Advertisement

CULTUREPHILE: PORTLAND ARTS

Posts tagged with: Portland Art

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

Review: The Little Prince

Shaking The Tree presents The Little Prince, a delicate allegory that’s never been just for kids.

Email
Lilprincecrop

Annabel Cantor charms as the iconic interstellar wanderer in The Little Prince.

The popular 1942 illustrated French book The Little Prince must be familiar to many Portlanders—heck, it must have inspired a dozen local tattoos. But though much beloved, it’s not a narrative that seeks to satisfy. Instead, it’s the kind of tale that strikes a tuning fork in the hollows of the heart, letting its echoes explore the empty space. Ah, l’ennui. The most prized French export beside champagne.

Philosophy

From the Little Prince, we learn:

The king’s perspective is pointless; he deludes himself about his dominion. The businessman’s perspective is pointless; he numbers among his assets things that he can neither use, nor caretake. The workman has become an unquestioning slave to ever-hastening external demands, and can never rest.

The main item of good news is that these are all “grown up” problems, and becoming a grownup, the text asserts, is preventable. One needs to carefully maintain a child’s mind, to see beyond the BS. “What is essential,” we’re told, “is invisible to the eye.”

To oversimplify this content for children’s theater, is probably a big temptation—but would also ultimately be a shame. Thank goodness Shaking The Tree has made the effort to get it right.

Cast

As the Little Prince, Annabel Cantor strikes several nice balances. Her stage presence is completely gender-neutral, and her body language easily slips between playful and proud, as befits a little prince. Her excellent delivery of the material itself, and her undeniable cuteness in a curly wig, prove she’s primed for her next role as Annie at Northwest Children’s Theater. Unable to be fazed, she even corrected a dialogue slip-up by costar Erich England on Sunday, without missing a beat.

As the Aviator, England serves as narrator, and worldly straight-man to the Little Prince’s otherworldly mystique. But you don’t get the sense (as you might from the script alone) that he’s fighting very hard to be a rational adult, “concerned with matters of importance.” While trying to decide whether the word “amateur” would ring too harsh for England, I scoped his bio. Looks like this is his second production, and his main avocation is rock climbing—so, “amateur” is apt. He coasts through the role in a dreamlike languor, but he’s a believable dreamer, and brings warmth and sensitivity to the role.

Phillip Cuomo, in contrast, is a veteran, (Artists Rep, Third Rail Rep, Imago and more) and the production heaps demands upon him accordingly. Cuomo plays all the characters the prince meets on his interstellar journey, and then resurfaces as the fox the prince tames on earth. While the former four roles seem like they could be making a philosophical point (“all grownups are the same”), seeing him emerge yet again as a fox strains the suspension of even a small child’s disbelief. Fortunately, he effects each role with a different voice and with a slightly clownish, child-favoring flair, giving little ones something to enjoy, whether or not they’re catching the philosophical point.

Megan Sky Hale (Imago/Theater Vertigo alum) plays two roles, rose and snake, with grace, but she brings the most convincing carriage to the latter. She wears menacing and hypnotic, better than coquettish. (And from this reviewer, that is a compliment.)

Tech

This play comes with major staging challenges, most notably: how do you show space travel? The single stationary set with varied lighting actually does a pretty admirable job of showing both a planetary, and a terrestrial desert landscape. And costumes which ingeniously come with their own “planets” attached, help sell the story.

Costumer Rachelle Waldie (of AEQUANIMITAS) wisely chose to bring Exupery’s illustrations to life, outfitting the Little Prince in bright colors and crisp dandy details like brass buttons, broad collars, and fitted darts. Fans of the drawings will be delighted by the faithful reproduction. Other characters are dressed suitably for their various roles; some looks are cartoonish, and others workaday. An additional bugaboo, talking flowers and plants, has been deftly dispatched with unique designs, such as the snake costume, which frees the actress’s arms to serve as graceful, slithering snake-puppets, even as her whole body is also attired as a hooded cobra.

Shaking The Tree doesn’t mind trusting tikes with big tasks, as evidenced by the production’s lighting tech, eleven-year-old Jasper Jenkins. As far as Culturephile could tell, he was riding the sliders for the whole show, and he delivered the best kind of lighting performance: the kind you can take for granted.

