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CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS - December 2009

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phile under: art

Continuing Through January

the good news

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The-seeds-roth

The Seeds (doubt). Molly Roth

Happy 2010!

The many exhibitions in Portland that I somehow don’t have time to see (and the many more I don’t have time to write about) are an ongoing source of regret for me. I console self with the thought that it’s a good thing that there are too many shows to see. It means we’ve reached some kind of critical mass, and I wouldn’t want it any other way.

Still I’m thrilled that several December shows are extended dance remix versions, some by a couple of days, some running through January.

Molly Roth is at Gallery Homeland through the end of January.

John Berry’s paintings are at Half/Dozen through the end of the month as well. And before the holidays bent my mind sideways, I’d been of a mind to write about Berry’s work as aphrodisiac inviting me to fall in love with painting again. I’ve been given a 30 day extension. Whew.

The Anniversary Portrait Show at Nationale will be up through January, a sweet group show of portraits by a number of interesting artists.

And I still have a couple more days (through Jan 4) to see Genevieve Dellinger’s 4/4 at Stumptown on SW 3rd.

Ready, steady, go.

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Tags: Art, Portland Art

phile under: art graphique

Stand Up Comedy’s “Ed Ruscha’s Bits”

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Ponik

It’s not a new project, but it’s new to me, and I like it.

“Ed Ruscha’s Bits” are 169 posters Scott Ponik typeset for Stand Up Comedy, (811 E Burnside) Diana Kim and Rachel Silberstein.

Originally made for the New York Art Book Fair in 2008, the Bits were included in a November show designer Andy Beach curated for Kiosk in New York, and I picked up a few at Portland’s recent Publication Fair. The text, according to Ponik’s website is indeed lifted from Ruscha and the phrases are set in the MARQ typeface by Karl Nawrot.

See all of “Ed Ruscha’s Bits” on the Stand Up Comedy website.

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Tags: Art, Portland Art, standup, Graphic Art

phile under:

Research Club + Publication Fair=!

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Research

Research Club at Tribute Gallery. photo: Brian Wilson

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Research Club at Tribute Gallery. photo: Brian Wilson

Sunday in Portland was a most hopeful day. So hopeful that precipitation was taken to mean future daffodil rather than hair mess as I walked here and there downtown.

“Here” was Research Club at Tribute Gallery. With the event scheduled to start at 11, I snuck in around 12:30 to find the gallery full to the brim with folks eating brunch and chatting with the formal proceedings not to begin until 1. Score. This iteration of Research Club was a mashup of salon and Pecha Kucha/Ignite/Interesting Portland lecture. (See also: the Lecture Series.) According to RC’s Nim Wunnan, Research Club sometimes means dinner, sometimes synesthetic events and/or football games. The website says, “The point of Research Club is to help inquisitive people and their ideas meet other inquisitive people and their ideas,” which is right up my alley.

Sunday’s highlight for me was finally hearing Amber Case do an abbreviated intro of her ideas on Cyborg Anthropology, as well as Kawandeep Virdee talking about Pattern Language and a love letter to Portland, and Rafael of Eggy Records talking about his cassette tape-only label and distro. Christine Taylor of Igloo Gallery talked about their new artist’s residency project in 2010, first hosting Colin Mathes, and Mike Merrill talked about his project as a publicly traded individual.

“There” was <a href=‘http://acehotel.com/portland/events/cleaners">The Cleaners at the Ace Hotel where Publication Studio (Matthew Stadler and Patricia No) hosted the Publication Fair with lots of small presses as well as purveyors of great printed matter. The place was packed, and according to No had been all day! I finally picked up a full set of poet/editor Sam Lohmann’s superb lit. ’zine Peaches & Bats, had a great talk with designer/author Mark Searcy (see his beautiful visual blog), caught up a bit with Diana Kim of Stand Up Comedy (loved the Scott Ponik-designed poster series for SUC), and thumbed through a couple of copies of Veneer. Also, renewed love of IPRC.

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Tags: Art, Galleries, Literature, Publishing

phile under: art

The Shape of Time at Oregon Jewish Museum

photography show opens new space for museum

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Shape

Today at 1 PM, the Oregon Jewish Museum (1953 NW Kearney) opens its beautiful new NW space with The Shape of Time a group photography show. The exhibition is guest-curated by Tim DuRoche. Portland-based photographers Bobby Abrahamson, Jeff Amram, William Galen, Stu Levy and Carol Isaak, David Lanthan Reamer and Sika Stanton were invited to make work in response to or inspired by photographs and objects in the Museum’s extensive archive. The works range from Sika Stanton’s elegant and moody tintypes of textiles and laces to Bill Galen’s re-shootings of photos he’d shot around Portland decades ago. Full disclosure: the exhibition was curated by my partner-in-crime, Tim DuRoche.

The goal of the exhibit is to go beyond historical comparisons of familiar locations or architecture. Rather, the work will initiate a dialogue about the specifics of Jewish history in Oregon as it ties to spatial location and public memory. Equally important, we are interested in how a photographic response to archival images might augment, shape or replace an eroded group memory, which never depended on historians in the first place. This step into a city’s and a culture’s well of history and memory helps us to uncover what Dolores Hayden has called “the power of place–the power of ordinary urban landscapes to nurture citizens’ public memory, to encompass shared time in the form of shared territory.” The intersection of private observation and collective memory captured by the photographs and our reactions to them should help us gain new perspectives on change.

