Got this from my friend Alexis about her new show opening up at Park Life in San Francisco:
Hello Friends,This Friday from 7-10pm is the opening for my solo show at Park Life ~ I have been working hard on this show and am very excited about the new work I’ve made for it.  Fecal Face came by for a studio visit! See a preview of the show here: FF Studio Visit I’ve included a couple extra images below. Hope you can make it to the opening, I would love to see you there. Park Life220 Clement Street (@ 3rd)SF, CA 94118415.386.7275 / info@parklife.com Press Release:
Park Life is pleased to announce our next art exhibition featuring the work of Alexis Anne Mackenzie. This show marks Mackenzie’s first solo exhibition at Park Life and will feature all new work. 
Alexis Mackenzie’s dreamlike collages intertwine the style of early 1900’s Dadaist Max Ernst with a strong botanical element to create strangely powerful scenarios. Benign elements such as flowers, human and animal figures, and other assorted Victoriana graft together symbiotically in tableaux which seem to deal simultaneously with both evolution and entropy. The resulting images pay homage to the Surrealist importance of the subconscious, where the meaning is left deliberately ambiguous.

Got this from my friend Alexis about her new show opening up at Park Life in San Francisco:

Hello Friends,This Friday from 7-10pm is the opening for my solo show at Park Life ~ I have been working hard on this show and am very excited about the new work I’ve made for it.  Fecal Face came by for a studio visit! See a preview of the show here: FF Studio Visit I’ve included a couple extra images below. Hope you can make it to the opening, I would love to see you there. Park Life220 Clement Street (@ 3rd)SF, CA 94118415.386.7275 / info@parklife.com
Press Release:

Park Life is pleased to announce our next art exhibition featuring the work of Alexis Anne Mackenzie. This show marks Mackenzie’s first solo exhibition at Park Life and will feature all new work.

Alexis Mackenzie’s dreamlike collages intertwine the style of early 1900’s Dadaist Max Ernst with a strong botanical element to create strangely powerful scenarios. Benign elements such as flowers, human and animal figures, and other assorted Victoriana graft together symbiotically in tableaux which seem to deal simultaneously with both evolution and entropy. The resulting images pay homage to the Surrealist importance of the subconscious, where the meaning is left deliberately ambiguous.


Notes

Show