Showing posts with label Mary Kline-Misol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Kline-Misol. Show all posts

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Art in Des Moines 2007

Best and Worst of 2007

Artist of the Year - Bill Luchsinger & Karen Strohbeen



Most artists take time off to recuperate from cancer surgery, Luchsinger and his better half opted for the therapy of hard work, producing some of the most eye opening creations of their brilliant mutual career. (Currently at Moberg Gallery).


Design of the Year - Dewaay Capital Management Corporate Headquarters by Jeffrey Morgan

If you could cross the rustic majesty of Gilbert Stanley Underwood with a little form-follows-function discipline from Bauhaus gospel you would get something like this new corporate campus in Clive. You’d also have a new standard of style in the western suburbs.

Runner-up - Interstate 235. The city has focused for decades now on impressing airport visitors while ignoring the vast majority visit by car. This finally presents the latter with a slick first impression of Des Moines.

Worst Design of the Year,- Ingersoll beautification project

If they can’t remove that ugly protective wrap from the new power poles, then please, try taking them back to Home Depot for a refund.
Runner-up - Interstate 235. It didn’t seem possible but somehow designers found a way to raise and arc all the freeway bridges while diminishing the sight lines and prohibiting safe right turns off exit ramps.

Gallery Show of the Year - “Sculpture” at Moberg Gallery

This was a monumental undertaking with Robert Craig, John Philip Davis, Chris Vance, TJ Moberg, Stretch, Bob Cooper and Tom Moberg all contributing big work for an indoor-outdoor show.

Runner-up - “Birds” currently at Olson-Larsen. This exhibition includes a roomful of Michael Brangoccio’s epic meditations on faith and physics.

New Artist of the Year - Robert Craig

It doesn’t seem fair but this talented Drake professor fits our criteria for a new artist: The “Sculpture” exhibition was actually the first time his work had ever been shown collectively in one place. Craig’s year culminated with a commission for a series of large sculptures for the Village of Ponderosa.


Best Performance Art - Joffrey Ballet at Art Fest

Thanks to Hancher Auditorium, this amazing show was free. Shawn Johnson was disqualified from this category because her best performances were out of state.


Museum Show of the Year - “Hug: Recent Work by Patricia Piccinini” at Des Moines Art Center Downtown

This Aussie artist’s first one-person museum exhibition in the United States introduced hyper-realistic sculptures to the ethical debates over cloning, stem cell research, intellectual rights over genetic material and good stewardship. Her adorable creatures (“Don’t call them freaks”) changed the way many visitors think about endangered species and “artificial life.”

Runner-up “Meet the New You” at Des Moines Art Center. Another thinking person’s show, this brought radical ideas concerning future shock from four worldly artists.

Story of the Year - Culver dumps Walker

New Iowa Governor Chet Culver took charge by dumping the successful, high-profile head of Iowa’s Department of Cultural Affairs. Anita Walker was soon hired to manage the arts agency of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Runner-up: ArtStop brings tourists and a new collective effort to town.

Logo of the Year - AIA Iowa Convention

The American Institute of Architects ought to carry a handicap in this category.


Worst Logo of the Year - Iowa State University sports


ISU Athletic Director Jamie Pollard compared this new brand to both Disney’s trademark ears and McDonalds’ golden arches. Who knew that in Ames, there IS an I in team. And a big ego in charge.


Most Ambitious Show - “Stellar Axis” currently at Hentshel Art Gallery

This exhibition credited 22 people including a “grant writing adviser.” The Des Moines show chronicles the work of five who traveled as close as possible to the South Pole to assemble an installation for a summer solstice photo shoot. Thank the National Science Foundation for funding and logistics and thank Lita Albuquerque for the vision and stamina.

Volunteers of the Year - Mary Muller, Sue Sweitzer and Don Dunagan
Collectively this trio of art teachers took art therapy into the Iowa Correctional Institution for Women and the Iowa Veterans Hospital and produced three exhibitions of their students’ works.


