Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

On View: “Solvers” by Theo Ellsworth at GR2

Werewolves, dancing aliens and 8-legged cats are just a few of the comical characters in Theo Ellsworth's show "Solvers", now on view at GR2, Los Angeles. It will come as no surprise that the Montana based artist and graphic novelist is inspired by all things fantastic. For this show, Ellsworth etched 73 whimsical illustrations of impossible creatures and objects. His wood-carved paintings are like a cross between our elementary schoolbook doodles and Where the Wild Things Are, drawn in Maurice Sendak's cross hatched style. Looking at Ellsworth's intricately detailed work is almost dizzying. A web of continuous lines and shapes energize his characters and bring their chaotic world to life.

Werewolves, dancing aliens and 8-legged cats are just a few of the comical characters in Theo Ellsworth’s show “Solvers”, now on view at GR2, Los Angeles. It will come as no surprise that the Montana based artist and graphic novelist is inspired by all things fantastic. For this show, Ellsworth etched 73 whimsical illustrations of impossible creatures and objects. His wood-carved paintings are like a cross between our elementary schoolbook doodles and Where the Wild Things Are, drawn in Maurice Sendak’s cross hatched style. Looking at Ellsworth’s intricately detailed work is almost dizzying. A web of continuous lines and shapes energize his characters and bring their chaotic world to life. Supplied with wacky time travel machines, they embark on a far out journey full of illogical twists and turns. No matter how far stretched, Ellsworth’s imagination flows with never-ending ideas to keep his viewers entertained.

“Solvers” by Theo Ellsworth is now on view at GR2 through February 18th.

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Trippy magicians and warriors find themselves in an unnamed land with black skies in Martin Ontiveros' current exhibition, "Strange and Unlovely" at Pony Club Gallery. Based in Portland, the artist and self-described metal-head (HF Collected Edition 3) has created a world of bizarre denizens throughout his painting career. Featuring new ink illustrations, mainly monochromatic, the show indulges in their fantastic strangeness. Check out more photos from the show after the jump!
Tomorrow, Giant Robot's GR2 gallery will introduce seven like-minded artists with a shared vision of fantasy and spiritual worlds. "Wavelengths" artists Stasia Burrington, Elliot Brown, Aaron Brown, Albert Reyes, Aya Kakeda, Jen Tong and Taehoon Kim are just as eclectic in their media choices, especially sculpture. Each artist tells a vignette featuring their signature styles with Japanese art undertones.
This Saturday, Mari Inukai is returning to Giant Robot with her expressive new series, titled "Marilla Blue and Orange". Inukai has long experimented with personal symbolism that blends her fantasy and reality worlds together. For this upcoming show, she takes a step into her imaginary world and brings her recurring subjects, including her daughter, and characters with her. Her narrative begins with a charming collection of pencil drawings, which she brings to life in illustrative paintings.
"Since I am not so good at making words to describe what I think and want, I choose to draw. And since I love to see the harmony in beautiful color relationships to emphasize the stories among everything that surrounds me in the real world, what I see and what I draw, I choose to paint," Mari Inukai shared at the opening of her GR2 show, "Marilla Blue and Orange." The exhibition blurs the lines of her signature worlds, in terms of her narrative and artistic styles. In addition to her new paintings (previewed here), which she describes as a mixture of Taoism, harmony and balance, nostaligia, fantasy, reality and dreams, the show also features her process sketches.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List