Thursday, December 15, 2011

FAREWELL TO DENVER POST ART CRITIC KYLE MACMILLAN

Serious art coverage in Colorado took a major hit last week as Denver Post Art Critic Kyle MacMillan announced his acceptance of a buyout package from the paper.  MacMillan reflected on his departure over the weekend with the following article:

http://www.denverpost.com/entertainment/ci_19451576?utm

MacMillan had a very poignant statement to make towards the end of the article, one that we think bears repeating here:

"The arts are not a luxury but an essential part of life. They probe the very essence of what it means to be human, taking us on emotional journeys that bring us face to face with our weaknesses and sorrows, but that also lift us to incredible heights of joy."
We couldn't agree more.  There is much doubt as to whether the Post will find a replacement for MacMillan and to what extent his departure will diminish their arts coverage.  We can only see it as a big loss for our community and another black-mark on regional arts journalism in general following the demise of the Rocky Mountain News two years prior.

PLUS GALLERY ARTISTS IN EXHIBITIONS THROUGHOUT COLORADO AND NY

Jon Rietfors: "Value Added" solo exhibition. Opens December 9th, on view through March 25th at the Loveland Museum of Art

Kate Petley: "Gline: Time and Light" installation in group exhibition. Opens December 2nd, on view through January 14th at the Lincoln Center Art Gallery in Fort Collins

Tsehai Johnson: "Strange Beauty: Baroque Sensibilities in Contemporary Art" group exhibition. Opens December 6th, on view through February 14th, 2012 at IDEA Space in the Edith Kinney Gaylord Cornerstone Arts Center, Colorado College, Colorado Springs

Justin Stewart: "Fully Empty #2" installation in group exhibition "The Longest Night. "Opens December 9th, on view through December 18th at Gowanus Ballroom in Brooklyn, NY

Melissa Furness: "A Feminine Contemporary Sublime" group exhibition. On view through December 21st at the A.I.R. Gallery in NYC

PLUS GALLERY LIMITED EDITION HOLIDAY T-SHIRTS FEATURING BILL AMUNDSON ARTWORK NOW AVAILABLE!

Long time followers of Plus Gallery can rely on one thing each year:  A classy design on a t-shirt featuring artwork by one of our artists.  Not quite true, we failed to deliver last year, but we are more than making up for it with a new t-shirt design this year with imagery and text culled from Bill Amundson's recent block-buster exhibition, specifically his scathing commentary on the art-world found in "Art Speak Remote."  This year's design is printed on high-quality American Apparel shirts which feel great against the skin.  We've also upped the ante with a three-color silk-screen, the first in gallery history!  The men's version is slightly different than the ladies, but all are available in three different sizes and limited to an edition of 36 of each.  Get yours now, we'll have them available starting tomorrow evening at Frank T. Martinez opening reception and Plus Gallery holiday soiree at a cost of $35 each.  Get yours while you can!

















Frank T. Martinez models Plus Gallery holiday shirt

PLUS GALLERY CONCLUDES 2011 WITH RETURN OF FRANK T. MARTINEZ IN "OUT/LINE"

OPENING RECEPTION THURSDAY, DECEMBER 8TH FROM 6-9PM

Plus Gallery welcomes Denver artist Frank T. Martinez back with his fourth solo exhibition "Out / Line" from December 8th, 2011 through January 21st, 2012.  Since debuting with the gallery in 2004, Martinez has become one of the most appreciated and acclaimed abstract painters in the region. Martinez works in series, each an extension but quite different from the last, exploring a particular concept in depth and to its conclusion.  His paintings generally combine multiple layers of paint applied through different techniques, the end result typically loaded with symbolic content that is thoughtful and visually captivating.  "Out / Line" might be his most dense and fascinating body of work yet, the new series exerting intricate line-play that hints at subtleties beneath the surface as well as bold flashes bursting through that create a gorgeous, compelling surface texture.  The new collection is an extremely rich exploration into pattern, architecture, color, and density, all seeming to combine with a poetic tension that stimulates the visual senses. The exhibition is presented in conjunction with the grand opening of the Clyfford Still Museum as an extension of hallmark ideas and the continuation of abstraction as a formidable practice in painting today.  Join Plus Gallery in welcoming Frank T. Martinez back to the gallery with an opening reception and holiday party on Thursday, December 8th from 6-9pm.













On Wednesday,  January 18th at 7pm Plus Gallery will host "New Abstraction Today: Four Essential Plus Gallery Artists." This forum brings together four of the gallery's represented artists who have consistently upheld new methods of abstraction within the Denver community and beyond. Frank T. Martinez, Kate Petley, Bruce Price and Dave Yust will discuss their place and what abstraction means in the contemporary milieu.  Presented in conjunction with the community celebration of the opening of the Clyfford Still Museum.  Reservation required, please RSVP to ivar@plusgallery.com

TELLURIDE'S TAKE ON CLYFFORD STILL MUSEUM

By now most everyone has either visited or heard about the latest in Denver's significant new infrastructure of institutional gems dedicated to art with the recent opening of the Clyfford Still Museum.  Two of our good friends from Telluride were recently in town for a tour, and has this report to share on their Still experience in their blog tellurideinside:

http://www.tellurideinside.com/2011/11/clyfford-still-museum-open-in-denver.html

JON RIETFORS ADDS VALUE TO THE LOVELAND MUSEUM OF ART STARTING DECEMBER 9TH

Plus Gallery artist Jon Rietfors has been a curator's favorite ever since emerging as an artist with his trademark approach to dimensional photography, utilizing consumer packaging as the substrate for his creations.  Denver's Center for Visual Arts just featured the artist in the summer group exhibition "Reclamation" with three recent examples of his work, and next month the Loveland Museum of Art follows suite with a more expansive solo exhibition of Rietfors work as a post-Chuck Close tribute to a particular approach to contemporary art.

Rietfors "Value Added" will open next Friday, December 9th with a reception up in Loveland, and will remain on view through March 25th.  Don't miss this opportunity to see one of the regions most original bodies of work in depth.