Restoration of the Year - Oreon E. Scott Memorial Chapel at Drake University by Substance

An Eero Saarinen classic was treated with due respect.

Runner-up. Azalea Restaurant by Mike Hutchison and friends.

November 2007


Bill Luchsinger & Karen Strohbeen:
The Way It Was


It isn’t easy being Bill Luchsinger & Karen Strohbeen. The couple’s collective nature is private, meditative and rural - that of philosopher and earth mother mutually bonded into one soul. Yet within many public parts of America, Strohbeen is a celebrity. Their PBS television series “The Perennial Gardener with Karen Strohbeen” stole their freedom to travel anonymously. People perceive Karen as some kind of divine authority over the green realms where bishop’s hat and crane‘s-bill need tending. Luchsinger confided that even though the couple keeps the location of their rural studio a secret, fans find it and just drop in on them without warning.

The TV series was a detour these artists took with different intentions in mind.

“We wanted to share the ephemeral moment with others - that blink or you miss it second, when a growing thing meets the perfect moment. Or when Fall turns lovely and you so badly want other people to be there, but they can‘t be there. That’s why the documentation became important,” Strohbeen explained.

A detour within that detour turned the couple into pioneers of digital art, years before David Hockney and the mainstream art media “discovered” it. Some quarter century ago, the couple wanted to add graphics to video. So they bought a computer.

“The computer represented a tool. It was a tool developed by the military industrial complex. From the beginning we’ve been interested in softening the applications of that technology, and expanding its possibilities,” Karen explained.

“Our first IBM computer came with a graphics package that could be operated with a brand new technological tool called ‘a mouse.’ Karen thought that was the nuts,” Bill recalled.

When they began mousing around, digital art was painstaking work. Just to make a first generation color transparency they had to carry an 80 pound computer into a state of the art photo lab. In the mid 1980’s, they tracked down a company in Omaha that was making complex graphics cards for AT&T. They hired a University of Nebraska computer engineer and taught him everything they had learned about graphics technology. Then they bought a prototypical computer drawing board from Chrysler Motors. That was still several years before software that allowed direct printing would be invented, so they often photographed images off their monitors.

Karen was rather famous for her single line drawings - she never picks up her pencil when making an initial design. Early graphics software was geared to create in series of dots or impressions instead of in a continuous line. A digital print that represented her method had to be broken down into eight separate parts, because that was all that a computer could handle memory-wise.

“The first digital print took six months to complete. It took us longer to make a digital print then than a lithograph. We’d work around the clock, in shifts. Our computer never shut down,” they recalled.

“With this medium, more than any other, you have a direction that gets you started and only gets you started. What happens next is filled with possibilities and that’s what’s creative and exciting,” Luchsinger explained.

They have stayed ahead of “what happens next” in digital art ever since. Their new show at Moberg Gallery (November 27 - February 9, reception November 30) will be divided into two sections: new works; and a retrospective. Among 30 new digital works are some that show Strohbeen back at her old drawing board. Older works include some huge canvas paintings that have never been exhibited before in Des Moines.

Touts and Deadlines

Friday and Saturday: “Catalyst State: Iowa Design Weekend” brings designers with an environmental focus to town for a series of fashion shows, discussions, parties and films at various venues. Contact: Mary Muller, 278-2083,
marymuller@mchsi. com
Saturday: “Lita Albuquerque” debuts at Joan Hentschel.
November 30. Olson-Larsen’s long awaited “Birds” exhibition debuts. Bill Barnes, Michael Brangoccio and Wendy Rolfe are among eight artists using birds to represent concepts as diverse as freedom and confinement, hope and despair.
 
