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Mondo
Gronk
18" x 24" Exhibition Posters
signed limited edition $40 ea
Printed on 80# coated cover weight paper.
proceeds support drkrm.gallery
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GRONKPATSSIPARTY
Photographs by Louis Jacinto
10"x8" Softcover book 46 pages
Limited edition signed $60
available
in gallery
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TWINS
1976 11x14
Toned gelatin silver print
ed/8
drkrm.gallery
is pleased to announce MONDO GRONK. This historic
exhibition - the first ever public presentation of never-before-seen
photographs by the internationally renowned painter, printmaker,
muralist and performance artist, Gronk - will be on view at drkrm.
gallery from September 12 to October 18, 2009. There will be a closing
reception with the artist on Saturday, October 17 from 7-10 pm.
Click
here for photos of Mondo Gronk opening reception
09/12 by Angel Villanueva
Spanning
the late 1970’s through much of the 1980’s, these black
and white images present a visual record of Gronk’s photographic
work that includes the East L.A. avant-garde art collective, Asco
(Spanish for nausea) and it’s conceptual counter-cinema
movement, NO MOVIE (making movies without the use of celluloid).
This alternative cinema was forged from the refusal of Chicanos
to accept their lack of access to Hollywood. They constructed single-frame
idealized images of daily life, like a still from a film, that would
tell a whole story. Along with Harry Gamboa, Jr., Willie Herron
and Patssi Valdez, and in collaborations with Cyclona, Mundo Meza,
Jerry Dreva, and Tomata DuPlenty, Gronk’s cinematic sensibilities
challenged the limits of sexuality, gender norms, and taste.

DAVID
1978 11x14
Toned gelatin silver print
ed/8
COKE
BOTTLE 1982
11x14 Toned gelatin silver print
ed/8
Gronk
Nicondra was born in the barrios of East Los Angeles where he
had known from an early age that he wanted to be an artist. "Drawing
was as an escape for me - from poverty, from my environment. It
was a way of creating new worlds for myself." He began his
career as an urban muralist who had to look up the word “mural”
to know whether he could paint one. Over time, he has grown into
an international figure who has created grand sets for operas and
computerized animation for panoramic screens. Gronk has made a lasting
mark on the Chicano art movement, the punk scene, gay art, and the
cultural world stage. Influenced by surrealism and German expressionism,
Gronk's paintings reflect Chicano traditions while wryly commenting
on themes of ethnic identity, high and pop culture, romantic love,
and mortality.
Gronk’s
works are in the permanent collections of the Corcoran Gallery of
Art in Washington, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles
Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver Art Museum among others and has
been shown in many more. He is represented in numerous private collections
as well. Gronk lives and works in downtown L.A.
On display concurrently in the Project Room::
GRONKPATSSIPARTY
Photographs by Louis Jacinto
Lobster
Bisque 1978 16x20 digital C-print ed/8
James,
Bobby, Ernie 1978 16x20 dgital C-print ed/8
On
Tuesday, October 31, 1978 Asco artists Gronk and Patssi
Valdez had an exhibition and party at L.A.C.E. Gallery in downtown
Los Angeles. The party included the second and final performance
of punk band The Snappers. But that night Snapper members Gerardo
Velasquez and Michael Ochoa met Edward Stapleton and decided to
form Nervous Gender. No photographs of Gronk were taken. No photographs
of Patssi Valdez were taken. Just a voyeuristic view of their guests
and the demise of The Snappers and the spawning of Nervous Gender.
Louis
Jacinto began photographing in 1973. His work has appeared in the
Los Angeles Times, The Advocate, Frontiers Magazine and
Drop Dead Magazine. In addition, two photographs from his book,
PUNKROCK LOSANGELES, have been added to the permanent collection
of the Claremont Museum of Art. As a member of the Los
Angeles art collective LAART, Louis has exhibited throughout Los
Angeles.
PR
CONTACT: Jay Lopez 213.595.7419
jay@jaylopez.net
CORRECTION:
The photo in the Mondo Gronk ad in THE Magazine, September 2009,
page 45, is by Harry Gamboa Jr. and was used in error.
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