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Tags: oregon jewish museum, Art, Photography, Portland Art, Museums

phile under: craft

Transference, the Making Of

behind the scenes of Ethan Rose/Andy Paiko collab

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A behind the scenes video by David Roos of the making of the Ethan Rose/Andy Paiko installation, “Transference,” at the Museum of Contemporary Craft.

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phile under: rad art

Review: Radiant Dream Face

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Radiant Dream Face, Oregon Painting Society. 2009 Augen Gallery

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Radiant Dream Face, Oregon Painting Society. 2009 Augen Gallery

It is a crime that the Oregon Painting Society show at PSU’s Augen Gallery, Radiant Dream Face, which was scheduled through January 1, ends tomorrow, Friday, December 18. Something about PSU=a campus, and they’re boarding the place up and going home for the holidays or whatever. It’s a big drag because if there were one installation you’d like to see held over this year, it might be this one; because this is a sensational installation that is optimally seen twice…once when you explore it for the first time and play the plants (you’ll see what I mean), and another time when you bring back a couple of friends to jam.

For Radiant Dream Face, Portland arts group Oregon Painting Society (Matt Carlson, Birch Cooper, Liam Drain, Barbara Kinzle, Brenna Murphy, Julia Perry, and Jason Traeger) populates the Augen Gallery with detritus of the suburban living room (or the Goodwill furniture department): vaguely faux-Colonial furniture variously disassembled (plenty of detached lathed legs) in multiple, generally low-lying arrangements interspersed with cheap houseplants (Brassia arboricola, Dracaena deremensis, Ficus benjamina). There are coat racks, chairs, screens, balustrade, tables, mostly of somewhat caramel-colored woods. On some shelves there are small-scale balsa constructions that are halfway between microstructures and wooden line drawings (by Traeger) and a number of white plaster cast faces (Cooper). Furniture and plant act as markers of aspirational interior design (albeit in the days before the late Domino), markers of the happy home…furniture the likes of which one might have seen on a t.v. game show behind Door #2.

But some of these plants are something special…this is a magnificently interactive sound environment and many of the plants are wired. Did I know that plants conduct electricity? I did not. But of course anything containing water conducts…like you, for example, lightning rod. Throughout the exhibition, there are plant instruments that can be played when you wet your hands and touch two at the same time. Meanwhile, there is a crystal table and two corn-cob wands that can be “played” by exposing the tips to light. Cooper, the instrument experimenter, has rigged the plants (and the dirt) as oscillators, the crystal table as a homemade synthesizer, while the sideboard at the end of the room bristles with switches triggering pre-recorded sounds, the result being electro-sci-fi-futuristo amid the placid suburban furnishings. That is: the soundtrack of the future imagined is to be found amidst the wreckage of the idealized yesterday.

On opening night of the exhibition, the room was darkened with various spotlights creating shadow (of the plant leaves on a white screen) and providing light source for the light-sensitive “instruments.” Visitors of all ages “played” the plants. An exhibition that can both intrigue (blinding me with science) and delight (playing plants!!) visitors of all ages who eagerly interact with its elements is doing many things right, one of which is Soc. Prac.‘s erstwhile goal of making triangulating experience that encourages visitors to interact with each other. Here, it’s done so well, which is why you must take a friend, and hopefully you’ll make a new one there.

Previously, I suggested that OPS’s work is, “more sci-fi/speculative even than its sounds and means would suggest…the utopian and even quasi-mystical plot line minus the ominous, culturally critical overtones (and with a dose of winking/joyful just good fun).” If utopian quasi-mysticism and presence of crystal sounds New Agey to you, you’d be right on track with OPS’s latest concerns. And why not revisit the high water mark of hopefulness and individual agency-meets-expansive spirituality that is the New Age?

After all, OPS is not the only arts group balancing on the fulcrum between idealized futures past and utopian/dystopian tomorrows. In Texas, see Totally Wreck; in Brooklyn, Lizzy Wetzel, and of course there’s Assume Vivid Astro Focus. In Portland, see: Weird Fiction (esp. their GIF Economy, on now), and Bethany Ides’ recent Third Side night of performance at PWNW where Emma Lipp, Corrina Repp, Erin Perry, Lindsay Kaplan, and the Glitterhearts rocked a sweet future-nostalgic ritual.

There’s something in the air.

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phile under: art

Pre/Review: Weird Fiction’s GIF Economy

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Polterzietgiest2

There is something in the air, something that is compelling artists in Portland and beyond to mine bits of futuristic past in retro-utopian explorations. Portland arts group Weird Fiction charts a nearby but divergent course exploring “the outer regions and ramifications of today’s pervasive information environments” but through the lens and often language of the early speculative fiction/horror literary genre from which it takes its name. There is no utopia envisioned in Weird Fiction projects but a disorienting future present that seems to key into prevalent cultural technological anxieties that mount in times of brisk and disruptive technological innovation (see also the era of Sputnik and the Bomb). It’s exciting work that is contemporary, expansive, and rigorous which is why it’s amusing/ironic that in its current iteration it hinges on the lowly GIF.