In a couple spots, Culturephile wished for more. A pair of ears, or a snout, or both, would’ve been a welcome addition to the fox character, to disguise a face we’d seen already. Some sort of lines on the page of the aviator’s sketchpad, would have sold the illusion better than total blanks. And while quieter sound is generally preferred for an all-ages crowd, a tad more volume for ostensibly noisy elements (like the airplane) and some sort of whooshing sound effect for the Prince’s simulated space flight, would have sounded more convincing.

Lasting Impressions

This story wins the day because it makes the heaviest and most complex emotions feel playful and accessible. It says profound and humbling things about the nature of intimacy (“If you tame me, we shall need each other” [said the fox] “To me, you will be unique in all the world…. First you must sit down at a little distance from me…but you will sit a little closer to me every day.”) It echoes ancient beliefs about death and afterlife (“I cannot carry this body with me…it will be like an old abandoned shell…there’s nothing sad about old shells.”) And, in a surprise twist that jerks the most parental tears, it offers a stunning insight: the little prince has tamed the big aviator, and not the other way ’round.

For a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar anytime!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, children, comics, book, book, Review, Theater, Literature, Portland Art, outer space

phile under: gallery

Shine A Light

Portland Art Museum

Email
Wamp

Tonight PAM shines a light on Wampire, and assorted other pop attractions.
Photo by Tyler Kohlhoff.

It’s been a big month for Social Practice Art, aka the “no more snootiness, let’s get everybody onboard” strategy of arts curation. First there was The People’s Biennial at TBA, (which closes this weekend), then there was last week’s FlashMob performance of Marian The Librarian at the Central Library, and tonight, PAM gets in on the action, hosting Shine A Light, an evening of accessible adventure, within its vaunted halls.

Says Wampire frontman (and natural cheerleader) Rocky Tinder, “There’s so much rad stuff going on at this show! I’ve never been to one of these yet but people have been telling me it’s super rad! Weird happenings throughout the whole museum. Food and beer too. Not bad, Portland Art Museum.”

Here’s a condensed list of events and times:

DJ Sexy Cousin 6-8:00

Music From The Milieu 6:30, 7:30, 8:30, 9:30, 10:30

B-Boy Is For Break Dance 7:00

A Teaching Collection 7:45-8:15, 9-9:30

Two Boys, Wrestling 8:00, 9:30

Performance By Wampire 8:15

Guidance Counselor 9:45

Sallie Ford & The Sound Outside 11:00pm

Other attractions, including food and beverage provision, will occur throughout. For a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar anytime!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, social practice art, modern art, weekend picks, portland, Live, Galleries, Portland Art, Portland Art Museum,

phile under: gallery

Gallery 903 hosts
Alexandra Becker-Black

These nuanced nudes are getting the gallery treatment Culturephile told you they deserved.

Email
Extend

“I told you so.” It’s an obnoxious statement, but occasionally so true.

Case in point:

Last week, Gallery 903 threw a moderately posh First Thursday opening, accompanied by a live flamenco guitarist and a gracious gallery hostess with a hint of a French accent.

I went. And while browsing Allen Stephenson’s golden pastoral landscapes, and admiring Jeff White’s vibrant firey cloudscapes—I was stopped in my tracks by Alexandra Becker-Black’s subtly masterful watercolor nudes. Where had I seen these before?

A quick search of this site * yielded the following post from a July edition of Weekend Picks:

There doesn’t have to be good art on the walls, for me to enjoy my coffee. Coffee shops know this, and so often when they see me coming, they whisk all the good art off the walls and tack up something unremarkable. However: yesterday as I happened into Backspace, I noticed several starkly beautiful pieces by Alexandra Becker-Black. Large expanses of white space and delicate splashes of monochromatic watercolor combined for surprisingly fresh depictions of the most classic subject: the female nude. Part of a show that will disappear at the close of July, these works seem worth visiting—even if you aren’t looking for a latte.

At the time of that post, Ms. Becker Black’s works were displayed—well, rather nakedly. They were hung on the wall poster-style, cringingly close to errant sprays of coffee spatter. Now that these delicate nudes are getting the star treatment they deserve, all the more reason to go see them. Why? Because I told you so.

*Portland Monthly’s site recently got far more searchable—give it a try!


