frohawk Two Feathers' second solo show at Taylor de Cordoba and the second chapter of an epic saga whose details are difficult to keep straight. They're scrawled on a long, scroll-like sheet posted to a gallery wall for those who want to give it a try. But the themes are all too familiar: power, war, colonialism, imperialism and the lure of global trade.

The hero is one Nancy of Gonaives, heir to the fictional kingdom of Frengland, who has embarked on a mission to avenge his father's death and reclaim the throne from his villainous uncle, Lord William (a.k.a. King Billy). Haiti figures in the story in some way, as do the sugar trade, the Inuit people, a pope and a certain pink sperm whale, hunted with Ahab-like obsession by the ill-fated King L'Oreal.

The bulk of the story is told through drawings and paintings that mimic the conventions of colonial-era genres -- particularly portraiture -- while remaining wonderfully fresh and strange. The project is a peculiar one that manages to balance a number of unlikely qualities -- lighthearted and earnest, endearing and unsettling, humorous and scathingly critical.

Two Feathers, who goes by a number of different pseudonyms, seems to have a lot going on: He has several musical projects underway and will perform at the gallery Saturday as Kent Cyclone. The full scope may take some time to unfold, but the promise is striking.