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Oct 2 2023
Surface
Design Dispatch
Mel Odom’s art of decadent dramatics, Tiwa Select brings the heat, and an American-themed buffet in Iraq.
FIRST THIS
“The future should be going back to the basics.”
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Mel Odom’s Art of Decadent Dramatics

In the late ‘70s and on through the ‘80s, Mel Odom developed commercial illustration work that penetrated the fine art corpus. The alchemical precision of his technique, which involved developing some seven iterations of graphite and dyes within a single work, resulted in portraits of lovers and other creatures that stand as documents of disappeared communities while summoning queer worlds of imagination.

Since moving to New York in the 1970s, Odom has lived a few lives. In 1995, he transformed the doll market into a site of postmodern experimentation with his blockbuster creation, Gene Marshall, but that’s a whole other story. This fall, “Blind Tongue,” a new exhibition at David Lewis, firmly establishes Odom’s place in the pantheon of those—Tom of Finland, James Bidgood, Kenneth Anger, Patrick Nagel, Cindy Sherman—whose genius harnessed languages of visual persuasion yet swelled beyond the bounds of commercial prompts.

“His work hits on the high point of gay liberation and the magic of after hours, with touches of surrealism,” says curator Michael Bullock. “It’s important for him for his drawing to be able to do what can’t be done in reality. I look at his work and it opens the door to imagine a whole world.” Below, in a conversation edited for clarity, Odom talks about childhood drawings of nightclubs, the real faces of porn, and drawing to survive.


When did you begin drawing?

I lived in a town of 4,000 in North Carolina. My dad had a peanut and tobacco farm. I began drawing around age three. My mother saved them all—she was my first curator. I remember her going, “What is this drawing?” I said, “It’s a woman making her nightclub debut.” There was a long pause—how does my five year old know about nightclubs? I saw it in an old movie. I asked for drawing lessons, and my parents encouraged me once they knew this was the only way I’d be happy.

When did you move to New York?

October 15, 1975. I came for the weekend to stay with friends. I looked up the agent of my college advisor and showed her my illustrations in the Village. Two weeks later, I got a call from her saying, “A new women’s magazine called Viva wants you to draw a sexual fantasy for them.” So I packed up and moved. I would draw on a board in my bed. Blue Boy saw my work in Viva. They were a gay magazine with a genius art director, Alex Sanchez, who’d let you do anything as long as it was beautiful. Then Playboy saw my work and hired me. Time saw my first Playboy drawing and hired me to do covers.

For them, you made portraits of despicable characters like Ayatollah Khomeini and Ronald Reagan. You were also making portraits of friends and lovers, some of which are in this show.

Hard Stuff (1985) is a portrait of a boyfriend of mine who became a heroin addict. It was very difficult and traumatic. I did the drawing after we broke up. He was attractive and charming and the other good things that get washed away with heroin. I worked on it for two months and then didn’t look at it for 20 years, then found it in a cabinet. I thought, “Oh, God. Okay. Thank you, Joe.” I put tattoos of roses on his body because tattoos require needles, and the roses were a beautiful way of expressing his not-beautiful addiction.


Do you generally use people you know in your work?

A lot of them are. I made up a lot of the people. I’d also buy porn because it has the best faces. I’ve drawn every boyfriend I’ve had since I lived in New York. Three in a row died of AIDS. Those drawings became documents. I thought I’d be dead soon, and I wanted something I’d be proud to leave behind. My work is tedious; I was drawing 12 hours a day. I had a sense of responsibility that I wanted it to be beautiful, and that required me to sit there and just do it.

Your illustration work slowed as you focused on the Gene Marshall doll and oil painting. Things are picking up again—you have this show, and your work illustrates a book of poetry by Jorge Socarras, The Archeology of Eros. How did the book happen?

I met Jorge the same time I met Joe. He was the sanest of Joe’s friends. He asked if he ever did a book of poetry, would I do drawings for it? We forgot about it, but Jorge lived in New York for a while and we’d bump into each other. We were glad to see each other still well and breathing. I have a unique bond with him because out of our friends back then, we’re two of the survivors.

He got in touch about this book. He’d mention things in the poems and I’d think of my drawings. I uncovered envelopes of preliminary sketches for various assignments, or I’d intended them to be sketches but I’d make them much more elaborate. They were beautiful in ways I hadn’t been able to recognize. I’m glad I was able to see through something I offered to do back in the ‘80s.

Mel Odom: Blind Tongue” is on view at David Lewis (111 Reade Street, New York) until Oct. 11.

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What Else Is Happening?

Check-Circle_2x Conservation groups call for India’s Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Stadium to be saved.
Check-Circle_2x Swiss artist Daria Blum wins the first-ever Claridge’s Royal Academy Schools Art Prize.
Check-Circle_2x Zaha Hadid Architects wins the competition for a new cultural district in Sanya, China.
Check-Circle_2xJony Ive is talking to Sam Altman about building the “iPhone of artificial intelligence.”
Check-Circle_2x A German museum employee sold archival paintings and replaced them with forgeries.


