current work

other exhibitions
Here is a partial exhibition list. Solo shows are in red.

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2011- Assiart Gallery, "Group Show". Through October 16th.
2011
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Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, "An Exercise In Cultural Democracy". July 24-September 25

2011- Shoshana Wayne Gallery, "Chain Letter". July 23rd- August 26th, 2011
2011- Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, "Benefit Auction". May 1st, 2011
2011
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L.A. Artcore Brewery Annex, "Selah- an aural tradition". April 3-28,Thu-Sun. 12-4pm
2010
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Arroyo Arts Tour, Highland Park, CA, "Re-Discovery"
2010- Gloria Delson/ ArtLA, 6th St. Gallery, Downtown Artwalk
2010- L.A. Artcore Brewery Annex, Group Show: 7th International Japan/ U.S. Exchange Show
2010
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L.A. Artcore Brewery Annex, Group Show: 4th International Thailand/ U.S. Exchange Show
2010-
Gloria Delson/ ArtLA, 6th St. Gallery, Downtown Artwalk
2010-
Chiang Rai Cultural Center, Chiang Rai, Thailand- 6th International Arts Festival
2010-
Fine Arts Museum, Chiang Mai, Thailand
2010-
Thailand Cultural Center, Bangkok, Thailand
2009
- Arroyo Arts "Recovery" Discovery Tour, Highland Park, CA (November 22nd)
2009- Ansei Gallery, Ukiha, Japan. Group Show: "Ukiha" (July 4th- August 3rd)
2009- CA Gallery, Munakata, Japan. Group Show: "Ark" (April 9- 26)
2009- Gallery Western, Los Angeles. Group Show: "International New Years Show"
2009- L.A. Artcore Brewery Annex, Group Show: "Mnemonica" (January)
2008- Arroyo Arts Tour, Highland Park, CA, "Re-Discovery" (Sunday, November 23)
2008- Gallery Western, Los Angeles. Group Show: "Inaugural Invitational Show"
2008- Takanaga Gallery, Fukuoka, Japan: "Canal City"
2008- Asian Museum, Fukuoka, Japan: "Japan/ U.S. Joint Show"
2008- L.A. Artcore Brewery Annex, Group Show: "A Beautiful Distance"
2007- Arroyo Arts Tour, Highland Park, CA, "Berths"
2007- Lost Dog Gallery, Durango, CO, Group Show: "Climate Change"
2007- Don O'Melveny Gallery, Three Man Show: "3"
2007- L.A. Artcore Brewery, Two Man Show: "Incantations"
2006- Don O'Melveny Gallery, Group Show: "Double Overhead III"
2006- Don O'Melveny Gallery, Solo Show: "Drowning Pool at Buddha Lounge"
2005- Don O'Melveny Gallery. Solo Show: "Road to Folly"
2005- Salon VI. Solo Show: "Leave Taking". Atlanta, GA.
2004- Don O'Melveny Gallery. Group Show. "Essentials"
2004- Joanna Burke Gallery. Group Show: "The Off-Off Venice Art Show".
2003- Don O'Melveny Gallery. Solo Show: "Drowning Pool: Live!"
2003- Salon V. Solo Show: "The So Long Salon"
2003- Don O'Melveny Gallery. "Launch Pad". Group Show.
2003- Salon IV. Solo Show. "Glimpses: Prints and Studies"
2003- The Market Gallery. Group Show: "The Get Down Town Show"
2003- Salon III. Solo Show: "riffs"
2002- Don O'Melveny Gallery. Group Show: "A Week in December"
2002- Don O'Melveny Gallery. Solo Show: "Marilyn's Bedroom"
2002- Don O'Melveny Gallery. Solo Show: "home and away" (Catalogs for this show are available for $10 + postage)
2001- Don O'Melveny Gallery. Group Show: "Group Show"
2001- Salon II. Solo Show: "The Now Paintings"
2000- Salon I. Solo Show: "New Paintings"
1998- The Meadows Gallery. Group Show: "Dues"
1997- Kantor Gallery. Group Show: "The Real Thing" with Keith Haring.

Press

Coagula Art Journal. July 27th, 2011. Edem Elesh at Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery.

Coagula Art Journal. April 5th, 2011. Edem Elesh at L.A. Artcore Brewery Annex.

Selah. April 27th, 2011 by Robert Seitz .
Selah: An Aural Tradition
The Music and Sculpture Installation of Edem Elesh

Edem Elesh, the multi-faceted artist behind Selah, is a traditionalist in the most modern ways of being. Drawing from an adventurous, international spirit, he is something of an explorer seeking after the fountain of youth. This fountain is not the peculiar prize of Pizarro, the quest for immortality. The youth Selah evokes is literally the beginning, the timeless, the elemental component that lies at the heart of human endeavor. It is perfectly fitting that he is an established visual artist in addition to his musical background, in fact it was a mentor at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena that encouraged him to branch out in his investigation of this elusive spring.

