Advertisement

CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS - February 2010

Main Content Skip to Sidebar and Blog Navigation
phile under: art

Review: Tidal

Email

Jenene Nagy, Tidal. installation view

As as if a giant pink polyhedron had been cast into the corner of Disjecta, Jenene Nagy’s “Tidal” is a massive installation of hot pink irregular polygons and jagged shards cast across the floor, splashed onto two walls, and shattering on the rafters and trusses of the soaring space.

Jenene Nagy, Tidal. installation view

The installation is lit only by a horizontal strip of florescent tubes a few feet off the floor that run the perimeter of the l-shaped space. If my first impression was that the panels pushing and pulling with the wooden rafters in the shadows were lost without further illumination, my second was that the lighting strategy both further complicated the relationship of installation to architecture overhead and toyed with my perceptions of a single hue, in particular by brushing exquisite gradients on the vertical panels.

Jenene Nagy, Tidal. installation view

Nagy’s installations, like stage sets built of drywall and exposed 2×4s, reference the natural world with forms that evoke wave here, or flock as in “s/plit” at PAM, or with titles like “Meadow.” But the blue-collar 2×4 supports of “Tidal” point away from the thing itself to that for which it is a stand-in, reinvigorating the reductive with possibility.

This review was first published in a longer form on ultra.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Review, Review

phile under: art library

Benefit for Portland Art Museum’s Crumpacker Library

DIY effort by library lover

Email

Apparently I am not alone in believing that the Portland Art Museum’s Crumpacker Library is one of the city’s most magnificent and underappreciated assets. A patron has organized a fundraiser for the library tonight at 7 PM at the United Church of Christ (1126 SW Park). The lineup is as eclectic as the Crumpacker’s holdings with Plum Sutra Trio and Alex Rudinsky (piano and live painting), Gino Majalca and Lindsey Cafferky (opera), Steve Kinzie (folk music), and Jeff Coleman (poetry). $10 donation.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Events

phile under: art talk

Terry Winters Lecture at Reed

Email
Winters

Tonight, Wednesday, February 24, at the Vollum Lecture Hall at Reed College at 7:00 PM, painter and printmaker Terry Winters will lecture in conjunction with his exhibition in the Cooley Gallery, Linking Graphics, Prints 2000-2010. The lecture’s to be followed by a reception at the Cooley.

From the press release:

Terry Winters is a world-renowned painter and printmaker whose work investigates biological, artificial, and information-based structures in a uniquely rigorous and imaginative manner. Winters explores the world’s dynamic energies through intricately fluid geometries. His prints and paintings speak to the history of abstract art, and explore the pulsating biological and spiritual dimensions of human existence. For the last four decades, Terry Winters has created interrelated bodies of prints and paintings that are completely unique in the history of American art. Terry Winters’ prints are exhibited at the Douglas F. Cooley Memorial Art Gallery through an academic collaboration with the Colby College Museum of Art, Waterville, Maine.

Born in Brooklyn, NY, in 1949, Terry Winters had his first solo-exhibition in New York, in 1982, at the Sonnabend Gallery; subsequently, he was included in the Whitney Biennials of 1985, 1987 and 1995. Additionally, he held a one-man show at the Tate Gallery in London; his work has been exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery of Art as well as with many international museums and galleries. Winters’ master prints are held in the collections of major American and European museums including: The Museum of Modern Art, NY; The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA.

Terry Winters attended the High School of Art & Design in New York and continued formal art training at the Pratt Institute, receiving a BFA in 1971. His early paintings are influenced by minimalist, monochromatic paintings, like those of Brice Marden. Winters has a love of drawing which led him to introduce schematic references to astronomical, biological and architectural structures as the subject matter of his paintings. He began exhibiting his work in 1977, and by the early 1980’s his ideas had developed into loose grids of organic shapes beside lushly painted fields. Bill Goldston invited Winters to print at the Universal Limited Art Editions studio in 1982. Winters’ work at ULAE has become increasingly complex, combining elements of drawing with painting. The artist lives and works in New York and Geneva, Switzerland.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Events

phile under: art

Melody Owen and Paula Rebsom at Art Gym

Email

Melody Owen, the weight of a tiny bird

Two new exhibitions open at The Art Gym at Marylhurst University on Sunday, February 21 with a reception for the artists from 3 to 5 PM. The Art Gym’s main space features So Close to the Glass and Shivering by Melody Owen. In Gallery 2, Paula Rebsom will present If We Lived Here. Both exhibitions continue through April 9, 2010.