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HOTEL

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A Calm Refuge Embedded in One of D.C.’s Liveliest Locales

The former Central Armature Works, a century-old electrical manufacturing hub, powers back up as The Morrow Hotel, one of the latest entries in Hilton’s Curio Collection of elevated stays. Pristine exteriors by Shalom Baranes Associates announce the arrival in the heart of the city’s tree-lined NoMa neighborhood, near Union Market and H Street.

INC Architecture & Design realized the soaring lobby in relaxing tones—the cool blues of a wraparound sofa, earth-toned leather armchairs, travertine floors—set to ambient music that transitions with harmonic lighting and flashes of sunlight throughout the day. There, patrons can indulge in house-made kombucha and fresh juices from the lobby beverage cart while writing emails or taking meetings in the morning. (Champagne and cocktails are served at night.) Rottet Studio, meanwhile, transformed functional spaces including an outdoor veranda and vast, configurable ballroom into events in their own right.

DESIGN

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In New York, Tiwa Select Brings the Heat

After establishing itself as a mainstay of the Los Angeles design scene, Alex Tieghi-Walker’s Tiwa Select gallery recently—and at long last—has opened a permanent location in New York City. Fittingly for its new home in a 1915 electrical parts factory in TriBeCa, its first show brings some serious voltage.

Glass artist Dana Arbib shows Vetro Orta, a new collection of lighting and vessels that pay tribute to gourds, cabbages, and other vegetal lifeforms in bold tones of Murano glass. The 17 objects show off Arbib’s ongoing work with Venetian glass artisans, sparked by a discovery that her Libyan uncle owned a furnace there—coincidentally, around the same time the Manhattan electrical parts factory was in action. To further ground Arbib’s work, Tieghi-Walker has partnered with Long Island City’s Somerset House, planting some 200 years of design classics (pieces by Alvar Aalto, Tucker Robbins, even a Biedermeier daybed) around the fifth-floor gallery’s electric 2,200 square feet.

MOVERS & SHAKERS


Our weekly scoop on industry players moving onwards and upwards.

This week’s biggest gallery news comes from Friedman Benda, the prominent stronghold of American design founded by Marc Benda and Jennifer Olshin that maintains locations in both New York and Los Angeles. They plan to open their first international gallery in Paris early next year—a follow-up to their participation in the inaugural edition of Design Miami/ Paris that kicks off in mid-October. The new location will be inaugurated with a “cycle of curated group shows” of designers on their roster, many based in Europe.

Creative Capital recently announced the election of new Directors of the Board: Raven Chacon, Kristina Wong, Grace Oh, and Corey Robinson, in addition to Sekka Scher as a new National Advisory Council member. Art21 also announced new appointments to their Board of Trustees: Abigail DeVille, Erica Samuels, Jasmine Tsou, Christine Turner, Nicole Deller, Mark Dorfman, Bill Gautreaux, and Diana Wierbicki. James Cohan was recently named board chairman, succeeding David Howe, who was named chair emeritus.

Over in the design world, Flos recently appointed Barbara Corti as chief creative officer after serving as the brand’s chief marketing officer for six years. In this role, she’ll set the creative strategy for developing product lines and content creation. BuzziSpace, meanwhile, has appointed Tommaso Baldini as CEO and managing director. He succeeds Steve Symons, who’ll now act as president of the Belgian acoustic brand’s supervisory board. Reddymade, the architecture studio helmed by Suchi Reddy, shared that Kaija Wuollet has joined as principal. She previously served as director of city building at WXY Architecture and Urban Design and led Detroit-based practice Laavu for a decade.

ENDORSEMENT

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Le Labo: Lavande 31 Eau de Parfum

The cult-favorite fragrance house knows a thing or two about subverting expectations. Its scents largely offer unexpected twists on common and often polarizing olfactory notes like rose, vanilla, or patchouli. With Lavande 31, Le Labo avoids the stuff of laundry aisle migraines and instead explores the bright, vegetal notes of lavender buds with a fresh infusion of bergamot and neroli. Base notes of amber, musk, and tonka anchor the formulation with mysterious complexity. $99 for 15 mL

THE LIST

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Member Spotlight:
F05 Studio

The detail-driven minds behind F05 Studio seek to instill architecture with meaning, achieving harmony and functionality in the built environment. An ever-evolving practice, F05 works in the pursuit of creating timeless spaces that emphasize seamless interactions between people and their surroundings.

Surface Says: As a full-service interior and architecture studio, F05 approaches spaces with a nimble and fresh point of view, with the versatility of experience and perspective necessary to execute anything from modern minimalism to Brutalist-inflected futurism.

AND FINALLY

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Today’s Attractive Distractions

This American-themed buffet in Iraq serves up sushi, steak, and globalization.

Mehran’s Steak House was created as a joke between friends until last week.

Silicon Valley’s biggest AI developers are hiring poets and humanities experts.

Here’s how fungi can break down junk and waste and transform toxins into life.

               


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