The development of Selah grew like an ocean swell becoming wave – the elements of nature, the context of childhood experience in a different culture, the discovery of painting as a way to reach into his own observations and relate the symbols and ideas that drew ever closer to a meaningful center, and his involvement with the band Drowning Pool which knew a fair measure of success in Los Angeles during the 1980's. His group was an underground darling, an ensemble that performed with other avant garde groups such as the Cocteau Twins and The Fall. He performed at some of the most legendary venues in the city – the Anti Club, the Roxy and the Whiskey.

As Elesh explains, music is jealous of art, and as progress with his painting accelerated he found is subject expressed itself in color, gesture, and a coalesced sense of oneness. Increasingly he found himself locating, seeking after key source elements in consciousness, in perception, and mirrored in the natural world. Finding the world phantasmagoric, he contemplates it as the result of an inescapable flaw that can't be avoided – the subjectivity of human experience. He finds in the shade of the branches of human knowledge seeds which tie us together, that lead to a cohesion that is easy to miss when we view human work strictly from the perspective of achievement and competition. When we look at the seeds, the potential, and their growth – literally seeing the forest for the trees – we discover that human community, the sound of the collective, the rise and fall of spirit in response to need and changes in the times – all are evidence of a characteristic human gift that can be easily missed in a society that objectifies the successful and solitary risers.

Two elements combined to make the Selah project possible. One was his introduction to Logic recording software (and the relevant advances in technology) that suddenly enabled an artist who had grown accustomed via the visual arts to work on his own to revisit music with the same independence and tool set. Secondly an exhibit afforded the opportunity to create an installation. The two gave birth the Selah, an evolvement of his collective experiences and a sort of crystallization of his investigations to date. The installation involves a total environment with walls softened by canvas, a space to sit and introspect, and a light sculpture called Satori that provides a fixed object to stare at. He hopes that the sculpture will assist in helping to clear the mind, by serving as a point of reference. The light installation is a flat, two-dimensional rendering of a three-dimensional cube. He finds reflections of artist Robert Irwin, and also Japanese heraldry with an implicit statement that such geometric forms demonstrate the experiential dimension as a spiritual element. Again, a revisitation of perception as a shaper of the whole, the subjective contributing to modify and change the collective, 'pure' nature of things.

The music is elemental, dreamy, and presented in a senses-stimulating 5.1 Surround Sound. It is woven and layered with samples, each crafted and arranged by the artist. It is a sound that can draw the spirit out of the body to drift for a time above the map of human language and idea, a soundtrack for contemplation and rest from the unconscious efforts we can place into structures that, ultimately, are more independent of ourselves than we even dream. From the statement for the project we learn that the name Selah is taken from ancient Hebrew, and occurs innumerable times in the Psalms to denote an interlude in singing voice when the instruments perform alone in order to reflect. He draws a connection to a very ancient traditional practice in India, where in an annual ceremony vocal sounds transmitted from person to person are recited. These sounds are considered pre-speech, the earliest form of human communication, more akin to birdsong and thus stemming from a place before ethnic, racial or religious base. We have in Selah the ongoing quest of an artist to pursue, deep in the wilds of human life and perfectly in tune with the multifarious conditions of urban conditions in Los Angeles, his own vision of a fountain of youth from which hope springs eternal.

Robert Seitz

Highland Park Artist Feature. Channel 7. Friday, May 19 2006

The Surfer's Journal. "Versus". Volume 13 #3: Summer 2004
A Beautiful 8 page spread in this Coffee Table Magazine.
http://www.surfersjournal.com/issues/726

Versus
Paintings by Edem Elesh

"It's all predicated on a basic truism: surfers make
bitchin' stuff. We've been running surf art portfolios for well over
a decade, displaying a wide array of styles, schools and
media. From the representational to the abstract; from the
figurative to the conceptual; from sculpture to glass... they've all had a chance
to hang in our little 2-D gallery space. As a result, we receive about 85 art
submissions each year. Of those, we choose perhaps three to augment
the two we assign. Edem Elesh came in out of the blue, in person, and
blew us away with his evocative, narrative and powerfully
expressionistic work. The craft is crazy, the concepts are unique, and the
overall package utterly imaginative- no cliche or shtick to
be found."

"Eye On LA" Channel 7: "The Amazing Art of Edem Elesh"

"A True Hollywood Story", Kevin Butler
West Hollywood Independent.
Wed. July 17, 2002

 


©2009/2010 edem elesh