View of West Glenwood Springs with Nerds Candy Packages (2009)

PATTI HALLOCK TO SPEAK ON ROBERT ADAMS TONIGHT AT CPAC, 7PM

Plus Gallery artist Patti Hallock, who exhibited earlier this year at the gallery with the solo exhibition "The West is Here," is going to be speaking at the Colorado Photographic Arts Center this Wednesday night, November 30th at 7pm. This is the third lecture in a series that focus on a different book by Robert Adams, and in conjunction with the CPAC exhibit titled "Situating Robert Adams". Patti's lecture is inspired by the book "Along Some Rivers" which is a book of interviews with Robert Adams in regard to his work, career and thoughts about photography. She will discuss the ways in which his photographs and words have inspired her own work.

Patti Hallock's "Trailview" from her 2004 body of work "Nocturnal Suburbia"

The talk will take place at the CPAC gallery which is located in Lakewood in the Belmar district. For directions and info visit

http://www.cpacphoto.org/how-to-find-the-center/

NEW MIRROR PANELS AT PLUS GALLERY FROM WILLIAM BETTS

William Betts has made serious progress since emerging in 2004, in a short period of time he's become one of the most fascinating and collectible artists in the international market, his approach to contemporary art truly formidable and thoroughly unique.  We are currently planning for his return to center stage at Plus Gallery in 2012, but in the meantime we've just received two of Betts' recent reverse-drilled mirrored acrylic paintings which will go on display in our upstairs viewing space.













Pool I Miami Beach, October 6, 2010, 3:16pm, (2011)


William is currently featured in the Western Edition of New American Paintings, available at major bookstores nationwide.  His most recent exhibition in Albequerque with Richard Levy Gallery was favorably reviewed in THE Magazine, read the report online at

http://www.levygallery.com/current/2011_betts.themag.pdf

FINAL WEEK AT PLUS GALLERY FOR BILL AMUNDSON EXHIBITION "BLURRED VISION"

This is the final week to stop by Plus Gallery and view Bill Amundson's "Blurred Vision" in it's full glory. Bill will return to Denver in February of 2012 for some lectures and workshops at the Art Students League, otherwise he'll be back on the boards in Wisconsin producing more work for the foreseeable future.

We came across this report on Bill from the Wisconsin State Journal, published in January of 2011 shortly after his return to the state.  We found it worth sharing, particularly in consideration of the explosive nature, quality and scale of the works he completed for our exhibition since that time:

http://host.madison.com/wsj/news/local/columnists/article_9cdc10e4-1865-11e0-8b6f-001cc4c002e0.html

 Bill's limited edition print "Four Art Franchises: Moderno" will be available from Plus Gallery through the holiday season, and we'll also be using portions of his scathing "Art Speak Remote" for the new Plus Gallery holiday t-shirt, available starting December 8th at the opening for Frank T. Martinez new exhibition "Out / Line"












 New Mens and Ladies shirts available at Plus Gallery soon!

THE LONGEST NIGHT BY R. JUSTIN STEWART @ GOWANUS BALLROOM

Plus Gallery aritist and sensation R. Justin Stewart will present "Fully Empty #2," a large scale installation @ Gowanus Ballroom as a part of "The Longest Night," a group exhibition that is all about paying a bit of Brooklyn-style homage to the winter solstice. Drawing inspiration from the longest night of the year, the show explores darkness and light through artworks that mesmerize and sometimes deceive the eye.

Sounds a little bit like the art world gone pagan, right? Because it is as artists contemporize ancient ritual and totemic celebration through modern artistic expression. Featured objects all but defy their materiality and toy with the peculiarities and sensualities that come with the absence of light. Labyrinthine interactive pieces play on ideas of negative and positive space, altering the atmosphere and leaving a potent experiential mark on viewers. Artworks range across media, from painting, drawing, and sculpture to photography, installation, and 3D light mapping projections and performances.

Artists include Jordan Eagles, Leandro Flaherty, Shani Frymer, Robin Hill, Jeremy Holmes, Serban Ionescu, Integrated Visions, Margaret Krug, Kate Raudenbush, Cecelia Rembert, Matthew William Robinson, Charlotte Schulz, R. Justin Stewart, Melanie Vote, Dustin Yellin, and Joshua Young.

Opening Reception
Friday, December 9, 2011
Doors open at 6pm
$5 suggested donation after 8pm

Gowanus Ballroom
55 9th Street, Brooklyn, NY 11215

Dates & Times
December 9-11 & 16-18
Fridays: Doors open at 6pm
Saturdays: Doors open at 12pm
Sundays: 12-6
Weekdays: Viewings available by appointment, 347.460.2687



KATE PETLEY TO UNVEIL "GLINT : TIME AND LIGHT" DECEMBER 2nd IN FORT COLLINS

The Lincoln Center Art Gallery in Fort Collins will unveil a new exhibition on December 9th curated by prestigious regional art critic Leanne Goebel and featuring none other than Plus Gallery artist Kate Petley with a new site-specific installation "Glint: Time and Light."   Other invited artists in the exhibition include Kevin Bell, Chris Coleman, Gregory Euclide, Jenny Gummersall and Laleh Mehran, all terrific artists who have made an impact in Denver and beyond with their work.  In addition, thirty four artists' work has been included, juried from a national submission.

The opening Reception will take place on December 9th from 5:00 - 8:00 P.M.

LOOKING FOR HOLIDAY GIFTS? WANT TO STIMULATE THE ECONOMY? CONSIDER SHOPPING PLUS GALLERY

One of the absolute misunderstandings within the community of contemporary art is that you can't find a good bargain or even something remarkably well priced at a gallery as established as Plus.  We have a number of excellent recommendations for this years holiday shopping, whether you are looking for someone special on your list or upping the ante on your own with an art investment that will leave you satiated for the rest of your life.  While we always highly recommend considering the Plus Gallery artwork inventory in depth at any time, here are just a few items we think you should take note of for holiday gift-giving and receiving:


Bill Amundson Limited Edition Print

The first of it's kind for both the artist and the gallery, a high-quality print from a master artists presented in conjunction with Bill's current exhibition "Blurred Vision" and supported by Modern in Denver magazine.  Available for $250 each in an edition of 58, numbered and signed by Bill.




















