AJC review : Atlanta artist Steven L. Anderson goes between the ferns @kailinart

Atlanta artist Steven L. Anderson goes between the ferns

Photo Credit: valentin sivyakov By Felicia Feaster, For the AJC

An understudy in the plant kingdom takes on a starring role in this botanical celebration.

Atlanta’s contemporary art galleries have never seemed so fixated on thistles, wildflowers, cypress trees and Spanish moss as they are this spring with myriad shows looking at mortality, the Southern landscape, scientific classification and technological intervention through the lens of nature.

And for Atlanta artist Steven L. Anderson it’s all about the fern. Anderson uses two scientific tomes of botanical drawings “Ferns of Georgia” and “How to Know the Ferns” (also the title of this solo show at Kai Lin Art) as jumping off points for what he hopes might be a more fitting celebration of these “mesmerizing, wise, forest weirdies.”

Instead of offering technically proficient botanical studies, Anderson’s drawings and paintings represent multiple poetic efforts to capture what might be called the “spirit” of the fern.

Anderson does a deep dive into that prehistoric plant in “How to Know the Ferns” an exhibition that blends the botanical study, formal experimentation and a light dusting of anthropomorphic psychedelia.

Within the lexicon of plant life, the fern is a worthy subject. One of the most ancient of plants originating millions of years ago, the fern hides a complex universe — and some idiosyncratic reproductive strategies — within its fronds. “How to Know the Ferns” feels like an anthology in which a slate of artists are asked to interpret a subject within their particular style. But here it’s one artist offering multiple interpretations. And so we have rich, romantic embossed works like “Where I Lived and What I Lived For” where the lacey fronds and dangling exposed roots of the fern are rendered in gold leaf on a Chairman Mao-red background. Those works read like love letters to a beloved, cherished entity. 

A neighboring artwork, “My Joyous Wisdom” in acrylic, spray paint and oil pastel is a celebratory paean to nature. In it a fern is surrounded by halos composed of multiple rings of color. The work recalls Anderson’s previous paintings of the endless rings of cross-sectioned trees. This is a fern in charismatic, life-of-the-party mode. And at its base, coiled in red, an embryonic fiddlehead waits to emerge.

The ferns in Anderson’s work are rendered in varying degrees of realism, from an abstracted version to a detailed, multidimensional fern. The diversity and eccentricity that speaks to the botanist also sucks in an artist who has found a complex subject worthy of his time.

A sort of symphonic, cacophonous fern exists in Anderson’s “Everything Everywhere All At Once” evoking study. Titled “Everything Which is Natural, Which is Infinite, Which is Yes” the work in paint and ink is a beautifully joyous fern festival in which a variety of plants in shades of lime, ochre and jade cavort like stars dancing in the night sky or the figures in Matisse’s “Dance.” In “Dreamers of Pictures” a lush emerald-colored fern is placed next to a thin, merlot-colored plant and the duo look like nothing so much as buddies posing for a photo.

 although some works admittedly convey Anderson’s rapture better than others. But it’s hard not to admire an artist who can make one ponder the subtleties of something more often trampled underfoot on a nature walk.

VISUAL ART REVIEW

“How to Know the Ferns”

Through April 21. Noon-6 p.m. Thursdays-Fridays; noon-5 p.m. Saturdays. Free. Kai Lin Art, 999 Brady Ave. NW, #7, Atlanta. 404-408-4248, kailinart.com.

Bottom line: A little silly, a little profound, this ode to the fern answers science with sentiment.

“Where the infinite meets the sublime” (Paper Boxes feat. Kevin Palme)

“Where the infinite meets the sublime” 

a review of Kevin Palme’s solo exhibition : Paper Boxes

by Yu-Kai Lin, Kai Lin Art
photos:
Valentin Sivyakov

What does it mean to capture the infinite? How can the documentation of a still-life of something as trivial as paper boxes become elevated to the extraordinary? When can play and work become so intertwined that the temporal becomes sublime?

Paper Boxes : Hexagonal Composition in Umber on Blues oil on wood panel  40” x 40” 

In this latest body of work, Paper Boxes, a solo exhibition from Asheville-based painter Kevin Palme at KAI LIN ART in Atlanta, the artist explores these ponderances and seems to have captured the un-capturable.

To document is to record something in written, photographic, or artistic form; to provide information or evidence that serves as an official record. In this collection of twelve paintings, Palme chooses to document trompe l’oeil paper boxes with layers of oil paint, in a kaleidoscope of alluring and opulent colors.

