Donald Fodness’s Duets is Double the Fun at David B. Smith Gallery | Westword
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Donald Fodness’s Duets Is Double the Fun at David B. Smith Gallery

Donald Fodness has been seeing double in the studio, from the looks of Duets, a series of drawings and bronze sculptures comprising his inaugural solo exhibition at David B. Smith Gallery in LoDo.
Denver artist Donald Fodness brings a new body of work to David B. Smith Gallery.
Denver artist Donald Fodness brings a new body of work to David B. Smith Gallery. Mark Sink
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Donald Fodness has been seeing double in the studio, from the looks of Duets, a series of drawings and bronze sculptures that make up his inaugural solo exhibition at David B. Smith Gallery in LoDo. As art fans who know and love his funny and grotesque imagery would expect, the new body of works blend everyday objects and Fodness’s trademark comic doodle-drawings to new heights of weirdness. But in this case, their impact will hit you, two by two.
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Donald Fodness, "Mr. and Mrs. Manyheads," 2017.
Courtesy of Donald Fodness
Case in point: Fodness, who’s been casting in bronze since working in a foundry after high school, returns to the medium for a work titled “Mr. and Mrs. Manyheads” that consists of two columns of stacked mugs.

“I used kitschy figurative cups that have body parts, like feet and boobs and heads, dipped them in wax and cast them in bronze,” he explains. “The cups stayed in the interior of the wax core. They are still there, entombed inside the bronze.” In spite of their assigned designations, the stacks are essentially non-gendered, giving thought to gender dualities.
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Donald Fodness, "This is," mixed media on record album cover, 2016.
David B. Smith Gallery
The drawings begin with found source materials, such as album covers, magazine pages and VHS cases, overlaid with drawings, often in sets of two — two record albums, two figures on a poster, and so on. And intrinsic to each is the dichotomy of Fodness’s experience of his own imagination and laborious process in contrast to the viewer’s experience in the gallery. “Like the Internet, and a good soap opera, my art provides the viewer with a multiplicity of accessible inlets and sub-narrative paths to weave a tangled cosmos,” notes the artist in a statement.
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Courtesy of Donald Fodness
Duets opens with a reception from 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday, January 20, and runs through February 18 in the David B. Smith Gallery Project Room, in tandem with a two-person exhibit by Chris Oatey and Dylan Gebbia-Richards in the main gallery. Visit David B. Smith Gallery online for additional information.
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Courtesy of Donald Fodness

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