New Plus Gallery T-Shirt

Artwork and text from Bill Amundson's  savage and scintillating "Art Speak Remote" will grace this years new Plus Gallery holiday shirt, available in very high-caliber t's silkscreened in three colors in select sizes for both men and the ladies.  This year's design was inspired not only by Bill's artwork but by the opening salvo at his amazing artist talk on November 4th.  Available for pre-order now at $30 or at $35 once they are finished and unveiled at Frank T. Martinez exhibition opening on December 8th.






 








Xi Zhang - Dream Dusts book

Plus Gallery's most recent in-house publication is a tribute to the remarkable career of Xi Zhang.  At just the age of 26 this artist has produced some of the most fascinating and finely-hones bodies of work by any artist we've encountered.  The book looks and feels good, combining a multitude of Zhang's best and most recent works together with select text on the artist including his fascinating 2011 thesis writing.  Available for $100. We might also recommend asking about some of Xi's smaller, most affordable works, just a few are left and available at the gallery.
 
Jenny Morgan - New Frontier

We have exactly 2 more fresh copies of our first Plus Gallery book "New Frontiers" by Jenny Morgan, at a cost of $120.  After these two are gone, they will only be available by special order or direct from blurb.com for $150. A definitive collectors item and essential for all fans of Morgan's work.















Gabriel Liston's "How to draw your family"

A new and exquisite gem arrived at our doorstep recently by one of our favorite painters Gabriel Liston.  His handbound "How to Draw Your Family" is a fun and inspired combination of the artist's loose, magisterial sketches and often misunderstood wit.  We think it's the perfect stocking stuffer and are expecting a small run of copies to be available soon for the holidays.  Cost will be based on how much we like you and/or how badly you want one.  We also suggest considering any and all of the fine paintings from Liston's recent exhibition "Still on the Wrong Side of the Water" presented last july to celebrate the 10 year anniversary of Plus Gallery in Denver.  Did we also mention the fine and affordable "Blue Book" tiles by Liston?  Also perfect for stocking or boxed, wrapped and stuck under a tree or two.
 







 











Ideal Woman & Mirror, Mirror Necklaces by Allie Pohl

Absolutely the ideal holiday gift, Allie Pohl has taken her concept of the "Ideal Woman" and developed a multi-tiered strategy for world domination, both as an artist and an icon.  We expect big things from Allie in the near future following her stunning solo exhibition "Mirror, Mirror" earlier this year at Plus Gallery.  We have a small supply of her necklaces, both the Ideal Woman in various colors and formats, as well as the new "Mirror, Mirror" that only the most deserving females can wear.



















Plus Gallery gift certificate

Can't decide if that special someone will like that radically innovative new William Betts painting?  Not sure if Bill Amundson's "Eric Cantormoretti" will bring a smile or a frown? Don't make your holiday burden more than it needs to be, consider a Plus Gallery gift certificate in whatever amount you deem worthy, available just like cash and without an expiration date.

Riva Sweetrocket paintings (if you are in Niwot)

A few of Riva Sweetrocket's most recent paintings are currently on view at the Manifest Art Gallery in Niwot, on loan from Plus Gallery for their inaugural exhibition.  Sweetrocket recently left Denver for NYC, a move that we have no doubt will increase her collector base and elevate the level of her career substantially.  As a result, everything left in her inventory is worth consideration now, those prices are unlikely to go anywhere but up from here.  Read a little about her show in last week's report from the Longmont Times:

http://www.timescall.com/lifestyles/entertainment/ci_19349207








PLUS GALLERY THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY WEEKEND HOURS

There are two weeks left to view one of the best exhibitions of the decade and now one of the most successful in recent years with 5 of the 6 major works in "Blurred Vision" already sold.  Bill's return to Denver to unveil an all new body of work has been a spectacular run, there really is nothing like it either in Denver or likely in the world of contemporary art right now.

Plus Gallery will close early today at 2:30pm for the Thanksgiving Holiday and will remain closed on Thursday.  But we'll open up again for regular hours on Friday and Saturday for a well needed respite for "Black Friday"  shoppers, those visiting family in the area, or those just looking for a decent outlet to get their art fix on.

We wish everyone a wonderful Thanksgiving and give our own personal thanks to those who has supported us this year and throughout our ten year history.  It has been remarkable to see some of our artists thrive even during tumultuous times, and for the gallery to remain standing on steady ground.  None of this would be possible if it weren't for the enthusiasm of our clients, the integrity of our artists, and the extended family that has built around our program.  As we get ready to head into one of our best lineups ever for 2012, all we can say is "you aint seen nothin yet!"

SDFF34 - FINAL PLUS GALLERY REPORT

The Starz Denver Film Festival concluded it's 34th year this last sunday, the end of an exhausting ten days that also marked the end of the latest Denver Arts Week.  Some in the community felt that Denver Arts Week would be better off not straddling the same dates as the Film Festival, others recognize it as a perfect tribute to the scene in Denver, albeit skewed towards the cinematic arts.  But it might not really matter, the takeaway from both concepts is that there is excellent programming all year round hosted by the Denver Film Society, Landmark Cinemas and a handful of other specialized pockets that aficionados can get their fill from, just as one can within the hyper-robust visual art scene at all moments of the year throughout the Denver community.   To celebrate it in a concentrated effort once a year can bring out some of the best, as it did in the case of Bill Amundson's artist talk as well as many of the terrific screenings held by SDFF.  Our only issue is the recurring bad-cold that tends to wash out half of the opportunities at hand this time of the year.  It happens that way every year......

