Thursday, November 21, 2013

LATEST NEWS FROM GABRIEL LISTON


And in closing this week's newsletter, we leave you with Plus Gallery artist Gabriel Liston's latest news from his studio, intact as we received it.  We have long revered reading everything that comes from Gabe's pen (and we do mean pen, he still sends postcards written in cursive handwriting!) as much as everything that he paints.  He is a true original and one of the most exquisitely gifted artists and gentlemen on the planet:

  Yesterday's painting is still too juicy to scan.


      But it's what I was thinking about this morning before crawling out of bed. It's not another image of skinny dipping in the Missouri, it's just a canoe on the river with some hills and clouds. It's one small panel, but I wound up working on it over several days, adding and removing paint, scraping and dumping and dragging. It should all work properly now, but I still wouldn't trust me alone in the greenhouse with it.

       
        "Painting is a black and bottomless pit." That was my thought this morning. You choose a composition and dig a hole and tumble in. Every painting. There's no mastering any medium, perfecting any skill, finishing any picture: you just huck yourself a little sideways into the next hole. That's the attraction: every composition is on the lip of vertigo. You're falling towards light and falling towards history. You're falling towards weight and you're falling towards touch. And you're wrecking it almost every step of the way.

       
        A few weeks back I decided I would write the book (however short) on Lafe Pence's activities in Portland 1905 - 1908 before I got to deep in the actual canvasses of his Tualatin Ridge ditch. I went deep in the research (am still there) and began sketching out the illustrations. I tried brush and ink. I tried pen and ink. I tried brush and pen together. They were all right. Sort of. But they weren't it. I chose to knock them out in grisaille on small panels instead. Oil. Black and white. It'll be much better. I can arrange them like an old black photo album now. Or something like that.  There are details, like publishing, yet to solve. As well as painting all the illustrations - my outline calls for 30 or so.

       
        Now with a palette loaded for grayscale, I can also paint black and white snapshots of the trip down the Missouri and the school trip to Not-Crater-Lake. It's hard (see bottomless pit above) but it works. I only have to pretend I know what's going on in all the blank space in the notebook sketches. And not run out of money or paint or time while I do it.
  

        I'm also mid-way through a mid-size pink commission. We can shoot and share that later.

       
       
This weekend Seth Nehil and I will select work to hang in Providence Portland Medical Center for three months, December - March. It will be an overview of the working process rather than paintings from any single show. Although the temptation is strong, I will not be doing any new skeleton pics for this installation.

       
        Froelick Gallery's Fire exhibit opens 18 December and will include that campfire panel from the Signal Fire expedition.
       

        If you're in Colorado, any holiday traffic we can channel through Plus Gallery's stacks will only increase the odds of them helping me paint up Lafe Pence projects in Colorado (Rico and Breckenridge) once I finish cataloging his riparian (and human) damage here in Portland. 
       

        Gosh. I hope that's everything. It's certainly enough for now. I'll close with the first of the Lafe Pence illustrations. Lafe Pence and Mr. Huber are standing on Government Island in Guild's Lake about a month before the Lewis and Clark Exposition opens looking across to the ridge with all its water and real estate potential. Painting isn't the only way to leap into a bottomless pit.

       Yours,
        Gabriel

SAVE THE DATE

"Fluid" featuring all new paintings by Frank T. Martinez opens at Plus Gallery December 5th from 6-9pm.


ARTS AND VENUES DENVER HOSTS DENVER MUSIC SUMMIT THIS WEEKEND


Denver is making a lot of progress on all cultural fronts, but maybe none more-so than within the music sphere, and Arts and Venues Denver is leading the charge this weekend with the Denver Music Summit.  Find out more about their programming and how you can participate at:



2013 WORD OF THE YEAR: SELFIE

Yesterday the Associated Press revealed that the Oxford University Press declared "Selfie" to be the word of the year.  Perhaps they've been in cahoots with Plus Gallery artist Xi Zhang, who has been compiling a rather impressive body of work on the topic all year.


PLUS GALLERY ARTISTS SHOWN IN MIAMI FOR ART FAIRS

Plus Gallery artists Jenny Morgan and Allie Pohl will have work featured during the early December art fairs in Miami this year.  Morgan's paintings will be on view through Driscoll Babcock Galleries at the prestigious Pulse fair, and Pohl's recent limited edition Men's Merit Badges along with select porcelain works will be on view at Context through Dallas' Gallerie Urbane.