Paper Boxes : Hexagonal Composition in Gray on Red  oil on wood panel  40” x 40”

Palme’s deft use of pigments can be observed in the ombre background environments, allowing for the stacks of paper boxes to lift off the 2D canvas into an optical illusion of three dimensionality.  The boxes compellingly pop off the surface of the canvas with astutely painted, photographic documentation. Each element is stacked in a haphazardly precarious, yet intentional formation as they connect at critical junctures. It’s as if Palme is saying “we are all in this together” as each box serves to further the next box in its contact.

Paper Boxes: Composition in Grey on Magenta; Composition in Clod Blue on Cobalt, Composition in Pink on Magenta, Composition in Sienna on Blue

These paper boxes begin to represent a society, a community, an individual. A delicate balance of souls in touch with one another, influencing and grounding with its presence.  These metaphorical boxes seem to be saying “we all play a part of the whole, what holds us together becomes our purpose and place, in formation.”

What’s temporal and temporary in his painted universe becomes sublimely refined and permanent. Each box is exquisitely depicted in a uniquely weathered temperament: affected by its experience, altered by its existence, transformed by its connection.

Palme has raised the banal to the infinite. His obsessive concoction of varying degrees of linseed oil used to dilute oil paint allows for an ephemeral quality wherein the viewer doesn’t knowing where brush marks begins and where it ends. 

We are left with an evanescence of a momentary glimpse in time.  An encapsulation of the ephemeral, an elevation of the elemental, a capturing of free floating forms, weathered by time, eternally altered.

Artists are observers of life and of the duality of existence.  Life is paradoxical in that way. Palme in his yearning for transience and documentation of the fragile and the impermanent, has created a meditative contemplation where the infinite meets the sublime.

FOR AVAILABILITY & INQUIRIES
404 408 4248 | INFO@KAILINART.COM

Ferns are flourish in this efflorescent exhibition featuring Steven L. Anderson

A closer look at “Frontispiece” acrylic, pen, ink, laser transfer on paper over panel 24”x 16”x 1.5”

Ferns are flourish in this efflorescent exhibition
featuring Steven L. Anderson
by Yu-Kai Lin, photos by Valentin Sivyakov

Lush yet precise, exacting yet amorphous, Steven L. Anderson’s latest exhibition “How to Know the Ferns” now on exhibition at Kai Lin Art embodies a diverse range of ferns and fern allies in contemplation of the history of botanical art. 

exhibition view of Steven L. Anderson’s solo show “How To Know The Ferns”

From panels wrapped with bookcloth, gilt with gold leaf, to spray paint and oil pastel, to the use of bleach on fabric-dyed canvas, Anderson’s choice of media presents a thoughtful exploration of layered and intentional mark-making.  

“I have been fascinated by the complex, fractal forms of ferns for a long time, and first made artworks on the subject in 2014. It’s been sitting on my back burner to return to this, until I brought it to the fore last October.” Anderson

Anderson’s “What the Night Tells Me” Spray paint on canvas 34”x 24”x 2”

The artist plays with what it means to document ferns of Georgia with an all-over pattern for “What the Night Tells Me” (spray paint on canvas, 34 x 24 x 2”), to a portrait-like depiction of flora in the dynamic and largest work in the show, “Dreamer of Pictures” (ink, acrylic, marker, solid marker, laser transfer on canvas over wood panel, 68 x 44 x 1.5”).  

”Dreamers of Pictures” Ink, acrylic, marker, solid marker, laser transfer on canvas over panel 68”x 44”x 1.5”

In this magnum opus (“Dreamer of Pictures”), Anderson employs the use of negative space to draw the viewer into his vision of the interplay between the masculine and feminine foliage as the deep maroon and thinner fern (left) is woven through the weft of the denser, plump fern in various hues of green (right).  

“My Joyous Wisdom” Acrylic, Spray paint, oil pastel on canvas 32”x 48”x 2”

In the center of the exhibition is the postcard of the exhibition, “My Joyous Wisdom” (acrylic, spray paint, oil pastel on canvas, 48 x 32 x 2”). This work refers to Anderson’s drawings of tree rings as the fern’s fronds are wrapped in rings of thin and thick outlined colors which encapsulate the unfolding sporophyte, dancing atop the bottom right of the canvas, in an illustrative element of wonder, germination, and creation.  