Gallery 903 is open weekdays and Saturday, 10-5:30, Sunday, 12-5. For a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar anytime!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art, Museums, Galleries, painting, weekend picks, galleries, nudity

phile under: october gallery pick

Ace Hotel

Artcrank Bike Posters

Email
Artcrank_pdx_webgraphic2

Posters + Bikes. Could it get any more “Portland?”

A coordinated effort between Seizure Palace, popular poster artists, BikePortland.org and Oregon Manifest, the opening will feature libations from Deschutes Brewery, and donations to charitable org Bikes To Rwanda.

The following artists’ work will be on-view. Note posterer-to-the-stars Mike King, and Portland Monthly’s own Jason Blackheart!

Aaron James • Ada Mayer • Ben Parsons • Berto Legendary H • Bettina McEntyre • BikePortland.org/Lukas Ketner • Craft Svcs. Design Co. • Casey Collett-Paule • Dan Kinto • Dana Mackenzie • David Gabel • Erik Johnson • Faith Brown • Fred DiMeglio • Haley Ann Robinson • Jamie Patrick Paul • Jason Blackheart • Jason Miranda • Jenn Levo • Jennifer Parks • Jimmy Cavalieri • Joanne Slorach • Jolby • Lynn Yarne • Martha Koenig • Mary Kate McDevitt • Michael Hyp • Michael Verhey • Mike King • Natalie Schaefer • Oregon Manifest • Thomas Bradley • Tiago DeJerk • Tom O’Toole

Click the red event title above, for more info. Or, for a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar anytime!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art, Galleries, Graphic Art, Guerilla Art, galleries

phile under: gallery

Modern & Contemporary Prints

Augen Gallery

Email
Fish_wallpaper

This print displays the classic Warhol school: simple motif, slight variation, and repetition.

Did TBA just whet your palate for more diversity and modernity? Well, you’re in luck: for one more week Augen Gallery hosts a group show with prints from more than 20 artists—including some names you may have heard of, like Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, and Pablo Picasso. (You know, some of the guys who boldly pioneered this aesthetic frontier.)

Culturephile Weekend Picks are published most Fridays at noon. For a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar anytime!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art, Galleries, galleries, galleries, galleries, modern

phile under: gallery

PDX Contemporary Art
Hosts Adam Sorenson

Email
Adam_1467

Stalagmites? Petals? Epithelial cells? Whatever these forms may seem to be, they’ve got something to do with a Dragon’s Mouth. Showing throughout September.

Adam Sorensen’s drawings and oil paintings simultaneously reference natural terrain, and psychedelic planes. Hence, his recent works, opening today at 925 NW Flanders Street, feel both familiar and alien. In other words, trippy topography in technicolor hues.


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

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art, Galleries, galleries,

phile under: fashion

AEQUANIMITAS Grand Opening

Email
Godseye

A god’s-eye by designer Rachelle Waldie.
Gaze into it, and find “AEQUANIMITAS!”

Tonight, fair friends, we usher in the age of AEQUANIMITAS, the most unspellable new art/fashion studio space in the Central Eastside complex erstwhile known as Grass Hut Gallery Row (8th and E Burnside, north side of the street).

The invitation is in all-caps, and wildly poetic. But this is is what we know:

~Designer Rachelle Waldie costumes experimental art-rockers. Her client list includes Deelay Ceelay.

~The word “aequanimitas” refers to the transcendent calm that a physician experiences in the face of life-and-death circumstances.

~The event starts at five tonight in the rear parking lot. It promises libations, and hints at revelations.



For a more comprehensive list of upcoming events, visit the Arts & Entertainment Calendar!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art, Galleries, Crafts, Fashion, Weekend Plans, crafts, weekend picks, weekend

phile under: quality time-frittering

Local Music Videos

Eye and ear candy, to placate your Monday stupor.

Email

Happy Monday. How much coffee have you had? Enough to track the tricks of this impressive local yo-yo-thrower? Set to the equally dexterous and energetic Hoop + Wire by Portland’s own Boy Eats Drum Machine, Clifton B. proves he’s “just swift enough.”


I know what you’re saying. Those were some radical yo-yo moves, man, but where is the actual wire that the song title implies? Oddly enough, it’s wound its way around Little Beirut’s “Last Light,” which features intricately detailed stop-motion-animated sequences, conceived by band-members who daylight as LAIKA talent.