FINAL WEEK FOR JENNY MORGAN'S NYC SOLO DEBUT WITH DRISCOLL BABCOCK GALLERIES

This is the final week for Jenny Morgan's solo debut with Driscoll Babcock Galleries in NYC, which has been a tremndous success. We've had so many people write and let us know about their experience viewing the show in person, it's been very encouraging to know that Jenny has made such an oustanding mark already in Chelsea.


The latest video to include Morgan's work came last week as a result of the Chelsea art walk, which made DB one of the first stops:


http://www.blouinartinfo.com/news/story/986054/gallery-night-video-chelsea-art-trek-8-galleries-1-night




And in celebration of her achievements, we once again share the first video to capture the mind of Morgan in motion, the Plus Gallery compilation "Self Portrait" from 2012:


https://vimeo.com/36023482


Jenny Morgan, along with Plus Gallery artist Bill Amundson, will next have works on view in the Art Students League of Denver's upcoming group exhibition "Revisiting" which celebrates 10 years of the ASLD's visiting artist series.  Each of our artists contributes two of their most exceptional works to ever be shown in Denver, and they are sure to be amongst a group of other highly talented artists from around the country.  The exhibition opens with a VIP preview on Saturday, December 7th from 4-7pm, with Plus Gallery as one of the hosts.  Tickets are $75 and include cocktails, hors d'ouevres as well as valet parking.  Space is limited and tickets can be purchased direct from asld.org/VAS

LAURA KRUDENER ARTIST TALK THURSDAY NOVEMBER 21st AT 6:30 pm

Plus Gallery will host Laura Krudener's first artist talk in Denver on Thursday November 21st, in conjunction with her successful solo exhibition "Suspended Chaos."  We are extremely eager to have Laura share her history and approach to making her gorgeous abstract paintings.  Come join us, doors will open at 6:15pm, with the talk taking place starting at 6:30.




Saturday, November 16, 2013

READ


Plus Gallery intern Caitlin Hedrick's take on our current exhibition by Laura Krudener:


SAVE THE DATE
For Laura's artist talk at Plus Gallery, next Thursday November 21st at 6:30pm


WATCH


Plus Gallery artist Frank T. Martinez bumpers from The Starz Denver Film Festival, still on screens throughout the festival till this Sunday:



WATCH ALSO


Alex McLeod's DU Lecture from last September, there is a lot to be learned from this incredibly talented and supremely engaging artist:



VISIT NOW

To see the newest works at Plus Gallery by Santa Fe, NM artist Tim Jag, they are terrific.


Thursday, November 7, 2013

BIG SCREEN BLISS: TWO OUTSTANDING DISCOVERIES AT THE 36TH STARZ DENVER FILM FESTIVAL


Approximately three quarters of the way through the Belgian narrative "The Fifth Season" the disc we were watching started to glitch, bringing on total despair, much in the same way the characters in the film itself were experiencing up to that point. But rather than running back to the film society office and demanding a replacement, we did something largely unprecedented in our history of previewing films for the festival: we went online and bought two tickets to the first screening this saturday night.  There is no doubt that this is one of the absolute discoveries of the 36th annual festival, our recommendation from programmer Matt Campbell like some giant, pulsating star that won't leave our field of vision anytime soon. Not only is it enormously beautiful and beguiling, it's a feature so immaculately composed as to fully warrant an engagement with a big-screen, even if that means having to miss the festival's highly vaunted Big Night film Nebraska (which is also receiving rave reviews....and likely to be playing at a megaplex near you very, very soon). Anyone looking for grace and craft without compromise should take in this chilling film, one that depicts a simple farming communities reaction to what appears to be unnatural and potentially devastating circumstances. The tone is more in keeping with European masters such as Bela Tarr, though with a much sunnier compositional disposition, we can't recall anything in recent memory being so masterful. So while there is no way to fully reflect on "The Fifth Season" at this time, it has left enormous anticipation for a full Saturday night viewing.


Another great discovery, and one that deserves to be viewed in full theatre as well, although you will occasionally need to cover your eyes, is the hallucinatory Dutch treat "Resurrection of a Bastard," part of the festival's focus on Dutch cinema.  This is a potent launch by an artist who apparently adapted his own graphic novel for the screen, bringing together a mixture of influences and visual effects that make for one of the headier experiences.  There is no simple way to frame the narrative, a tale of capable thugs going overboard on a botched job for a psychotic gangster.  The violence is limited though brutal, and framed by a building tension that ratchets up with every new sequence, ultimately tripping into a brilliant tonal shift that leads towards an increasingly abstract finale.  It's very dark and surreal, joyfully pushing the envelope while remaining rooted in a strong pathos.  The filmmaking is exceptional for a first-time director, particularly acute in its use of camera movement and framing, as well as attention to sound detail, with the sublime throng over the closing credits coming across as the celebration of something somewhat profound. If the rest of the films in the Dutch series are as skillful as Guido van Driel's debut, then everyone participating is in for a major treat this year.