October 2007

John Phillip Davis: Vanity of Vanities

John Phillip Davis is the godfather of a young mob of Iowa artists who created an art scene in Des Moines in the last decade. Along with colleagues such as Chris Vance, Frank Hansen and T.J. Moberg, Davis built an art career without leaving Iowa. Doing that was a long-odds proposition when this gang began showing at street fairs and festivals in the 1990’s. Davis emerged as the ringleader with unusual discipline. Early on, he determined to create a limited number of large, heavily layered abstract paintings, rather than falling to the temptation of fewer and smaller, which are also much easier to sell. His works have always been characterized by a professional attention to details. The back ends of Davis paintings look like the finest furniture and even canvas edges are painted. His explanation recently for moving into a new studio showed similar focus and discipline.

“My other place was too comfortable. I was afraid it was becoming a distraction from the work. Plus, I’m not restricted size-wise now by the dimensions of the freight elevator,” he said about exchanging a studio with north-light windows and a dramatic view for a stark, dark one on the ground floor of an old warehouse.

Hanging prominently in public places like Des Moines University, Mercy Hospital and Trostel’s Dish, Davis’s abstract paintings have become a Des Moines art brand. Because they sell for mid-five figures, he’s aware that he may saturate this market.

“I do have to consider the next step,” he admits, adding that the internet has helped him sell to an international audience, so “moving on” isn’t as urgent as might have been for other generations of Iowa artists.
Davis is already moving on stylistically. “Magnus Red,” his new show at Moberg Gallery, presents figurative, almost narrative, paintings that comment on the excesses of modern times. “Razorback” is a portrait of young “master of the universe.” “Casanova,” “First Born,” “Rogue” and “Apollo” all reveal human vanities on other bonfires. Davis admitted that the new show is “liturgical” and a natural segue for an artist who was raised by theological scholars. It’s also Davis’ Iowa show for at least two years. Just as he outgrew street fairs, he’s now matured beyond the annual exhibition cycle.

All-Iowa Exhibit at Olson-Larsen

Five of Iowa’s best known artists are featured in Olson-Larsen Galleries Fall exhibition through November 24. John Beckelman develops distinctive ceramics, with an excavated appearance. He throws bowls, bottles, and vessels on a potter’s wheel, fired to about 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit in a residual salt atmosphere. Karen Chesterman’s large oil paintings deconstruct both color and texture. For this show, Carlos Ferguson introduces sculpture into his repertoire, with multimedia installations of airplanes in flight. He also shows several small, minimal landscape paintings. Thomas Jewell-Vitale’s abstract oil and wax compositions suggest a birds-eye perspective. Joseph Patrick, an Iowa icon as a painter, shows photographs that dramatize the glories of Oaxaca’s legendary market.

Touts

Des Moines Art Center’s “Enrique Chagoya: Borderlandia” is the first American retrospective of the Mexican-born, Northern California painter’s 25 year career. It’s perhaps the most political exhibition in DMAC history, taking a nasty swipe at a litany of villains of the left wing, from Jesus and the Conquistadors to Pete Wilson, Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan and Walt Disney. Francisco Goya and Philip Guston are updated in service of the cause… “Apes Helping Apes” at Zanzibar's (October 21 - November 24) features mostly acrylic paintings by orangutan and bonobo artists-in-residence at the Great Ape Trust of Iowa. All proceeds help preserve the wilds of apedom from Sumatra to Rwanda… The women of Iowa Correctional Institution for Women will exhibit their work at Gloria Dei Lutheran Church in Urbandale through November, with a public reception November 2... Metro Arts Alliance’s 20th annual Two Rivers Expo will be November 2 - 4 at Hy-Vee Hall with 130 artists from 14 states represented. The event is MAA’s major fundraiser and helps support the group’s good works.

September 2007

The Month of Punning Dangerously

September is New Year’s Eve for the art world, where even grown ups mark time on the school year calendar. To insure champagne-worthy kick-offs, most museums and galleries schedule some of their strongest shows in month nine. This year, the arts communities of greater Des Moines (minus Drake, Grandview and Ankeny) created a co-operative new September event, Art Stop, bussing visitors among their various venues. Despite sporadically timed busses, the event was a good idea that could develop into a genuine tourist attraction.

