7.20.2008

Paul Zone at DRKRM Gallery


PAUL ZONE has a background that took in all that was cool, all that was cutting edge about New York City in the 1970s. He is New York through and through. His two older brothers started to take him to concerts by the age of 11. He'd always make sure to have his square box Brownie camera with him. He saw Bowie premier Ziggy Stardust at Carnegie Hall, Iggy Pop & The Stooges at the Electric Circus in 1971, the first ever performances by The New York Dolls at the Mercer Arts Center and was the youngest boy let into the back room of Max's Kansas City during the tail end of the Warhol Factory era.

Zone was friends with members of Blondie and The Ramones before their bands were even formed. By 1973 his brothers already had their own band called The Fast, and Paul, being so young, wasn't yet considered to be a member. Paul concentrated on taking photographs of his nights out at concerts, clubs and parties around town. He shot the first photo session of Blondie as a five piece band, did portraits of friends and worked as a photographer along side Lance Loud on his writing assignments for Circus Magazine, Rock Scene & Andy Warhol's Interview.

Some of the legendary personalities and musicians Zone has photographed include Blondie, Marc Bolan, David Byrne, Stiv Bators, Clem Burke, Blessed, Alice Cooper, Wayne County, Peter Cook, Divine, Ray Davies, Jimmy Destri, Eric Emenson, Chris Franz, Ace Frehley, Plesent Gehman, Richard Hell, Kristian Hoffman, Duncan Hannah, The Hudson Brothers, David Johanson, Lenny Kaye, Kiss, Ivan Kral, Arthur Kane, Lance Loud, Pat Loud, Richard Lloyd, New York Dolls, Jerry Nolan, Natasha, Christopher Makos, David Walter Mcdermott, Ron Mael, Russell Mael, Manic Panic, Billy Murcia, Anya Phillips, Howie Pyro, Iggy Pop, Kid Congo Powers, Lou Reed, Joey Ramone, Dee Dee Ramone, Johnny Ramone, Tommy Ramone, Martin Rev, T. Rex, Johnny Thunders, Tish & Snookie, Patti Smith, Stephen Sprouse, The Stooges, Suicide, Sparks, Paul Stanley, Gene Simmons, Chris Stein, Sylvain Sylvain, Richard Sohl, Alan Vega, Cherry Vanilla, Arturo Vega, Gary Valentine, Armand Zone and Miki Zone.

Sunday July 20, 2008

Philip-Lorca diCorcia at LACMA


Hosoe Eikoh and Butoh: Photographing Strange Notions at LACMA


Karen Halverson: Downstream at Dawson's


Politics as Usual: as Seen by Harry Benson at David Gallery


Paul Fusco at M+B


Tomoko Sawada at The Rose Gallery


J. Bennett Fitts at Paul Kopeikin Gallery


Jim Marshall at Duncan Miller Gallery


Ron van Dongen and Laszlo Layton: New Work at Peter Fetterman Gallery


George Platt Lynes and Jennifer Gough Cooper at Craig Krull Gallery



You Have Seen Their Faces at Gallery Luisotti



Ten Years in Focus: The Artist and the Camera at the Getty


August Sander: People of the Twentieth Century at the Getty


Bernd and Hilla Becher: Basic Forms at the Getty


Brian Finke at Stephen Cohen Gallery


Jan Pietrzak at Freestyle Photo



A couple of shows at A and I Hollywood and Santa Monica

4.25.2008

Aftermath: The Griffith Park Fire


Aftermath: The Griffith Park Fire
Photographs by Colin Remas Brown

May 3rd - 18th, 2008

Opening Reception Saturday, May 3rd, 7-10 pm

On May 8, 2007 a major wildfire broke out in Griffith Park and, over the course of that afternoon and evening, spread rapidly. Before containment, the fire consumed over 800 acres of the 4,200-acre park. Just days after the fire, photographer Colin Remas Brown documented its effects. Where he expected to find only scorched trees and hills, he discovered instead the true victims of the blaze: the native wildlife. During the fire, worries about damage to our neighbor’s homes and the possible destruction of such landmarks as the Griffith Observatory trumped all other concerns. Who wondered if the reptiles went deep enough into the dry, parched ground to survive? How far do you think the squirrels, coyote and deer got? How many birds flew off in the middle of the night?



