Artists
Related: About this forumHere's a virtual art show w/10 pieces from my collection...(image heavy)...
...these are likely artists you have never heard of.
The last 3 images (before the Green Germs Lamp) are by my son (AbeK) and me (Tim K).
The first three images are by Germs, one of Cheech Marin's (and my) favorites, plus the aforementioned Green Germs Lamp is the last image at the bottom.
Jaime "Germs" Zacarias, Jefita. Acrylic on 16" x 20" canvas. 17.5" x 21.5" framed.
Jaime "Germs" Zacarias, Lucha Skull. Acrylic on 16" x 21" wood panel. 26.5" x 31.5" framed.
Jaime "Germs" Zacarias, Moment Of Silence. Acrylic on 12" x 12" wood panel. Framed size 13 7/8" x 13 7/8" (frame not shown)
Italian artist Stendardo, My Galaxy Date. Acrylic on canvas, 31.5" x 31.25"
Philadelphia artist JoKa, Softcore. Acrylic on canvas using only toothpicks to apply the paint. 26.5" x 21.5" framed.
Gary Baseman, untitled. Acrylic on two 11" x 8.5" wood panels, from a set of nine interchangeable panels. Total image area 11" x 17"
Abe K, Mantis On The Moon. Etching on paper. E/V 2 of 9. Image area 4 1/8" x 6 1/2" framed size 13.5" x 16.5"
Tim K, Birdbrain. Digitally altered bird dropping. Digital Print on paper. Image area 7" x 5"
Tim K, We'll Be Safe Here. Acrylic on two wood panels, 4" x 8" total image area
Green Germs Lamp - 36.5" x 68" - in the corner of my tiny room, with some of the above art on the walls.
There were four lamps made, with red, blue, amber and green custom-made stained glass shades.
Based on a miniature - maybe 6 inches tall - maquette of the lamp, created by Germs using "sculpy" - I created actual size digital art files for all of the lamp elements, i.e., the stained glass shades, plus the teak wood tentacles that comprise the base, which were then used by the stained glass artist and wood carvers to create the elements that were used to assemble all of the lamps.
Each lamp had 16 individually hand-carved "tentacles" which were mounted into a disc of bamboo, above which is the lightbulb fixture and support for the shade.
The lamp base/teak wood tentacles were individually hand-carved in Thailand, which were assembled by my friend Al, who is an amazing carpenter and set builder.
The full 4-lamp set has been shown in The Vincent Price Art Museum - shown below - and the Riverside Art Museum, as well as the famous original "lowbrow" art gallery "La Luz de Jesus" in Hollywood CA.
callous taoboy
(4,673 posts)Your music lines up with it!
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)...I don't have enough.
I have literal piles of art (especially Germs' stuff), that I have no wall space available to hang it all.
I've slowly been working on converting a two car garage into an office/gallery space. Hopefully in a couple more months, the space will be ready to fill up.
lunatica
(53,410 posts)I love the storytelling element where the images pull you in with so many artistic elements used to great effect. The viewer gets the treat of a visual and mental trip thats actually trippy. It puts me in mind of the effect psychedelic art and black light art and its genesis and development had on our mind expanding explorations when we were hippies. The art that depicted appreciation and awareness of our own awareness. Trips directed inward rather than reaction to what was objectively outside ourselves.
This is all wonderful imagination expanding artwork with the use of non traditional tools mixed in with traditional presentations such as the choice of frames. The colors and shapes are truly amazing. Thanks for posting
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)...I'm definitely psychedelically inclined, although it has been a few decades since I've ingested anything.
Back in the late 70s, I worked on an underground comic book called "Timothy Leary Neurocomics," which you can see here.
The comic was based on the writings of Dr. Timothy Leary, with the script written by George DiCaprio (yes, THAT George DiCaprio), and art by Pete Von Sholly, the now well-known monster expert and movie storyboard artist.
I did the front/back cover painting, panel border inking, ziptones, some airbrushing, and the lettering.
Back around 1978, as we were preparing to start the Neurocomics project, Pete, George and I visited Dr. Leary at his home in L.A. He invited us in, where he was watching a football game on a whacked-out color tv that made the football field look blue. Dr. Leary offered us all a beer, so we sat there drinking beer and watching football with the notorious acid king...it was a little strange.
lunatica
(53,410 posts)Your front and back cover are groovy man!
Now I have to definitely read the comic and appreciate the artwork.
It seems kind of strange to have such a normal visit with Leary. It makes me laugh.
Thanks so much!
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)...it wasn't in the original script.
Dr. Tim thought it was "silly."
I forgot to mention that when we visited the Dr., he was also taking care of a little kid in a playpen.
Don't know whose kid it was, but it reminds of the "urban legend" about the young woman who was babysitting while tripping on acid.
The parent called to check on how their kid was doing, so the babysitter went to the oven, opened the oven door and said "he's almost done."
Heres one I saw elsewhere on DU.
When I die, I want to die like my grandfather who died peacefully in his sleep. Not screaming like all the passengers in his car.
― Will Rogers
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)"I don't belong to any organized party, I'm a Democrat."
I may be paraphrasing, but it's close.
lunatica
(53,410 posts)Star-Thrower
(309 posts)Those are amazing! I love them! Great art work.. keep it up and post more!
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)...I have a lot of Germs pieces. I'll try to get some more of those posted soon.
leighbythesea2
(1,216 posts)I love this. Definitely a show I'd love to attend.
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)...would sound like (adjust volume to your preferred decibel levels).
leighbythesea2
(1,216 posts)Was just talking w my daughter about how i miss events. Gallery shows, art walks, music events. Experiential void with covid.
GReedDiamond
(5,371 posts)...we will someday be able to return to normal, whatever that used to be.