Tuesday, September 23, 2014
Monday, June 16, 2014
Tuesday, January 08, 2013
Sunday, November 19, 2006
press on matt sesow (interviews and other promotionals) 1994-2006
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Sesow interview
Jan/Feb 2006
and Interview with N&O newspaper
Sesow paints onstage during performance
of "Don Giovanni" in Raleigh, NC
October 2006
and Interview with N&O newspaper
Solo show of "Don Giovanni" paintings
at RebusWorks Gallery in Raleigh, NC
November 2006
Group show of paintings on street banners
DC Economic Partnership
July 2006
Two-person Show
Studio One Eight (DC)
August 2006
Art of War
November 2006
10 plays
10 plays written/performed about Sesow painting
Phoenix
April 2005
Hogan Gallery
April 2005
8th Annual International Art Singular Festival
Roquevaire, France
Dec 2004 - jan 2005
Studio One Eight Gallery
"Eye of the Storm"
October 2005
Gallery Co.
"Looking Back, Sprint Forward"
July 2005
Raleigh, NC
Rebus Works
"Carrots and Sticks: bunnies and bullies"
November 2005
Inside Outside Gallery
August 2005
"Ask the Expert" column
March 2004
Washington, DC
Sesow at the Visionary Museum/Baltimore
October 2004
Big Cat Gallery
New York City, NY
January 2004
Nature Visionary Art Gallery
Charlottesville, VA
April 2004
Paralysis Resource Guide
Paintings by Sesow used in the guide
2004
front and back cover
Left Turn Magazine
Sept/October 2004
cover and inside
Cover and inside
Homeless benefit magazine
New York City
April 2004
Alcove Gallery
Aug-Sep 2004
Interview with "the Palette"
publication of VSA Arts
Spring 2003
Number 5, 2003
Review
Nisk-Art Gallery (Schenectady)
December 2003
and cover
December 2003
(Los Angeles)
Review of Sesow's work
with Theater of Note
F**king Wasps
November 2003
(Los Angeles)
Sesow paints backdrop of play
for Theater of Note
(written about Alfred Kinsey)
2003
(New York, NY)
Outsider Art Show
May 2002
cover and inside
Cover and inside
Homeless benefit magazine
New York City
February 2002
(Virginia Beach, VA)
"OUTSIDE/IN: Visionary Artists and Virginia Collectors"
November 2002
(Washington, DC)
"Artists with (dis)abilities"
Sept-November 2002
Gallery three
San Pedro, CA
October 2002
Schenectady, NY
Viewpoint Gallery
May 2002
11 venues over 3 years
"Hellbound" and "Bunny Collector"
2002-2005
"Enron" painting
"Enron" painting published, full page
fall 2002
Corcoran Museum
White Walls Gallery at Corcoran Museum
May 2001
1999 Interview
1997 Article
Tuesday, April 04, 2006
What others have said about Matt Sesow's paintings:
"Sesow's canvases would hardly complement floral-print furniture. But the personality behind the art is anything but dark. A polite, affable man with bright blue eyes and closely cropped blond hair, Sesow chuckles often and appears to be enjoying life. "
-- ( Molly Knight, DC Style Magazine, January/Feb. 2006)
"Matt Sesow's "Father of the Bride" threatens to steal the show with its irrepressible expressionistic angst. This 2001 acrylic painting on cardboard is defined by the remarkable violence of its brush strokes, which recall the kinetic force of Jack the Ripper with their razor-sharp slashes and blade-like shredding effect. These kinetic linear forms combine to create a grotesque portrait of an imposing man in a blue blazer and orange tie, dried white mounds of paint forming his monstrous teeth."
-- ( Allison Hersh, the Savannah Morning News, December 2005 ... Hurn Museum exhibit "Face Dances")
"While some of his images might be considered brutal or brutish in the same way as, say, Francis Bacon, they are only real life with the beauty secrets stripped away, the cover girl make-up stuffed back into society's compacts. They are the skeletons, out of the closet, with the raw meat still attached. Sesow may very well be the most important artist working today. His paintings are explosions of color. Punk rock energy paired with the symbolism of alienation dressed in the finery of a rainbow. As he says, he is trying to create something that is funny, political and chaotic. In that quest he has been successful on a grand scale. "
-- (Ron Taylor, Demon Beach Records, November 2005)
"Matt's work still bites big holes in the canvas and the sanctified social order of the day. Only now there is a greater confidence, with a higher level of sophistication in color and composition. ... drives ideas like nails through current events. Whatever the theme, manages to steeer clear of illustration and drill (his) way to the inner core of fearless, almost reckless interpretation."
-- (Jim Magner, Capitol Hill Rag Magazine, March 2005)
"Matt Sesow ... is a master of angular lines and jarring color."
-- (J. Bowers, Baltimore City Paper, oct. 2004)
WON BEST EXPERIMENTAL THEATER (June 2005): "Collateral Damage," Cheap Theatrix: Raymond Shurtz collected a handful of antiwar plays and strung them together against a painting by Washington, D.C., artist Matt Sesow. Somewhat thoughtprovoking, occasionally brilliant, entirely fresh."