To accommodate Art Stop, Frank Hansen previewed his new exhibition “Using What I Got to Get Where I Want,” which runs through October 6 at Moberg Gallery. Even Hansen’s film biographer Mark Kneeskern showed up from Texas, sometimes filming people reacting to a film of Hansen painting obsessively. Hansen openings are unlike other local art events. One first timer said last week’s reception reminded him of “a shelter house during a thunderstorm at a biker picnic.” The gallery catered to this rather different crowd by persuading Hansen to create limited edition T-shirts, titles of which can not be printed in this column. They sold like six packs at closing time.

The emotionally autobiographic nature of Hansen’s paintings hits people with very different punches. “A Sad Bear Waves Goodnite” made one person tear up and another laugh. At least two of the new paintings are contemplations on Hansen’s wife, the artist Holly Hansen. One of them also graced the exhibition invitation, which one art lover returned it to the gallery, complaining that it offended his mailbox and asking to be removed from Moberg’s mailing list. Yet many others thought Hansen‘s “The Mystery of Wife” was a sweet ode to his spouse.

Several of the paintings are visual puns: “And The Whore Ran Away With The Spoon” is painted on found objects, making the whore is a real dish; “Idle Time On The Devil's Day” was created entirely from items found after a Halloween party; “Pocahontas Moneyshot” is a story of cross-species pollination painted on Disney memorabilia; “Lookin’ for Love ” has several puns walking in a pair of striped pants, the likes of which have not been seen in public since the days of Sergeant Pepper. Hansen said these were his favorite pants at age 3.

Humorists also plays with puns at From Our Hands Gallery (FOH), through September 22, and Heritage Gallery (HG), through October 5. At FOH artists collaborated on ceramic creations. Linda Lewis and Sharon Nelson Vaux always deliver layered Reginald Marsh-caliber comedy with their sculptures, this time they play on other artists’ stages. HG’s “Lucia Hwang and Joyce Lee” debuts Hwang’s original style, which in one case employed the hand-dipped lifetime egg production of a factory hen - in a comment on high fashion. Which came first, the chicken, the egg or the Louis Vuitton purse?

The Veterans Hospital recently hosted an exhibition of the best paintings produced by veterans working in a hospital art workshop. Many were painting for the first time and almost all were painting for therapy. Most created idyllic, comforting scenes of mountains, lakes and such. One anonymous painted confronted his demons head on, painting crocodile jaws in intriguing close-up.
“Our hope was that we could engage veterans who have not had an opportunity to express their talent or to put voice to their problems or pain,” explained Project Director Don Dunagan. This program is totally funded by private contributions (515-223-1982).

Blair Benz and Bonney Goldstein star in a new group show at Olson-Larsen Galleries, through October 6. Charcoal master Benz follows up on his last psychologically charged exhibition of troubled souls with some calming delicacies. Intricately detailed shells, insects and flowers are framed and cloistered like monks on retreat. Other artists call abstract painter Goldstein “an artist’s artist” and check out her new works from all sorts of strange angles. For this exhibition, she delivered a new, darker mood to her “diary“ technique of layering, scratching and scarring canvasses into records.

August 2007

The Bloodroot Whisperer

August is the dark hole of the art continuum which makes it the appropriate time for Mary Kline-Misol to shine. Even within the eccentric orbit where artists circulate, Kline-Misol is a breakaway comet lighting her own way. The painter brightens the month this year with two big shows: a mammoth career retrospective; plus a separate exhibition of all new works.

