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Posted inArt

Redefining the Landscape

Art Review

Redefining the Landscape Site Specific Sculpture by Jason Rogenes Paintings by Michael DeJong Philip Feldman Gallery Pacific Northwest College of Art 1241 NW Johnson, 821-8892 At a certain point, it seems that landscape paintings are interchangeable, merely glorified postcards of similar settings. This can be especially true within the Northwest art scene, as the beauty […]

Posted inArt

Redefining the Landscape

Art Review

Redefining the Landscape Site Specific Sculpture by Jason Rogenes Paintings by Michael DeJong Philip Feldman Gallery Pacific Northwest College of Art 1241 NW Johnson, 821-8892 At a certain point, it seems that landscape paintings are interchangeable, merely glorified postcards of similar settings. This can be especially true within the Northwest art scene, as the beauty […]

Posted inArt

Redefining the Landscape

Redefining the Landscape Site Specific Sculpture by Jason Rogenes Paintings by Michael DeJong Philip Feldman Gallery Pacific Northwest College of Art 1241 NW Johnson, 821-8892 At a certain point, it seems that landscape paintings are interchangeable, merely glorified postcards of similar settings. This can be especially true within the Northwest art scene, as the beauty […]

Posted inBooks

Trosper

Trosper Story by Jim Woodring Music by Bill Frisell (Fantagraphics) In 1968, a 14-year-old Jim Woodring visited a surrealism retrospective at the Los Angeles County Art Museum, and the experience planted the seed for his eventual entrance into the world of comics. Woodring began his career in 1980, when he took a job at Ruby […]

Posted inArt

Top Picks for First Thursday

Art Review

The following is a list of May exhibits that should be at the top of the list in one’s First Thursday tour. PDX Gallery presents “Arrangements,” an exhibit of sculptures by Ellen George. The installation of works in plastic is characteristically bio-morphic and as the artist explains, “the configurations expand as I examine an association, […]

Posted inArt

New in Town

Art Review

New in Town Portland Art Museum 1219 SW Park, 226-2811 Through June 23 The 13 artists included in the exhibit New in Town at the Portland Art Museum are certainly not new–in fact, each have garnered significant international attention for their respective work. However, this is the first opportunity for a Portland audience to view […]

Posted inArt

Debra Van Tuine

Art Review

Debra Van Tuine Butters Gallery 520 NW Davis 248-9378 Through April 27 Debra Van Tuinen garners much inspiration from the diverse coastal landscapes of the West. From this fodder, she creates loosely abstract, encaustic paintings, which attempt to translate the moody atmosphere that the land and sea can evoke. At points, Van Tuinen does indeed […]

Posted inArt

First Thursday

Preview

Preview: First Thursday Art-viewing opportunities available this month are characteristically Portland-like–meaning they are many and varied. Yet, if one looks for a trend, it would appear that the installation art is still en vogue. The following list includes installation work that should not be missed, as well as a few other savory nuggets for consumption. […]

Posted inBooks

Nigger

Book Review

Nigger by Randall Kennedy (Pantheon) In 1940, Langston Hughes wrote: “The word nigger to colored people of high and low degree is like a red rag to a bull. Used rightly or wrongly, ironically or seriously, of necessity for the sake of realism, or impishly for the sake of comedy[,] it doesn’t matter. The word […]

Posted inArt

Time Circles

Art Review

Time Circles: Past and Present Larry Fink SK Josefsberg Studio 241-9112 Through April 13 New York photographer Larry Fink is very much a photographer’s photographer–meaning that during his lengthy career, he has maintained a commitment to creating strong prints. Fink relies on the usual aspects of image making, like composition and contrast. Yet he goes […]

Posted inArt

No Purchase Necessar

Art Review

“No Purchase Necessary” Heidi Cody Philip Feldman Gallery Through March 30 New York artist Heidi Cody dials into a fascination with good, old-fashioned American consumerism in the exhibit, “No Purchase Necessary.” It is a well-crafted selection of work that provides a graphically stunning glimpse into aspects of advertising like branding, packaging, etc. At its most […]

Posted inArt

Love is a Stranger

Melanie Manchot “Love is a Stranger” Portland Institute for Contemporary Art 219 NW 12th, 242-1419 Through March 23 London-based, German artist Melanie Manchot sets out to confront viewers with identity politics, issues of intimacy, and canons of beauty. Her mission is, for the most part, accomplished in the exhibit “Love is a Stranger,” a selection […]

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