2022 SOLO EXHIBITION

OCHI PROJECTS, LA
January 15 – March 12, 2022

The exhibition features twelve new wall works intentionally placed throughout OCHI’s two Los Angeles galleries.

Building upon the artist’s unique visual vocabulary of thread, paint, and wood, Wills’ new work evokes experiential understandings of line, color, space, and object as he aligns his practice with minimalist abstraction, the subversive history of the monochrome, California Light & Space, and other art historical paradigmatic shifts.


Singular strands of thread are delicately wrapped around wooden substrates, eventually creating surfaces that appear to vibrate and shift depending on available light, thread density, the architecture of the panel, and the motion of the viewer.


In the largest gallery, individual works use a repeating color scheme—turquoise, red, yellow, and green threads wrapped around International Klein Blue-painted panels.

One quadtych of deeply beveled panels appears to hover off the wall, supporting alternating layers of threads wrapped vertically or horizontally. While a single color plays the primary role per panel, adjacent colors appear to occupy the spaces between. Harnessing the notion of this perceived reflected color, Wills expands the composition beyond traditional dimensions.

Brian Wills @ OCHI PROJECTS, LA

The back gallery is an immersive installation in International Klein Blue.

Co-invented by French artist Yves Klein in 1960, IKB uses a matte, synthetic resin binder that allows the suspended ultramarine pigment to maintain its aesthetic potency. A blue born of conceptualism, IKB’s super saturation was made to provoke perception.


“To sense the soul, without explanation, without words, and to depict this situation,” Klein declared, “is what led me to monochrome painting.”


In the center of each of Wills’ blue room panels is a small blue square, framed by thousands of colored threads that reflect light, create patterns with their layering, and cast shadows on their supports—as if a square could determine whether artworks have souls. “Abstract work should have a bit of a heartbeat,” says Wills, “with material, let’s say, having a voice.”

Brian Wills “Blue Room” @ OCHI PROJECTS, LA

Wills is acutely aware of how a viewers’ brain will react to his work.

The visual cortex interprets received visual data—color, motion, texture, and depth—precisely the fundamental properties that Wills engages. When exposed to pattern, the brain extrapolates as it habituates, for example when assuming that a vertical line of brown thread will repeat as it did thousands of times in a row—the works in OCHI Aux exemplify these principles. Deliberately skipped threads or a shift from warm to cool red thread are intended to reveal moments of intuition and intention, while indicating methods of construction. Expectations are constantly at play. Engaging with one’s own perception is always a gift, offering moments of joy, wonder, and self-reflection—in other words, investments in observation are rewarded handsomely.

Brian Wills @ OCHI AUX, LA

Visit OCHI Projects at 3301 W Washington Blvd in Mid-City Los Angeles, CA.

Photos courtesy of Josh White Photography, © 2022 OCHI Projects