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Added: October 11, 2009

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Spanierman Gallery In East Hampton Presents Danny Simmons: 'From There To Here'

East Hampton - The Spanierman Gallery, LLC (68 Newtown Lane) in East Hampton, is pleased to announce the opening on Saturday, October 10, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. of the exhibition, Danny Simmons: 'From There to Here,' featuring abstract, radiantly gestural paintings created by the artist over the course of 15 years, in which he has sought to reveal a spiritual presence beyond that of the art object's physical properties. There will be an opening reception on Saturday, October 10, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., and the exhibition will run from October 8 through November 23.

Drawing inspiration and motivation from the African contemporary and indigenous art and other tribal examples that he has collected over the course of many years (his collection numbers close to 2,000 items), he is motivated by a desire to think about spirituality and to seek a way to access, channel, and touch it through the creative process. Simmons views a painting as similar to a message in a bottle or a spiritual emanation that when sent out into the world encompasses a realm of experience and a life of its own beyond that of its creator.

A self-taught artist, Simmons evolved his work through studying all of the major art-historical movements. Eventually he developed a strong interest in Surrealism, encompassing the work of Miró, Dalí, and André Breton, in particular. A turning point for Simmons was his discovery of the art of the Cuban artist Wilfredo Lam (1902-1982), whose paintings combining modernist styles with those of the indigenous arts of the Americas, were admired by and exhibited in the late 1930s alongside those of his friend Picasso.

Simmons was drawn to Lam's expression of a humanism transcending the individual and to his effort to liberate the African heritage in Cuba from cultural subjugation through a conveyance of its spiritual basis. Another important influence for Simmons has been the art of the contemporary African-born painter Ouattara, who blends African and Western subjects through physically diverse materials and totemic, mythic imagery, expressing the way that personal identity today is hybrid in nature, bringing together experiences of colonial and postcolonial history.

Developing from these sources, Simmons's earlier paintings often incorporated figurative elements and specifically referenced such work as the bark paintings of the Pygmy people of the Ituri Forest of the Congo and Kente textiles from Ghana and Sudan. Gradually he developed his own visual language, using line, color and form as conduits for capturing the spiritualized essence of this work and making it his own. Rising at 5 a.m. to paint, Simmons works surrounded by silence, letting his canvases speak and evolve with their own rhythms and voices.

A color is usually the starting point for Simmons. Mixing paint from powdered pigments, he will bind layers together and build up surfaces and then often peel or scrape them away, so that his method, as in a divination ritual, conveys us beyond the realm of the physical. With their dense textures, in which writhing color has a kinetic force that seems self-generated and glistening presences hover within palpable atmospheres, Simmons's paintings function as objects of power and mystery.

While there are resonances here of Picasso, Pollock, and Surrealism, Simmons pulls together disparate threads to come up with new and original results.

Often Simmons will stare at a painting for days before its title comes to mind. "Let's Communicate by Drums" to "Confuse the Enemy" are among the most intriguing of his titles, referencing voodoo foot tapping and people who are able to perceive spirit. Another title, "Dr. Gris-gris's Book of Potent Spells and Portents, Price $19.95" alludes ironically to the purchase-able nature of these "commodities." "Three Duppies on the Roof" is a title recalling Simmons's childhood neighbor who, due to dementia, could see what others could not, including the occasional "duppy," a Jamaican word for ghost.

Simmons is the older brother of the hip-hop impresario Russell Simmons and the rapper Joseph "Reverend Run" Simmons. He is the co-founder of the Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation, which provides disadvantaged youth with access to the arts and education and promotes a diverse group of emerging artists. Simmons was also recently appointed chairman of the New York State Council on the Arts. In 2002 Simmons and his brother Russell established "Def Poetry Jam," introducing poetry to mainstream television in a long-running series on HBO in which original poems are spoken along with performances by well-known actors and musicians.

An author himself Simmons has published a novel, "Three Days as the Crow Flies" (2004), consisting of a fictional account of the New York art scene in the 1980s, and a book of poetry, "I dreamed My People Were Calling But Couldn't Find My Way Home" (2007). This March, Simmons's collection of African art along with his own paintings will be shown at Queensborough Community College in Bayside, New York, and will be the subject of a book entitled "House of the Spirit" accompanying the exhibition.

This is Simmons's first exhibition at Spanierman Gallery, LLC at East Hampton. For more information contact Helen Spanierman (helen@spanierman.com); Terry Ross at (tross@spanierman.com). In New York City: Alice Hammond (alicehammond@spanierman.com),or 212-832-0208,or go to www.spanierman-at-easthampton.com



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