Weird Fiction’s current show The GIF Economy at Tractor Gallery (328 NW Broadway, #114) is deceptively simple—a classic iceberg exhibition—with a handful of monitors displaying a series of animated gifs. GIFs, you’ll recall if you ever haunted MySpace, are the family of moving illustrations that can range from hopping cartoon penguins to seizure-inducing slideshows. Weird Fiction’s GIFs, plundered from the interwebs in a year’s worth of trawling (and no doubt massaged a bit) are more complex: crude and glitchy, they are micro-films…the cinematic equivalent of a haiku written by a madman, run through a papergrinder, and reassembled with wheatpaste. On the wall of the gallery is a brilliantly mind-twisting taxonomy of GIFs Weird Fiction has developed which I’ll reproduce in toto as a paraphrase would be as good as a blindfold (the taxonomy says much about the groups retro-speculative-fiction concerns as well as their adventurous play with words and concepts):

#CINE-MOLECULE: microscopic mental vampires weaponizing space/time in a kinesthetic battle for hearts and minds.

#DERELICT THEORY OBJECTS: artifacts so murky & feedback singed that even the solipsistic world of contemporary art can’t make sense of them.

#FICTO-QUIZZICAL: non-euclidean narratives contingent on unforeseen “Z points.” fickle phenomena requiring attention to new signals in noise.

#GLITCHCRAFT: The art of the creative short circuit. Vessels for exploring new worlds. A proto-theory object with trails of attention.

#LORKURERS: cool hunting zombies sift through the foul stench of info-detritus seeking fresh brain matter for their Voodoo Economic masters.

#MAJESTIC 12: was the birth of the transistor just months after the Roswell crash an utterly cosmic conspiring?

#OBLITERATI: You can never make enough money to disappear! These data bodies are off the grid, staying anonymous while outing everyone else.

#OBLITERATARIUM: a stronghold of grey market R&D, a nexus perplexus, a theory object with a death wish.

#POLTERZEIRGEIST: A scary spirit of the times. The feeling of hovering inches off the ground, escape velocity threatening to fire you away.

#PANOPTICONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR: an interloper of and within vernacular information architectures.

#SECOND-WAVE VAMPLING: shifts from grave-robbing to mind-jacking, snatching images from the future, straight from the multitasking mind.

Weird Fiction invited viewers to contribute their own GIFs (you can do the same, there is still time, by emailing weirdfictiongifs@gmail.com) and have added them to the mix displayed on the monitors. Behind a partition is a computer on which gallery visitors can access Weird Fiction’s website. And tomorrow night, December 18, from 6-9, they’ll host a closing party with live multimedia performance and the release of texts the group has produced during the exhibition “in an effort to advance Weird Fiction mythologies,” the below-the-waterline back story (and front story) of the Weird Fiction project.

The GIF is such a brilliant choice of medium (and raw material). Recall the way the GIF’s gee-whiz factor faded quickly in the cacophony of its visual assault on highly GIFed webpages…the joy in discovering we could make an image move blanching before the question, as we faced the growing evidence with the proliferation of GIF, of whether or not we should. The GIF then, is an everyman’s online pivot point between the possible and the good. And that really is what our cumulative online experiences are now all about. We can do more than ever before, virtually; how much of that that we can do is good?

Technically, the GIF is interesting as it nears obsolescence because although it lacks the elegance of its neighbor, the Flash animation, its relatively tiny file size makes it a more efficient delivery mechanism for motion. The GIF’s fall from favor is another marker on the road to byte bloat and the neverending, requisite march toward faster, more memoried computers. And for this you will pay…and pay.

Weird Fiction is channeled by Zack Denfeld, Mack McFarland, Jeff Richardson, and Carl Diehl. McFarland calls “the more laid back scientist of the group,” Denfeld the “more crazed salesmen researcher,” Richardson “the quiet tinker[er],” while he says, “I fall under the engineer zealot category.” For the past year, Weird Fiction has produced speculative fiction blogs, multimedia performance, videos, interactive installations and book works.

I talked at length with Diehl at the exhibition’s opening and followed up with an exchange of emails to dig further into the WF practice. Diehl said, “Today, our group aims at contemporary information environments, taking a surreal approach to the network culture that is so pervasive.”

“For example,” he continued, "as one wanders freely around the internet, web histories, search histories, various bits of personal data are accumulated.  This accumulation of data becomes a shadow of an individual, and potential means of exploiting that individual’s privacy. Weird Fiction starts with a concept like this, a data shadow, and riffs off of it in speculative fiction. Collaboratively creating a constellation of meanings, wordplay, and associations from fictional/folkloric narratives, tales of supernatural possession, or paranormal abduction and mixing it freely with non-fiction notions around surveillance and identity theft, intellectual property and remix cultures. "

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phile under: all's fair

Publication Fair

for the love of printed matter

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Yes, Sir Isaac Newton, for every action there is indeed an equal and opposite reaction. As possible methods of idea transmission continue to multiply, so in the book capital of the west there is a resurgence in interest in good old-fashioned printing from broadside to book.

Publication Studio this weekend hosts a Publication Fair, Sunday 11-6 at The Cleaners at the Ace Hotel (SW Stark at 10th), to showcase the wares of local publishers of books and magazines, arts groups, shops, galleries, and arts institutions that sell or make printed matter.

These include
Octopus Books, Peaches and Bats, Ooligan Press, Stand Up Comedy, Veneer Magazine, Marriage Publishing House, Reading Frenzy, Plazm, Cooley Gallery, Fourteen30 Contemporary, PICA, Ampersand, Red76, Dill Pickle Club, IPRC, Hawthorne Books, Mark Searcy, Sarah Meadows, Pinball Publishing, Container Corps, and Publication Studio.

There will also be publication info sessions on “Material Practices, Social Practices, and Digital Practices.”