From the press release:

Both exhibitions address human and animal interactions, migration and travel. Owen uses drawing, video and sculpture as “quiet ruminations on whales and exploration.” Paula Rebsom built a house-like structure and set up an observation station on her family’s abandoned farm in rural North Dakota. Images of the structure, landscape and the birds and animals that frequent the site will be recorded or broadcast live from North Dakota and projected in The Art Gym’s Gallery 2 over the course of the exhibition.

The Art Gym is on the third floor of the B.P. John Administration Building at Marylhurst University, which is located one mile south of Lake Oswego on Highway 43.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art

phile under: art

The Big One: Disquieted

Email
Keep-me-safe

Tracey Emin
(British, b. 1963)
Keep Me Safe, 2006
Neon; edition of 3
12 11/16 × 38 ¾ inches
The Miller-Meigs Collection, Corvallis

Opening today at the Portland Art Museum (1219 SW Park), Disquieted is an extensive show of contemporary work addressing challenging issues of the day ranging from secret prisons to race relations and the role of women in society. Some pieces come at an issue straight on like Glen Ligon’s text paintings, many approach at an oblique angle; some pieces express a general antagonism or anxiety, like Tracey Emin’s “Keep me safe,” while some are simply button-pushing like Paul McCarthy’s gold lamé inflatable butt plug.

Chief curator and curator of modern and contemporary art, Bruce Guenther said that when he began working on the exhibition more than three years ago, it was to be “a market-driven survey” of contemporary art. But it morphed over time to something “thematically driven” at a political/cultural moment that to Guenther called for work that “reflects something we feel but may not be able to articulate,” in the face of “war, acts of terror, and natural disasters.”

Disquieted features 38 works by 28 living artists including John Baldessari, Gregory Crewdson, Tracy Emin, Andreas Gursky, Barbara Kruger, Shirin Neshat, Jan Tichy, and Bill Viola. The oldest work in the show is a Barbara Kruger from 1992. There is video, sculpture, painting, photography, all of it meant to provoke discussion. To that end, the Museum has admirably created an iPhone app that features both videos of many of the artists talking about their work as well as curators, educators, and art historians conversing about work in the exhibition.

This is an opportunity to see work by a number of important contemporary artists without traveling. Embrace it.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art

phile under: poet + critic

New York School Poet Bill Berkson in Portland

two readings and a conversation

Email

Bill Berkson

It’s the Berkson Difference Engine, hitting on the level of the syllable, illuminating arrays, pure products of daily utterance, mining one of the deepest veins of living vocabulary ever. — Clark Coolidge

In a remarkable and rare Northwest visit from important New York School poet and art critic, Bill Berkson, he will be doing two readings and a conversation at the Spare Room Poetry series Sunday night, at Reed College Monday night, and then returning on March 6 for a Back Room in conversation with Rob Slifkin “About Philip Guston.” It’s huge. (Details below.)

He’s here to celebrate several recent publications: Portrait and Dream: New and Selected Poems (Coffee House Press); Ted Berrigan (a collaboration with painter George Schneeman) and Sudden Address: Selected Lectures 1981-2006 (both from Cuneiform Press).

Spare Room reading series
Sunday, February 21, 7:30 pm
Concordia Coffee House (2909 NE Alberta)
$5.00 suggested donation

Reed College
Monday, February 22, 6:30 pm
Eliot Hall, Room 314
Free admission

Back Room PDX
“About Philip Guston” — a conversation with Rob Slifkin
Saturday, March 6, 6:30 pm
Cooley Art Gallery, Reed College
Free admission

Born in New York in 1939, Bill Berkson is a poet, critic, teacher and sometime curator, who has been active in the art and literary worlds since his early twenties. Director of Letters and Science at the San Francisco Art Institute from 1993 to 1998, he taught art history, critical writing, and poetry and directed the public lectures program there from 1984 to 2008. He studied at Trinity School, The Lawrenceville School, Brown University, Columbia, the New School for Social Research, and New York University’s Institute of Fine Arts.

