
Opening Reception & Book Signing: Saturday, March 21, 3-6PM
Location: Sylvia White Gallery - 1783 E. Main Street, Ventura, CA 93001
Gallery Hours: Wednesday - Saturday, noon to 5:00pm
Hardy’s recent paintings on handmade paper exude a surreal stream of consciousness, looseness, and comic style. Depicting strange creatures, they layer an impossible hybridization of mythological characters and totem-like designs borrowed from Asian, Northwestern American, and ancient Mexican motifs. At once funny and disturbing, Hardy’s fantastical creations and dense visual references resonate with the ecstatic spirit of Dada’s most adept graphic practitioners, Francis Picabia and Max Ernst, who also mined and reshaped the pop culture imagery of their day into absurdist fantasies.
Also on view is a survey of prints, done over the last 10 years. All the work relays Hardy’s familiar sophisticated visuals with a painterly intensity. As an added bonus, Hardy has designed a print, unique to this exhibition, as a tribute to the city of Ventura: California’s New Art City. There will be a limited number of signed prints available for purchase. All proceeds from the sales will be donated to the new Ventura Museum of Art.
ABOUT DON ED HARDY
A Southern California native born in 1945, Hardy acted on his childhood determination to become a tattoo artist and underwent a tattoo apprenticeship while simultaneously receiving a B.F.A. degree in printmaking at the San Francisco Art Institute in 1967. Considered one of the founders of modern tattooing, he developed the artistic and expressionistic potential of the medium with emphasis on its Asian heritage. In 1973 he lived in Japan, studying with a traditional tattoo master-the first non-Asian to gain access to that world. He resumed these studies in Japan throughout the 1980s. Hardy pioneered the pop-culture tattoo-as-art space decades before the worldwide boom in tattoo art that permeates popular culture.
In 1982 he and his wife, Francesca Passalacqua, formed Hardy Marks Publications and have written, edited and published over twenty-five books on alternative art. Now in its second printing, Tattooing the Invisible Man pays homage to Hardy’s lifetime of work. In addition to showing his own works at galleries and major museums, Hardy has curated a number of exhibitions including the groundbreaking Pierced Hearts and True Love: A Century of Drawings for Tattoos at the Drawing Center in New York and he frequently lectures at museums and universities.
His work has appeared in numerous periodicals, books, and films internationally. In 2000, he was appointed by Oakland Mayor Jerry Brown to that city’s Cultural Arts Commission and he awarded an Honorary Doctorate by the San Francisco Art Institute. In 2004 “Ed Hardy,” a major fashion line featuring his artwork, was launched internationally. Hardy and his wife now divide their time between Honolulu and the San Francisco Bay area.