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phile under: art talk

Incoming: People’s Biennial

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PSU professor and artist/curator Harrell Fletcher, PICA visual art program director, Kristan Kennedy, and iCI executive director Kate Fowle discuss the 2010 iCI exhibition People’s Biennial at the Lumber Room in Portland. Fletcher curates the People’s Biennial with Jens Hoffmann and Kennedy will present it as part of PICA’s 2010 TBA program.

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Tags: social practice art

phile under: art talk

Action Artists on Art Focus

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The main reason to listen to Eva Lake’s interview of the artists at Rocksbox Fine Art on her Art Focus talk show on KBOO is to hear Sean Joseph Patrick Carney sing Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” in a Kermit the Frog voice.

Otherwise, I can summarize. Alicia Love McDaid did a section of her Golden Girls meets abortion clinic piece that she performed at the Alembic series at Performanceworks NW. Michael Reinsch describes self as awkward which is why he does performance and will do a piece re: sloth at Rocksbox. Matt Green reprises for radio audience his performance in which audience is applauded whilst he holds a lighter aloft. And Sarah Johnson (who on December 5 had done a version of the Ben Vautier/Alison Knowles Fluxus piece in which Knowles wraps Vautier in string as he plays cello, if memory serves…Johnson wrapped a drummer with something other than string) called someone on the phone. Eva ably wrangles.

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phile under: small press

Benefactor Mag Brunch at Tribute

small press brunch n’ sale

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Brunch

Today at Tribute Gallery (328 NW Broadway #117), The Benefactor Magazine hosts a brunch from 11-1 followed by a sale of small press titles from Future Tense Books, Make Literary Productions, Starbage Hands Press, Ooligan Press, and Foulweather Press.

Lest you think brunch (and the promised quiche) with your small press literary offerings sounds terribly civilized, know that the proceedings will be interrupted at noon by a performance by Future Death Toll (who I can imagine benefiting in future from a “press quote” that called them the “antithesis of quiche”…so you can quote me on that.)

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phile under: cinema

Deep Leap Microcinema: Sacred Geometries

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Videobag

image via deepleap.net

Tuesday night, Deep Leap Microcinema presents an evening of “visionary cinema and performance” on the theme of Sacred Geometries at the Waypost (3120 North Williams) at 7:30 PM. Artists include Sabine Gruffat, David Smith, Leslie Supnet, Clint Enns, Derek Larson, David Montgomery, Dustin Zemel, Jade Ajani, Andrew Kurtz, Kawandeep Virdee and Shawn Patrick Higgins with “ecstatic sound” by Carson McWhirter and movement by Jin Camou and Lena Sradnick. Whew! We have Adam F. Johnson, Jesse Malmed, and Raven Munsell to thank for Deep Leap’s evenings of cinema/performance as well as zine projects. Check out their website for more.

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phile under: art

Congratulations Tharp and Hutchins: Whitney Biennial!

Storm Tharp and Jessica Jackson Hutchins are tapped for Biennial

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Curators Francesco Bonami and Gary Carrion-Murayari announce artists for the 2010 Whitney Biennial (in the video below), and…Portland-based artists Storm Tharp and Jessica Jackson Hutchins make the list. The Whitney Biennial, for those who don’t know, is the massive survey of American art at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. The show runs from February 25 through May 30, 2010.

The much lauded Storm Tharp, represented by PDX Contemporary Art, has shown internationally, been in the Oregon Biennial and was a finalist for the Contemporary Northwest Art Award. His 2008 installation, “The Dresser (SFTKBDP)” in his show Arm & Arm at PDX Contemporary was a high-water mark in rigorous work of that nature in Portland, but he’s perhaps best known for his ink and gouache portraits that are as brilliantly conceived and rendered as they are often disturbing.

Jessica Jackson Hutchins, represented by Derek Eller Gallery and Small A Projects (the former Portland gallery transplanted to New York) makes work (often ceramic) of a late-funk or abject nature. She was recently was curated into BENT at Oregon College of Arts and Crafts by Jeanine Jablonski of Fourteen30 and will be included in The Shape of Things to Come: New Sculpture at The Saatchi Gallery, London in the coming year.

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phile under: art

Forth Estate at Fourteen30

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Handmade-shoes

Matt Keegan. Handmade Shoes, 2008. Archival pigment print and 3 color silkscreen on paper. 32 × 35.5 inches

Fourteen30 Contemporary (1430 SE 3rd) Friday opens an exhibition of recent print editions of New York based Forth Estate (Luther Davis and Glen Baldridge) with a reception from 6-9 PM. The exhibition will include prints by Sara Greenberger Rafferty, Will Yackulic, Eddie Martinez, Glen Baldridge, Joseph Hart, Phil Sanders, Ruby Sky Stiler and more. To preview the show, or in case of blizzard, you can check Fourteen30’s website.

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Everyone But Me On Daniel Léveillé

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As it turns out, one way to get every writer in town (but me, sadly) to write about your dance work is to promise/threaten that your dancers will get naked…or so it would seem as Daniel Léveillé Danse company’s weekend run of “Crépuscule des Oceans” (“Twilight of the Oceans”) presented by White Bird was covered (inadvertent but acknowledged pun) every which way by Portland’s dance, art, culture writers.

Barry Johnson on his Portland Arts Watch blog for the Oregonian, “The harsh movements of these bodies, clothed or not, the limited vocabulary they are allowed to express, the sheer intensity of their effort, the oppositions implied even when they seek help from each other, the silence and then that highly organized piano accompanying them — this is an austere world that Leveille’s conjured.”