He is the author of eighteen books and pamphlets of poetry — including, recently, Gloria, a portfolio of poems with etchings by Alex Katz (Arion Press), Our Friends Will Pass Among You Silently (The Owl Press), Goods and Services (Blue Press), and most recently, Portrait and Dream: New & Selected Poems (Coffee House Press).

A collection of his criticism, The Sweet Singer of Modernism & Other Art Writings, appeared from Qua Books in 2004, and Sudden Address: Selected Lectures 1981-2006 from Cuneiform Press, in 2007. A new volume of his art writings and interviews, The Ordinary Artist, will follow soon.

Other recent books are What’s Your Idea of a Good Time: Letters & Interviews 1977-1985 with Bernadette Mayer (Tuumba Press); BILL with drawings by Colter Jacobsen (Gallery 16 Editions); and Ted Berrigan with George Schneeman (Cuneiform Press).

During the 1960s he was an editorial associate at Art News, a regular contributor to Arts, guest editor at the Museum of Modern Art, an associate producer of a program on art for public television, and taught literature and writing workshops at the New School and Yale University.

After moving to Northern California in 1970, he began editing and publishing a series of poetry books and magazines under the Big Sky imprint. Before coming to the Art Institute, he taught regularly in the California Poets in the Schools program.

In the mid-1980s he resumed writing art criticism on a regular basis, contributing monthly reviews and articles to Artforum from 1985 to 1991; he became a corresponding editor for Art in America in 1988 and also writes frequently for such magazines as Aperture, Modern Painters, Art on Paper, and others.

As a curator he has organized or co-curated such exhibitions as “Ronald Bladen: Early and Late” (SFMoMA), “Albert York” (Mills College), “Why Painting I & II” (Susan Cummins Gallery), “Homage to George Herriman” (Campbell-Thiebaud Gallery), and “Facing Eden: 100 Years of Northern California Landscape Art” (De Young Museum).

Past recipient of awards and fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, Artspace, Yaddo, the Briarcombe Foundation, the Fund for Poetry, the Poets Foundation, and the American Academy in Rome, he was Distinguished Paul Mellon Lecturer for 2006 at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine, and was awarded the 2008 Goldie for Literature from the San Francisco Bay Guardian.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Literature, Events

phile under: music

Ordo Virtutum

morality plays, manbands, and Hildegard von Bingen

Email
Kaj-anne

The Devil is played by a boombox.

A Medieval morality play gets a 21st century treatment by Stephen Marc Beaudoin, Ben Landsverk, Kaj-anne Pepper, the FourScore classical manband and friends. If Beaudoin’s name sounds familiar, you’ll recall that he wrote criticism for both the Mercury and the Willamette Week. And so it is not with a little irony that those of you who remember the tenor of Beaudoin’s criticism will appreciate that he plays the role of Mercy in (as well as directs) Hildegard von Bingen’s “Ordo Virtutum” this Sunday, February 21 at 2 PM at First Presbyterian Church (1200 SW Alder, SW12th and Alder). Admission is $10.

I asked the new kindler, gentler (and did I mention classically trained) Beaudoin how he became interested in von Bingen’s work. “I got turned on to Hildegard’s music in college at New England Conservatory,” says Beaudoin. "We did a big recording project to commemorate her 900th birthday in 1998, and I’d been yearning to do something outlandish with the Ordo Virtutum ever since.

“So many of the recordings and performances by early music ‘specialists’ sound like wallpaper music. And I wanted to tap into the radical, visionary aspects of her being and her music.”

For radical, Beaudoin has brought in Kaj-anne Pepper both to perform the role of the Soul, doubling a singer playing the role, and to create movement for the non-dancerly singers. Pepper is a committed, adventurous dancer and dancemaker who has performed with Sissyboy and the Gender Fluids and choreographed the finale for Ten Tiny Dances at PICA’s 2009 TBA Festival.

