DDR Projects, an innovative gallery located on Broadway, just East of Redondo, is having an opening reception tonight for it’s new show, The Future is Tandem, which features the work of Dixon, an alter-ego of the internationally renowned artist Juan Carlos Noria. 

Here’s a brief bio:

A confluence of cultures and contradictions, Juan Carlos Noria is a  painter for our times. Born in Caracas, Venezuela he carries his Latin  American sensibility on his sleeve. As a teen growing up in Ottawa,  Canada, he became an  accomplished figure skater. Grace and lines were  an obsession. So, too were his ideas of subversion. He fell out of  skating after hitting the rigid class structure of the sport, finding  comfort (and discomfort) in visual art, on the streets with a paint  can, postering, skateboarding, fleeing police. A strange opportunity  then came. A world tour with Disney on Ice. It heightened his sense of  absurdity, humour and anger, sharpened his visual and social  awareness. Arriving back in Ottawa, he hung up the skates and his  career took flight with live painting performances. So proficient from  his days of graffiti, he quickly earned a reputation for highly resolved canvases produced in front of appreciative crowds. Through these events in various venues, Juan Carlos also ensured a showcase  for other young Ottawa artists, raising the bar and pushing them to  achieve with him. It was 2001-2002.

Meanwhile, the tide of CNNesque culture rose in North America. Juan, always with an eye on pop culture and current events, found himself  painting with increasing anger. He needed to change the channel. In  November 2004, he moved to Barcelona, Spain to find tranquilo, a new  view of the world and new audiences. Since his move, he has evolved,  focused and become more prolific, with exhibits in Spain, the United States and Canada.

True to subversive nature, he undercuts his own personality allowing  himself to explore two other personas and visual styles. He sometimes  works under the pseudonyms of royal or dixon. He has been infuenced by his  contemporaries Mark Marsters, Pat Thompson and Dave Cooper. Yet, he is  himself-singular Juan. He is without pretense, full of concern for  others, quick to laugh and quicker to paint something ripe.

The exhibition runs through January 31st.  Visit DDRProjects.com for complete details.