-- (Chris Page, critic, East Valley Tribune Daily, June 2005)
"Matt Sesow's nightmarish portraits possess a voracious brutality that hits the eyes like sand, but embed in the heart with unexpected wonder"
-- (Timothy Cahill, Albany New York Times Union, 2004)
"Sesow didn't have any formal art training, but his work is gaining recognition in the small but growing world of so-called visionary art. The genre -- sometimes called outsider art, art brut or contemporary folk art -- groups works by self-trained artists who deal with very personal issues, often their own disabilities... Through his art, Sesow worked through the emotional knots created by his childhood accident.... Sesow's paintings communicate the emotional power of his healing. One of his works in the AVAM exhibit, titled "Out of Water," depicts in loose, abstracted brush strokes and bright colors a scuba diver emerging from water. On his goggles is a line with three crosses that Sesow uses to symbolize the trauma of his childhood accident. For years after his hand was amputated Sesow wore prosthetics, but about a year after he started painting, he gained confidence and stopped wearing his artificial hand. Sesow feels freed now that he doesn't have to try to be and look like something he isn't. ..."
-- (Cate Hescox, Reuters News, October 2004
"Sesow's explosively colored and powerfuly composed expressionist paintings in this exhibition are broad brushed self-portraits with a compellingly dramatic tension that draws in the viewer. Both 'Setting Sail' and 'Out of Water' capture on canvas and board doubling figures, expressions, and markings-- on the first-- and a powerful head complete with a characteristic Sesow trauma scar marker on the second..."
-- (Tony Harvey... regarding Sesow paintings at 'Holy H2O' AVAM show, Intowner magazine, Washington DC, Oct. 2004)
"Every stroke (of Sesow's) is like a cannonball hitting the canvas"
--(Chris Warner/Alcove Gallery, Atlanta Magazine, 2004)
"Matt Sesow, whose "Bunny Collector" could hold its own with Grosz, and whose "Hellbound III" posits a universe where Francis Bacon and Edvard Munch are the same."
-- (Las Vegas Mercury, 2003)
"The essential appeal of the outsider spirit in art is robustly exemplified by the compelling impact of a Matt Sesow painting. His finest works tend to gather themselves to lunge at you and take root in unguarded channels of emotion"
--(New Art International, Book Art Press. 2003)
(Regarding paintings done by Sesow for the Hollywood play 'F**king Wasps' about Alfred Kinsey, by Steve Haskell) "The set consisted essentially of a blue piano and several immense paintings by DC-based artist Matt Sesow, which were commissioned by the director for the production. These complex, savage, allegorical portraits not only represented but actually contained the entire psychological subtext of the play. Their vivid, unsettling presence gave the rigid agony of the performances a context and a dignity that despite their best intentions they might not have achieved otherwise. The art was there to say no, that despite the defenses, controls and masks, inside everyone there is a mass of turmoil and contradiction. The paintings were an integral part of the content of the production, not just its style. The said more about the Kinsey the man than Kinswy ever could. That is exactly what I was looking for at the LA Art show, what I look for all the time now. For art that takes the human condition seriously, and engages with it, even at great risk to itself."
-- (Coagula Magazine, Hollywood, CA, 2003. Shana Nys Dambrot)
"Brace yourself. Maybe even toss back a stiff drink before you go. Because to encounter Matt Sesow's paintings is to enter a maelstrom. Undiluted primary colors fly off the wall, blinding, dazzling. Frenetic lines thrash violently. And Sesow's disturbing, distorted images needle and jab.... Viewing the current wall of Sesow's work is like eavesdropping on the artist's ongoing argument with the world. With paint he shouts down and wrestles with his tangled personal and political issues. And we get to watch wide-eyed."
--(Laura Parsons, from 'the hook', Charlottesville, VA... regarding Sesow's 2004 show)
"Matt is a true Brutarian, a self-taught painter who, despite having his work extensively shown and written about, has little interest in becoming part of the art network. Sesow appears unconcerned with communicating in the accepted tropes of the professional; he defers to no recognized code, nor to the rules of any recognized idiom. "Crude!" "Unfinished!" "Aberrant!" the boulevardier may jeer, but it may well be that Matt's approach results in a creative range beyond the normal compass of our responses . . .Perhaps not, nevertheless, Mr. Sesow has created a fascinating body of work "
--Interivew with Matt Sesow from "Brutarian" magazine, issue #28
"I suppose everybody has experienced some pain and fear in their lives. Just as paintings of pretty flowers and sunsets with horsies make us smile and feel content, I want to paint emotionally charged intense works that cause discomfort or inspire people to challenge themselves. I had some unique physical trauma as a child that got me started on this path... I'm a generally happy person, but I have taught myself to channel anger and intensity in art. The best musicians and painters have done it, those are my heroes."
--(Interview with Matt Sesow, 2004)