Brian Belott

Adult Soda: Collages, Books, Paintings

September 8 - October 15, 2005

Clock Eyed Cat #2, 2005, Acrylic Paint on Plexiglas, 24 x 30 in (61 x 76 cm)

Clock Eyed Cats #1, 2005, Acrylic Paint on Plexiglas, 24 x 30 in (61 x 76 cm)

Clock Eyed Cat #3, 2005, Acrylic Paint on Plexiglas, 24 x 30 in (61 x 76 cm)

Damian Hirst you Suck, 2005, Mixed Media Collage and Acrylic paint, 32 x 32 in (81 x 81 cm)

Nebuli, 2005, Mixed media collage and acrylic paint, 47 x 70 in (120 x 178 cm)

Shrine, 2005, Mixed media collage and acrylic paint, 36 x 36 in (92 x 92 cm)

Lazy Dazy, 2005, Mixed media collage and acrylic paint, 36 x 46 in (92 x 117 cm)

Study in blue, 2005, Mixed media collage and acrylic paint, 22 x 39.5 in (56 x 100 cm)

Collage Grid, 2005, Mixed Media Collage, 11 x 17 in each (28 x 43 cm)12 pieces total

Peacoks of the Future, 2005, Mixed media collage and acrylic paint, 46 x 69 in (117 x 175 cm)

Feels so good, 2005, Mixed media collage and acrylic paint, 36 x 46 in (92 x 117 cm)

Small Books, 2005, Mixed Media, Dimensions Variable

Medium Books, 2005, Mixed Media, Dimensions Variable

Large Books, 2005, Mixed Media, Dimensions Variable

Found Images, 2005, DVD, 1:10:00, Edition1/5

Stux Gallery is pleased to present the work of Brian Belott. Belott’s bizarre and child-like books
and collages investigate the fluctuating state of a “self-imposed permanent psychedelic trip.”
Belott utilizes elements of ephemeral cultural detritus -- ingredients that ultimately relate to 60’s
and 70’s pop culture -- to examine materials, process, and cultural memory. Utilizing found
images and sound, children’s books, cartoons, fabric, and other “tag sale” novelties, the artist,
who cites the Marx Brothers and Woody Allen as his key influences, relies on free association
and humor in rendering work and reworking images that manage to be both whimsical and
monumental. Investigating the aesthetics of cultural decay by using “low-tech” methods of
application, Belott creates thickly and elaborately layered collages, books, paintings, and works
on paper alongside seemingly disparate groupings of found images and sound.
Belott’s sincere knowledge of his materials – he is as much a collector of cultural ephemera as he
is a creator of it -- is reinforced by his interest in humor, kitsch and self-discovery. Combining
imagery taken from the mythical language of scavenged children’s books, Belott subverts
outdated moral lessons and bible stories. These forgotten “lesson’s in morality,” at one time
intended to shape the minds of impressionable young people, are now exposed to the hand of the
artist whose whim for free association distorts for the sake of humor and experimentation.