Category Archives: Art

Expressionism, From Van Gogh to Kandinsky at LACMA – Love it!

LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
‘Beach at Low Tide’, 1900, Theo van Rysselberghe, LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
‘The Farmer’, 1905, Maurice de Vlaminck, LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
‘Boats in Chatou’ 1904/5, Andre Derain, LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
LACMA, Photo Romi Corrtier
‘Arabian Cemetery’, 1909, Wassily Kandinsky, LACMA, Photo Romi Corrtier
LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
‘Woman in a Striped Dress’, 1895, Edouard Vuillard, LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
‘The House of Pan-Du’, 1890,  Paul Gauguin, LACMA, Photo Romi Cortier
LACMA, Romi Cortier
‘Young Girl’ , 1908, Max Pechstein  & ‘Modjesko, Soprano Singer’, 1908, Kees van Dongen, LACMA, Romi Cortier

I recently returned to LACMA for my second viewing of the  Expressionism Show, From Van Gogh to Kandinsky in Germany and France and I loved it even more the second time.

There are many scholarly reviews online about this exhibit, however, this isn’t one of them. That said, I simply can’t say enough good things about this show. It made me feel something, and I found myself standing in front of several paintings, drinking them in, luxuriating in their use of color and their bold brush strokes. I’ve traveled the world and seen many great shows, and many great paintings. Therefore, I yield to my eyes better judgement, and trust my instincts. Great art is great art, and when you see it you know. If a curator or scholar tells me it’s brilliant and I don’t get it, then so be it. The bottom line I ask myself is, would I want to live with it? And with this exhibit, I offer a resounding yes!! Please Please Please give me that Kandinsky in the black frame!! (Fourth image down) Some scholars are saying this show isn’t meant to be a blockbuster exhibit, but rather a bridge from Post Impressionism into Expressionism, spanning the periods from 1900 – 1914.  All I know, is that this show resonates with me in a very profound way and is  one of my favorite exhibits I’ve seen at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art during the last decade. My other other fave was the block buster  2006 Magritte exhibit: Magritte and Contemporary Art: The Treachery of Images, which included carpets of clouds on the floor, and wall paper on the ceiling of Los Angeles Freeways.  Both of these shows have created total environments, which totally appeals to the interior designer in me.  

One of the elements that I LOVED was the use of black walls with navy blue insets, that made the paintings jump off the wall. And I also loved how intimate works on paper were juxtaposed next to oil paintings from different periods. It’s the same way a sophisticated home owner would create groupings in their home if they had this caliber of work. While I know there’s an intellectual order to the way this show was hung, I simply have to say that this layout makes the entire exhibit warmer and easier to absorb. This show is also much more varied than the title suggests. I was surprised to learn that there are more than 40 artists in this exhibit, and works from different periods, such a Post-Impressionism, Fauvism, and Cubism.  In total there are 90 paintings, and 45 works on paper.

Don’t be intimidated if you don’t know a thing about art. You don’t need to, all you simply need to do is show up, and start educating your eye. I guarantee you’ll find something that excites you here, which in return, may teach you a little something about yourself.

LACMA: Expressionism: From Van Gogh to Kandinsky – Germany and France. Closes September 14, 2014

John Tessier aka Jack McCullough: Photographer, Roommate, Killer? Part 2

Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair, Make Up & Concept by Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair, Make Up & Concept by Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair & Make Up by Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair & Make Up  Romi Cortier (Used for Washington Stylist Magazine Cover)
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair, Make Up & Concept by Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair, Make Up & Concept by Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair & Make Up by Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair & Make Up  Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair & Make Up Romi Cortier
Model Ana, Photo John Tessier, Hair & Make Up Romi Cortier

This is part 2 of my previous post about my former roommate photographer John Tessier, aka Jack McCullough, who’s been convicted for the murder of Maria Ridulph.

Ana, the model above, was John’s Muse. She was a ballerina with a remarkably thin strong body. She was a tad short for the modeling world at 5’6″, but pursued it along with her acting career. Her dance background gave her an elegance and poise that made her remarkable in front of the camera. She knew where her body was, and how to give John the curves and movement he needed to create  his compositions. The three of us created images off and on for nearly a decade. Images that I’ve always been very proud of… until now. Now I see things with a different perspective, a perspective that clearly disturbs me.