In Ordo Virtutum, the Virtues battle the Devil for the human Soul…does this good/evil struggle not sound terribly contemporary though this piece premiered in 1152? In an era of uncertainty (aside: I previewed Disquieted at the Portland Art Museum today!), how appropriate to return to a simple, binary framing of modern complexities.

I love the to-do list Beaudoin recently posted on his blog because it says a lot about what we can expect. Mega choir? Girl as Devil? Ribbon pop effects?

Hildegard to-do’s today:

1. Create Facebook event
2. Respond to all of AVB’s emails
3. Email SD about PSU tix
4. Recruit 50 more singers for mega-choir
5. Remind singers to bring schedule-books tomorrow
6. 8 music stands in First Pres
7. Mtg with Jon Stuber RE organ improv’s, talk tomorrow, play on Feb 7? (4, then 2, 5, 18, 87) – copy for Jon S, length of improvisations (1.5-2 mins for first one; 2 min’s for second one)
8. Ribbon for effect
9. FourScore mtg to record Devil speaking parts
10. Recruit girl for Devil (Odile, Tuesday’s sister’s daughter?; who else has a young girl/daughter that could do this?)
11. Tape recorder from Kristen
12. Costumes/makeup????
13. KP photo, credit to Eric Sellers
14. Investigate ribbon pop effects with KP
15. Finalize solo coachings for next 2 weeks
16. Program translation? To AVB

More from the press release:

The musical approach to the work is led by noted Portland singer/conductor Ben Landsverk. Landsverk’s eclectic approach to instrumentation, voice combinations and choral arrangements in the “Ordo Virtutum” ranges from Notre Dame school era organum to Messiaen-inspired choral explosions and free improvisation. FourScore classical manband (Ben Kinkley, Ben Landsverk, Brian Francis and Stephen Marc Beaudoin) is the house band for the work, performing on both early and modern instruments, including banjo, trumpet, piano, laptop, melodica, recorder, electric guitar, chimes and tape recorder.

Stephen Marc Beaudoin (“The Beggar’s Opera,” Opera Theater Oregon) stage directs, and the movement and choreography is by Kaj-anne Pepper. Additional cast members include Andy McQuery, Maria Karlin, Gigi Urban and Kristen Buhler. First Presbyterian Church organist Jon Stuber is special guest performer, and the entire company will be joined by a special pick-up choir featuring more than 100 local singers from groups including Roxy Consort, Flash Choir and Portland Vocal Consort, as well as students from Lewis and Clark College and Portland State University.

A clip from a rehearsal might whet your appetite:

Add a Comment »

Tags: Theater

phile under: art publications

Trio of New Art Publications for Portland

Email
And

Tonight and tomorrow night, experience the one-two punch of two launch parties for two new arts publications based right here in Portland.

First is and&review, edited by Mia Nolting and Rachel Peddersen, which launches tonight with a party at TIGA (NE 15th and Prescott) from 7-10 PM.

And launching tomorrow night with a party at Reading Frenzy (921 SW Oak) , from 7-9 PM is Forrest Martin’s new arts magazine, Death, supported by a Stock grant.

Both and&review and Death are available in some form online. and&review is free in print form as well (Nationale and PNCA have copies, I believe).

Plus (no party, but you could perhaps buy the editor a drink) Lorna Nakell has recently started Arts Interviews with intros to artist/curator’s Derek Franklin and TJ Norris, thus far.

Congratulations to all.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Publishing

phile under: art

Laura Russo Memorial

Email

A memorial service for longtime Portland art dealer Laura Russo will be held tomorrow, Wednesday, Feburary 17 at 3:00 PM in the Portland Art Museum’s Sunken Ballroom. All are welcome to attend.

Laura Russo graduated from the Museum Art School (now PNCA) where she had met Arlene Schnitzer. She worked for Schnitzer at her Fountain Gallery, arguably Portland’s first serious contemporary art gallery selling work by Northwest artists. Russo eventually bought the Fountain and over the next decades built on Schnitzer’s comprehensive stable of venerable Northwest artists including Mel Katz, Jay Backstrand, Lucinda Parker, Michael Brophy, and too many more to name including the estates of Carl and Hilda Morris, Louis Bunce, and of course, her uncle, Michele Russo. A visit to the Laura Russo Gallery, in other words, is an art history lesson in mid to late 20th century Northwest art. According to a press release jointly issued by the family and the Laura Russo Gallery, the gallery, “will remain open under the able direction of her trusted and longtime manager, Martha Lee, who is dedicated to carry on the legacy that Laura has left behind.”