Richard Speer for the Willamette Week, “To witness a human body, clothed or otherwise, subjected to these athleticisms is to study our capacity for punishment, not pleasure.”

Catherine Thomas for the Oregonian, “Léveillé’s treatment is architectural, a body-as-canvas aesthetic that reveals not only the dancers’ ribs and sinews but the devilish difficulty of execution….”

And Bob Hicks on Art Scatter, “There was a time, years ago, when nudity was so common on the stages of Portland that Mr. Scatter, in the course of scurrying from basement to loft in order to comment on productions in the pages of a certain large periodical of august sensibility, sometimes forgot to mention it. It was just the times.”

Almost like being there.

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phile under: art performance

Future Death Toll

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View Slideshow » Illustration: View Slideshow » Illustration: View Slideshow » Illustration: View Slideshow » Illustration: View Slideshow » Illustration:

And…the perfect soundtrack by which to enjoy a set of charcoal figure drawings is…industrio-futuristic throb-rock with a high vocoder-esque overlay. (I know you know what I mean.) There was either a funny juxtaposition or mild culture clash Friday night as the boys in bright orange, Future Death Toll, in their safety vests and bandanas, performed in the backroom of a SE post-light-industrial space (warehouse painted gallery white) inside a cube of plastic sheeting on which were projected lines of DOS, monitor textures, and dystopian vid clips.

Newly transplanted David Griess, Edward Sharp, and Todd Beaty are Future Death Toll whose concerns extend from sound performance with reclaimed obsolete technologies (hold the phone!), installation (site=“top drawer in bathroom chest of Pied Cow Coffeehouse”), sited performance, to text play (like). I made a little slideshow of photos from their performance but a promenade around their website will give you a better idea.

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phile under: art

Side Tangled at Half/Dozen

catching you up on the big week

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It’s been an art-filled week beginning with “Side Tangled,” Tim Mahan’s one-night-only installation at his gallery Half/Dozen. I’ve made a little slideshow in my sub-par photographic way because I know you all weren’t there, and I wanted you to see this installation of bright yellow nylon rope that began with a curtain of tangled yellow rope in the doorway, nearly empty wooden spools spilling down the stairs. Lengths of the yellow rope puddled on the floor of the main galery and ran up through holes in the rafters high overhead, they alley-ooped over the balcony railing and into the living quarters above. My photos are from early on. As the night went on, people were invited to pull on lengths of the rope like so many bell-ringers, elevating tangles to head height, drawing masses of vivid yellow lines against the white walls. Humble material made art is very of-the-moment, but something about this compelling hue in its humble Home Depot form dancing from door of public space to the very private balcony living space—drawing us in, in fact—appealed.

The next day, the installation was gone.

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phile under: art

Time Ends Now

ends tomorrow

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Meadows

It would be worth your while to stop into Nationale tomorrow to see a tiny exhibition of photos by Sarah Meadows, Time Ends Now which ends…well, now…tomorrow.

I’m terribly interested in Meadow’s project. How does one employ photography, the medium that wants so badly to represent, to do something else entirely? Sarah says, “I’m interested in the point at which a picture starts to fall apart and become inscrutable, and in making images that, though sourced from a legible photograph, are stripped of information.”

She is working toward this in photos of natural landscapes deformed by light flare or possessed of a surreal haziness. Meadows manipulates her images by zooming, cropping, slicing, so leafy trees become abstractions of texture, hue, and form. Most successfully, she shows two larger works shown in vertical or horizontal slices, a further step in loosing image from representation.

(I should apologize to Sarah for my photo of her photo above. You’ll just have to go see it in real life.)

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phile under: dance + (landscape) architecture

Dancing About (Landscape) Architecture

…and a book is born

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Today at Ziba’s new HQ (1044 NW 9th) at 2 PM, Portland dancer/choreographers Linda Austin, Linda Johnson, Tere Mathern, and Cydney Wilkes do short works with music by Ron Blessinger of Third Angle as part of a celebration of the release of a new book on legendary landscape architect Lawrence Halprin, Where the Revolution Began: Lawrence and Anna Halprin and the Reinvention of Public Space, edited by Portland Monthly’s editor-in-chief and former architecture critic for the Oregonian, Randy Gragg.

Dancing about architecture? Halprin, whose Forecourt Fountain (now called Keller Fountain) is one of downtown Portland’s treasures, was married to terrifically influential dancer/choreographer/teacher Anna Halprin. In 2008, these dancers did a tribute to both Halprins, “The City Dance of Lawrence and Anna Halprin,” a dance sequence that played out in the string of plazas Halprin designed in SW downtown Portland.

Read D.K. Row’s piece in the Oregonian about Halprin, Portland, the book, and the event.

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phile under: art

Body Parts at FalseFront

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Body Parts
Flight64 printmaking studio
False Front Studio (4518 NE 32nd Ave)
Opening Saturday, December 5 from 6-10 PM

Print show curated by Flight 64‘s Misha Cappechi, with work by Ana Hurtado-Gonzalez, Andrew Lorish, Anne Cote, Erin Dollar, Garrett Price, Heather McLaughlin, Jemila Hart , Michelle McKay, Misha Capecchi, Sean O’Connor and Walker Cahill.

I’d mistakenly noted this as opening last night. Apologies. Wondered why I saw Jason at Worksound last night.