Bookending the center piece are three works, “Compendium of Nature Writing” (gold leaf, bookcloth, chip board on panel, 24 x 16 x 1.5”), “Liberation Textbook” (gold leaf, bookcloth, chip board on panel, 24 x 18 x 1.5”), and “Where I Lived and What I Lived For” (gold leaf, bookcloth, chip board on panel, 34 x 24 x 1.5”).  

Close up on the embossed “Where I Lived and What I Lived For” Gold leaf, book cloth, chip board on panel

Each of these works illustrates ferns debossed and gold leafed onto green and red bookcloth, creating an antiqued relic-like artifact from a bygone time.

These three are dimensional in a “you want to touch them but can’t way”, yet they compel the viewer to take a closer look at the depth and shimmer that encapsulates dew on an autumnal morning fern. 

“When I started on this project late in 2022, I sat down and tried to draw a fern freehand, from memory. I couldn’t believe how hard it was! It made me question If I really knew how to draw or paint. To move forward, I knew I had to dig in, use a range of techniques and media, jump back and forth between pieces, and just experiment.“ Anderson

“One Thousandfold” Acrylic, ink, rit dye, laser transfer on canvas 32”x 48”x 2”

The most intriguing work of the show is “One Thousandfold” (acrylic, ink, fabric dye, laser transfer on canvas, 48 x 32 x 2”), which plays with drips and dyes that stain the canvas, creating an ambience of chaotic cacophony and wistful warmth. Anderson’s deft outlining in acrylic of fully developed fronds dance upon the surface of the way you would find a forest of ferns. 

“Ferns are still as magical and elusive to me as ever, but I think I’ve learned *how* to know them—by painting and drawing them in as many different ways as I can imagine.” Anderson

”The Fool” Acrylic, ink on canvas 14”x 16”x 2”

Finally in “The Fool” (acrylic, ink, gold leaf, wood stain, laser transfer on canvas, 48 x 32 x 2”), Anderson develops yet another visual language employing densely raised outlines in heavy acrylic on wood-stained canvas. The fern form anchors a luscious flow of vibrant colors in shades of ochre and pink, custard and lavender, olive and emerald. The frond is then topped off with shimmering gold leaf. This piece can be viewed as the kitchen sink of Anderson’s entire body of work: everything, everywhere, all at once. 

A deeper look into artist Stan Clark's exhibition CHIMERA

In visual art, a chimera typically refers to a creature that is a combination of different animals or mythical beasts. It is often portrayed as a fierce and powerful creature, with the ability to breathe fire or possess other supernatural abilities.

To create a visual representation of a chimera, an artist might combine various elements of different animals, such as the head of a lion, the body of a goat, and the tail of a serpent. The artist may choose to emphasize certain characteristics, such as the muscular build of the lion, the shaggy fur of the goat, or the sinuous curves of the serpent.

The color palette used to depict a chimera can also play an important role in conveying its mood and personality. Bright, bold colors like red, orange, and yellow might be used to convey its fiery nature, while darker colors like black and purple might emphasize its more ominous qualities.

In modern art, the chimera has continued to evolve and take on new meanings. Some contemporary artists use the creature as a symbol of genetic engineering and the blending of different species, while others use it as a metaphor for the human condition and our own internal struggles.

Ultimately, the chimera in visual art is a fascinating and complex subject that offers artists a wide range of creative possibilities. Whether used as a symbol of mythological power, a representation of evil, or a metaphor for the human condition, the chimera remains a powerful and enduring image that continues to captivate audiences today.

FOR AVAILABILITY & INQUIRIES
404 408 4248 | INFO@KAILINART.COM

The Art of Steven L. Anderson :: How to Know the Ferns

How to Know the Ferns {Artist Statement}

“How to Know the Ferns is a new body of paintings and drawings from Atlanta artist Steven L. Anderson.

Anderson’s ongoing look at the power of Nature and the nature of power focuses here through the lens of historical research. Art and science meet in two books, “Ferns of Georgia” (Rogers McVaugh & Joseph H. Pyron, 1951), and “How to Know the Ferns” (Frances Theodora Parsons, 1927 ed.). These wonderful collections of botanical line drawings present a close observation of the leafy plants, while imagining them as either soft, lilting, fainting, dainty beings; or as flattened, deterministic vessels of scientific study. Both adhere to Western culture’s tendency to reduce knowledge into categories, and to drain experience of its color.

