Bobbi
Starr, Aiden Starr, Artist Chris Wessman to Open Starrlight
Gallery; David Aaron Clark Requiem is Gallery's First Show
Source: Press Release
LOS ANGELES —
AVN Award
winners Bobbi Starr and Aiden Starr, as well as renowned artist
Chris Wessman, share their creative passions with the opening of
the Starrlight Gallery, a venue that will showcase their art as
well as pieces from other mainstream artists.
"While people know Aiden and I from adult movies,
it doesn't give us an outlet for our other creative endeavors,"
Bobbi Starr said. "Chris is a great talent and we've both worked
with him on our projects. Since we knew the same people and
traveled in the same artistic circles, it just made sense to
come together to a place we could all display our work."
Their first exhibit marks the one year memorial
of the death of their mutual friend, multiple AVN Award winning
director David Aaron Clark. The Starrlight Gallery: Requiem
David Aaron Clark 1960-2009. Original artwork by his friends and
collaborators including Michael Manning,
Steven Johnson Leyba, John Nystrom, and Charles
Pinion will also be on display. Doors will open on Nov. 27 at 8
p.m.
Aiden Starr, one of Clark's best friends, will
present his body of work — including out of print books,
videotapes and DVDs — in an interactive station as well as an
original Buddhist/Día de los Muertos-inspired shrine in his
honor. The requiem will also be the only public showing of
Manning's work commissioned by Clark for his personal use,
including portraits of his lovers and mistresses, and for use in
his productions. Candid photos of Clark shot by Nystrom will
also be on display.
Clark's passing still weighs heavily on the minds
of his friends and fellow creatives who knew him.
"I first met him — along with his partner at the
time, Joanne — at a Valencia Street cafe shortly after he had
moved to San Francisco," Manning remembered. "I was immediately
impressed by this mountain of a man who was as intelligent and
well-read as he was tattooed and pierced. A gentleman
pornographer in the best Wildean tradition."
Nystrom wrote, "David was stubborn in a good way:
his refusal to compromise whenever he was pressured to (I know —
I was his producer on several projects) could make life
miserable for the money people, but, in the end, resulted in
something as close to Art as one can achieve in this business.
Not a day passes without thinking how empty my life would have
been without Dave, and how empty it is now that he's gone."
"David was a
great friend and one of the great talents of our industry,"
Bobbi Starr added. "Aiden, Chris and I thought the grand opening
of our gallery should be held in honor of David. He was
amazingly creative and passionate about creating adult
entertainment that not only stimulated the libido, but the
intellect as well."