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CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

Posts tagged with: Photography

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phile under: photography

Mercy Corps Hosts
Reframing Re-entry

Recently released female felons photo-document their journeys.

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When you get out of prison, you get a bus ticket and the clothes you wore going in. You may miss your inmate “family,” and rewards for good behavior. You have to check the box on every form forever, that says “convicted felon.” Psychologist and recalcitrance researcher Joni Kabana brings these post-prison hurdles to light, as she supplies women who’ve just been released from prison with journals and cameras, and then displays their combined images and writings. Brace yourself for a surge of empathy. These photographs will show throughout September at Mercy Corps Action Center, 45 SW Ankeny Street.

Also, if this topic tugs your heartstrings, please have a look at PM’s recent photojournalism feature, A Woman’s Work by Cassandra Nelson.


Culturephile can only feature a few First Thursday picks, but for a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar!

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Tags: Art, Photography, First Thursday, women, charity

Recent Snaps

Cut and Paste

Van Sant and Warhol exhibitions expand

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Vansantpm

Boy and Girl 2010 is one of the photo collages by famed filmmaker Gus Van Sant on display at PDX Contemporary Art this month.

Cut-ups & One Step Big Shot
Polaroids in Portland and Eugene by Gus Van Sant and Andy Warhol

It seems to be a strangely interconnected summer for Northwest art galleries and museums.* Two venues have collaborated in spanning the I-5 corridor to bring the viewing public a richer experience. PDX Contemporary Art’s May exhibition, Cut-ups, features photographs digitally collaged by filmmaker and Portland aficionado Gus Van Sant, while the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art presents straight Polaroids by Van Sant and Andy Warhol along with film and print work in their exhibition One Step Big Shot.

Each comprised of multiple casting shots Van Sant has taken over the years, the images in Cut-ups invoke an uneasy link between their myriad subjects. The outlines and features of faces line up at times in a strange metamorphosis while in other spots the overlap is more jarring. A comment on the nature of the portrait and its relation to an individual identity, the works reference William S. Burroughs and Van Sant’s interest in re-contextualization.

At the JSMA, the eagerly-awaited pairing of Van Sant and Andy Warhol opened this weekend to much pomp and circumstance. Complete with live music from The Hugs and a photobooth, the masses of visitors were not disappointed. Presented in tidy rows, the Polaroids by both artists looked unassuming next to the larger photographic blowups and Warhol’s vivid prints. Each miniscule photograph is, however, a poignant example of the scrapbook-like nature of these pictures. And the emphasis on the instant film materials is one that is prominent in both artists’ work as well as the exhibition as a whole.

First meant as records of people and faces, the images at the JSMA form the basis for the works on view at PDX Contemporary Art. Each portrait is reworked from its humble beginnings to take on larger artistic concepts. “The collages by Van Sant,” posits Lawrence Fong, curator of American and Regional Art at the JSMA, “reconfigure the portrait with elements similar to Warhol’s use of blocks and swatches of color, gestural marks and drawing.”

And, although shows like One Step Big Shot may seem en vogue, this exhibition has been in planning since the JSMA received over 150 of Warhol’s original Polaroid and photographic prints in 2008 from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts as part of its “Legacy Program,” which has distributed similar portfolios to hundreds of other museums across the country.

“During the past year or two many of the other recipient art museums have been organizing exhibits of their Warhol prints, and this will continue,” notes Fong, “The other factor is the new ‘Impossible Project,’ the revival of Polaroid-type instant films.”

It’s definitely worth your while to head on down to Eugene for the companion exhibit to that at PDX. And while you’re there you can pick up a copy of the Nazraeli Press catalog with stunning reproductions of Van Sant’s works that have been so carefully spliced in Cut-ups.

*Seattle Art Museum Warhol/Cobain show; JSMA show; PDX; Warhol images at Reed College in “Scarecrow”

Full disclosure: In my off hours as a sensational arts blogger here at Portland Monthly, I also work for PDX Contemporary Art. And I used to work for the JSMA while I was in grad school at UO. You have been warned..

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Tags: Art, Photography

phile under: photography

8xPDX

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Libby-se11

Brian Libby, Southeast 11th

Architecture writer and filmmaker Brian Libby has curated 8 x PDX: Photographs of Portland Architecture, opening First Thursday with a reception from 5:30-8:30 PM at the American Institute of Architects/Portland Chapterʼs Center For Architecture (403 NW 11th). The show features work by eight Portland photographers including Jeremy Bitterman, Jeff Jahn, Chris Hornbecker, Shawn Records, Susan Seubert, Sally Schoolmaster, Michael Weeks, and Libby.

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Tags: Photography, Architecture

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

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