When I first met Ana, her hair color was light brown with golden highlights.  However, John felt she would look better with darker hair, and to this day, that’s how she wears it. When I’d found the images online of John’s victim, Maria Ridulph, I gasped. Even at age 7 she bore a striking resemblance to Ana, with her porcelain skin and dark eyes and hair. I now see Ana as the grown up version of Maria.

Maria Ridulph
Maria Ridulph

Is this why John was obsessed with photographing Ana over and over again through out the years? Was it truly art we were making, or was it something much deeper and darker. Once I became aware of Maria’s story, and that John had been convicted for her murder, I contacted Ana via facebook and brought it to her attention. Unfortunately, we’ve never actually talked about it, and it makes me wonder if there was a dark side to their relationship that I know nothing about. For Ana’s sake, I hope not. It’s hard to know where I stand in the bigger narrative of John’s life. Did I unknowingly participate in his obsession?

As artistic director of Lewis Fox Salon, I brought many teenage girls from the salon to his studio to be photographed. The models were never left alone with John as a matter of professionalism. Everything was on the up and up, at least on my end.  I don’t ever recall any type of inappropriate behavior, but now I’m questioning everything. Even the first image above, with Ana’s hands framing her neck, takes on a whole new meaning. That was the image that John chose from the proof sheet at the very top, not me, not Ana, but John.  There were plenty of great images to print… were we unknowingly seeing into the psyche of a killer? I also recall John talking about how much he loved the saturated black against the bright white in his black and white photos. He wasn’t much good with color, but truly excelled in this medium. Maybe the starkness of black and white was how he saw the world, a world with no room for the nuances of grey.

After reading the articles online about his conviction, I contacted the detectives who were responsible for prosecuting John Tessier, aka John McCullough, and gave them my contact information. Reports indicate that they’re still looking at cases of missing women from the areas that John lived in, with hopes of tying him to their disappearances. To answer my own question in the previous post, can monsters also be artists, I simply have to remind myself of Adolf Hitler. It’s so tragic to discover that someone I held in such high esteem, could turn out to be such a flawed and horrible human being.

July 6, 2016…

I just learned that Jack McCullough, aka John Tessier, has been exonerated of all charges in the murder of Maria Ridulph in April of this year. 

 

John Tessier aka Jack McCullough: Photographer, Roommate, Killer?

 

Photo John Tessier, Model Sally, Romi Cortier Archives
Model: Sally, Photo: John Tessier, Concept,  Make Up & Hair  by Romi Cortier, Romi Cortier Archives
Model: Unknown, Photo: John Tessier, Concept & Make Up by Romi Cortier, Romi Cortier Archives
Model: Unknown, Photo: John Tessier, Concept & Make Up by Romi Cortier, Romi Cortier Archives
Model unknown, Photo John Tessier, Hair ? Make Up Romi Cortier, Romi Cortier Archives
Model: Unknown: Photo: John Tessier, Hair: ?  Make Up by Romi Cortier, Romi Cortier Archives
Model Unknown, Hair Make Up & Concept Romi Cortier, Romi Cortier Archives
Model Unknown, Hair,  Make Up & Concept by Romi Cortier, Romi Cortier Archives

Imagine my surprise last year when I google searched my former roommate photographer John Tessier, aka Jack McCullough, and discovered that he was a convicted killer. I was stunned. How could this be… was this really the same man I’d worked with for nearly a decade, and who was also my first roommate?

The initial story I’d found was a CNN news article that headlined for over a week on their web site. As I dug deeper, reading everything I could find, I discovered they’d done an entire series on him… It was one of the nations longest and most notorious unsolved cold cases, until his mother implicated him on her deathbed in the 1957 slaying of Maria Ridulph.  It was his half sister Janet who then went to the police and tried to get the case reopened, which took years. As I watched the police interview videos of John McCullough, aka John Tessier, it sparked memories that confirmed he was indeed the same man. But how do I bridge the gap from denial to acceptance, that someone I thought I knew could be both an artist and a convicted killer. Can monsters also be artists?

