What is going on!!
News, current and past…
While I was working with Gary Rogowski on the framing of the Treasury Building project, he was wearing a different hat indulging his interest in learning more about how artists work via his series of podcasts. He asked me to join him on the topic of “curiosity”, and here it is if you’d like to listen.
Here's what I've been up to! Back in December, I saw a call for entry that seemed interesting...wrapping an art center in Los Angeles with images. The building itself, the Palos Verdes Art Center, is a blocky metal clad structure that spoke to me as a large scale canvas for my still life photography. So I mocked up some concepts, entered the competition, and in February, got the call that I'd won! In April, Fred and I flew down to see the reality of the situation, and found the building wrapped with iconic images from Hollywood photographer Douglas Kirkland. Wow! So great. Finally, seeing a picture of a person in front of Audrey Hepburn put it all in perspective for me. I'm so excited to see the scale I've only imagined my work to be in. (What is wrapping????, Well, images are printed on vinyl that is 36” wide, and as tall as the building is…it has an adhesive backing, and is hung rather like wallpaper in strips, covering the surface, till the building is “wrapped”!)
Big thanks to the diverse and delightful crew at PVAC. Thank you for support from the RLES Burke Artist Residency Program at the non-profit Palos Verdes Art Center for creating the opportunity to help me think of my work in this way, as well the Oregon Arts Commission and the Ford Family Foundation for a Career Opportunity Grant supporting travel. The show opened September 7, 2019, and will be up through December of 2020. If you’re in the LA area, go take a look! It’s all completely outside, so you can see it anytime!
Blue Sky Gallery, Northwest Viewing Drawers 2017
Each year Blue Sky offers a competition to show work in their flat files for a year. And so each year, I see it as an opportunity for an investigation into a small new body of work. This one was inspired by the solarized photographs of Man Ray and Lee Miller. Juried by Mitra Abbaspour, an independent curator and scholar based in New York, formerly Associate Curator in the Department of Photography at The Museum of Modern Art. You can check out my drawer any time Blue Sky is open until March of 2018, or even better, spend a few hours going through the dense talent represented by all of the interesting photographers in the Drawers. First portfolio walk happened December, 2017, with another on Saturday, March 17, 2018, and I'm presenting my work from 4-5pm. Stop by if you have a chance!
and in a moment of blog meets other blog, seek out Photoshelter, for the article "50 Nifty Reasons to Love Photography in 2016", and scroll down to #18 for a sweet nod to my work. Thanks Allen.