Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

On View: “Suburban Mythology: Volume 2” by Andrea Heimer at the Good Luck Gallery

Washington based artist Andrea Joyce Heimer classifies her work as "outsider art", or paintings of strange suburbia. Her solo exhibition at the Good Luck Gallery in Los Angeles, "Suburban Mythology: Volume 2", is a continuation of her main theme: every day dramas full of dark humor, based on real people and events in Heimer's life. Her simple and flat visual style recalls artists like Mark Whalen, Mel Kadel, or Deedee Cheriel, but this can be mis-leading. Heimer fills her scenes with personal symbolism.

Washington based artist Andrea Joyce Heimer classifies her work as “outsider art”, or paintings of strange suburbia. Her solo exhibition at the Good Luck Gallery in Los Angeles, “Suburban Mythology: Volume 2”, is a continuation of her main theme: every day dramas full of dark humor, based on real people and events in Heimer’s life. Her simple and flat visual style recalls artists like Mark Whalen, Mel Kadel, or Deedee Cheriel, but this can be mis-leading. Heimer fills her scenes with personal symbolism. Her lengthy titles, which read like some eloquent teenager’s diary, give us a hint: “I Went to School with Genevieve who Join Us Part Way Through The School Year. Her Father Had A Secretive Government Job & Her Family Had Last Lived In Thailand. She Was Exotic & Likeable & Even When She Openly Picked Her Nose In Class We Regarded the Act As Some Enlightened Ritual. Genevieve Had Too Many Sisters To Count, Each More Beautiful Than The Last, With Hair Like Spun Silk.” Others tell us about her first crush at age sixteen and the unusual behavior of her neighbors while growing up in Montana.

“Suburban Mythology: Volume 2” by Andrea Heimer is now on view at the Good Luck Gallery through April 11.


detail

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
This Saturday, Merry Karnowsky gallery will exhibit 17 new works from their roster with "Aggregate". The exhibition is part of the gallery's expansion as the KP Projects, here celebrating their collaboration with Zero+ Publishing. Curated by founder Kirk Pedersen, the show is a unique gathering that includes Andrew Hem, Edwin Ushiro, Augustine Kofie, Yumiko Kayukawa, Lisa Adams, Mercedes Helnwein, Blaine Fontana, and Dabs Myla, to name a few. Together, their paintings embody an adventurous spirit that is in tune with their editions, also on display.
Blending two- and three-dimensional forms, Mark Whalen creates cerebral and absurd arrangements of the human body. Whether stacking vibrant heads or using sculpted hands to sculpt the very shapes of canvases, there’s a metatextual component in tackling the act of creating art itself.
Each of Andrea Joyce Heimer's acrylic paintings begins as a written story. Even if the viewer isn't able to know every detail of her narratives, the painter's work gives us the chance to piece her myths ourselves. The artist offers some personal reasons why this process is so integral to her practice:
Australian-born, Los Angeles-based painter Mark Whalen is known for works that exhibit both a dark humor and vibrancy, mirroring the duality of Western living. His current show, “Around the Bend,” fills Australia’s Chalk Horse Gallery with examples of this charge, with disparate, vague figures rendered in struggle.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List