May 4, 2018 - May 25, 2018

Lonac

Strange Tales (Main Room)

Opening Reception with the Artist(s): Friday, May 4, 2018 6:00pm - 9:00pm

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(Los Angeles, CA) – Thinkspace is pleased to present Strange Tale, the gallery’s first solo exhibition of
new works by Croatian artist and street muralist Lonac. Currently based in his hometown of Zagreb,
Croatia, Lonac has produced impressive large-scale, site-specific murals across Europe and worldwide,
combining photorealistic rendering with illustrative and two-dimensional stylistic elements. His public
murals are painstakingly detailed and primarily executed with spray paint and minimal brushwork, a
technique he has self-taught and refined through extensive fieldwork over the years. In his solo debut with
Thinkspace, Lonac will present new drawings, paintings, and sculptures, all inspired by his penchant for
surreal storytelling.

Lonac’s earliest forays into mural making and street art predate his time spent in art school at the
University of Zagreb’s Academy of Fine Arts. His first attempts were undertaken as a child on a wall in his
backyard, followed by an experimental effort on the grounds of his primary school. This is one of those
great apocryphal artist stories in which the art teacher, recognizing the ‘vandal’s’ talent, had the school
council subsidize the cost of the young renegade’s art supplies. Since those first precocious initiations
into the world of public art, Lonac has gone on to produce some of the most compelling murals in Bosnia,
Croatia, China, Great Britain, Italy, the United States, Switzerland, and elsewhere.

The artist’s Croatian pseudonym translates loosely to ‘cooking pot,’ a nickname he hated as a child but
went on to embrace while in search of a moniker as a young graffiti artist. After having spent his teen
years as a graffiti writer, he began exploring figurative subjects and styles, expanding the scope of his
aesthetic and the reach of his content. Working from a combination of influences, including a love of
comics, graffiti, music, film, and an immersion in skateboard culture, Lonac developed a signature style
that incorporates highly sophisticated representation with free association and surreal juxtapositions. His
works often contain portraits of people he knows, including himself, his father, and friends, bestowing a
level of intimacy and diaristic intimation to the imagery instead of a generalized anonymity.

Emotionally driven, Lonac’s works are often about personal disclosures and social commentary brought to
life through the playful combination of the hyperreal and surreal. A recurring figure in his compositions, the
bird, is often present as a symbol of war and peace, while other symbolic introjections appear with varied
references to wildlife and natural imagery like fish, wolves, and owls, for instance. Used to embody or
typify human behaviors, conflicts, or détentes, these poetic analogies contribute to the imaginative impact
of the works while keeping them firmly in the realm of fantasy.

This allegorical penchant for extended metaphor is never far from Lonac’s imagery, nor is the tender
observation of human foibles or their momentary redemptions. Some of his other subjects have included
children in a tender moment of prototypical flirtation, the imminence of a couple’s approaching kiss, and a
woman bathed in light while indulging in her morning ‘vices.’ Other murals have included a giant
architecturally sized squirrel scaling the side of a building, an emancipated beatle newly released from a
jar, the artist’s father at work on the construction of a ship model, and a woman’s reaction mid-result of a
‘he loves me, he loves me not’ petal-plucking ritual. Another still, depicts a pumping anatomical heart in
which the building’s ducts become arterial extrusions structurally incorporated into the piece; an animation
of this phenomenal mural went viral at the beginning of 2016.

Lonac encourages images and references to interact freely in his works in unexpected ways. This world in
which logical boundaries are temporarily suspended delivers with playful pathos to reveal a rich spectrum
of human vulnerability.