Russo died Thursday, February 11 after a brief bout with cancer.

D.K. Row wrote this considered piece on Russo in the Oregonian,

Add a Comment »

phile under: art talk

Barry Sanders at PMMNLS

Email

Don’t miss this talk.

PNCA President Tom Manley calls the venerable Barry Sanders, a “grand convivialist,” and he is, and Manley should know having worked with Sanders for many years at Pitzer College at Claremont before inviting him to PNCA. Sanders, who recently retired as professor of History of Ideas and English at Pitzer College at Claremont after 30-some years is also a Pulitzer-nominated (and prolific) author and Fulbright Senior Scholar.

A wide-ranging intellect, Sanders has taken on the evolution of the written word through the electronic age, race relations, and the history of laughter among other things in more than a dozen books.

Sanders will speak tonight, Monday, February 15 at 7:30 PM as part of the Portland State University MFA Monday Night Lecture Series at Portland State University: Shattuck Hall Annex (1914 SW Park).

Add a Comment »

Tags: Talks

phile under: art

Timothy Scott Dalbow: I don’t know anyone in Paris

Email
Dalbow_naau

Timothy Scott Dalbow, I don’t know anyone in Paris. image via newamericanartunion.com

Portland-based artist Timothy Scott Dalbow moves his painting studio into the New American Art Union (922 SE Ankeny) for six weeks starting Sunday, February 14.

Dalbow won’t keep hours. You’ll have to catch him if you can. NAAU says, “the gallery space will be as active or inactive as his studio practice dictates. As mainly a night painter though, it is likely that to see him painting the visitor will need to drop by the NAAU in the evening.”

The project launches with a reception for the artist from 6-9 PM. Will Dalbow have just moved in at this point? Will everything be tidy, in readiness and anticipation? How about, just for fun, a little preview of what might be: a studio visit with Dalbow courtesy of OPENWIDEpdx.

I’m having a little bit of a flashback because if memory serves, Rose McCormick also once made work in-gallery at NAAU. Or am I thinking of something else?

Add a Comment »

phile under: poem + music

Very Nice Night

Email
Verynice

Portland-based Poor Claudia, a semi-annual journal of literature and the arts, presents Very Nice Night, an evening of music and art tonight, February 10, at Holocene, as part of the club’s once-monthly program, “My Favorite Things.”

Very Nice coincides with Poor Claudia’s release of Zachary Schomburg’s LITTLE BLIND THING, a collection of twelve film-poems on DVD. They’ll show a few of the films from LITTLE BLIND THING throughout the evening, and Schomburg will read some new work. And the night will include music from Nolan Foster, Typhoon, Breakfast Mountain, Guantanamo Baywatch and DJs Sexy Cousin and Magic Impact.

Add a Comment »

phile under: performance

Through the Lens

Email
Through-the-lens

Choreographer Danielle Ross is interested in the idea of found performance, both in the sense of the artist creating work from the found and what she calls “found opportunity for viewership.” I asked her what the “Fountain” (Duchamp’s R.Mutt-signed urinal) of performance might be.

Ross and a number of other performers explore the ideas around the found (found interaction, found dialogue, found noise/sound) with Through The Lens Tuesday night at 9 PM at Valentines (232 SW Ankeny). It’s a strong lineup mostly featuring performers coming from contemporary dance like Tahni Holt and Linda Austin with improvisational musician Jean Paul Jenkins and arts collective Future Death Toll.