Culturephile can’t help but wish they’d stuck with the stop-mo motif for the whole piece, despite the art form’s notorious time-consumption. (See Culturephile coverage of Fred, by Misha Klein and Billygoat’s Dioscuri.) But, with an upcoming album release for the band, we suppose the show must go on.

Finally, the following piece, recently released by Portland Cello Project, features marionette puppetry in a scale set, and then not-to-scale live locations. Telling the tragic tale of a displaced shrimp in a big cruel world, this short points up the gulf-pollution crisis in a poignant, accessible way.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Portland Art, music, Film, Animation, LAIKA, video, puppet

Richard Foreman Mini-Festival

Hurry, go go go!

Email

If you step into some slip-on shoes and really rush, you may still catch some of the 8th Annual Richard Foreman Mini-Festival tonight at Someday Lounge, featuring the following performers:

5 PM
David Abel + Sam Miller
Chuck Barnes + Lois Leveen
Jin Camou
Anthony Christy + Surprise Guest
Lisa DeGrace
Georgia Luce + Co.
Our Shoes Are Red/The Performance Lab
Theo Wilson

7 PM
Action/Adventure
Gregg Bielemeier
Tiffany Lee Brown
Mizu Desierto
Tim DuRoche + Lisa Radon
Formspace
Danielle Ross + Future Death Toll
Doug Theriault + Cyndy Chan

An annual celebration of the work of Ontological-Hysterical Theater Director Richard Foreman, the festival will be presented in two separate shows, at 5 and 7pm respectively. Linda Austin, of Performance Works NW, has teamed up with a cadre of performance-arts acts, including former Culturephile author Lisa Radon, to present works inspired by some assigned text and some “simple restrictions” that they were given just 10 days ago. The results should make for a one-of-a-kind spectacle, set to start soon after you read this and rush out your door!

In performance art, you must allow for spontaneity, and react immediately. So GO!

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art

phile under: first thursday

First Thursday

Still life, simple stones, and surreal painted fables.

Email
Latch_them_softly

Hibiki Miyazaki’s Latch Them Softly makes you yearn for a story. At Augen Gallery.

GALLERY OPENINGS

Augen Gallery
Hibiki Miyazaki

This artist’s name brings to mind author Haruki Murakami (Wind Up Bird Chronicles). Far be it from Culturephile to force a fit, but the heady, disorienting, whimsical feel of Murakami’s writing, would actually be quite nicely accompanied by the images of Miyazaki, which also mix children’s-story motifs with a modern, surreal feel.

Chambers Gallery
Echo Pool, Resting Stones

Please permit a haiku:
seven black stones sit,
gazing on pond’s reflection,
nothing more than this.

Jackson_echo-pool_install

Resting Stones chillax beside the Echo Pool, Chambers Gallery

Froelick Gallery
Neptune’s Picnic, Patterns and Memories

Katherine Ace’s masterful realistic still-lifes in oils, seem to bring to light the cheerful entropy of consumption. Overturned glasses and ravaged rind-fruits sometimes perch atop a drifting pile of loose newspaper, and sometimes are submerged underwater.

Ace123_wanderingofpsyche_web

Katherine Ace paints feasts laid to waste. Froelick Gallery.

Meanwhile, Charles Dazler Knuff’s black bronzes comprised of functional found-object shapes, equally evoke chess pieces, farmscape silos, and factoryscape chimneys.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Portland Art, Museums, First Thursday

phile under: first thursday

First Thursday Picks

Gallery openings explore many dimensions, and indie cult faves close the evening.

Email
Bluesky

GALLERY OPENINGS

Blue Sky Gallery
From the Studio of Roy Lichtenstein
by Laurie Lambrecht. Artist Talk at 6:30pm.
Photographer Laurie Lambrecht served a stint assisting the iconic Roy Lichtenstein, and photo-documented his preparation for an exhibition at the Guggenheim (pictured). The result is an “art-within-art” series of photographs that expose the processes and postures of one of the 20th-century greats, in his element.

Laura Russo Gallery
Mel Katz: New Wall Sculptures
Responsible for enough Portland sculptures to be considered a fixture himself, Mel Katz continues his exploration of shape and contour.

