3rdgensooner
1/3/2011, 03:59 PM
Frances Bean Cobain (aka Fiddle Tim) "Scumf#@!" at La Luz De Jesus Gallery (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mat-gleason/review-frances-bean-cobai_b_635942.html)
Fiddle Tim is the artistic pseudonym of Frances Bean Cobain, 17 years old, an emancipated minor, the daughter of two complexly interwoven musical personalities whose impact on culture rivals that of any of the most successful artists of the 20th century. And she makes art.
http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2010-07-06-FiddleTimCoagula.jpg
Frances Bean Cobain AKA Fiddle Tim at the July 2 opening of her exhibit
"Scum****" at La Luz De Jesus Gallery, Los Angeles.
Her debut solo show, entitled Scum**** (http://www.laluzdejesus.com/shows/2010/Fiddle-Tim/Fiddle-Tim2010.htm), is up now at La Luz de Jesus Gallery (http://www.laluzdejesus.com/) in East Hollywood. La Luz is the major league of Low Brow art, a major step in any fine art career. Hundreds of artists send packets and portfolios each year to attract the attention of gallery founder Billy Shire and gallery director Matt Kennedy. One can imagine that Cobain did not have to wait in the same line as every other artist, but in an art world where if you are not pulling strings you are not part of the art world, this cannot be held against the artist nor the gallery. Since the artist is using a pseudonym, the assumption is that there is a desire to have her work judged free from the context of her famous father, Kurt Cobain, and famous mother, Courtney Love.
If that is the case, here is a review for her pseudonym's show:
http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2010-07-06-Bean_LG_ChopsyCheech.jpeg
Fiddle Tim is a raw artist in need of honing her above average aptitude for drawing. Fiddle Tim's drawings balance a basic illustration approach with a scruffy (but delicately painted) texture, all aptly composed and not glopped on or glittered like so much trendy low brow attempts at feigning real experience in a cartoon culture. Her themes draw from abject personalities in search of nihilistic power: Jim Jones, infamous punk anti-legend GG Allin, and a recurring specter who makes demands of the viewer with the threat of eating the sun if they are not met.
The rest of the story and more art pics (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mat-gleason/review-frances-bean-cobai_b_635942.html)
Fiddle Tim is the artistic pseudonym of Frances Bean Cobain, 17 years old, an emancipated minor, the daughter of two complexly interwoven musical personalities whose impact on culture rivals that of any of the most successful artists of the 20th century. And she makes art.
http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2010-07-06-FiddleTimCoagula.jpg
Frances Bean Cobain AKA Fiddle Tim at the July 2 opening of her exhibit
"Scum****" at La Luz De Jesus Gallery, Los Angeles.
Her debut solo show, entitled Scum**** (http://www.laluzdejesus.com/shows/2010/Fiddle-Tim/Fiddle-Tim2010.htm), is up now at La Luz de Jesus Gallery (http://www.laluzdejesus.com/) in East Hollywood. La Luz is the major league of Low Brow art, a major step in any fine art career. Hundreds of artists send packets and portfolios each year to attract the attention of gallery founder Billy Shire and gallery director Matt Kennedy. One can imagine that Cobain did not have to wait in the same line as every other artist, but in an art world where if you are not pulling strings you are not part of the art world, this cannot be held against the artist nor the gallery. Since the artist is using a pseudonym, the assumption is that there is a desire to have her work judged free from the context of her famous father, Kurt Cobain, and famous mother, Courtney Love.
If that is the case, here is a review for her pseudonym's show:
http://images.huffingtonpost.com/2010-07-06-Bean_LG_ChopsyCheech.jpeg
Fiddle Tim is a raw artist in need of honing her above average aptitude for drawing. Fiddle Tim's drawings balance a basic illustration approach with a scruffy (but delicately painted) texture, all aptly composed and not glopped on or glittered like so much trendy low brow attempts at feigning real experience in a cartoon culture. Her themes draw from abject personalities in search of nihilistic power: Jim Jones, infamous punk anti-legend GG Allin, and a recurring specter who makes demands of the viewer with the threat of eating the sun if they are not met.
The rest of the story and more art pics (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mat-gleason/review-frances-bean-cobai_b_635942.html)