Luis Gonzalez Palma has been invited by the Global Art Affairs (GAA) Foundation to participate in the 2017 Venice Biennale. This marks the third time the Artist has been invited to participate in the prestigious global art event.
Read moreLuis González Palma Retrospective in Spain
"Luis González Palma’s universe is made up of a constellation of themes orbiting around his work , constantly going to and fro. Identity and memory, –the axes of his first works- are tackled using portraits with constant echoes of religious and baroque painting . . . [Palma's] work is impregnated with a symphony of formal solutions which are, in his own words, 'an attempt to give body to ghosts that govern personal relationships, religious and political hierarchies found in life'. " - Alejandro Castellote, Curator
Read moreRecent Press: "Carry Me Ohio" by Matt Eich
Beyond the boundaries of our San Diego venue, the work is the subject of major editorial attention, including from CNN, The New Yorker, PDN, and Photograph Magazine.
Read morejdc Curates for The Center for Fine Art Photography
Dreams connect the space between real and surreal. They derive from fragments of our stream of consciousness. Our life’s memories, our desires, and our fears reshuffle and play-back in visions that may appear obscured by double-vision, or be crystalized by a hyper-real clarity. Often, they exist with the support of an uncanny logic or disjointed symbolism. Whether hopeful or menacing, dreams pull on the strings of our most raw and primal emotions.
Read morePaul Turounet on 2016 Paris Photo | Aperture Foundation First PhotoBook Shortlist
Paris Photo / Aperture Foundation PhotoBook Awards have released the shortlist for the PhotoBooks of 2016; Paul Turounet's latest Artists Books Estamos Buscando A (We Are Looking For), made the list. This award for PhotoBooks was initiated in 2013 to celebrate the medium's contribution to the evolving history of the media.
Read moreIan van Coller's The Last Glacier Acquired by the MET & More
Congratulations to represented Artist Ian van Coller, who's artist books continue to gain critical attention; the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, the U.S. Library of Congress, and the New York Public Library have all recently acquired van Coller's The Last Glacier.
Read moreREVIEWS: Jennifer Greenburg's "REVISING HISTORY"
Jennifer Greenburg's Revising History series continues to catch eyes and turn heads. Her current show (on view through May 28) was reviewed in the Southern California Guide, ArtScene, and the nationally run Western-focused periodical, art ltd. magazine.
Copies of both available at the gallery.
jdc Fine Art Celebrates 5 Years in Business
This April, the Gallery celebrates its 5-Year Anniversary. Special thanks to our Artists for their work & our Patrons for their support.
We are here because of YOU.
jdc Fine Art will be celebrating this milestone all month with a look back at work we have exhibited at the Gallery on our Instagram feed. To join the recap, follow @jdcFineArt and the #jdcCelebrates5. Be sure to "like" your favorites and contact the gallery to bring a work offline and into YOUR personal collection.
Read morejdc in Black & White Magazine
Larry Lytle of Black & White Magazine authored a 2-page story on Director, Jennifer DeCarlo, in the April issue. We were the first subject in a new column on Art Dealers. We are honored by the coverage; excerpt follows.
DeCarlo feels a sense of responsibility to the larger art community. She explains, “I’m trying to cultivate the next generation of artists as well as cultural consumers. Keeping a gallery open to the public is very important to a sustainable and healthy cultural community . . . We vet, make sense of and help decode the current work. We provide the viewer a place to see the work, mark it in time and place, and create a history through exhibitions.” - Larry Lytle
Read morejdc in Photograph Magazine
jdc Fine Art Director, Jennifer DeCarlo, is the feature of Photograph Magazine’s In Profile column by Sarah Schmerler.
Excerpt:
DeCarlo’s eclectic stable favors work with complex and often elegiac narratives, including imagery by Mexican-born Tatiana Parcero, who overlays images of her own body with cosmological maps and anatomical diagrams, and Paul Turounet, whose recent exhibition at the New Mexico State University Art Gallery displayed his photographs of illegal immigrants on an actual wall salvaged from the border between the U.S. and Mexico. “The border is just 20 minutes from my house,” says DeCarlo. “We should just have as our motto ‘Let Art Lead The Way.’ I may run this gallery by myself, but I almost always use the plural when I refer to what we do here. It’s the artists, and all the collaborators, and all the vast issues that surround us. It’s not just me.”
Read the full story by Sarah Schmerler in Photograph Magazine, November 2015.