Group Exhibition of Gallery Artists: Paintings, Sculpture, Textiles, Works on Paper
Culturephile favorite:
Tom Fawkes and Judith Poxson Fawkes. Between Tom’s photorealistic acrylic paintings of Mediterranean gardens and architecture, and Judith’s massive, intricate, tapestries, this Portland married couple displays mind-boggling mastery of detail and deft, skilled execution. The work of each of these shrewd, crafty Fawkeses will be on display.
Other contributors include:
Betty Merken and Lucinda Parker—Bold, blocky abstracts
Mary Josephson and Gregory Grennon—Naïve folk intensity, hints of Kahlo
Kim Osgood and Henk Pander—Unique slants on still life.
Anne Siems Sherrie Wolfe—Renaissance riffing.
Erik Stotik and Jay Backstrand—Sensory overload iconoclasm.

3-D Center of Art & Photography
Digital Stereo Paintings by Theo Prins
Fourteen digital paintings produced using a graphics tablet, inspired by the bustling marketplaces of Seoul, Saigon, Hanoi, Bangkok, and Chiang Mai.

The Caretaker 3D, starring Dick Van Dyke
In this 3D film, which debuted earlier this year at the Malibu Film Festival, Van Dyke portrays the legendary 1930’s handyman tasked with maintenance and repair of the famous “HOLLYWOOD” sign (which, at the time, read “HOLLYWOODLAND.”)

MUSIC

Mississippi Studios
Ioa & Alan Singley
Amanda Spring, erstwhile known as the pink-haired, pitch-perfect singer and intricate math drummer of the indie-rock combo Point Juncture Washington (a band, not a town) has jumped front and center for Ioa, a lush 7-member lineup supporting her unwavering alto croon and utterly unique songcraft. And if you’re not careful, Alan Singley, affable bandleader of Pants Machine and longtime all-ages house-show hero, will ride his bike right into your heart.

Ground Kontrol Barcade
DJ Diabetic (aka Shepard Fairey)
If rumors—and posters—are true, then Ground Kontrol’s usual lineup of video-game-beep-drowning DJ’s will feature an extra-special guest: guerrilla graphic-art god Shepard Fairey. Think you don’t know who that is? You do. Trust and obey. Even if he’s hunched under a hoody, avoiding everyone’s gaze and spinning terrible tunes, you can boast later about being in the same room.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art, Museums, First Thursday, music

Gallery Guide

The Book of Crumb

Misanthrope in the Garden of Eden

Email
001chapter1rev

The Book of Genesis Illustrated by R. Crumb, 2009. Chapter 1. Ink and correction fluid on paper. 14 x 11 in. (37.5 × 29.2 cm). Courtesy the artist; Paul Morris; and David Zwirner, New York.

And R. Crumb said, “Let there be bosoms and vast buttocks.” And we saw that it was good.

If you go to church, then you’ve heard of the book of Genesis. If you’re immersed in the world of underground comics, then you’ve definitely heard of R. Crumb. But you probably haven’t heard of these two in the same sentence. Well prepare for a cross-culture comics catechism!

Q: What kind of man is R. Crumb?
A: R. Crumb is an unabashedly perverse cultural misanthrope known the world over for his highly detailed drawings of large uninhibited women, goofy spiritual seekers, and old blues singers (not to mention “Keep On Truckin’” and the cover art for Cheap Thrills, Janis Joplin’s classic album with Big Brother and the Holding Company) and for his bawdy, surreal approach to comics.

Q: How many drawings did he do for his Book of Genesis project?
A: 207 illustrious pages!

Q: And how many are on view starting Saturday at the Portland Art Museum?
A: All of them!

Q: What does God look like according to R. Crumb?
A: White beard, white robe, furrowed brow and big as the cosmos oh my!

The Bible Illuminated: R. Crumb’s Book of Genesis presents black-and-white drawings by the artist along with narrative text to guide you through all your favorite Old Testament shenanigans. Everything from “On the seventh day he rested” to snakes and apples to Amazonian biblical heroines. Anyone familiar with his style will immediately recognize Crumb’s brooding, heavily-inked figures and intensely detailed panels. And his take on the biblical canon is certainly something to see. The text might be the same old same old, but the graphic inferences in the panels themselves give you a little something extra that only the wild and worldly Crumb can provide. While you’re at the museum, stop by and compare his line-work with that of the Masters on display in A Pioneering Collection: Master Drawings from the Crocker Art Museum. Admission is $12 for adults and $9 for students and seniors. Free for members.

Add a Comment »

Tags: Art, Portland Art, Galleries, Interview, galleries, comics

Advertisement