LittleBird

an eclectic group of creative friends ranting and raving in one space. email us info@littlebirdgallery.com

15 Questions About Art :: Dola Baroni

Dola Baroni - b. August 1986 in Los Angeles, Tiger, West Coast enthusiast, photographer and dancer, big eater, big sleeper.

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What is your earliest art-related memory?

In the first grade we had Art a couple times a week in a room near the Principal’s office.  Mrs. Levitan was the art teacher and I remember feeling really relaxed by the sound of her voice. I don’t remember anything that we learned but I do remember her showing us Picasso’s Old Guitarist.

Then in second grade I wore all blue and called it my Blue Period.

Who has had the greatest influence on your work?

LaVerne M. Disney b. 1916, my pseudo-Grandmother a.k.a. Jicky

What are the main tools of your craft?

films, cameras, space

Is a formal education important?

OVER-RATED

What is the biggest misconception about art?

I don’t know yet.

Which is more important in art - concept or execution
?

EXECUTION

What theme or aesthetic are you most drawn to?

I like sincerity and simplicity. I don’t like tricks.



What is your favorite piece of art in your home?

A postcard with a photo of Chief Red Cloud’s bedroom on the front.

If you could collaborate with anyone, living or dead, who would it be?

Living: Yukio Waguri
Deceased: Otis Redding

Which emerging artist do you think more people should know about?

The Dance Me.



What has been your greatest achievement to date?

Finding my Bifano family in San Demetrio De Corone, province of Cosenza in the Calabrian region of Southern Italy.



What has been your biggest roadblock?

Lack of funds.

How do you define success?

Love all around, a house in the mountains, a house by the sea and no film cost worries.

What will be the name of your autobiography?

I’m too young to wonder that but how about Get Free With It

What is the best piece of (art-related) advice you’ve ever been given?

“Become Baby”

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15 Questions about Art is an ongoing series in which we ask our collective favorite artists, writers, musicians, sleepy dreamers and object makers from across the creative spectrum to give us a glimpse into how they perceive art through a standard set of questions.

Please click here for the archives and check back next week for a fresh perspective.

15 Questions About Art :: Dan Monick

Dan Monick grew up in Minneapolis, Minnesota and now lives and works in Los Angeles, CA.  

His work has been commissioned by and featured in numerous publications including Interview, Paper, Swindle, enRoute, ESPN, Dwell, XXL, Out, Rolling Stone, Foam, The Journal, Arkitip, and Fortune.  His commercial clients include American Standard, Clearwire, Dell, Virgin Mobile, Target, Stussy, and Activision.  

In addition to being a widely sought after editorial and fine art photographer, he is currently an administrative member of the gallery and community-based arts center THIS: Los Angeles as well as co-founder of the independent music publication LA RECORD.

His first book of photography is set to be published by Gingko Press this year.

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What is your earliest art-related memory?
Scribbling on  the mean baby sitters dress when she wasn’t looking

Who has had the greatest influence on your work?
Nan Goldin, Richard Avedon,  William Eggelston

What are the main tools of your craft?
Spastic energy



Is a formal education important?
Yes

What is the biggest misconception about art?
That you do it alone

Which is more important in art - concept or execution?
Execution.  By far

What theme or aesthetic are you most drawn too?
Loose



What is your favorite piece of art in your home?
My sisters photo of a parking lot

If you could collaborate with anyone, living or dead, who would it be?
Steve Rubell

Which emerging artist do you think more people should know about?
Jesse Spears

What has been your greatest achievement to date?
Doing what I love, which happens to be the only thing I know how to do.

What has been your biggest roadblock?
Me



How do you define success?
Never being jealous, never being scared

What will be the name of your autobiography?
Heavy

What is the best piece of (art-related) advice you’ve ever been given?
You better love what you do.

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15 Questions about Art is an ongoing series in which we ask our collective favorite artists, writers, musicians, sleepy dreamers and object makers from across the creative spectrum to give us a glimpse into how they perceive art through a standard set of questions.

Please click here for the archives and check back next week for a fresh perspective.

An interview with photographer Dan Monick



Dan Monick’s capacity for love is immense.