One thing the festival programmers sure know how to do is secure the films that will be on everyone's hot-sheets at year's end, at least the critical hot-sheets.  This might have more to do with the timing of the festival in early November than anything else, many complain that a lot of the "big" films show up right after the festival concludes, making it partially redundant.  But there are many other ways to look at the concept of the festival, and two of the best examples came with the closing night film last Saturday night and the next day's Special screening at the King Center.   There seemed to be a lot of advance speculation as to the merits and audience readiness for the Michel Hazanavicius' "The Artist," a film that attempts to take the audience back in time to the silent era.  While other contemporary filmmakers such as Guy Maddin have been dabbling in this arena in the most creative and engaging ways for years now, seemingly nobody has endeavored to make what could be a "popular" film that hearkens back to that bygone era.  Fortunately "The Artist" had the chops to pull it off, in addition to the Weinstein stamp that will undoubtedly pull some weight come Oscar time.  I think one would be hard pressed to not fall under the overwhelming charms and spells put forth in this feature; it's certainly not the best film out there, hell I dozed off through most of the last third, but it does a lot and does it well within what most would consider confining boundaries.  And even though it will be unleashed to screens around the world very soon, one probably won't find a better venue than the Caulkins Opera House to view it, something no-one including the entire Starz staff, filmmaker and audience would say about the opening night film "Like Crazy."  What makes "The Artist" resonate in that environment is simply that it takes us all back to a time and place where going to the theater to see a movie was a thrill, it didn't even need sound to bring an audience in.  The screen at Caulkins supports the pictures now-defunct aspect ratio, almost a perfect square, which will seem completely alien to most audiences that watch it in a multiplex (or god forbid on a TV) and certain to lose a lot of it's grandeur there as a result.  But at Caulkins it just filled the stage with the most striking black and white imagery, and brought back a playfulness in film that is largely lacking since the early 1920's.  Of course not entirely, but that's what it felt like at the festival and that's really what the festival is about.  Does this mean that others will start using outdated formats and flourishes in the coming years?  Possibly..........I did also find out just yesterday that music CD's are officially out and that cassette tapes are again all the rage, at least amongst hipsters, for reasons entirely baffling to me.

The final day of the festival always holds a few gems, and considering the crowd lined up to get into the matinee screening of Cronenberg's latest "A Dangerous Method," one would think the festival was still going full-tilt.  Everyone seemed to be discussing "The Artist" and whether it could really win this year's best picture award, or if that last third really was sleep inducing, or was it just the cold/flu/fatigue at festival's end????  and how much they hate the King Center for festival screenings, etc, etc.....And all of the anticipation seemed worthy of the new Cronenberg, it's definitely a riveting piece for the mind as well as the eye, nothing too fancy here save for the excellent recreation of the period and the strangely subdued, extremely thought-provoking banter amongst rival psychologists Freud and Jung. And if outmoded technology is a recurring theme, all I could think during the film was how sad it is to have lost the hand-written letter, first to email, now facebook, one day to something else.  Where did these people get the time to write not just beautifully but long, flowing treatises of philosophical inspiration!!  Maybe that's why both "A Dangerous Method" and "The Artist" are so timely, they strike chords in multiple ways that are so far removed from our lives, yet are only one hundred years old.  Amazing.  And of course, where else but the festival is one going to get to witness this in a crappy theater not meant for screening film but one that supports a large stage with no less than 5 local "Jung" specialists to dissect the film afterwards?  That's the icing on the cake!


On a final note, this year is the last in which screenings will be held at the theaters in the Tivoli Center.  The festival celebrated that night with screenings of some of the first films ever hosted at those screens at the inception of the festival 34 years ago.  No doubt some crying ensued amongst staff and patrons that night, though we had to bow out of that nostalgia ourselves.

AND TSEHAI JOHNSON REPRISED NEXT MONTH IN COLORADO SPRINGS

From December 6, 2011 to February 14, 2012 the Interdisciplinary Arts program at Colorado College will feature the exhibition Strange Beauty: Baroque Sensibilities in Contemporary Art. The exhibition presents paintings, sculpture, installation, photography, and performance art by selected Contemporary artists who revisit artistic strategies and cultural concerns of the 17th Century. The exhibition will take place in the IDEA Space, located in the Edith Kinney Gaylord Cornerstone Arts Center, 825 N. Cascade Avenue, Colorado Springs, CO.  On Tuesday, December 6 beginning at 4:30 pm, the public is invited to attend an opening reception and IDEA Cabaret presentation by IDEA Curator Jessica Hunter-Larsen and the Colorado College student co-curators who contributed research to the exhibition. The exhibition and reception are free and open to the public.

Exploring some of these intersections between contemporary and Baroque culture, Strange Beauty features bodies of work by Liza Lou, Kehinde Wiley, and Sherrie Wolf, an installation by Tsehai Johnson (a reformatting of her DAM installation from the summer's blockbuster "Overthrown: Clay without Limits" exhibition) and a selection of pieces by Ken Aptekar, Jimmy Baker, Renee Cox, Andres Serrano, and Cindy Sherman. The exhibition text, written by students in the Colorado College course "The Age of the Baroque: Art and Empire in the 17th Century" will further explore connections between Baroque and contemporary art and experience.

Colorado College is a nationally prominent, four-year liberal arts college that was founded in Colorado Springs in 1874. The college operates on the innovative Block Plan, in which its 1,975 undergraduate students study one course at a time in intensive 3_-week blocks. The college also offers a master of arts in teaching degree. For more information, visit www.ColoradoCollege.edu . For directions or disability accommodation at the event, members of the public may call (719) 389-6607.

MELISSA FURNESS CURATES GROUP EXHIBITION FOR A.I.R. GALLERY IN NYC

Plus Gallery artist Melissa Furness has curated a group exhibition that will also feature her work for A.I.R. Gallery in NYC, scheduled to open at the end of the month.  "A Feminine Contemporary Sublime" features works by Liz Surbeck Biddle, Melissa Furness, Jan Johnson, and Nancy Lasar. The exhibition will run November 30 - December 21st, 2011 with an opening reception on Thursday, December 1st from 6:00 - 9:00pm.

In Western society, the 'sublime' was something historically described by men. The sense of what is "beyond words" manifested itself in art as images of grand landscapes and romantic spectacles of the heroic act. A Feminine Contemporary Sublime articulates a feminine perspective of the sublime understood in the
context of contemporary society, where the grand illusions of male-centric Romanticism have dissipated into a mass of social media and complex communication. In his survey of Documents of Contemporary Art on the Sublime, Simon Morley states that in modern society "the sublime is an experience looking
for a context." The works featured in A Feminine Contemporary Sublime recognize the awe produced by the "sublime experience" as an illusion of misperceived realities. 19th Century Romanticism stressed that "the transcendental ego must strive to detach itself from nature, from society, from the emotions, from the body, and above all from the feminine" (Philip Shaw in The Sublime). With this exhibition, we affirm the failure of the notion of the autonomous self elevated by the imagination's supposed ability to depict the transcendent, and instead rebuild our understanding of the sublime from a "detached" feminine point of view - a view that recognizes the multi-faceted complexity of what we perceive each day in contemporary society as a transcendent force within itself.