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phile under: art

Beyond Place: Recent Photography Acquisitions

opens tomorrow at Portland Art Museum

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Beyond

Adam Bartos, KOSMOS: assembly hall 1995-1999. detail. Chromagenic print. The Blue Sky Gallery Collection: Gift of Jim and Susan Winkler. image via: portlandartmuseum.org

Opening tomorrow at the Portland Art Museum, the exhibition Beyond Place: Recent Photography Acquisitions is 50 photographic works by international artists exploring place including Adam Bartos, Susan Dobson, Beth Dow, Pedro Lobo, David Maisel, Saul Robbins, and Donald Weber.

On a way-to-go-major-arts-institution! note, according to what PAM curator of modern and contemporary art, Bruce Guenther says on the Portland Art Museum website about this show, it’s the result of the Museum making purchases with the support of patrons Jim and Susan Winkler (those you have to thank for the development of the DeSoto Building where Froelick and Augen galleries, Museum of Contemporary Craft, Blue Sky and Nine galleries live) from non-profit Blue Sky Gallery’s exhibitions, chronicling the path of this significant, but far smaller non-profit gallery while building the Museum’s contemporary photography collection. Sweet.

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’Twas a Dark and Story Night…

The art of the true tale, on stage, all over town.

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I am delighted by the storytelling evenings that have sprung up on stages around town. It is the perfect evening of performance to treat yourself to in the dead of winter.

Why?

1) your fancy pants are not required.

2) the stories are surprising
-some are funny*
-some are heartbreaking*

*_many are both_

3) its like cozying up with the most interesting person at the cocktail party—and you don’t have to tear yourself away to mingle with the dullards.

I don’t know if you all listen to NPR with quite the OCD fervor that I do—storytelling abounds: This American Life, et al—have you also heard that the popular storytelling show The Moth is coming to Portland in January?

Tickets went on sale Dec. 1 and the Jan 18 performance is already sold out.

Luckily for us (me) there are local storytellers on stages all over town about in the new year. I got to see some of them onstage at the Baghdad this week in an evening of holiday themed stories called Word to the Wise(men).

Keep an eye out for the following—don’t worry, we’ll remind you as they get closer.

January 21: True Stories at Mississippi Studios
February 12: Mortified at the Mission Theater
March 24: Back Fence PDX at the Mission Theater

PS: Was anyone at the show on Wednesday night? Adam Shearer, from the band Weinland, was the host. He asked the audience to text him their “Dirty little Christmas Wishes” and then read them throughout the evening. Hilarious, and sort of inspired, if you ask me. I’m wondering if Shearer is paying for it though, how many awkward texts has he had to delete this week, after giving out his number onstage at the Baghdad?

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Tags: Theater

phile under: art

First Friday December

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Tychobrahe

First Friday and Eastside Portland represents with a group show or two, a big solo, and a space that’s new to me.

Future Death Toll
Bamboo Grove Salon (134 SE Taylor)
7:30 PM performance

I’m not sure how a performance by Future Death Toll dovetails with the art on display at this SE space I’ve yet to visit…I actually see a Grand Canyon gap between the two, but a recent performance by FDT at FalseFront included “1)downward projectionz 3x 2)2x rotary phonez: chest harness equalizer & table top distortion 3)blaze orange korg 4)bazz pointed upwards 5)rubberized leg drum stickz,” (what’s with the z’s?), and I want to check this out. They go on at 7:30 PM.

In-vicinity

InVicinity
Worksound (820 SE Alder)
Opening 7-10 PM

How many curators does it take to screw in a lightbulb? Or curate a group show? Ask the four—Ryan Pierce, Jeff Jahn, Amy Harwood, Josh Pavlacky—who’ve curated this group show featuring work by Tia Factor, Nicole Mark, Everett Beidler, Sandy Roumagoux, Enemies Of The Proposed Palomar Pipeline, Jill Campoli, Julia Calabrese, Zack Davis, Claire Staples, Josh Pavlacky. It’s an interesting lineup and I’m looking forward to seeing how these artists deal with place.

Molly-roth

A Story About Some People Changing
Molly Roth
Gallery HOMELAND (2505 SE 11th Ave)
Opening from 6-9 PM

Roth’s recent bowed installation on Nationale’s ceiling was enchanting if . I’m curious to see what she does with Gallery HOMELAND’s expansive space. HOMELAND coyly says that, “A Story About Some People Changing is based on a story about some people changing.” Roth says on her blog, “I am interested in revealing the transparency of language and indulging in emotional fantasies, as well as addressing the post-modern depressed subject as a new cultural paradigm.”

NOTE: I’d mistakenly included FalseFront’s opening in this Friday melange…I was wrong…it’s tonight.

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phile under: performance

The Third Side

contemporary performance meets 70s pop tunes

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Thirdside

If you’ve ever wondered what to call the place between recalling and foretelling, imagined yourself and your cohorts starring in a “flashback” episode from the sitcom of your lives, or repeatedly pressed “play” in order to prolong an instance of becoming, you’ve been dialing The Third Side. The phone is ringing again. It’s for you. —Bethany Ides

I can’t believe I’m using the words “radical nostalgia” twice in as many days…clearly the words that artist/poet Bethany Ides wrote some time ago in reference to the evening of performance she’s producing, “The Third Side,” embedded themselves in my brain. I am very much looking forward to this evening of “studies in radical nostalgia,” dance, music, and performance with a nod to 70’s pop tunes at Performance Works Northwest (4625 SE 67th Ave) tonight and tomorrow night at 8 PM anchored by a solo by NYC choreographer Rebecca Davis, “I’ll Crane for You,” developed through her participation in renowned choreographer Deborah Hay’s 2008 Solo Commissioning Project.

