Primarily working in the medium of drawing, Koch makes meticulously structured abstract works inspired by the scientific fields of physics, cosmology, dimensional mathematics, and parapsychology.
In Koch’s newest body of work, “Versor Parallels”, the properties and relationship of rotating spheres is contemplated further. These drawings consist of six vortices within twelve circles that circumscribe an exponential matrix of triangles. This geometry of vortices, circles, and triangles form a prismatic refraction, an analog to the electromagnetic spectrum, which we perceive as visible light. Koch views these works as an allegory for the kaleidoscopic combination of the twelve Jungian archetypes within people or even the cosmological myth of our solar system having once been inhabited by twelve planets.
Koch’s ongoing Circle Set series are experiments in hemispheric discontinuity and parallel-processing. Analogous to the bifurcated hemispheres of the human brain, these dense colored pencil drawings consist of two warped sets of five rings, each encircling a blank white oculate. These blank center points focalize the viewer’s attention leaving the vibrant, often-dissonant sets of rings to be subliminally cross-processed in unison. The toroidal shape of these drawings also closely resembles how magnetic fields radiate out around a planet. The resulting experience is similar to neuroscientist Robert Monroe’s use of oscillating binaural auditory tones. These tones stimulate and harmonize brainwaves promoting an experience of altered states of consciousness.
Koch has previously exhibited in Los Angeles with Karl Hutter Fine Art, Happy Lion, Kantor Gallery, High Energy Constructs, Galerie Sabine Knust in Munich, and Miyake Fine Art in Tokyo. In September 2012, Koch exhibited in the group exhibition, XYZ: The Geometric Impulse in Abstract Art, at the Torrance Art Museum. In November 2013, Koch was highlighted as one of 7 emerging male artists to watch in Los Angeles Confidential Magazine. He currently lives and works in Los Angeles, California
Dennis Koch
Untitled (Versor Parallel), 2019
Color pencil on paper
47.25 x 47.25 in.| 56 x 56 in. framed
Dennis Koch
Untitled (Versor Parallel), 2019
Color pencil on paper
35.75 x 35.75 in. | 42 x 42 framed
Dennis Koch
Untitled (Versor Parallel), 2019
Color pencil on paper
35.75 x 35.75 in. | 42 x 42 framed
Dennis Koch
Untitled (Versor Parallel), 2019
Color pencil on paper
35.75 x 35.75 in. | 42 x 42 framed
Dennis Koch
Scrambled Channel (Spark), 2019
Color pencil on paper
80 x 51 in.
Dennis Koch
Scrambled Channel (Golden Egg), 2019
Color pencil on paper
80 x 51 in.
Dennis Koch
Life Cutouts, 2019
Hand-cut magazine, collage
13.75 x 10.5 in. each
Dennis Koch
Life Cutout No. 140 (October 17, 1969, Black Models Warhol), 2019
Hand-cut magazine, collage
13.75 x 10.5 in.
Dennis Koch
Scrambled Channel (Danny's Octopus), 2014
Color pencil on paper
80 x 51 in.
Dennis Koch
Scrambled Channel (New Organs of Cognition), 2014
Color pencil on paper
80 x 51 in.
Dennis Koch
Untitled (Hemispheric Discontinuity), 2014
Color pencil on paper
49 x 51 in.
Dennis Koch
Untitled (Hemispheric Discontinuity-3), 2014
Color pencil on paper
49 x 51 in.
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is pleased to announce that Dennis Koch's color pencil drawing Untitled (Versor Parallel) (2019) was acquired by the Neiman Marcus Art Collection in Dallas, TX. The Neiman Marcus Art Collection began in 1951 when Stanley Marcus purchases a large-scale Alexander Calder mobile and reflects the company’s broad interests in high quality, creativity artworks that span all media. With the initial purpose of enriching the environment and supporting artists who explore unusual paths of creative expression, the collection has grown to hold some 2,500 works of art.