This feminine perspective translates the sublime into an "other" reality overwhelmed with information and emotion that ultimately produces a full and even dark contemporary sublime. The works in this exhibition present the viewer with what is familiar, and then exposes them again as a kind of "unknown." As women artists working today in our own "supersensible vocation" (Kant), we are utter multi-taskers, piling one thing upon another and balancing our layered worlds of work, family, home, in addition to navigating social media and virtual communication. This overlapping series of structures at some point breaks down and suspends thought, producing a sublime experience. In this way, the sublime has transformed into multi-layered meanings and forms that are fragmented and contradictory-a kind of super anti-sensible substrate. Here, there is a sense of altered place and unhinged movement, of lines that connect and disconnect, and hints of virtual worlds and information masses, all moving from the internal to the external through a cycle of broken "structures."

A.I.R. Gallery is located at 111 Front Street, #228 in the DUMBO neighborhood of Brooklyn.

http://www.airgallery.org

SHANNON NOVAK BRINGS HIS UNIQUE BLEND OF ART AND MUSIC TO TEXAS THIS WEEKEND

Plus Gallery artist and New Zealand native Shannon Novak unveils a unique installation this Saturday as part of the University of Texas at Dallas Artist's residency program. "One Song, Three Composers" is Novak's latest installation that explores the interrelationships between three distinct approaches of mapping color to sound. Novak references three prominent figures in the field: Louis-Bertrand Castel (France), Richard Merrick (USA), and Michael Smither (New Zealand). Three electronic pianos form the focal point of the exhibition, each chromatically altered to represent these theorists' approaches. The keyboards form a triangle in CentralTrak's gallery, corresponding to the connection and intersection of Castel's, Merrick's and Smither's individual hypotheses. This configuration of musical instruments acts as a birthing point, propagating geometric forms imitating the unseen movement of sound. One Song, Three Composers links three schools of thought through visual abstraction, and uses duration, volume and spiritual content to reconsider the effects and nature of sound beyond pitch. Check it out if you happen to be in Dallas!

Opening reception: Saturday, November 19, 2011, 8 - 10 pm
Exhibition runs through December 17

The University of Texas at Dallas Artists Residency - centraltrak.org

CentralTrak Gallery
800 EXpOSiTiON AvE., DALLAS, TX 75226
Gallery Hours: Wed. - Sat., 12 - 5 pm

BILL AMUNDSON REPORT ON THE ILLITERATE BLOG

Read what the Illiterate Blog has to report on our current exhibition by Bill Amundson here at Plus, this is from a source that specializes in radical art, works on paper and all things extremely hip in the local and international art spheres.

http://www.illiteratemedia.com/blog/view/515

Saturday, November 12, 2011

SDFF34 - DOCS AND OTHER GOOD FILMS


The 34th edition of the Starz Denver Film Festival is now in full swing, with screenings taking place at the Tivoli Center, the Colfax Film Center and select other locations such as the King Center and Ellie Caulkins Opera House. Opening night offered up an enticing film in "Like Crazy," an indie hit from this year's Sundance Film Festival directed by super young bad-ass filmmaker Drake Doremus (of "Douchebag" fame).  It was a surprisingly good film for opening night and not-so-surprisingly received a fairly tame reception, in fact the auditorium wasn't nearly as packed as in recent years, a true sign of what the opening night wanna-be crowd generally expects.  We felt that it had a lot to offer in it's absorbing execution and magnetic performers including newcomer Felicity Jones.  The screening suffered from digital projection issues that apparently rendered all of the coloring in the film improperly, but if you hadn't seen it yet you'd never know that it wasn't anything more than an "artistic" choice.  Guess we'll have to see what it really looks like if and when it resurfaces later in the year.
With all of the major opening presentations behind us, the community can now fall in line and get into the groove of what the festival is really about:  serious, extremely heralded (in the real world of film) and often unheard of films that are labors of love or efforts to be put on the map of independent cinema.  Bela Tarr's latest "The Turin Horse" falls into the category of the former, quite serious and applauded by most everyone with a deeper understanding of film as art.  Reportedly the director's final film, the two and a  half hour epic was an unrelenting, often mesmerizing fable that carried the director's stamp in spades (extremely long and very repetitive).  Tarr's films are always dark and full of existential grist, but quite beautiful to watch and ponder, his cinematic style is not only singular but highly influential upon other directors works, most notably Gus Van Sant's better films.  Though his latest and possibly last is about as depressing as can be, it's not without small, ripe doses of humor and good will.  It was a challenge for sure, but those who made it through will most likely never look at a potato in the same way ever again. 

On the documentary front, "A People Uncounted" stands as the yearly tribute to the holocaust and it's survivors, something that crops up not only yearly at SDFF but throughout world festivals, a topic that never seems to diminish because of the historic magnitude of the period.  This particular film stands as one of the most well-crafted, something that no doubt stems from the filmmakers concept that the Gypsy People of whom the film focuses on are said to not have any relevant or known artists who have risen to major status.  It puts forth many strong impressions about this largely derided group of nomads whom Hitler and others across the European continent reviled.  Strong subtexts, such as pop-culture hits like Sonny and Cher's "Gypsy's, Tramps and Thieves" amongst others distill the concept in terms closer to present day, validating that the return to suppression of the Gypsies may not be as far off as one might think.   There are some awefully strong, bone chilling moments, such as the  recounting of Joseph Mengeles experiments with children, from a survivor who was actually on his operating table. Overall it's a very thorough and engaging experience, a well composed film with generous doses of creativity that will hopefully go far in rectifying some of the issues it purports.

MAJOR HONORS FOR DENVER'S PLATTEFORUM LAST WEEK


Denver's PlatteForum received the most prestigious honor available to a national arts organization, one that took founder Judy Anderson and two of her cohorts to Washington DC for a ceremony with Michelle Obama.  PlatteForum's ArtLab program received the 2011 National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award from the Presidents Council on Arts and Humanities! We congratulate the group and all who have helped the organization become not just one of the most inspirational arts programs in the State of Colorado but now in the country.  Read more about it at
And check out the video created for the special celebration that aired last week for members and friends of the group the day of the award.