“I have ‘little person complex,’ so I need to do big work,” she laughed.
Kline-Misol is best known for her 20 year cycle of reflections upon Lewis Carroll’s “Adventures in Wonderland,” but her more recent subjects have been as down to earth as forests, gypsies, livestock and the wild west. Last week a Kline-Misol retrospective opened at Octagon Center for the Arts in Ames. The show, which runs through October 7, also includes a few new paintings. One is a companion for her Bosch-like “From the Faerie Queen Garden,” which was her homage to Richard Dadd, “the most psychotic painter in history” according to Kline-Misol. To balance Dadd’s schizophrenic fantasies, she has now created a William Shakespeare dreamscape dedicated to other aspects of the same fairy world.

Kline-Misol also painted some new abstract paintings of “women renegades” to play with her portraits of old “buffalo girls” like Annie Oakley, which were inspired by the painter’s grandmother, a real buffalo girl in her day. Altogether, the Octagon exhibition includes 36 large paintings covering her entire career. Any connection among these diverse, fantastical subjects is hiding in Kline-Misol’s consciousness, which operates on a purer blend of ether than yours or mine.
“Bloodroot speaks to me,” admits an artist who paints 10 hours a day, six days a week, sometimes with her fingers.

“I inherited the obsessive-compulsive gene and I need to paint, to layer paint on canvass, to stretch heavy canvasses. I wish I could paint on burlap. Just going into the studio gives me the most joy I think I can experience in life. It’s a good thing that I paint,” she admits.
All her big subjects seem suspended between consciousness and dreaming. But don’t expect any clues about how that relates to the artist.
“I am not a confessional artist. It breaks the spell,” she said, before tossing us a bone.

“I think my paintings occupy a static stage in which images seem frozen in time - a moment of suspended animation. Perhaps, it is a glimpse into the realm, not of the senses, but of dreams and childhood visions,” she said.

Last winter Kline-Misol began working earnestly on a painted history of performing chickens. “Chicken Act,” a series of six such paintings, will fly the coop this Thursday at Hentschel Art Gallery. 

“My father used to take me to Riverview (Park in Des Moines, which closed in 1978). After he died I started experiencing memories about it and one of the most vivid was of these chickens that would play piano and sing opera, for a dime. I started painting a piano-playing chicken and then I did a chicken that rides a unicycle. Pretty soon I had a whole carnival full of performing chickens,” Kline-Misol explained, matter-of-factly.

Because the artist moved to Clive recently from thicker woods outside Panora, we asked if the suburbs effected her art.

“Oh definitely, but only in positive ways. I am much happier here. But we still have a large backyard and I still rescue animals,” Kline-Misol said.
She explained that a cardinal which had been left for dead last winter now flies around her bedroom and her rescue cat, Conscious Pilot, has adapted well to Rizzo, a retired racing greyhound.

“Conscious Pilot likes to jump on Rizzo’s back and ride him,” she said, perhaps shedding some light on the inspiration for her circus-class chickens.

Touts

“Frank Hansen” will open at Moberg Gallery August 21. The official opening (always an walk on the wild side with Hansen fans) will be September 14... A show of new works by Blair Benz, Sharon Booma, Dan Mason,Jan Zelfer-Redmond and Bonney Goldstein will open at Olson-Larsen Gallery September 7.
July 2007

Larger than (something derived from) life

WHO TV covered an art show recently! That doesn’t happen very often and the station showed great instincts for recognizing a significant event. Moberg Gallery’s “Sculpture” is a coming out party for Robert Craig, a Des Moines artist with monumental talent. I’ve seen his sculptures before on college campuses, but before this show not even Craig had ever seen more than one of his “skeuomorphic” works in the same place at the same time.