Anderson aims to return a spirit of energy, wonder, and power to these pages. Experiments with bright inks, acrylics, and oils emphasize the true strangeness of these plant forms. Generative, fractal mark-making threatens to plunge the artist into exponential iterations of labor. Retinal vibrations bring the viewer into the madness. Poured auras imbue a glimpse of nature’s magic. The ferns begin to gain their own agency as mesmerizing, wise, forest weirdies.”

FOR AVAILABILITY & INQUIRIES
404 408 4248 | INFO@KAILINART.COM

HOW TO KNOW THE FERNS :: a solo exhibition featuring Steven L. Anderson

 
 

OPENING RECEPTION
FRIDAY, MARCH 17, 2023
7:00 - 10:00 PM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
EXHIBITION RUNS THROUGH APRIL 21, 2023

HOW TO KNOW THE FERNS : A SOLO EXHIBITION FEATURING STEVEN L. ANDERSON

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce our second exhibition for 2023, HOW TO KNOW THE FERNS : a solo exhibition featuring new artworks from Atlanta-based artist Steven L. Anderson.

Steven L. Anderson

How to Know the Ferns {Artist Statement}

“How to Know the Ferns is a new body of paintings and drawings from Atlanta artist Steven L. Anderson.

Anderson’s ongoing look at the power of Nature and the nature of power focuses here through the lens of historical research. Art and science meet in two books, “Ferns of Georgia” (Rogers McVaugh & Joseph H. Pyron, 1951), and “How to Know the Ferns” (Frances Theodora Parsons, 1927 ed.). These wonderful collections of botanical line drawings present a close observation of the leafy plants, while imagining them as either soft, lilting, fainting, dainty beings; or as flattened, deterministic vessels of scientific study. Both adhere to Western culture’s tendency to reduce knowledge into categories, and to drain experience of its color.

Anderson aims to return a spirit of energy, wonder, and power to these pages. Experiments with bright inks, acrylics, and oils emphasize the true strangeness of these plant forms. Generative, fractal mark-making threatens to plunge the artist into exponential iterations of labor. Retinal vibrations bring the viewer into the madness. Poured auras imbue a glimpse of nature’s magic. The ferns begin to gain their own agency as mesmerizing, wise, forest weirdies.”

Steven L. Anderson is an exhibiting artist, and Co-Director of Day & Night Projects, an artist-run gallery in Atlanta that he helped originate in 2016.

Anderson is a graduate of the University of Michigan and The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He has exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the United States since 1996. His artworks are found in the Microsoft Art Collection, the Tim & Lauren Schrager Collection, and in collections of Fulton County Public Arts, Coca-Cola Inc., Emory University Hospitals, the National Park Service, and others. Anderson’s sketchbooks are in the permanent collection of the Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library at Emory University. 

Anderson is a two-time winner of the Artists Project Grant from the City of Atlanta Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs. He was an Artist-in-Residence at Yes We Cannibal in Baton Rouge, LA in March 2022, and at Atlanta’s Blue Heron Nature Preserve for the year of 2021. He was a recipient of the 2019 Denis Diderot [A-i-R] Grant at Château d’Orquevaux Artist Residency in Orquevaux, France. Anderson was a TAR Project Therapeutic Artist Resident in 2016–17, has been a Studio Artist at Atlanta Contemporary (2013–16), a 2015 Hambidge Center Distinguished Fellow, and a 2014–15 WonderRoot Walthall Artist Fellow. 

Anderson’s day job is Senior Graphic Designer and Studio Manager at the Office of Undergraduate Admission at Emory University. He lives in Atlanta with his wife Liz and son Finn.

exhibiting through April 21, 2023
FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM

PAPER BOXES :: the opening photos

We are pleased to share with you photos from the grand opening of PAPER BOXES, a solo exhibition featuring Kevin Palme. Thank you to Valentin Sivyakov of Visual Sage for the awesome shots. For more on Val visit his page here.

The Art of Kevin Palme’s Paper Boxes

The Art of Kevin Palme : Paper Boxes

What a phenomenal opening this past Friday for the launch of our first exhibition of 2023 : Paper Boxes, a solo exhibition featuring all new work from Kevin Palme.