Another programmer recommendation that is a little harder to gush over is the strange oddity "The Search for Emak Bakia," an artfully crafted documentary that perhaps stretches too far in its search for something profound. The search in question is for the location of a film that surrealist artist Man Ray used for a film he shot somewhere in the Basque region of Europe a long time ago.  The director composes shots to mimic those of the original film, and uses extensive text to frame both the journey and the mysterious reference points he encounters.  It's well principled in its investigation, and relatively easy to follow, but it ultimately feels like its obscurity isn't strong enough to overcome the challenges of pure engagement.  It's hard to recommend for anyone but the most sage art fanatic, though it could have some greater reach as a tribute to understanding the greater depths of historic preservation.

The festival launches tonight with the Red Carpet rollout of Jason Reiman's film "Labor Day." We'll be at Caulkins Opera House for the festivities, and look forward to the next eleven days of great film at the 36th Starz Denver Film Festival.


http://denverfilm.org



MEDIALIVE TAKES PLACE AT BMOCA NOV 7th - 10th

Denver Digerati fans or anyone who is interested in how technology is rapidly influencing contemporary art take note:  The second iteration of MediaLive occurs this week from November 7th - 10th at the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art.  Visit their website to get a full rundown of activities:  http://bmoca.org

2013 FRIDAY FLASH REVIEW TO BE PRESENTED AT 6PM THIS FRIDAY NOVEMBER 8th AT CRAVE ON 14th and CHAMPA

Crave Desert bar and lounge will present four of Denver Digerati's five Friday Flash programs from this summer's unique series this Friday evening, November 8th starting at 6pm.  Crave has been a partner with the Denver Theatre District throughout the summer for the Friday Flash series and is continuing to elevate the programs through our winter off-months.  This will be a great opportunity to see four of the programs back-to-back projected onto the large screen within Crave's excellent culinary environment, right across the street from the LED screen where the content was originally exhibited to the public.


LOGAN LECTURE FEATURING MARGARITA CABRERA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6th @ 7PM AT THE DAM


Known for her soft sculptures that use a pop art sensibility to address the histories and contemporary politics of migrant labor between the Mexican and US borders, Margarita Cabrera has developed a unique style that explores the interplay between craft, contemporary art, and her personal journey of growing up as a "border girl."


Cabrera was born in Monterrey, Mexico and spent much of her childhood in Mexico City before relocating with her family to El Paso Texas as a young girl. She was old enough to have strong memories of this transition of language, culture and traditions. More recently, Cabrera's interest in border politics and a return to her own Mexican roots has inspired a series of performance and community-based projects that aim to give a voice to DREAMers* and other under-represented communities.

Since receiving her BFA from Hunter College in 1997, Cabrera has participated in numerous group exhibitions, such as Phantom Sightings: Art After the Chicano Movement at LACMA in 2008. More recently she has had solo exhibitions at the Mexican American Cultural Center, Austin, TX and the El Paso Museum of Art.


In the fall of 2014 Cabrera will participate in the Hamilton Collaborative: A Visiting Artist Program of the University of Denver and the Denver Art Museum, generously funded by the Hamilton Family Foundation.


Visit Cabrera's website to learn more:http://www.margaritacabrera.com



Lecture begins at 7:00 pm in the Sharp Auditorium at the Denver Art Museum's Frederic C. Hamilton Building.
Doors open at 6:15 pm. For more information, or to purchase tickets, call 720-913-0130 or visit online at https://tickets.denverartmuseum.org/DateSelection.aspx?item=985

LAURA KRUDENER ARTIST TALK THURSDAY NOVEMBER 21st AT 6:30PM


Save the Date!  Plus Gallery will host an artist talk with Laura Krudener on Thursday, November 21st at 6:30pm, in conjunction with her exquisite exhibition "Suspended Chaos."  Krudener has developed outstanding techniques for her large-scale abstract paintings, one that bridge between 20th century masters and our contemporary times.  Come hear what she has to say during a casual conversation at Plus Gallery in two weeks time.


Installation views of Krudener's exhibition are now available on the Plus Gallery website at http://plusgallery.com/exhibitions/74/141