PUBLIC INVITED TO HISTORIC RECEPTION FOR JOHN BONATH'S DMNS EXHIBITION NOVEMBER 22nd


We've heard from a lot of good people who've ventured out to see John Bonath's current, massive new body of work that's on exhibit at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, the first time ever that artwork has been displayed in their space. DMNS will host a reception for John on November 22nd, an event that will not be publicly announced but is open by invitation from credible sources (such as Plus Gallery!). If you plan to attend, please RSVP with your name and number in your party by Monday, November 14th to carla.bradmon@dmns.org or 303.370.6367.
Bonath's effort, which includes a stunning rendition of Udo Zeile with an ancient Rhino Skull, has received a lot of press coverage since opening including the following:
From Colorado Public Radio - Colorado Matters, aired 10/25
Second Westword blog article on the show by Susan Froyd, 10/25
From Open Letters
And from an independent artist who was inspired to write about the show

SAVE THE DATE:  FRANK T. MARTINEZ OPENING RECEPTION AND PLUS GALLERY HOLIDAY CELEBRATION THURSDAY DECEMBER 8TH 6-9PM


Frank T. Martinez is going to create a major stir in Denver next December as he unveils an impressive new body of work that we've been take shape this year.  This will be Frank's fourth solo exhibition with the gallery and the first in our current location.  The opening reception will also serve as the Plus Gallery holiday celebration, so expect lots of merriment in addition to Frank's terrific new paintings.

JENNY MORGAN IN PROMINENT GROUP EXHIBITION IN LA, OPENING THIS FRIDAY NOVEMBER 11TH


Plus Gallery artist Jenny Morgan recently completed a stellar new painting for the group exhibition "Dark Water" hosted by the Copro Gallery in Los Angeles.  The exhibition, which opens this Friday night, features 29 renowned artists curated by renowned painter Martin Wittfooth.  Here's the text from the press release:
"The dullest soul cannot go upon such an expedition without some of the spirit of adventure; as if he had stolen the boat of Charon and gone down the Styx on a midnight expedition in the realms of Pluto.... The silent navigator shoves his craft gently over the water, with a smothered pride and sense of benefaction, as if he
were phosphor, or light-bringer, to these dusky realms, or some sister moon, blessing the spaces with her light."
-Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)
Bringing together 29 internationally renowned contemporary painters, Dark Water is a collaborative exploration of a theme that yields both personal as well as universal interpretations. Historically in art and literature, the imagery of dark water has made a symbolic allusion to various states of the inner self, such as the murky depths of the subconscious or the raging seas of our more turbulent moods. Alternatively, in our modern age the imagery of dark water can also provoke a reflection on such topics as environmental imbalance and a global dependency on - and uneasy relationship with - the dark waters of industry.
Ferrying us across this stygian visual landscape are some of the most celebrated painters of our era. Artists in this group have their work included in such public collections as The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Brooklyn Museum, The Smithsonian Institute, and London's National Portrait Gallery, and in the private collections of such notable collectors as Leonardo diCaprio, Eric Fischl, Nike CEO Mark Parker, Robert Schiell, Howard Tullman, and Kanye West.


DOUGLAS WALKER WRAPS FIRST LEG OF PRESTIGIOUS CANADIAN MUSEUM TOUR


Plus Gallery artist Douglas Walker wowed the Denver community in 2010 when he unveiled the first of his large-format paintings on paper that looked like cosmically derived, unearthed ceramics.  One of the most impressively executed works ever, it was the launch into a new realm for the artist that he's been unveiling in Canada recently supported by no less than 3 Canadian Artist Grants (yes, canada actually funds spectacular artists!!).  His most recent exhibition "Other Worlds" just concluded last weekend at the Robert McLaughlin Gallery in Oshawa, Ontario, culminating in an impressive report from Richard Rhodes in the publication Canadian Art.  Read about it here and see more of the spectacular photos online as well.



XI ZHANG BOOKS NOW IN STOCK!


We just received fresh copies of Xi Zhang's new book "Dream Dusts" here at Plus Gallery, come by to take a look and purchase your copy for $100.  Everyone has been very excited about this collector's item, a great takeaway from one of Denver's most loved and collected young talents.
And while we are on the topic of Xi, check out the feature on him in last week's UCD Advocate newspaper:

BILL RETURNS IN JANUARY FOR THE ART STUDENTS LEAGUE VISITING ARTIST SERIES MASTER CLASS


Finally, Bill will be returning to Denver early next year to participate in two amazing opportunities for the Denver Arts community.  Save the following dates and contact the ASLD to make your reservations or find out more info:
February 16 - Lecture and demonstration: How I Draw What I Draw
February 18-19 - Master Class: Blurred Vision, Seeing the World Your Way

AMUNDSON WORKS ALSO ON VIEW AT GREAT DIVIDE


Two of our Nation's best assets are now combined under one roof:  The Tap room at Great Divide is now featuring an adjunct exhibition of several of Bill Amundson's recent works that have never been properly exhibited including two of his "American Dickheads," two drawings that reference cultural highlights in Denver, and a handful of others.  There is nothing better than the beer at GD, and nothing better than looking at Bill's work while drunk.  Go check it out for our month long celebration of all things Amundson.

WOW, WHAT A NIGHT!!!


Overwhelming and profound are the only words to describe last Friday evening's artist talk with Bill Amundson.  Thanks to the hundreds who came by to hear Bill deliver one of the most rousing and entertaining discussions on art ever in Denver, we were mesmerized!  Our apologies to those who came and couldn't get in the door, we thought the house would be full but nowhere near the numbers who came by.  For those who couldn't squeeze in or had other plans, we give you youtube:  the entire talk was filmed up-close with good audio and picture quality, and we've posted it in three segments to our youtube page for you to enjoy at your leisure.  It's particularly good for those with Apple TV to watch full screen from the couch; regardless, we think you will find it to be highly enjoyable.
The last week was a great homecoming for Bill and the immediate response to the show has surpasses anything else in the last five years.  The exhibition is a terrific mixture of Bill's quintessential multi-leveled approach and button-pushing style.  It will be on view through December 3rd.  Bill is back in Wisconsin now but will resurface again in Denver next February for some very special events in conjunction with the Art Students League, more information on that is below.