The full lineup:
Danielle Ross with Jean Paul Jenkins (and performers Keyon Gaskin, Leah Wilmoth, Lillian Rossetti, and Robert Tyree)
Linda Austin
Paige McKinney (and performers Esther LaPointe, Beth Loy, Bonni Stover, Taylor Young)
Tahni Holt with Thomas Thorson
Future Death Toll
Little Friction Dance
Suniti Dernovsek

Add a Comment »

phile under: art

Cy Twombly at Portland Art Museum

opens today

Email
Cy-twombly

Cy Twombly, Untitled, 2007, from Blooming, A Scattering of Blossoms & Other Things, Acrylic on panel, The Broad Art Foundation, Santa Monica. © Cy Twombly. Courtesy Gagosian Gallery

A favorite Portland indoor hike is the through-the-tunnel and up-the-stairs trek to the Miller-Miegs space on the 4th floor of the Jubitz Center for Modern and Contemporary Art at the Portland Art Museum (note: name almost as long as trek). Starting today in that space, find three recent works by influential gestural abstractionist Cy Twombly, two paintings and a bronze sculpture.

One of the works, “Untitled,” is from his “A Scattering of Blossoms and Other Things” series, a “peony” painting.

AH! The Peonies
For which
Kusunoki
Took off his
Armour
—Takarai Kikaku

The octogenarian artist has had two recent retrospectives at Tate Modern, London, and the Art Institute of Chicago.

On Wednesday, February 10 at 12:30 PM Chief Curator Bruce Guenther hosts a Midday Art Break viewing and talking about Twombly’s work. Free with admission or membership.

Through May 16.

Add a Comment »

phile under: art

First Friday February

Email
Dark

Dark: A Show to Winter
curated by Blood Rainbow Family
Fourteen30
1430 SE 3rd Avenue
Reception Friday, February 5, 6-9PM

A burnt troll, a tranquil pool, the oppressive mass and textural complexities of a wall-sized void…while there are a number of strong group shows this month, Dark: A Show to Winter is going to be the most talked about for good reason. The exhibition brings together work by an international roster of artists that addresses, mines, answers darkness in multivariate and, thanks to curators Blood Rainbow Family (who curated the massive Haunted exhibition at Disjecta’s Templeton space), surprising ways. Because dark, a void, as Brenden Clenaghen notes, can be as much a place of rest in an image-saturated world, a place of transcendence, as it can be ominous, foreboding, or provocative.

From Fourteen30:

In a 1998 interview Alan Vega of electronic duo Suicide described the live experience of the band as “you are coming off the street to come into the street.” The exhibition Dark: A Show to Winter will function under the same premise. Opening during the dead of a Portland winter, Dark will include work that addresses and/or reflects this outside environment. The grim, the cold and the black will mingle with the solitary, the contemplative and the transcendent. Explorations of dark and winter drawn from both a common visual culture, as well as more personal voids, will work together to bring the vast, seemingly endless dark winter into the confines of the gallery space.

Sebastian Gogel: Leipzig, DE
Matthew Green: Portland, OR
Frank Haines | Francis Heinzfeller: Brooklyn, NY
Alex Hubbard: Brooklyn, NY
Arnold Kemp: Portland, OR
Alicia Love McDaid: Portland, OR
Thomas Moecker: Leipzig, DE
Jo Nigoghossian: NYC, NY
Sven Stuckenschmidt: Berlin, DE
Molly Vidor: Portland, OR

Kendra

Kendra Larson

Kendra Larson + Kurtiss Lofstrom
galleryHOMELAND
2505 SE 11th
New work by two Portland-based painters.

!Obsolete Dreams
Corey Smith
Worksound
820 SE Alder

“Amid famine, collapse, and massacre, we dream of freedom. From the pyramid to the moon shuttle, man’s greatest endeavor has always been to subjugate death and the dreams of sleep—to own them, control them, escape there—to paint our own new futures onto the blank slate of unfilled coordinates.

In Obsolete Dreams, Corey Smith confronts the hulking physicality of these useless masters of dreams and death: Cold-War stealth bombers, moon shuttles, astronauts, the unholy engine fueled by the American flag. Smith makes them according to their own dream logic, that alien symbolism of deflective curve and angle that is both perfect and perfectly incomprehensible to the life that is always right here in front of us.

In Smith’s work, silent death comes in the bright colors of advertising, and bombers swing lovely as children’s models on wires. The grim, grey haze of a satellite photo takes on a more intense reality than the one you know, because it comes from that high, floating future. Even if the art of science is war and escape, there’s nothing more romantic than chasing the zero all the way down."