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is pleased to announce that the Fidelity Investments Corporate Art Collection has acquired several Cutouts (2018) by artist Dennis Koch. Part of a new series in which original LIFE Magazines are carved page by page to reveal interior images, thus transformed into hand-cut magazine sculptures, these works interrupt and reconstruct common narrative strategies while compressing time and space into one image. Launched in 1980 in Boston, MA, Fidelity Investments Corporate Art Collection collects artwork that is experimental, intellectually curious, and technically precise across all media.
Dennis Koch, Bitcoin Magazine’s art gallery coordinator, described why this space is important, saying, “Meetup locations like Bitcoin Park in Nashville or Bitcoin Commons in Austin affirm that there’s no replacement for spending time with Bitcoiners in real life. The same goes for the new Bitcoin Magazine Art Gallery. We want to build a tactical meetup and exhibition space for artists. Nashville has a tangible bitcoin vibe, and BMAG is going to be a big part of this expanding scene.”
Next door, Luis De Jesus Los Angeles has two fantastic collage-centric solo shows on view until July 28th. Dennis Koch: Beyond the Funny Farm! Crypto-K, Cutouts, Cut-ups, Copies, Mirrors, Membranes, and Temporal Algorithms comprises sculptures and works on paper inspired by dizzying literary theory alongside modified LIFE magazines. The artist has incised into the publications, creating compositions that play off of the cover story and the images from advertisements within. My personal favorite is “Sex Kitten” Ann Margret, hair wild, surrounded by a chorus of televisions.It’s the show in the front room, however, that I found myself thinking about days after seeing. SOMETHING ELSE: The Collages of Nathan Gluck is a survey of the late artist’s small works on paper that spans from the 1930s to the 2000s. Gallerist Luis De Jesus was a close friend of Gluck, who himself worked as a window dresser and assistant to Andy Warhol (among many other adventures). De Jesus lovingly organized this tribute with a personal eye to the artist’s singular wit and personality, sorting through a treasure trove of material in Gluck’s estate.
A pair of exhibits at Luis De Jesus Los Angeles demonstrates two distinctly different approaches to the manipulation of paper in the service of cultural commentary. "SOMETHING ELSE: The Collages of Nathan Gluck" celebrates the centennial of the late artist's birth. Mr. Gluck is primairly recognized as Andy Warhol's early commercial art assistant. But the show at Luis De Jesus Los Angeles presents an overdue retrospective of Mr. Gluck's own versatility and skill with collage, but also the wide-ranging possibilities of art form in general. Works on displayinclude photogram, steel engraving, gouache, watercolor, rubberstamps, and marbalized paper and exhibit stylistic influences of the decade in which they were created, such as cubism, surrealism, modernism, pop, word/ text, and postmodernism.
Although many artists and non-artists alike engage with the process of collaging, a successful collage is not that easy to achieve. For the merger of unrelated images and/or texts to resonate beyond the obvious, there is much to take into consideration— point of view, message, cohesion of elements, formal arrangement, etc. Juxtaposing disparate elements from various sources does not necessarily construe art. Collage has a broad history and those who venture into collaging must take into consideration their historical precedents.
I think Dennis Koch is a total nut job. He is mad. He is crazy. Imagine Koch in his shack inventing strange drawing apparatus and mechanical coloring devices. And I am unreservedly digging his topographically psychedelic color field maps and crystallographic circular implosions at Luis de Jesus. I figured the subject matters and reference materials would be beyond me and reading the press release only confirmed my suspicion.
Who says fractals can’t be fun? Dennis Koch’s colorful canvasses first appear to be abstract, but the works are actually visual manifestations of mathematical codes and theories in Physics.Yet Koch shows that even though he works in geometrical recursion, his paintings look like inviting Froot Loops. He applies Systems Theory to his works, layering different steps to create a great, overarching superstructure.
"The Newest" brings together a couple of collages, a few photos, a painting, a drawing and a sculpture by six young artists who live in Los Angeles. It's a sampler show that abandons logic for pleasure, leaving viewers free to weave whatever connections they want (or need) among its consistently intriguing works.