I first met John when I was hired as a hair dresser at Seattle’s Carolyn Hansen Fashion College in the early 1980’s.  Apparently Carolyn Hansen had been a model in her younger years, and her daughter Patti Hansen famously followed in her footsteps. The school was shoddy at best, but those 6 months completely changed my life and the trajectory of my career. John Tessier was their staff photographer and we hit it off remarkably well. I was looking for my first apartment away from home, and being roommates with John was an affordable option. I didn’t mind that he was 20 years older, he was a retired cop (little did I know he’d actually been fired for inappropriate behavior) and was an achieved mentor in my eyes. If I recall correctly, we were roommates for about a year, and our working relationship continued for nearly a decade afterwards. As Artistic Director of the Lewis Fox Salon in Bellevue Washington, I recruited John to be our photographer for advertising campaigns, and also to inspire our salon stylists creativity.

The photographs above are some of my favorite photos from those years. We fancied ourselves as Avedon and Richardson, photographer and make up artist/hairdresser, creating high art. I was a bit stunned when the police reports I’d read referred to Tessier’s brief stint as a photographer as a ‘hack’. Was he really a hack I asked myself? Those images we’d created launched my career as a celebrity hairdresser, catapulting  me ahead of the local pack of stylists with aspirations for Hollywood. I drove to my storage locker and dug out those images I’d been saving for over 20 years. I dusted them off, and began pouring over them. What makes cops authorities on photography I wondered.  They’d found his archives which included many of our artful nudes, which were always tasteful in my opinion, and chalked it up as trash.

Looking back, I’m still very proud of what we created, and I never felt the least bit unsafe around John for those hundreds of hours we spent making art. But that begs the question, do you really ever know someone? Maria Ridulph’s death certainly wasn’t accidental. And from what I gathered during my hours of reading about Tessier/McCullough, was that the FBI might still be investigating him for other unsolved murders in Washington State.

To be continued…..

 

 

Auction Houses, LA’s best kept secret for buying Art!

Peter Max, Lot 161,  Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Peter Max, Lot 161, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Alfred Defossez, Lot 59, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction
Alfred Defossez, Lot 59, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction
Fernand Leger, Lot 141, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Fernand Leger, Lot 141, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Alexander Chistov, Lot 42 A, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Alexander Chistov, Lot 42 A, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Sam Francis, Lot 86, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Sam Francis, Lot 86, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Pablo Picasso, Lot 182, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Pablo Picasso, Lot 182, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Norman Lundin, Lot 146, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service
Norman Lundin, Lot 146, Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service

Los Angeles’s best kept secret for buying Art… Auction houses! I know this goes against everything I should be about, which is selling my own art, but hey – I can’t be all things to all people. With the amount of affordable art that’s available, there’s no excuse for having crappy Made in China ‘art’ hanging on your walls, even if you’re only renting an apartment (which is most of us here in LA). For as little as $100, you can end up buying  a beautiful lithograph  or oil painting already  framed. Most art needs a frame, and if it’s included in your purchase price, you’re ahead of the game. I know it’s possible, because I’ve done it more than once.

I’m sharing one of my favorite auction houses with you, truly one of LA’s best kept secrets. A client of mine who’s a top notch art appraiser here in town told me about this place over a decade ago. His famous line, ‘you can often buy art there for .10 cents on the dollar‘ which is so true. A few years ago I bought a painting there with a retail value of $18,000 for about $2,000. I did my research ahead of time to see if what I saw hanging on the wall was as great as I thought it was, then set up a phone bidding appointment with the auction house because I was going to be out of town during the actual auction. They called me 2 lots ahead of time, I waited for my lot number to come up… and placed the opening bid. Fortunately for me, no one bid against me. I screamed with joy and jumped up and down because the painting was now mine!

