My Friends

Arrow Up

Arrow Up
Arrow Down
,
Log in to use your Facebook account with
San Diego CityBeat

Login With Facebook Account

Recent Activity on San Diego CityBeat
  • Fri
    24
  • Sat
    25
  • Sun
    26
  • Mon
    27
  • Tue
    28
  • Wed
    29
  • Thu
    30
Sound: Experiments in Sound May 24, 2013 This two-day exploration will take listeners through the works of composers Alvin Lucier, Eliane Radque and La Monte Young, as interpreted by Charles Curtis and Jason Lane. 43 other Music events on Friday, May 24
 
Check 1, Check 2 | Music & nightlife
New club, a branch of Avalon Hollywood, will do business under the name Avalon
Arts & Culture Features
Organizer of May 17 exhibition in East Village fends off criticism
Last Blog on Earth | News
Website switches to national focus, lists string of upcoming fundraisers
News
Stricken with terminal cancer, Robin Reid languishes in county jail
Cocktail Tales
Five bars serving up season-appropriate libations

 

 
Home / Articles / Arts / Seen Local /  Marc Sandoval’s work inside Gang Kitchen
. . . .
Wednesday, Nov 07, 2012

Marc Sandoval’s work inside Gang Kitchen

Urban pop art decorates Downtown Asian eatery

By Amy T. Granite
seenlocal A rendering of Marc Sandoval’s mural inside Gang Kitchen

Seven years ago, Marc Sandoval interviewed for a bartending job at Basic in East Village, and he left feeling pretty sure that he wouldn’t get a call back. Seeing the other applicants in “club gear” gave the Carlsbad native the impression that he wouldn’t fit in, so he brushed the whole experience off until the phone rang, with a job offer on the other end.

It turns out that he couldn’t have landed at a better place. For one, when he graduated in 2008 with a degree in graphic design, job prospects were dismal, so he already had a gig. And, working at Basic allowed him to connect with other artists, many of whom are still his coworkers.

“There’s definitely a creative vibe at Basic because of the people who work there…. You know you’re not at the Marriott lounge,” he says.

Restaurateur Jon Mangini supports the local art community in more ways than just hiring its quirky characters. Every Tuesday night, there’s an art party at Basic produced by Thumbprint Gallery, and once a month, Sandoval coordinates a group show with his fellow employees.

Later this month, when Mangini opens Gang Kitchen, an Asian-themed eatery in Downtown, two large-scale paintings by Sandoval will adorn the walls in the tri-level, polished industrial space that architect Graham Downes is finishing up.

For one of the pieces, Sandoval will paint the eyes of the Buddha on some doors that Mangini salvaged from a building demolition behind Basic. They hang up high on a wall, side-by-side with a pillar in between. For the design, Sandoval is working off a photo that Mangini took in Cambodia during a summer research trip for the place that he’s always wanted to open.

Sandoval’s style blends pop and street art, and he’s most known for his 1970s Hollywood glam portraits of pouty-lipped actresses and models. These influences will come through in the 10-by-15-foot mural in the restaurant’s lounge; its background is designed to be gritty and urban, the way Mangini likes it, Sandoval says, with a high-contrast portrait of a woman wearing a rice-paddy hat in the foreground.

It’s been a busy year for Sandoval. In March, he opened Molotov Gallery in East Village, and a month later, he lost his father to liver cancer. He closed up shop to regroup and opened again in July.

“My dad never pushed art on me, but he knew I wasn’t going to be a quarterback,” Sandoval laughs. “I always had huge support from parents, which is why I followed my dream.”

Now back in the swing of things, Sandoval has had a couple shows at The Lion’s Share restaurant and is hosting monthly group and solo shows at Molotov with other emerging artists.

“For beginning artists, there’s not a whole lot of places to show in town,” he says. “I want my gallery to be a hub, where people can come and hang their art for a month, and be a part of a close network of artists at a place where things are constantly changing.”


Amy blogs at saysgranite.com and you can follow her on Twitter @saysgranite.

 
 
 
 
 
 
Close
Close
Close