Saturday, December 27, 2008

Link Roundup

Memorial Service for Terry Toedtemeier

Following the recent death of Terry Toedtemeier, a memorial service will be held at 2pm on Sunday, January 4th at the Portland Art Museum. The PAM website has the details.

Friday, December 26, 2008

Links

L.A. Travel Guide

From the snowed-in confines of Vancouver, BC, here (by special request) is a guide to what look like some must-see sights in the L.A. art world over the holiday...

  • Culture Monster enthuses about 'Gouge: The Modern Woodcut 1870 to Now' at The Hammer Museum at UCLA. Billed by as a 'thematic survey' the exhibition juxtaposes the work of recognized masterst (Gaugin) with more contemporary artists (among them a beautiful piece by Anselm Kiefer). Baselitz's 1981 piece The Eagle is above.

Wednesday, December 24, 2008

A missed opportunity...


For those who failed to catch Corey Arnold's Fish Work at Charles A. Hartman, it was one of the most compelling photography exhibitions in Portland this year. Quite literally capturing both the 'fish' and the 'work' of deep sea fishing, Arnold's prints capture the sometimes horrific beauty of our society's relationship to the sea as well as making a compelling statement about the very human nature of the fishermen themselves. Loneliness, above, was featured in the exhibition.

Dawoud Bey in Baltimore

Both the Contemporary Museum and the Walters Art Museum in Baltimore opened exhibitions of Dawoud Bey on the 13th. The exhibition at the Contemporary Museum is a companion piece to Portraits Re/Examined: A Dawoud Bey Project at the Walters, which looks like the more interesting of the two; it places the photographs of Bey alongside portraits from the museum collection and is curated by Bey and a group of Baltimore high school students. According to the press release race, class, and identity in historic portraiture are the fundamental questions addressed. 

Both museums should be commended on the project. Working together, working with local schools, allowing a relevant contemporary artist so much space and freedom, exposing the relationship between history and present, influence and practice; refreshing examples of what cultural institutions should be doing.

Compare...Bey's 1988 Boy Eating a Foxy Pop (Brooklyn, NY) and the 17th Century Portrait Bust of a Young Boy, by an anonymous Flemish artist.
      

Links

Saturday, December 20, 2008

Check Out


Check out the overcaffeinated art of Justin Gibbens at Elizabeth Leach Gallery, up until January 3rd. Red Bird of Paradise (above) uses coffee, while other paintings use materials such as green tea.

Friday, December 19, 2008

Terry Toedtemeier

PAM loses another significant curator - after the resignations of Jennifer Gately and Marnie Stark, comes the death of Terry Toedtemeier, photography curator and significant artist in his own right. One of his photographs is below.

Museum of Contemporary Craft

The Museum of Contemporary Craft has fallen on hard times of late, cutting back staff, which is a shame. MoCC and its fellow art galleries in the DeSoto building are a great resource for the artistic community of Portland, and MoCC is one of the better free museums on this coast. Thus I wholeheartedly endorse the scheme to benefit the museum by buying Powell's books through the MoCC website. There are MoCC curators picks, behind the link, as well as catalogs.

News roundup

In honor of the weather...

...which I'm braving to head up the coast to exhibitions at the Frye in Seattle and VAG in Vancouver, here are a few great snow-centric images...


Pierre Dubreuil Duck on the Marsh in the Snow, from 1898.

William Hahn's 19th century Indians in the Snow.

On Kawara at David Zwirner

David Zwirner Gallery in NYC is currently presenting On Kawara's on-going performance project 'One Million Years.' The gallery is looking for volunteers to be part of the performance, so if you're in NYC and want to get involved, you can get in touch with the Northwest's own Julia Guariglia at jguariglia@davidzwirner.com. As readers will know, I'm a big fan of Kawara's work and wish I could make it out there myself.