We hope you’ll come by the gallery for a preview of the exhibition* which runs through March 3rd. Enjoy the works and please connect with us at the gallery at 404 408 4248 or info@kailinart.com

Happy 2023!
Yu-Kai Lin, Kai Lin Art

*As our exhibition evolves, we will be including new works to replace the ones that have been collected

PAPER BOXES : a solo exhibition featuring KEVIN PALME

OPENING RECEPTION
FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 2023
7:00 - 10:00 PM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
EXHIBITION RUNS THROUGH March 3, 2023

PAPER BOXES : A SOLO EXHIBITION FEATURING KEVIN PALME

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce our first exhibition for 2023, PAPER BOXES : a solo exhibition featuring ten new artworks from Asheville-based artist Kevin Palme.

Kevin Palme earned a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art from Wake Forest University and a Master of Fine Arts in Painting from the Savannah College of Art and Design. Palme primarily works with oil paint on canvas.

“We are surrounded by impermanence. Fleeting moments, shifting perspectives, and change all illuminate the fact that nothing in life is permanent. Daily and seasonal transitions, birth, growth and death all remind us of the inevitability of impermanence. Even the most seemingly eternal landscapes will eventually succumb to time. We are left with memories. Abstract and residual, our memories are a means by which we can honor the past and recall experiences, relationships and parts of our histories. Oddly enough, painting feels permanent. It is a means of documentation that can be quick or slow, but one that seems durable and in some ways, timeless. An image left on a painted surface is the tangible result of working with a flexible and changing medium until the arrival of an end. It is a path that allows for a memory to be made into something more concrete than an idea.”

EXHIBITING THROUGH FEBRUARY 3, 2023
FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM

REVERIE :: a solo exhibition featuring Patrick Heagney

OPENING RECEPTION
FRIDAY, NOV 18TH, 2022
7:00 - 10:00 PM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
EXHIBITION RUNS THROUGH DECEMBER

REVERIE : A SOLO EXHIBITION FEATURING PATRICK HEAGNEY

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce REVERIE featuring all new works by Patrick Heagney:

“Chimera…you think you remember exactly what happened. You don’t. Your memories are retellings of a story. Like a message in a game of telephone, each time you repeat the story the more it gets distorted, changed from its original form into something new. Memories are colored by emotions--what you felt when the story began, what you feel when the memory is recalled. When you retell this story, to others or to yourself, you create a new story. Over time, the facts become more altered, less accurate.

After two people experience something together, their stories begin to diverge. Years later, two similar but subtly different recollections will emerge, the differences and overlaps between them obscuring the original events.

An elaborated form of photographic multiple exposure is used to create these images. A subject is photographed against a plain background. That original photo is then loaded onto a digital projector and projected back onto the subject, creating a live double exposure and dual depictions of the subject. While this is happening, the subjects are photographed with a long exposure. The long exposure introduces the element of time, and the subjects move around during this process. The resulting photo is the final portrait.

In this way, two different interpretations of the same people are recorded at once, along with the blurring element of time. By combining two different versions of the same subject, the viewer is given contradictory and overlapping renditions of the event. As a result, they are left only with an interpretation of the story, not an accurate representation of the moment.”

EXHIBITING THROUGH DECEMBER 2022
FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM

The Art of Stan Clark

CHIMERA : A SOLO EXHIBITION FEATURING STAN CLARK

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce CHIMERA, a genre-defying selection of new work by artist Stan Clark. In this latest exhibition, Stan takes viewers on a trip through tall-tales, both familiar and strange:

“I’ve always loved borrowing from mythological themes in my art, and this show is no different. Each picture represents a composite of multiple images, as I often splice drawings or fragments of work together to arrive at a finished work of art. This process inspired me to play with the theme of ‘chimerism,’ a reference to fantastical creatures made up of disparate parts from various animals. This idea of taking things that don’t typically belong together and finding ways to make them connect became not just a narrative element but also stylistic approach. In this show, you’ll see images that blur the lines between drawing and painting, between printmaking and collage, between digital vs. analog. You can expect to see pop elements and classical motifs combined in surprising ways, with the results being more magical than the sum of its parts.”