THE THIRD SIDE of the tape occurs when the magnetic ribbon is twisted from exhaustion and outstrips its memory.

Ides has also invited NY interdisciplinary artist and independent researcher Sreshta Rit Premnath to perform. Premnath’s score “has instigated a group of local performers in dynamically rehashing a playlist of sappy 70’s folk songs. The songs once filled the halls of Premnath’s now-demolished art school as if a prelude to its demise. Culled from its ruins, these reinterpreted melodies configure a new site – half memorial, half razed ground.”

Portland-based dancers, performers, poets include Ben Asriel (movement), Jaime Lee Christiana (voice), Emma Lipp (dissimulation), Alicia McDaid of Rush’N’Disco & Rad Wave Goodbye (memorization), Kaya Oneida (constellation, unearthed), and members of Snails accompanied by the experimental poetic mechanizations of Maryrose Larkin.

“The Third Side,” tonight and tomorrow night, December 4 and 5 at 8 PM, is part of the PWNW’s Alembic Performance Series. Tickets are $10-15.

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phile under: art party

’Fit to Be: Unwrapped

post First Thurs fun

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Unwrapped

Tonight at Aura (1022 W Burnside) at 7 PM, the Portland Institute for Contemporary Art gets Unwrapped with their annual holiday benefit party and silent auction for contemporary arts/performance programming. Tickets are $50 or head over late, after 10 PM tickets are $5.

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phile under: art

First Thursday December

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4

4/4. Genevieve Dellinger.

What am I doing this First Thursday, you ask? After Oregon Painting Society at Autzen, I’ll head north and mostly, it looks like, take a spin around Everett Lofts (which hasn’t always been my M.O). Most receptions begin at 6 PM and carry on til about 8 or 9. But first a stop on 3rd…

4/4
Genevieve Dellinger
Stumptown (128 SW 3rd)

Dellinger’s inspiration=accidental patterns like sidewalk cracks and paint drips+4/4 bars of minimal electronic dance music.

From the press release: For this new exhibit, Dellinger questions the borders of function that she had investigated in her long involvement with fashion and presents gigantic banners/blankets, serving both as tapestry wall ornaments and sources of warmth for the body.

WORK | PROGRESS
Dill Pickle Club
Eyeful Gallery (NW 6th & Everett)

This art show and pop-up bookshop to benefit the Dill Pickle Club features work by 24 socially-engaged artists including: Icky A, Brad Adkins, Moe Bowstern, Carye Bye, Bill Daniel, Dyslexxis, Harrell Fletcher, Sarah Gottesdiener, Sam Gould, Anna Gray, MK Guth, Ariana Jacob, Kendra Larson, Ian Lynam, Eric Mast, Justin Scrappers Morrison, Michael Parich, Ryan Wilson Paulsen, Brittany Powell, Khris Soden, Bwana Spoons, Matthew Stadler, Nim Wunnan,
Pete Yahnke.

Cape Perpetua and Niekrasz/ Jenkins Duet (of Why I Must Be Careful) play the opening.

Level

John Berry. Hidden Area with Secret Supply Shop, 2009, oil on canvas, 65 × 78 inches.

Level 1: Stage 1
John Berry
Half/Dozen Gallery (625 NW Everett St #111)

Pre-Renaissance perspective meets kid stuff like forts and video games? I’m in.

Level 1: Stage 1 comments on ideas of ambition, isolation, illusionary spaces and transcendence. The work draws on imagery from pre-renaissance landscapes, where space is determined more through the relationship of color and shapes than through volumetric forms. Berry integrates this with puzzles, mazes, forts and 8-bit video games, such as Super Mario Brothers and the original Zelda for Nintendo.

The GIF Economy
Weird Fiction
Tractor (328 NW Broadway #114)

Weird Fiction (video band/arts group) embraces the much-maligned animated GIF in their new show at Tractor. Reading Weird Fiction is head-spinningly delicious. I kind of love these guys:

As 2009 expires, Weird Fiction exhumes a curious collection of GIF animations, curating items conjured up from a year’s worth of trolling in the deep
dark dungeons of the internets.

This, alongside an emergent compendium of collateral texts, GIF speciation theories and other missives propagated by the (((WFT))) policy institute; who, in an effort to advance their own “ficto-quizzical” mythologies, will facilitate the hoarding of
materials on a dedicated electronic storehouse (weird-fiction.net)

At once an instantiation of the “gift economy” and a call to action within the economy of expression roused by the humble parameters of the Graphic Interchange Format.

Appropriated material, both solicited and scavenged, will be intermingled within this labyrinthine technocultural milieu.

Denizens of the World Wide Web are implored to reanimate dead media and revive retrograde knowledge structures; deploying anomalous information and thereby accelerating GIF speciation.

The GIF is your passport to the immortal realms of mythology mash-ups and off-modern memes. Remember: overexposure to cine-molecular glitchscapes (GIF animations and their kin) may lead to as of yet unknown climes of panopticonscious surrender.