He loves his relationships - the good times and the trying ones, too. He loves inspiration, be it accidental or accidentally on purpose.

He loves old signage, ominous skies and foreign advertisements stapled in a noisy jumble of symbol and language to telephone poles. He loves objects so far removed from context that the meaning becomes lost in translation and the viewer is left with more questions with answers. He loves spinning a good story and using a photograph to tell it even more.

But looking at his most recent collection of work, it seems as if Dan Monick loves the quiet moments most of all - the ones that when strung together create the entire landscape of a life, but by themselves are fragile and fleeting. And all too often overlooked by the rest of us.

Dan Monick sits down with LittleBird Gallery to talk about all these observations and how they came together to create the narrative for his upcoming show,My Love For You Is Immense.

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LB: Can you tell us about how the title for the show came about?

DM: My girlfriend [Catlin] and I were driving along and this Rod Stewart song came on - and funny enough, that’s where the title came from. But it seemed to have to do with everything going on… and then later when we were putting the images into sort of individual “chapters”, the theme pretty much showed up.

The last show [with Little Bird Gallery] was called “You Know Only You Can Break Your Heart” and this was sort of the next logical step.

LittleBird: When you are talk about chapters, do you see the exhibit as a whole telling a specific story?

DM: There’s no question I’m trying to tell a story - both through this and “Only You Can Break Your Own Heart” and to tell you the honest truth, they’re both about my girlfriend and our relationship. The previous show was the narrative about this two year period where we had broken up and the journey I went through in the time.

LittleBird: So this show is a continuation of that narrative?

DM: Kind of. It’s about what came out of that period; what I’ve learned since. Most of the images were actually taken with her nearby so, yeah; our relationship is really present through out.

Another part is that it’s a heavy nod to all the people in my life I have been influenced by. While I think everything is still shot very unconsciously, the trails and tribulations of the past few years put my brain into a spot where for the first time I could sort of consciously edit as I was going along.

For instance, this piece [an image of a table top at the end of a meal] was inspired by Steven Shore. I’d didn’t set it up on purpose but we were sitting there and I looked down and I was reminded instantly of this image [from the cover of one of his books] and so this was my little nod to him.



LittleBird: Commercially, you are known for your portrait work and yet the subject matter in this exhibit focuses on images of everyday objects - often in a state of disorder or decay, and almost always out of context.

DM: The funny thing about portraits - because I have done portrait shows as well - is that people either identify with the images in a really hardcore way or not at all. So I very intentionally stayed away from portraits in this collection.

But I’ve always shot stuff like this - little narrative stories. When I’d started out I didn’t know much about Robert Frank who I later came to find out was known for this style that I’d [unknowingly] heavily borrowed from. And it was kind of weird that I’d always shot this way and really wild to find out that these guys were drawn to photographing the corer of the room too.

As I did learn about guys, like [William] Eggleston and Steven Shore, I didn’t want to shoot like them so much as I saw they had these amazing characters and I wanted to live in there lives. So it wasn’t so much about documenting my life as it was about creating a fantasy world that I wanted to live in.

LittleBird:One of my favorite images of the show is the man in the ticket booth. It seems to comprise elements of all of the themes you have running through the exhibit.

DM: That was taken at the Minnesota State Fair… well, I wont ruin it by telling you the back-story, but there is this image that I love and when I saw this moment, I knew I could recreate it.

So, it’s kind of like doing a cover song, you know? I have thought about this image through out my life and when I looked through the viewfinder and snapped the shot… Well, it’s not a copy - it’s not perfect - but you still get that feeling. It works.





LittleBird: You leave a lot up to the viewer in your images - and I almost don’t want to hear the stories behind them in order to have my own experience.

DM: Good! Along time ago I remember people would tell me that as an artist you have to do this and this and this in your work for the viewer to get it and my response was “fuck that”. That makes no sense to me.

It’s funny because I’ve always got a camera in my hands and the idea with a camera is to capture the moment where something happens. But if it makes more sense to me to show the moments around the action because then your letting the viewer sort of fill in the blanks with their own story.

And I think that’s kind of nice.

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