Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Hi-Fructose Volume 46 Preview!

Young Chun

It's the 46th volume of Hi-Fructose! Featured in this issue are ... Craig Gleason's drawings of Bad Guys, the badass quilts of Ben Venom, the super saccharine starlet paintings of cover artist Young Chun, the art and murals of Koralie, Ryan Heshka's Mean Girls Club, the distorted and demented baby sculptures of Johnson Tsang, the surreal paintings of Horacio Quiroz, and the outstanding drawings of Sverre Malling. Plus multi-page reviews of the new monograph by Todd Schorr and Ernst Haekel.


Young Chun

It’s the 46th volume of Hi-Fructose!

Featured in this issue are …
Craig Gleason‘s drawings of Bad Guys, the badass quilts of Ben Venom, the super saccharine starlet paintings of cover artist Young Chun, the art and murals of Koralie, Ryan Heshka‘s Mean Girls Club, the distorted and demented baby sculptures of Johnson Tsang, the surreal paintings of Horacio Quiroz, and the outstanding drawings of Sverre Malling. Plus multi-page reviews of the new monograph by Todd Schorr and Ernst Haekel.


Johnson Tsang


Craig Gleason


Ryan Heshka


Horacio Quiroz


Koralie

Plus a special 16-page glossy insert section on the art of Laurie Lipton. Click through for more previews! Subscribe today here, and pre-order the issue here.



Laurie Lipton


Ernst Haeckel


Ben Venom


Sverre Malling

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
The dark and insanely detailed drawings of Laurie Lipton mix elements from different eras of art and time, including her own surreal version of reality.  When asked her to describe her meticulous, cross-hatching in one word,  she answered, "sick" (with a grin).  She has exhibited and lived all over the world from Holland, Germany, France, and recently London, where she spent time with the likes of Terry Gilliam, one of her favorite creatives. She will exhibit the art discussed here at Ace Gallery in Los Angeles next year.
In Laurie Lipton's recent works, featured here, the artist take us into a world that feels overwhelmed with technology. It is a place where wires, screens, emojis and other aspects of our modern day communication devices define this world's movement and style. She calls it a "Techno Rococo" of sorts, the title and basis of her latest series of drawings which debuted over the weekend at Ace Gallery in Los Angeles.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List