Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Interview: Devin Liston’s “The Department of Water and Power”

Artist Devin Liston, perhaps best known as one half of the duo devNgosha, featured here, is recently aiming towards a singular voice. His new body of work, debuting at Los Angeles' KP PROJECTS/MK gallery this weekend, represents a different direction for the artist who up to this point has mostly worked with collectives. Within the series, titled "Department of Water & Power", Liston’s portraits of friends and more figurative characters merge detailed realism with expressive brushstrokes and dabs of vibrant color. We caught up with him recently in his Los Angeles studio as he was putting in the final touches.

Artist Devin Liston, perhaps best known as one half of the duo devNgosha, featured here, is recently aiming towards a singular voice. His new body of work, debuting at Los Angeles’ KP PROJECTS/MK gallery this weekend, represents a different direction for the artist who up to this point has mostly worked with collectives. Within the series, titled “Department of Water & Power”, Liston’s portraits of friends and more figurative characters merge detailed realism with expressive brushstrokes and dabs of vibrant color. We caught up with him recently in his Los Angeles studio as he was putting in the final touches. Check out the interview below.

HF: What does the show title “Department of Water & Power” mean to you?

DL: It’s basically about my personal journey through life as of recent. Ive been through a lot of changes in the last year and I really needed to talk about it in my work. It sort of translates to: The search for the power to keep swimming. This show helped me come to a lot of understanding about myself as a person, which has helped me come to a lot of understanding about humanity and life. The department is really just us as the living vessel and the water and power is the everything that comes along with that.

HF: How has your previous work and collaborations influenced your new artwork?

DL: I’ve been so lucky to work with the people Ive worked with. I got to learn so many specific techniques and have been able to see such unique perspectives in action. The new work is all of the great stuff I’ve been able to learn in the past along with the element of allowing myself to learn more. It feels like a new beginning as far as I can tell. There is also a lot of stuff that I need to unlearn. This work is a fresh perspective, its about letting go of things as well.

HF: What’s the most important element in your artwork?

DL: I believe at this point in creating that the most important element in my work is freedom. I’m learning more and more how to not let the past or the future effect the way I create things. I really want to be present and in the moment when I’m in my studio. The work is more genuine when I am able to allow my self to be vulnerable. It also needs to be fun. If I can’t see the fun in my own work than I usually feel that it was a failure.

HF: What inspired this new body of work?

DL: I felt the need to communicate what was going on on the inside. There was this need to really have a deep ass conversation with myself and the air around me. There was plenty of shit that I wanted to let go of so I could stop thinking about it and messing it all up in my psyche.

HF: Your work can sometimes have abstract elements but also focuses on realism- Do you like to work in one area over the other? And how do you approach the process?

DL: I will bring it back to freedom. Sometimes I am very focused and sometimes I am all over the fucking place, but I don’t want to let that stop me from working everyday. I have this need for art to be fun. Sometimes its all about spending two days on a portrait and I love it, while other times its about throwing paint on the canvas and the sanding the shit out of it. It’s all about flowing with the way I feel.

HF: What’s your daily routine like when you’re preparing for a show like this one?

DL: Wake up, get a really massive coffee. Try and get to the point where I am able to think straight. maybe go have a face to face conversation with somebody that’s not in the middle of making an art show so I can get a little reality in. Then I will fuck around a bit more somewhere maybe walk around. Then I will get to the studio and work late late hours. I’m on the night shift. I like the solitude. Then at some point I will be covered in paint and feeling dirty and crazy and my back will hurt and I will go to sleep.

HF: What’s next for you?

I’m going to keep exploring the work I’ve been doing lately. I feel like I have a lot more to talk about with it.

Photos by The1point8.

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Last Saturday, Merry Karnowsky looked to the La Brea Tar pits for the inspiration behind their pop-up gallery at Tarfest. Produced by LAUNCH, the event is an annual music and arts festival paying homage to Los Angeles' natural wonder, while fostering creative expression. The famous seepage has been happening for tens of thousands of years, and continues to ensnare organisms today. These unlucky flora and fauna were interpreted by artists Greg 'Craola' Simkins, Todd Carpenter, Lezley Saar, Von Sumner, and James Griffith, who used tar as his painting medium. With the pits just a few hundred feet away, their renderings merged new culture with this culturally historic spot.
On Friday, September 12th, Soze Gallery will host double solo exhibitions by Los Angeles based Devin Liston and Gosha Levochkin (of DevNGosha, covered here). Titled "GROWN UPS" and "LOST" respectively, the event celebrates their first time exhibiting together since 2012- and highlights their unique dialogue as collaborators. Together, the two artists create a subtle dichotomy by focusing on two parts of a combined expression. We take a look after the jump.
Artist duo Gosha Levochkin and Devin Liston have made a name for themselves as DevNgosha, combining their backgrounds in illustration and fine art. Years after their first collaboration, Soze Gallery is showcasing their individual talents in side by side solos "GROWN UPS" and "LOST" (previewed here). As collaborators, they've come up with a system of working together and creating, where one starts a piece and the other finishes it, and vice versa. Now abandoning that system, we can see Liston and Gosha are artists who like to play with varying aesthetics.
Glenn Barr, devNgosha, and William Wray are three artists who share an affinity for 1960s cult film characters and subculture. Tomorrow, they join together at Merry Karnowsky in an exhibition of new works that elaborates on their inspirations. We first featured Glenn Barr's nostalgic portraits in HF Vol. 10, which range in emotional appeal and design. His background in graphic novels has progressed into a unique style that combines cheesy glamour with scenes based in modern reality. With the concept of "communication" as a central theme for these new pieces, we find them talking on rotary telephones. Read more after the jump.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List