Add a Comment »

phile under: art

First Thursday February

it’s a knockout

Email
Logogram

This is a month that promises a wealth of remarkable exhibitions including sharp-looking group shows at both Elizabeth Leach Gallery and Half/Dozen, Oregon Painting Society at Manuel Izquierdo at PNCA, plus new work by Jaq Chartier (Leach), Bean Finneran (PDX Contemporary), and something intriguing from Lindsay Aucoin at Tractor. And that’s just the exhibitions opening on Thursday! Receptions generally start at 6 or 6:30 PM. Websites have details. Stay tuned for Friday openings.

SuperNatural
Jaq Chartier
Elizabeth Leach
417 NW 9th
The gallery, as I do, calls Chartier’s work both lush and minimal. Like test strips or views through a microscope, this is work that is quietly beautiful.

Re-Present
Pat Boas, Adam Chapman, Isaac Layman, Joe Park, Xiaoze Xie
Elizabeth Leach
417 NW 9th
According to the gallery, “the artists in Re-Present consider the differences between representation and perception.” Boas’ work I respect very much, recontextualizing the everyday info-stream via excision, and Layman I was introduced to by the recent show at the Archer Gallery. I’m perhaps most interested to see Chapman’s video drawing portraits.

Shadowgut

Shadowgut
Oregon Painting Society
Manuel Izquierdo Gallery
825 NW 13th
I don’t know much about what this arts collective is doing for this show, (Derek Franklin says its the dark opposite of their Autzen show) but their recent exhibition at Autzen was widely lauded. They’re adventurous, smart, and surprising.

Signs of Change: Social Movement Cultures 1960s to Now
The Philip Feldman Gallery + Project Space
1241 NW Johnson
Sweeping exhibition of posters, photographs, ephemera capturing over 40 years of international social activism. Graphically powerful reminder of stakes and role that art/design has played in agitating for social change.

The Quadratic Logogram of Almost Everything: The Democracy of the Contemporary Art Object
Half/Dozen
625 NW Everett St. #111
Excellent group of artists, smart curator, and interesting premise, I’m going to dig into more fully in short order. I wouldn’t miss this group show curated by Derek Franklin with work by David Corbett, Alex Felton, Kristan Kennedy, Sterling Lawrence.

Incidence and Pattern
Bean Finneran
PDX Contemporary Art
925 NW Flanders
“For the past seven years I have been working with a single elemental form, a curve as a meditation upon multiplicity in nature."

T9

T9
Lindsay Aucoin
Tractor
328 NW Broadway
“I’m interested in word play, idea play, picture play- anything that interrupts the way we normally see things. … T9 is an abstract look at technology as a means of communication.”

Inland Empires
Tyler Kohlhoff
Tribute Gallery
328 NW Broadway #117
“Inland Empires focuses on the transitional habitats of the Interior West. In a series of two studies, the artist leverages anti-narrative to explore space as found artifacts of the abandoned." It’s a first PDX show for this artist of what look to be lovely , moody photos.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Portland Art, First Thursday

phile under: art

Portland2010 Biennial Artists Announced

Email
Portland2010

Well played, Criss Moss. Curator Moss today announced the lineup for the latest incarnation of the Oregon Biennial, now a Portland Biennial called Portland2010. Portland2010 is a project that Disjecta took on after Portland Art Museum put the Oregon Biennial to bed in favor of the Contemporary Northwest Art Awards. For some reason still having the “Oregon” biennial on-the-brain, I was surprised to see so many Portland-based artists, but then it is the Portland2010 now. This makes one wonder why the Springfield-based Ditch Projects is included but at the same time grateful as trips to Springfield, Oregon from which Ditch Projects operates have been impossible/improbable. When I’ve seen work by Ditch’s Mike Bray or Donald Morgan, I’ve wanted to see more. So thanks, Criss Moss! And thanks for this list:

Holly Andres
Corey Arnold
Pat Boas
John Brodie
Bruce Conkle & Marne Lucas
David Corbett
Ditch Project
David Eckard
Damien Gilley
Sean Healy
Tahni Holt
Jenene Nagy
Oregon Painting Society
Melody Owen
Crystal Schenk
Heidi Schwegler
Stephen Slappe
Kartz Ucci

First reaction: yes! Good that Moss has included the performative (Oregon Painting Society and Tahni Holt) as well as some of the most interesting artists to which Portland is home. The inclusion of equally rigorous and imaginative artists like Pat Boas, Jenene Nagy, Melody Owen, and Heidi Schwegler (among others) mean that Portland2010 will be a showcase of Portland work that likely will both be exportable and will stand the test of time. The recent inclusion of Orleonok Pitkin in a show at Worksound, though, demonstrated the value of cross-generational fertilization, so here’s hoping future iterations reach further afield age-wise.

