Posts Tagged ‘portland artist’

Review: Jenene Nagy’s Tidal

Monday, February 22nd, 2010

Jenene Nagy, Tidal. installation view

Liquid Mercury
We called it “mercury sea:” the Pacific on a windless evening in a thin fog just after sunset when the glassy surface of the Monterey Bay reflected the orange-tinged grey of the sky.


A Shattered Polyhedron, A Wave, A Horizon Line

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.

Unlike earlier installations, including “s/plit” at the Portland Art Museum, where flat monochrome fields are both painted on the walls and extend out from them on panels, “Tidal” hugs but maintains a distance from floor and wall. It tangles but does not merge with the rafters above.

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. It was not until my second visit to “Tidal” that I perceived the magic that the horizon line of florescents worked, making mercury sea of the panels propped on the floor and brushing exquisite gradients on the vertical panels. 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.

Jenene Nagy, Tidal. installation view

Real, Hyperreal, Un-
But Nagy’s always thinking about how we perceive and/or remember color, hence her use of intense, hyperreal hues. She’s dealing with space—Nagy’s recent installations are both big enough to envelop the viewer and nimble enough to create a sense of movement with static parts. She is, in fact, creating stage sets—referencing natural world with forms that evoke wave here, or flock as in “s/plit” at PAM, or with titles like “Meadow”—built of drywall and exposed 2×4s.

As set, “Tidal” signals that we are to suspend disbelief, be willing to meet this fractured hot pink wave somewhere between reality and artifice. Unlike strictly representational art (say a pastoral scene painted in oils and surrounded by a massive gold frame) Nagy’s work is resolutely honest about its fakeness.

Jenene Nagy, Tidal. installation view

If Nagy’s work employs reductive methods borrowed from minimalism (while addressing space and perception as did light and space artists), the  blue-collar 2×4 supports of her installation point away from the thing itself to that for which it is a stand-in, reinvigorating the reductive with possibility…the possibility of viewer-supplied narrative or memory…not unlike that of a mercury sea.

Jenene Nagy Artist Talk + Happy Hour

Friday, February 12th, 2010

Jenene Nagy, Tidal

Disjecta is doing a happy hour every Friday from 5-8 PM with artist Jenene Nagy whose epic installation, Tidal, is currently on view. Friday night, February 19 at 7 PM, “Nagy will present a talk on her work in the form of a Q+A led by fellow artist Avantika Bawa. The conversation will range from practice in general, site-specific and project-based works, Tidal in particular and how it came to be, and the influence of curatorial practice on artmaking.”

Annotation: Configure

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010

Derek Faust, Transmission Lineage, 2009, Series of 23 24"x36" Prints

Annotation: Configure is a show of new work by Portland-based artist and OCAC grad, Derek Faust. At Alpern Gallery (2552 NW Vaughn) for the month of February, there will be an opening reception for Annotation: Configure this Friday, February 12 from 6-9 PM. Information systems made visually manifest, especially in abstract and minimal forms, is definitely an intriguing hopping off point.

Statement:
Annotation: Configure is a formal examination into the aesthetics, materials, and means of information storage and reproduction. By combining image with the language of objects, Faust’s new body of work explores analog and digital information through abstraction and minimization. Be it a dot and dash of Morse code or the shape of a USB port, there is a language that has a direct lineage to how we view, value and communicate with each other. Specifically, Faust’s work grapples with information systems through an investigation of their physical and visual language.

Gallery hours Friday 12-5 & Saturdays 11-5 (and by appointment)

Derek Faust, Annotation Configure _2

Derek Faust, Annotation Configure

images: top, Derek Faust, Transmission Lineage, 2009, Series of 23 24″x36″ Prints. bottom l-r, detail. Derek Faust, Transmission Lineage, 2009, Series of 23 24″x36″ Prints.

Erik Whittemore

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009


Erik Whittemore, Revitalization Effort, 2009, kilncast glass, 7″ x 8″ x 4.5″

From the group show currently winding down at Bullseye Gallery, Erik Whittemore’s work stands out. Glass can be showy with a seeming hierarchy of technique over aesthetic over idea, which is why it often doesn’t send me. There have been, though, a number of works at Bullseye recently that have made me eat my words/thoughts.

In the case of Whittemore’s pieces, I was seduced by the sublime, milky, opacity of some of the forms, the gravity-provoked tension (the perilously leaning forms are glass, after all), and metaphor that can be read—in spite of its seeming simplicity—in multiple ways. The titles and arrangements say architecture, but the relationships among the forms can alternatively be read as those among humans. Well played, Whittemore. Can’t wait to see more of this Portland-based glass artist’s work.


Erik Whittemore, Location, 2009, kilncast glass, 7.5″ x 4.75″ x 3.375″

Review: Ben Stagl’s Unfolded at Gallery HOMELAND

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Folded and Clad. Ben Stagl. Unfolded. image Calvin Ross Carl OPENWIDEPDX.com

To dig into Ben Stagl’s tour-de-force solo show, the best place to start is at its center. Unfolded, like all exhibitions at Gallery HOMELAND, flows through an angular lobby that twists through the Ford Building (SE 11th & Division).

In the heart of the building, in the main space on the north wall, is a piece called “First Snap.” And if your daddy was a carpenter, you’ll immediately recognize the single straight-if-splattered line as created by a carpenter’s chalk line. It hovers diagonally, simply in the center of a long sheet of paper. And its import as metaphor is central, because anything built is only as good as the first snap and its perpendicular. (more…)