Brown’s photographs unveil the incalculable losses suffered from a wildfire and what we stand to lose in a future disaster. These photos fascinate and enlighten. They also repel, shock and sadden, for they expose a pitiful and grotesque tragedy, one that would have remained invisible had Brown not ventured into the park that day. But life does go on. “The last day I was there,” says Brown, “there were green sprouts pushing through the blackened soil everywhere.”

drkrm. gallery is pleased to present these photographs in an exhibition commemorating the one-year anniversary of this disaster.

4.22.2008

Tuesday April 22, 2008

Photo Fictions at The Show Cave



Frank Worth at A & I Hollywood


Emerging (I) 3 at Freestyle Photo


David Halliday at Stephen Cohen Gallery


Studios at Angels Gate Cultural Center


Fred Pyrczak at Zakimages


The Birdfoot at CLUI


Se Barnet at de Soto gallery

Jim McHugh: L.A. Skies at The Pacific Design Center

3.30.2008

Sunday March 30th, 2008

Glen Wexler at the Arclight Cinema


Contemporary Photographs of Paris at the Central Library


Inside Architecture at MOCA PCD


The Artist and The Camera at The Getty


Catherine Wagner at Gallery Luisotti


Marvin Silver at Craig Krull


Cartier-Bresson at Peter Fetterman


Chris McCaw at Duncan Miller Gallery


Amy Stein at Paul Kopeikin


Top 40 at LACDA


Olaf Otto Becker at Stephen Cohen


Balthasar Burkhard at Scalo Guye


Three from Britain Rose Gallery


Rumble in the Jungle at M+B


Eve Arnold at David Gallery

2.27.2008

The Children of Edgewood at drkrm



drkrm. gallery 2121 San Fernando Road • Suite 3

Los Angeles, CA 90065

323.223.6867 drkrmgallery@gmail.com

www.drkrm.com/edgewood.html


Photographs by Ryan Herz
March 8 –April 27, 2008

Opening Reception Saturday, March 8, 7-10 pm


All images Untitled, Edgewood Center, So. California 1976 20x24 silver gelatin prints

In late summer through early fall of 1976, Ryan Herz’s job was taking ID photos for the patients at the Edgewood Center, a Southern California facility for the developmental disabled. This gave him a unique opportunity to document a fragment of humanity the public at large rarely, if ever, sees. The resultant images are of patients who cover the landscape from mental retardation and severe autism to Down’s syndrome and brain damage. It is important to know that, even though some may look like adults, they are emotionally and developmentally children. These never-before-seen portraits were completed in three or four sessions. “I had just a few minutes with each person,” Herz explains. “This both forced me and freed me to be instinctual rather than manipulative.” That spontaneity coupled with the intense humanity and the unfiltered emotions of the subjects gives the photographs their power.

Viewing these beautiful and sometimes brutal black and white images, one almost feels the need to reach out to the children, not only to provide comfort but to let them know they are not forgotten or abandoned. One cannot help but see in their faces our own emotions. We look at them and wonder what they feel, what they dream of, what they aspire to. We become overwhelmed with sorrow, sympathy and an appreciation for the human spirit. Drkrm. gallery is proud to present the first public exhibition of this powerful and important body of work.

A portion of all sales will benefit The UCLA Foundation Medical Genetics Division Drkrm. gallery is an exhibition space
dedicated to fine art and documentary photography, cutting edge and alternative photographic processes and the display and survey of popular cultural images.

Regular gallery hours are Tuesday – Saturday, 11 am – 5 pm. Sunday
1-4pm.

PR CONTACT: Lee Joseph Publicity

p 818.848.2698 - f 818.848.2699

email: leejemail@gmail.com

---------------------
John Matkowsky
drkrm :: 2121 San Fernando Road
Suite 3 Los Angeles CA 90065
www.drkrm.com 323.223.6867
tues-sat 11-5 sun 1-4
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2.08.2008

Friday, February 8, 2008

Ian Hunter at Shotgun Space



Walker Evans at Stephen Cohen



Hiromi Tsuchida at Dawson's



Disfarmer at Rose Gallery



Masao Yamamoto at Craig Krull



Rocky Schenck at M+B



Stephen Wilkes at David Gallery



Justin Guariglia at Otis



Johnny White at MJ Higgins



Martin Gantman at LACDA