It is a little confusing that, “The work of eighteen Oregon visual and performance-based artists will be presented as a series of one-person exhibitions beginning March 13 at Disjecta and spreading to satellite venues throughout Portland, including Rocksbox, IFCC, Marylhurst Art Gym, Elizabeth Leach Gallery and Alpern Gallery through May 30.” So for two and a half months there will be scattered one-person exhibitions? How does it tie in to a cohesive Biennial (it’s feeling more like PICA’s TBA model) but perhaps even more diffuse. 18 artists in 6 venues in solo shows? Who gets to show in Disjecta’s expansive space? Will be interesting to see the mechanics of this (noting that collaboration is almost always a good good thing). I am deeply anticipating Portland2010.

Any thoughts about who Moss missed?

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Events

phile under: theater

Willow Jade: Extended!

Bloody spectacle, good acting, and Orcs through Feb. 14.

Email
Wj2-credit-bweaver-web

Becky, played with a petty fury by Aiyana Cunningham, is a video store manager transformed by a broadsword.

photo credit: Brian Weaver

Willow Jade, written by local playwright Hunt Holman, received a staged reading at Portland Center Stage’s JAW Festival in 2008. And now its back, enjoying a full-blooded, fully staged premiere at Portland Playhouse.

It premiered as part of the Fertile Ground festival, and Portland Playhouse has recently announced an extension of added 8 more shows. It’s running through February 14.

This is great news if you overlooked Willow Jade during its festival run. This is a fun night at at the theater. If you are a supporter of good, locally-grown work, go. And to you, my occasional-theater-goer-friends who are leery of live performance, Willow Jade is a great one to try out.

Willow Jade is deeply familiar, funny, and filled with adrenaline pumping spectacle. It is a play about the stagnant stuck-ness and familiar security of small town living, and it is also an orc-filled bloodbath.

Doug has returned home without much to show after seeking his fortune in the big city of Seattle. His plan to be a Dungeons & Dragons Game Master turned out not to be so lucrative.

So here he is, back at home somewhere in rural Washington, and broke. And there’s a D&D game planned for tonight, a sort of nostalgic re-gathering of the old high school buddies.

Again, Portland Playhouse delivers terrific acting from the entire cast. The adrift Doug is reunited with his slacker friend Lance, who still lives at home, and his friend Steve, who has made it, locally, as a real estate agent flush enough to afford cycling gear, which serves only to highlight his nerdy essence like a spandex beacon.

The play is set in Doug’s mom’s kitchen. Sondra is played with crass abandon by KB Mercer, and her kitchen, the set designed by Daniel Meeker, is so painstakingly realistic that the sponge on the edge of the kitchen sink is grimy with use and there are dog scratches on the door frame.

Doug has been kicked out of his apartment above his mother’s garage. And that there is a slightly seedy mystery surrounding the new tenants, especially Willow Jade, who is rumored to be an underage runaway.

And midway through this kitchen-sink drama: playwright Holman cues the orcs.

Who knew that Dungeons & Dragons, a game that I (admittedly ignorantly) associate with funny-shaped dice and NEEEEEEEERRRRRRDDDDDSSSSS, contains within it the high drama of Shakespeare’s Titus Andonicus, and the dark, bloody comedy of Martin McDonagh? Willow Jade accomplishes a neat little story trick; showing us the regular lives that most of us lead, and the yearning for grand adventures that we hold onto within them.

Mostly, watching the goopy, bloody stage fighting is FUN. Forewarned is forearmed: shoes in the first row may be subject to a bit of gory splatter.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Theater

Advertisement