EXHIBITING THROUGH DECEMBER 2022
FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM

CHIMERA : a solo exhibition featuring STAN CLARK

OPENING RECEPTION
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2022
7:00 - 10:00 PM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
EXHIBITION RUNS THROUGH DECEMBER 2022

CHIMERA : A SOLO EXHIBITION FEATURING STAN CLARK

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce CHIMERA, a genre-defying selection of new work by artist Stan Clark. In this latest exhibition, Stan takes viewers on a trip through tall-tales, both familiar and strange:

“I’ve always loved borrowing from mythological themes in my art, and this show is no different. Each picture represents a composite of multiple images, as I often splice drawings or fragments of work together to arrive at a finished work of art. This process inspired me to play with the theme of ‘chimerism,’ a reference to fantastical creatures made up of disparate parts from various animals. This idea of taking things that don’t typically belong together and finding ways to make them connect became not just a narrative element but also stylistic approach. In this show, you’ll see images that blur the lines between drawing and painting, between printmaking and collage, between digital vs. analog. You can expect to see pop elements and classical motifs combined in surprising ways, with the results being more magical than the sum of its parts.”

EXHIBITING THROUGH DECEMBER 2022
FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM

SERENITY :: opening photos featuring GREG NOBLIN

Dear Friends & Art Peoples,

We are excited to share with you this photo album below from our latest exhibition opening of SERENITY featuring all new works by resident KAI LIN ARTist Greg Noblin.

Thank you to VALENTIN SIVYAKOV PHOTOGRAPHY for taking such awesome photos. If you are looking for a photographer for your event, please contact Val by visiting :: valentinsivyakovphotography.com

Our exhibition of SERENITY will be ongoing through the end of October. Please save the date for our upcoming solo show featuring all new works from Stan Clark which opens on Friday, October 21st from 7-10pm!

Keep Creating!
Yu-Kai Lin // info@kailinart.com // 404 408 4248


SERENITY :: a solo exhibition featuring GREG NOBLIN

OPENING RECEPTION
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 2022
7:00 - 10:00 PM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
EXHIBITION RUNS THROUGH OCTOBER 2022

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce SERENITY : A SOLO EXHIBITION FEATURING GREG NOBLIN.

Vignettes and single scene narratives. Greg tells these stories as from a single page in a whimsical and magical story book. Greg holds the belief we all have shared common experiences, joy, sadness, elation, love, heartbreak, nostalgia, and desires to break free from the constraints of daily life. As such, he uses animals as a metaphor for these shared human experiences and presents enough of a story to allow the imagination to wonder, yet intently ambiguous for the viewer to impart their own meanings. Bending the boundaries of reality versus perception, Greg creates worlds of imagination and unlimited possibilities.

These ideas are not simply implied in the images themselves. Greg places an emphasis on the physical nature of the actual work. Life is imperfect and he intentionally places or allows these imperfections to be presented on the panel. Instead of a single printed image, for example, Greg chooses to print over several sheets and hand cut the print out, recreating a whole image from smaller pieces. This is symbolic of the human condition being comprised of many parts or experiences to make the whole, or who we are as individuals. In addition there is a purposeful nostalgia aesthetic built into the physical piece to create a hand-made, vintage quality.

EXHIBITING THROUGH OCTOBER 2022
FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM

SYMBIOSIS :: opening photos + extension

Dear Art People,

We are pleased to share with you the photos from our SYMBIOSIS exhibition, Cameron Bliss’ first solo exhibition @kailinart. The show has been extended now through September 30th! We hope you’ll come by the gallery for a visit.

A huge shout out to Valentin Sivyakov for the great photos. For more on Val visit his photography page here

Our next opening will be on Friday, September 16th from 7:00 - 10:00pm, a solo exhibition featuring the art of Greg Noblin.

Cheers!
Yu-Kai Lin / info@kailinart.com / 404 408 4248

The Art of Cameron Bliss

Dear Art Folks,

We are pleased to present The Art of Cameron Bliss for our SYMBIOSIS exhibition @kailinart

Please enjoy the artwork and let us know if you might want to tour the exhibit!

With gratitude,
Yu-Kai Lin & Luke Hamilton
404 408 4248 info@kailinart.com

SYMBIOSIS :: a solo exhibition featuring Cameron Bliss

OPENING RECEPTION
FRIDAY, JULY 29, 2022
7:00 - 10:00 PM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
EXHIBITION RUNS THROUGH SEPTEMBER 3, 2022

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce SYMBIOSIS : a solo exhibition featuring the art of Cameron Bliss from July 29th through September 3rd in our Grey Gallery.