“Skeuomorph” is a word academic designers use to scare the rest of us. Basically it means “derived from as opposed to copied.” These sculptures may resemble familiar objects like teapots, et cetera, but it would be so very Oldenburg to call them teapots, et cetera. Still Craig’s sculptures fit Des Moines like the form of a glove-like thing. Our town rests in the Crusoe Umbrella shade of the Oldenburg prairie, half way between the “Shuttlecocks” and the “Cherry Spoon.” This is the perfect place for a post-Oldenburg, post-Calder re-construction of sculpture. And it’s about time someone showed us that Craig is attempting that.
One powerful small piece amid several giants appears to make a statement on industrial age fishing. An amphibious boat-tank hauls gargantuan tusks, as if forbidden walrus ivory has been snared in it’s maniacal coat wire nets. That’s how these sculptures perk my imagination anyhow.
Three well known painters also brought sculpture to this party: John Phillip Davis shows his first ever free standing piece; Toby Penney introduces vegetable sculptures real enough to bite; and Chris Vance has some new wall pieces. TJ Moberg, Stretch, Bob Cooper and Tom Moberg all contributed new work too.

“Shades of Greatness: Art Inspired by Negro Leagues Baseball” is a mixed media presentation as dazzling and tragic as its subject. There’s a commendable local historical angle too - displays feature the Sioux City Ghosts, the Iowa Colored Cowboys and the Des Moines Hot ‘n Tots, who featured football Hall of Famer Johnny Bright on their national runners-up team of 1952. “Hot ‘n Tot” I learned is now considered racist because it mimics African American speech patterns. I guess such a team today would be called the Ebonics.

The museum deserves credit for not glossing over Cap Anson, who is described in the show as “a major influence among major league elitists to ban blacks from the game in the 1890’s.” In 1886 Anson refused to let his Chicago team play until Fleetwood Walker was removed from the Toledo lineup. “Get the nigger off the field” was how Anson‘s “influence“ was reported. That’s not included here though. Nor was that part of the old boy’s “influence” included by the Des Moines Register when it saw fit to induct Anson into its hall of fame.

Anson‘s historical depth is shortchanged on a second count too. The exhibition describes his “strong racist views” as “unquestioned.” In reality, some people find Anson’s racism dubiously enigmatic. In his autobiography he revealed deep respect and remarkably un-racist attitudes toward Native Americans, especially considering that Anson was the first white child born in Marshall County.

But we came for the art not the sociology. There’s a fantastic art show lurking amid some poster art and some caricatures. Minimalist symbolism powerfully serves Larry Welo, John Ferry, Rob Hatem and Raelee Frazier. Bonnye Brown captures the joy of the game with her portrait of prototypical groupies. Kadir Nelson knocks the socks off the definition of role models, with his portraits of Willie Foster and Andrew Rube Foster. This game lasts through October 28.

Heritage Gallery opened Iowa Exhibited 22 with a lot of refreshing, first time artists being shown. For once, there’s not a single watercolor tulip or iris in this exhibit. Among highlights: Watercolorist Arjes Youngblade works in three dimensions; Peggy Jester shows inexpensive minimalist embossed prints that stopped person after person their tracks; Larry Gregson shows three works, in three different styles; The judge’s favorite works, by Jeff Rider, revealed good senses of humor and style.

June 2007

Summer Blockbusters

Like a state fair for shoppers, Des Moines Arts Festival (DMAF) will pack the city’s hotels and restaurants next weekend. This three day event in Western Gateway Park brings enough music and fireworks to turn art shopping into a source of civic pride. We’re number 3! (Or number 25 if you rank by total sales instead of by less objective criteria). DMAF will attract an estimated 200,000 visitors. That equates to more than 330 battalions, or half-again the number of troops stationed in Iraq. These soldiers of commerce will converge on a bivouac of 160 tents that require 62 hours to reach full erection. They will service 20 food concessionaires and 179 art vendors, most of whom are equipped to accept major credit cards. Plus two interactive mural billboards - based on true paintings by Van Gogh.