Believe it or not, 100's of people came by to see this man speak

PATTI HALLOCK PHOTOGRAPHS ON VIEW IN ROBERT ADAMS TRIBUTE AT COLORADO PHOTOGRAPHIC ART CENTER, OPENING NOVEMBER 4TH


Robert Adams, one of the most celebrated chroniclers of Denver and the American West,  influenced a generation of landscape photographers following his 1975 "New Topographics" exhibition in Rochester, NY. "Situating Robert Adams," opening at the Colorado Photographic Arts Center November 4, 2011, uses the occasion of his current retrospective at the Denver Art Museum to learn about his influence on photographers imaging the western landscape today.

The exhibition features select works by Plus Gallery artist Patti Hallock from her initial "Nocturnal
Suburbia" series, along with Peter Brown, Danae Falliers, Greg McGregor, Roddy MacInnes, Jessie Paige, Richard van Pelt and Willy Sutton.

Exhibition Dates: November 4 - December 17, 2011
Public Reception: Friday, November 4, 6-9 pm. Free

Related Events:

Wed, October 26, 6 pm: "Reading Robert Adams:  Beauty in Photography" with Eric Paddock.
Location: Denver Art Museum. $15/$13 CPAC/WWA/DAM members. (Note ? space is limited. RSVP to dmitri@cpacphoto.org or call 303-837-1341

Wed, November 9, 7 pm: "Reading Robert Adams:  Why People Photograph" with Roddy MacInnes & Jessie Paige. Location: CPAC.  $5/$3 CPAC/WWA/DAM members.

Wed, November 30, 7 pm: "Reading Robert Adams:  Along Some Rivers" with Patti Hallock.
Location: CPAC.  $5/$3 CPAC/WWA/DAM members.

Gallery Tour and panel discussion:
Sat, November 19, 3 pm: with Danae Falliers, Richard van Pelt, and Willy Sutton. Free

For "Situating Robert Adams," curator Rupert Jenkins chose eight regional photographers whose works are diverse yet complimentary in approach, and which span a period of almost four decades, 1977-2011. The visual relationships between traditional and non-traditional landscape photography, and the progression of strategies used by each photographer during their careers, are informed by a series of questions and answers that lend insight into the exact nature of Adams' influence on each artist and their work.

Collectively, Peter Brown, Danae Falliers, Patti Hallock, Greg McGregor, Roddy MacInnes, Jessie Paige, Willy Sutton, and Richard van Pelt convey images of concern and admiration for the landscape that mirror those of Adams, a self-styled "democratic socialist" for whom content and aesthetics are essential elements of every meaningful image. To what degree Adams inspired each of them individually lies at the heart of this exhibition.

Rupert Jenkins (curator) is Exhibitions Director and Board Chair of the Colorado Photographic Arts Center. His most recent curatorial projects are Warhol in Colorado (co-curator with Dan Jacobs/catalog editor, Myhren Gallery, January 2011), and Double Diptych (Vertigo Art Space, March 2011).
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SDFF34 - CHALLENGE YOURSELF IF YOU DARE!


The Starz Denver Film Festival begins tonight, in traditional fashion with an opening night film and celebration at the magnificent Caulkins Opera House.  You have to either be socially connected or a populist film fan to actually want to attend opening night, it's largely a sold out affair with a crowd-pleasing piece of cinema that won't and couldn't possibly set the audience up for the mostly respectable and occasionally sublime offerings ahead during the next ten days. Most of the films that are celebrated with fanfare to kick off the fest are already slated for major release, some as soon as this weekend; others like von Trier's "Melancholia" have been available on-demand for a while now.  That's okay though, most everyone knows that the primary reason to attend is for the big-screen experience, something that "Melancholia" offers up in a major way for the Denver Filmcenter/Colfax opening night on Thursday and serves dual purpose as a major programming statement.  Saturday's Big Night back at Caulkins rolls out the mostly excellent and highly admirable "The Descendents," the final prospective blockbuster before retiring into a week of substantial cinema covering all levels of the field.  The festival always brings a great balance with their programming, and so far this year seems to wield wildly successful results in many areas, particularly world cinema.


As a prospective client recently related to me via email last week, "Big Night films end up at Landmark a few days after so we stick with the indies. I love them." My sentiments exactly.......and of course not everyone has the same taste in films, that's what makes the festival and reporting on it so much fun.  After having screened a number of films in advance, I offer up the following for those who want to successfully navigate a few screenings without wasting much time, at least if you trust my judgement, have an open mind and a highly adventurous taste for film.

The best of the fest so far:



"Attenberg" is easily one of the festival standouts, it's almost absurd how perfectly it marries a compelling, humane narrative with some of the most distinct and elegant visuals in contemporary cinema today. Athina Rachel Tsangari delivers a thoughtful meditation on love, death, and friendship through a truly endearing father/daughter relationship that's akin to Big Night's "The Descendents" only more gratifying for those looking for a sublime visual purpose with their prose.  Her graceful sensibilities for the off-kilter abound whether in tracking shots across rain-soaked tennis courts, solitary foosball games, or synchronized walking.  Everything is sexualized here but in the most uncommon ways, the entire narrative leading to a climax in which the young protagonist asks her best friend to sleep with her dying father, an unusual request but one that the viewer can firmly connect with after watching the proceedings unfold.  Greek society may currently be on the rocks, but lets hope filmmakers like Tsangari remain unscathed, she stands to become a world force if given the latitude and backing to press forward. 




The recent Canadian feature narrative "Curling" has been getting as much respect across the globe in the last year as "Attenberg," both films having screened previously at many international festivals.  It's an equal to Tsangari's film in terms of elevating a major talent, something the festival programmers want to enforce by offering director Dennis Cote's debut feature "Drifting States" during the festival as well. Death seems to lurk in every corner of "Curling," with no easy answers and certainly no overbearing directives.  Also centered around a father/daughter relationship, the narrative covers a lot of territory but is supremely simple at its core, constantly extending in diffuse and subtle directions.  It's a mystery that keeps unraveling slowly but never concedes to any sort of conclusion or perhaps deeper perception of the characters, other than that they are human. Strange in all the right ways and places, Cote delivers an incredibly well executed film that has everything and nothing at all to do with the unusual sport it is named after.




