art

First Thursday Openings

Latin Studies
Al Taylor
Elizabeth Leach
417 NW 9th
Opening reception 6-9 PM

“Don’t call them sculptures,” the late Al Taylor said of his wall constructions of found materials. His drawings and constructions were of a piece, one leading to the other and back again. Taylor, a New York artist whose work is here via David Zwirner, made work with materials at hand and considered shadow as a medium, according to the artist’s widow, Debbie Taylor. As these represent his first forays into three dimensions, this is a rare opportunity to see works from a pivotal point in Taylor’s career without getting on a plane.

In Touch
Judy Cooke
Elizabeth Leach
417 NW 9th
Opening reception 6-9 PM

Portland-based artist Judy Cooke negotiates a space between painting and sculpture with her almost architectural paintings on panel.

Elizabeth Leach
417 NW 9th
Opening reception 6-9 PM

Targets
Eva Lake
Augen Gallery
716 NW Davis
Opening reception 5-8:30 PM

Portland knows Eva Lake as an abstract painter, host of Art Focus on KBOO, arts writer, and former gallery owner. But Targets may take some people by surprise (although they are more Eva than perhaps anything else she’s done in her long arts career). Unified as a series by paper targets (which Lake originally swiped as a teenager from a police shooting range), these photomontages embody Lake’s unique and powerful feminism as an artist. They capture her nostalgic appreciation for pop feminine icons as well as her sense of art’s historical treatment of women as object (even women artists as objects). All the while Lake demonstrates, as to be expected, her deft way with color.


Recent Paintings
Terry Waldron
Augen Gallery
716 NW Davis
Opening reception 5-8:30 PM

A show of Waldron’s paintings which incorporate figure and scrawled word in compositions that suggest precarious and even tragic narrative.

Hercules
Storm Tharp
PDX Contemporary Art
925 NW Flanders

“In some regard, the drawings from Hercules reflect a desire to observe philosophy and to encounter perfection – to be enlightened. The maximal and decorated inclinations are in question. The labor and the effort are being weighed. Representation is scrutinized and the desire to explore the formlessness of abstraction is pursued. I do not intend to discount the work as intermediary, although it is fair and exciting to suggest that the work represents both a closing and an opening. The nods to Minimalism throughout are both revering as much as they suggest an end game and, ultimately, a question.”

An opening and a closing. What an interesting time, then to be seeing this show of Tharp’s uncanny portraits and minimalist abstractions. Particularly on the heels of his inclusion in the Whitney Biennial, that we are seeing him at a pivotal moment is exciting. He namechecks the Pillars of Hercules on which the hero supposedly had inscribed, “Non plus ultra,” (or “Nec plus ultra”) “there is nothing beyond.” But it seems, from what he says above, that he’s about to disregard that warning and sail through the Straits out onto the open ocean.


Romance
Brad Adkins
Across the Hall, PDX Contemporary Art
925 NW Flanders

Meanwhile, Across the Hall, Adkins Romance is a show of large scale sculpture and text-based work with a dim (if witty) view of the show’s title.

Pop Coochie
IGLOO
625 NW Everett #102
Opening reception 6-10 PM

Maybe I’m just saying we’re all corrupted in a way; life itself is corrupted, and that’s the way we like it.
- Maurizio Cattelan

With work by Sean Joseph Patrick Carney, Jason Traeger and Liam Drain, Alicia McDaid, Matthew Green, Ralph Pugay, Patrick Rock.

POSTED: June 3rd, 2010 | AUTHOR: admin | FILED UNDER: art | TAGS: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments »

events

PICA TADA!

Edge of my seat. Portland Institute for Contemporary Art (PICA) announces the artist lineup for the 2010 Time-Based Art Festival (TBA) at its annual gala, TADA! next weekend, Saturday, April 24 from 6-10 PM at The Bison Building (419 NE 10th). A few tickets are still available ($150) for this main fundraiser of the year for PICA’s programming, especially TBA.

Portland-based choreographer (and TBA:10 artist!) Noelle Stiles and Unrecognizable Now perform with Delaney Kelly (music), and Chris Lael Larson (video). Simpatica provides dinner.

Below is a detail of artist Storm Tharp’s “Suit,” just one of the items at auction. Tharp, who, as I mentioned in an earlier post, is one of two Portland-based artists with work in the Whitney Biennial, will be an artist in residence for TBA:10. !

Storm Tharp, Suit. detail. image courtesy: PICA

POSTED: April 17th, 2010 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: events | TAGS: , , , , , | No Comments »

art

Talking Judd

In anticipation of Donald Judd: Delegated Fabrication, the one-day symposium at U of O on Sunday, April 25, a clutch of Portland artists, including the symposium’s organizer, writer and artist Arcy Douglass, will talk about Judd’s work and their own today at PNCA, Room 201 (1241 NW Johnson) at 3 PM. Storm Tharp, Laura Fritz, Victor Maldonado, and Anna Gray and Ryan Wilson Paulsen round out the panel. Jeff Jahn of PORT, moderates.

It’s not clear to me that each of these artists’ work, as info for the panel says, “has had a strong relationship to Donald Judd’s.” Storm Tharp, whose work is currently in the Whitney Biennial, and Laura Fritz seem to stretch that premise the most, but given the sharp minds on the panel, it should be an interesting conversation.

POSTED: April 17th, 2010 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: art | TAGS: , , , , , , | 1 Comment »

art

Lovely Petaluma: Storm Tharp and Elizabeth Taylor

Elizabeth Taylor in Suddenly Last Summer

Lovely Petaluma is small A projects’ (1430 SE Third) screening series at the gallery. Tonight at 7 PM, installment no. 2 of the series finds Portland-based artist (and critical favorite) Storm Tharp presenting a program of excerpts from Boom, Suddenly Last Summer, and A Place in the Sun and discusses “what a crazed and unsubtle actress she (Elizabeth Taylor) is – and how great she is in her badness.”

It’s not the first time Tharp has considered Liz. What we didn’t know that is noted in his mini-bio on the press release is that, “To get into college he submitted drawings of Guess models on velvet paper and scratch-boards of movie stars. It worked.” There’s nothing that could warm up a frigid night like Liz Taylor in a green dress. Plus, beer and popcorn…and Tharp.

POSTED: January 24th, 2008 | AUTHOR: lisa | FILED UNDER: art | TAGS: , , , , | No Comments »