If you’ve never been to an art auction, then let me share with you the process. This particular auction house works as follows: There will be an estimated value, lets say it’s $500-$1000. The bidding will start at half of the estimate, in this case it would be $250. It will go up in small increments, determined by the house. You might be bidding with others in the room, on the phone, or online. If no one bids against you, then the piece is yours, provided the reserve that the seller might have pre-set, has been met. Once the hammer is dropped, the winning bid will have a 20% buyers premium added, plus applicable sales tax. Therefore, when you’re bidding in the heat of the moment, keep that in mind. The best way to keep yourself from loosing control is to set a mental limit on the piece you’re intending to bid on, knowing  that it will be roughly 25% higher if you have the winning bid. This will come in handy if you’re bidding on multiple pieces.

And what’s the name of this auction house…. you’ll have to email me to find out. Kidding! Clark Cierlak Fine Arts Estate Auction Service. All of the images I’ve loaded above, which are some of my favorites for this event,  are from the up coming auction on Saturday July 26th at noon.  A word to the wise,  if you’re serious about buying art this way, then go to the preview or the actual auction. Never buy it sight unseen, digital photos can be deceptive and pick up more detail than your eye might see in person. By the way, if you do make it to this auction, tell Ellen Romi sent you!

Peter Max, Lot 161, With Out Borders, 1991, color lithograph, signed in white pencil, from the numbered edition 300, image 40 x 32″, full margins, artist’s blindstamp lower left, framed.  $500/1000

Alfred Defossez, Lot 59, Various, five color lithographs (only one shown here) each signed in pencil, from the numbered edition 200, 150 and an artist’s proof, sheets from 22 x 17 1/2 to 15 x 18″, Together with two color exhibition posters, for a total of 7 items.  $300/500

Fernand Leger, Lot 141, Untitled Figures on Yellow Background, color lithograph, signed in ink (faded), image 16 1/4 x 13″, full margins, framed.  $1000/2000

Alexander Chistov, Lot 42 A, Still Lifes, two oil paintings on panel (only one shown here) one signed lower right, one initialed upper right, both 8 x 10″, both framed.  $500/800

Sam Francis, Lot 86, Untitled, (SFS.132: S.3) color screenprint, signed in pencil, from the numbered edition 100, sheet 30 x 22 1/4, published and printed by Gemini G.E.L, with their blindstamp lower right.  $2000/3000

Pablo Picasso, Lot 182, Jeune Homme Au Masque Taureau, faune Et Profile De Femme (B.279), 1936, etching, stamp signed, from the numbered edition 50, published in 1961,  plate 8 1/2 x 12″. $3000/4000

Norman Lundin, Lot 146, Study of Jar, 1989, gouache and water-soluable crayon on paper, signed lower right, 9 x 15 1/2″, framed. $300/600

 

“Transitions: Works by Francoise Gilot”

Francoise Gilot 'Applause' Oil on Canvas
Francoise Gilot ‘Applause’ Oil on Canvas, Photo Romi Cortier
Francoise Gilot, Oil on Canvas, Photo Romi Cortier
Francoise Gilot, Oil on Canvas, Photo Romi Cortier

 

Francoise Gilot, 'Sea Goddess', Oil on Canvas, Photo Romi Cortier
Francoise Gilot, ‘Sea Goddess’, Oil on Canvas, Photo Romi Cortier

“Transitions: Works by Francoise Gilot” was a remarkable exhibit that I had the pleasure of seeing at the Oceanside Museum in the summer of 2011. It was curated by Mel Yoakum Ph. D, author of ‘Monograph 1940 – 2000′ Francoise Gilot: Painting – Malerei and Stone Echoes: Original Prints by Francoise Gilot – A Catalogue Raisonne. 

Mel’s knowledge of Gilot’s work is extensive, especially with their 20 plus years of collaboration which began in 1987.  His lecture was rich in detail, and was one of those moments in story telling that you never wanted to end.  The exhibit began with her Labyrinth Series and included important works into the 21st Century. Had I of known I’d be writing this blog post, I would have taken greater care to to get clearer images with the proper dates and titles. The images above were my favorites, and I snapped the photos for my own personal reference. However, they do not begin to capture the remarkable depth of this exhibit.

Due to its resounding success, the ‘Transitions‘ exhibit was taken to the Berman Museum of Art at Ursinus College in the summer of 2012.  To learn more about Gilot’s work, go to francoisegilot.com.