U.S. Independent film is usually in a tough spot when it comes to SDFF, almost every director working in the field today wants to have their screening at Sundance, which follows just three months after the Denver Fest.  Many of the entries are either post-sundance big-buzz-films like "Marth Marcy May Marlene" (which gets an exclusive reel-members only screening Thursday night, just one day before the film opens in wide release)  or castoffs from that net that can show up in any number of other festivals without ever really seeing a wider stage.  But every year SDFF delivers a few gems and this year "The Color Wheel" seems to be one of them.  It's a very refreshing film, one that many people might initially (and arguably) find aweful and pretentious but quickly catches a groove all its own that is refreshing and absolutely hilarious.  The director and screenwriter are the actors at the core of the drama, exerting an off-kilter brother/sister bond. Both are equally strange and the success of the film is derived from their tight-knit relationship both on-screen and off.  Shot old-school in 16mm and B&W, "The Color Wheel" is as unusual as it gets and indie to the core!




Even more unusual and frankly shocking, is "Gandu." Anyone seeking an absolutely new manifesto in contemporary filmmaking should take in this brash film, another captivating and singular work in black and white (with the most raucous, crazy-cool hardcore interlude of color ever seen) by the mysteriously named Indian director "Q overdose."  The title translates to "Asshole" and even though it's been compared to the formidable work of french director "Gaspar Noe, you have definitely never seen anything like it, ever.  This is what contemporary cinema should be, it pushes in many new directions that build upon its new-wave predecessors in ways that can only be accomplished today, though with extremely refined and timeless visual sensibilities. It might be easy for some to dismiss because it's overly hip and daringly non-linear in so many ways, but it has the chops to pull it off visually, sonically and as a major artistic statement.  "Gandu" succeeds in ways that will leave it seared in your brain for a long, long time and leave you waiting to see what the director will do next,  it's an absolute big-sreen trip. And though it is stunningly realized, it is definitively not for everyone, particularly conservative christians and maybe most of our nation's underage youth.




Finnish director Aki Kaurismaki's  universe changes little over time,  and it's a lovely, singular one that you wouldn't be able to mistake for anything else.  His latest is distinctly brighter in color palate than normal, which would almost seem jarring if it weren't for the director's trademark combination of clear composition and the duration that it holds. "Le Havre" reprises Kaurismaki character's from his masterpiece "Scenes from the Bohemian Life' of almost 20 years ago, with delightful results that are more uplifting than his usual fare, almost oddly so because it's such a subtle yet impactful tone he's honed over the years. Fans of the Finn will enjoy for sure and newcomers will likely grasp the warmth and oddity of the characters and action throughout.


Alexander Payne's latest "The Descendents" isn't likely to be as big a box-office smash as some of his previous films, though I wouldn't bet against it, it has George Clooney after all, cast (or at least clothed) a bit against type.  But it is as thoroughly enjoyable and has as much of a slightly off-centre conscious as everything else Payne's accomplished to date. Clooney is complemented by a great cast that also goes a bit against type, the Hawaiin setting dictating much of that. Most everyone will be talking about magnetic newcomer Amara Miller as Clooney's daughter, she almost steals the show, along with her neandrethal boyfriend who has one of the most potent scenes in the film.  Another mostly father/daughter psychological study, Payne methodically builds the narrative to a calmly riveting climax that doesn't overstep itself.  It's likely to induce much crying and will stir genuine emotional feelings from all who take it in.
Press the eject, now:

That's what I did, or should have done in the case of three of the festival films I screened in advance.  Though I wasn't surprised that "The FP" couldn't muster up the goods to become a "cult-classic" except for the inept or blind, I was completely shocked at how little I could stand actor Paddie Considine's directorial debut "Tyrannosaur," which has been singled out as a programmers pic.  One might say this is an acting tour-de-force, to be expected from such a lauded and gifted actor as Considine, and it's certainly well shot.  But I was thrown completely by how utterly and absolutely the piece is over-dramatized. Those who like this kind of film will probably hate all of the above (except maybe for "Le Havre" and "The Descendents"), preferring something that spoon-feeds the grool till it starts flowing from all orifices.  Part-way through, one of the lead characters throws something at a framed picture of Jesus on the wall, followed immediately by a closeup of the Jesus teetering in frame.......at that point in the film I thought all hope was lost.  A few moments later the rape scene indeed proved that all hope was gone, I still rode the train-wreck out but the whole thing just left a very, very bad taste in my mouth.  The same could be said for the no-budget indie drama "Bad Fever," it's hard to imagine anyway walking out of this film raving about it or even giving it any regard if they make it all the way through.  I did not, so I can't ultimately say it's valueless but I'm pretty certain any payoff is going to be too long in coming and removed for any discerning audience.  "Attenberg" is the perfect example of how this type of narrative can and should be done, and it's certainly enough for one festival.





CELEBRATE THE LAUNCH OF DENVER ARTS WEEK THIS FRIDAY NIGHT WITH PLUS GALLERY!!! AND, BILL AMUNDSON ARTIST TALK COMMENCES AT 7PM....NOT TO BE MISSED!!


Denver Arts Week begins this Friday, November 4th, launching another week-long focus on the many wonderful facets of art in our city.  While most every gallery in town will be opening their doors for First Friday, Plus Gallery is certainly going to be the place to be with an event that we've been greatly anticipating all year long, an artist talk so special we decided to give it a name:
"Bill Amundson's Blurred Vision: An enhanced gallery talk with  props, interruptions & souvenirs" will take place this friday evening at 7pm.  One might pay good money for such an experience, there is no more dynamic, entertaining speaker on art and life than Bill. But we like to give, so this event is free and even includes a cider-tasting by the Colorado Cider Company http://www.coloradocider.com that evening, feel free to come by early to participate.  Bill is also going to be giving away a few items during his talk to select, randomly drawn folks.

A full set of images from Bill's exhibition are now online at the Plus Website, and there are all kinds of references to the show online through other sources as well.