Fiveseconds

Five Seconds, 2009. Kristen Miller. organdy, tissue paper, beads, nylon thread. 16.25″ × 13.75″ image via: pdxcontemporaryart.com

Here & Gone
Kristen Miller
PDX Contemporary (925 NW Flanders)

Subtle works in ephemeral materials like organdy, glassine, thread and bead.

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phile under: art

Richard Serra: Etchings 1999-2007

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Trajectory

Richard Serra, Trajectory #4 , 2004. 1 color etching. 67″ × 48″ image via: elizabethleach.com

No First Thursday reception (crew is at The Ice Palace in Miami for PULSE), so you’ll just have to wait a minute to see the show of recent Richard Serra etchings at

I’ve always loved the Serra painting in the collection of the Portland Art Museum (last spotted next to the Agnes Martin in a kind of yin/yang moment). He manages in the piece to bring the massive physicality and even the texture of rusting Cor Ten to the canvas. So I’m interested to see how this impulse plays out in this recent series of etchings.

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phile under: art

Oregon Painting Society: Radiant Dream Face

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Radiantdreamface

A while ago, I was sitting on the floor in PSU’s Autzen Gallery talking with artist Ariana Jacob when in walked the Oregon Painting Society (painting club? no! adventurous arts collaborative) to scope out the place for the exhibition they were planning. And I was instantly intrigued…it’s a good space for expansive installation, and I’m eager to see what they do with it (sneak peek via Liam Drain). At two exhibitions at Fontanelle Gallery, OPS did a hybrid installation/group show/performance, and the recently performed at TBA:09.

Theirs is a kind of selectively and radically nostalgic collaborative utopianism with a soundtrack. This time, they’re talking spaceship (see below). I just want to be there. Radiant Dream Face opens with a performance and reception from 4-6 PM (note the time, it’s early…kind of a pre-First Thursday)today Autzen Gallery (2nd Floor PSU Neuberger Hall, Room 205, 724 SW Harrison) and runs through Jan 1.

Best to let OPS tell you about their ideas here.

Statement:

Radiant Dream Face is a control room on board a starship fashioned from the dreams and detritus of late-20th century West Coast America. This interactive sound-sculpture installation is an extension of ideas Oregon Painting Society has presented in our previous shows at Fontanelle Gallery and TBA:09. In January at Fontanelle, OPS looked at exteriors and outdoor activities; there were banners and flags, tools for cleaning, fishing, planting and harvesting. A sense of a season permeated the show. In this incarnation, we examine and imagine an interior world, one that is climate-controlled. We’re not looking at a UFO from the outside; we’re inviting the public to come inside the ship.

The general aesthetics of our shows reflect the group’s ongoing fascination with the look and philosophies behind the new age and human potential movements, mass-produced consumer goods, DIY home improvement trends, suburban utopianism, and psychedelic transcendentalism. As with our performance at the TBA:09 in September, Radiant Dream Face finds our collective vision skewed away slightly from the rough, pagan feel of past efforts toward a more elegant, sci-fi inspired sensibility. The objects and the method of their arrangement in the gallery willfully distort, defy and establish lines between a number of different interior spaces – intimate domestic setting, office workspace, house of worship, and performance stage are all evoked. There is a feeling of a community space, a shared harmonious reality. The interactive aspect of the show (feel free to touch!) is an invitation not just to take a tour of the ship, but also to try flying it.

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phile under: art + institutions

This Just In: Object Stories

new Portland Art Museum program

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Trap

Trap. Josh Smith. 2009. an object that’s important to me.

How do we talk about the object that moves us? How can an object do that, anyway? What do we say about an object when we don’t speak art language? Maybe there is no such thing as art language and our responses are far more universal that we might imagine.

These are some of the things that came up when I heard that the Portland Art Museum just received a $100,000 grant from the MetLife Foundation to support its new Object Stories initiative.

Object Stories will collect stories we have about objects that matter to us via several mechanisms/programs, and here’s the twist: although the Museum is running the program with its Northwest Film Center (as well as partnering with Theater Milagro and Write Around Portland), the objects we talk about won’t necessarily be in the Museum collection.

Conceived by Christina Olsen, Director of Education & Public Programs, Object Stories
is a one-year project scheduled to begin early next year that is intended to reach out beyond the Museum’s current regular audience. And by meeting folks halfway, it seems like a sincere, and smart, effort.

The project, “centers on empowering a cross-section of communities, most of whom have never visited the Museum, to tell stories about objects that matter to them both inside the museum and in their own communities. By doing so, the Museum hopes to honor the stories people have about their lives and the things that matter to them, and make the museum and its own collecting enterprise more deeply relevant to underserved audiences.”

Here are the details, from the press release:

The Object Stories initiative has four components: 1) and on-site video capture booth to record Museum visitors’ stories about the objects that matter to them, whether those belong to them or the museum; 2) two workshops at the Museum in partnership with the non-profit storytelling/writing organization—Write Around Portland—focused both on objects in the participants’ lives and in the Museum’s collection; 3) two documentary filmmaking workshops for the local Spanish-speaking population, offered on-site in the community, conducted by the Northwest Film Center in partnership with Theatre Milagro; and 4) a culminating “Storytelling Weekend” event at the Museum in which all of the above participants, with their families and friends, are invited to come together to display the objects of their storytelling focus, and to celebrate the power of the storytelling process to unify and give shape to the collected objects among us.

Collected stories from the workshops and booth (with participants’ permission) will be published online by way of user-generated online portals such as Vimeo and YouTube, or partner websites (when possible), and on the Museum’s own website.

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