Exquisitely painted figures that are contorted and ponder-some, inquisitive and reflective, Cameron Bliss studies the female figure in worldly, lavish environments. Her paintings are intricately patterned, ornamental and iconographic, representing a moment in time for each central figure in their habitat. In the tradition of painters as Egon Schiele, Gustav Klimt and Edward Hopper, Bliss layers each piece using oil on canvas to invite the viewer into her world of characters in play, in pose, in peacefully enticing gazes. Her love for patterns, wallpaper, architecture, botanicals and clothing brings forth a rich and balanced representation of colorfully alluring paintings that are both imaginative and captivating. The work embodies modernity, the yearn for a simpler time and imbues us to learn that sometimes being is more important than doing.

Symbiosis :: Fact or fiction.

Cameron’s exhibit ponders the question, can one exist without another. Can a pendulum swing if there is no opposition? What if there is no Yang to the yin?

Our FANTASTICAL exhibition will be featured in our main gallery in tandem with SYMBIOSIS.

EXHIBITING THROUGH FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2022

FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM

The Art of IDENTITY :: A Larry Jens Anderson Exhibition

Dear Art People,

We are so grateful for the turn out from our last exhibition opening for Larry Jens Anderson’s commemorative exhibition of artworks he created throughout his career. Our IDENTITY exhibition will be on display through May 2022, we hope you’ll come by for a visit to the gallery to see the works in person. Also a huge thank you to Hank Thomas, Larry’s partner/husband of 38 years.

Please reach out if you would like a tour or are interested in any of the works from the show.

with gratitude,
Yu-Kai Lin
404 408 4248 info@kailinart.com

IDENTITY :: A Larry Jens Anderson Commemorative Exhibition

OPENING RECEPTION
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2022
7:00 - 10:00 PM

FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
EXHIBITION RUNS THROUGH MAY 6, 2022

Kai Lin Art is pleased to announce IDENTITY: A Larry Jens Anderson Commemorative Exhibition from April 1st through May 6th, 2022 in our Grey Gallery.

We are pleased to present this commemorative exhibition featuring 25 artworks from Larry Jens Anderson, teacher, mentor, and friend.

From his series of All Dick no Jane, featuring elegantly rendered drawings of the classic icon Dick of Dick & Jane, which Larry recontexualizes into a representation of a gay boy in a contemporary setting, to art exploring the meaning of home and the history, shared life journeys and the love and loss that is found under one roof; from delicately deft ink and watercolor line work in Larry’s representation of himself in his piece Learning to Fall, to the whimsy, painterly and seemingly abstract colorfield strokes of thick, gestural pigments that can only be appreciated once the viewer zooms out to realize the moments of veiled painted plumes representing one of Larry’s favorite animals he would visit throughout his career, the pensively grazing cow; from the painted bouquet of wild and seemingly unkept flowers that Larry collected from his garden completed on June 12th, 2016 (the day 50 young gay people were killed at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, FL) which he used red paint to convey the loss and extreme grief that had befallen our nation and the LGBTQI community, to a collaged piece entitled The Twins, a diptych created through charcoal, thread, graphite and gold leaf meant to symbolize Larry and his twin brother Terry who had passed in the 1990s from complications with HIV.

This broad and extensive exhibition reflects the life and legacy and lessons of Larry and his ability to capture moments from all that he saw, all that he experienced: the laughter, the loss, the love, the lessons that were imparted through his hands onto the surface of the canvas.

We are so very grateful to have Hank Thomas, Larry’s husband and partner for over 38 years be with us for the opening of this exhibition:

“Welcome to everyone.  I was very fortunate to have had 38+ years with Larry.  He was a very unique person and I loved him very much. He took his career as a teacher and artist very seriously and felt everyone could benefit from some education of art and art history as it pertains to everyone and affects their life whether they knew it or not. He and I had numerous discussions on what was art and what was not but we always enjoyed our discussions and I always walked away changing my mind. Most of the time. He was a dedicated teacher and loved teaching and finding new talent and the energy of the students. He was always a student and was always learning too. 

I hope everyone enjoys the show and I am sure his spirit will be among us.  Thank you for coming. 

PS  We all miss you Larry.” 
Hank Thomas

Our FANTASTICAL exhibition will be featured in our main gallery in tandem with IDENTITY. We hope you’ll join us for this commemorative show.

EXHIBITING THROUGH FRIDAY, MAY 6, 2022

FOR MORE INFO CONTACT 404 408 4248 OR INFO@KAILINART.COM