Local hotels will be further stressed by the fan base for Des Moines Metro Opera (DMMO), whose 35th season begins this weekend. DMMO’s cosmopolitan audience comes from some 35 states and 3 foreign countries. This year the company detours its traditional program with not one, but two “the slut-must-die” classics (“Carmen” and “Otello”) plus a rare melodic modern opera ( “A Midsummer Night‘s Dream.”) “Carmen” will be a coming out party for local girl Janara Kellerman. She’s been singing lead roles for a few years, but this will be the Simpson grad’s first Carmen, a role she will also cover next year for New York City Opera.

In “Dream” rising star and counter tenor Randall Scotting will sing Oberon to longtime audience favorite Jane Redding’s Titania. Their duets are so lovely they have changed the way people think about 20th century opera. Alan Glassman brings a rangy tenor to Verdi’s tragic Otello, who will be fooled again by the wily Iago, while former DMMO apprentice Dana Beth Miller returns to sing Verdi’s drop dead gorgeous “Willow Song” and “Ave Maria.”

The city’s brick & mortar art scene is also alive around the hottie solstice. Moberg Gallery’s “New Artists” show brings Davenport’s storied painter Leslie Bell to Central Iowa. Bell’s magical realist narratives explore innocence, and its evil twin, in a most contemporary style. Recent UNI grad Noah Doely reveals a new phase of his prodigious talent. Doely sculpts mythic creatures with perishable materials like paper mache, then records them photographically. In previous work, shown at the Des Moines Art Center, he used digital color photography which exposed the illusions. At Moberg he’s working with ambrotype backed with ruby glass, a medium that gives sea monsters the authentic look of a Mathew Brady photo. It’s appropriate summer entertainment in a galaxy not so far away. Wayne Norton, a photographer with an eye for Iowana, and Jeffrey Thompson, a graphic pop artist with an eye for subtle irony, complete the cast of this show, through July.

Olson-Larsen Gallery exhibits its purest Iowa Landscape show in memory - no Arizona deserts, nor Montana sierras this time around. Just the beauty of Midwestern summer. Hung side-by-side, the works of two artists contribute a trompe d’oeil to the show. The venerable Genie Patrick exhibits oils as softly smudged as Mary Cassatt pastels. Patrick said she “scumbles” the paint on the canvass, wearing out three or four paint brushes per painting. Her works share a wall with Bobbie McKibbin’s high definition pastels, which seem more like oils. Gary Bowling, Dave Gordinier and Betsy Margolius join them, through July 14.

Des Moines’ newest gallery, Hentschel AG, opens a full rainbow exhibition by Brazilian Edson Campos’ and Floridian Kathleen Brodeur. "Post-Romanticism" will run June 27, through August 11... Art Dive and Fitch Gallery, less than a block apart in Gateway West, will both host opening receptions Friday June 22. Rob Reeves, Jena Klanrenbeek, Kevin House, Dan Schuster, Bekah Ash, Christine Mullane, Judy Wipple, Jack Wilkes, Dana Schaeffer, and Timi Snyder will be one place or the other, but not at this year’s DMAF… Fort Dodge’s Blanden Museum reprises a legendary New York City art show of 1947 - a veritable Alfred Stieglitz’s greatest hits, through July 6.

May 2007

Orientation of Iowa Art

It was not an ordinary evening at the Des Moines Art Center Downtown. African-Americans played jazz riffs on woodwinds while South Asian percussionists backed them on tablas. Musical scores alternated between eight and twelve note scales. That fusion of raga and jazz was symbolic of the opening of the Iowa Artist Exhibit. Artistic creativity depends upon the clash and synthesis of displaced ideas and Asia is the most displaced of all continents in Iowa. For this year’s exhibit, the Art Center invited three artists whose work is filled with Asian inspirations.
Charlotte Cain lives in Fairfield, the most Asian of Iowa towns, and treks through India and Nepal about half of each year. Her art is mostly Indian, but on a simple symbolic level, it brings together disparate South Asian concepts as only a traveler-artist can. Cain mixed the curly, leafy contours of Dravidian motifs, from tropical southern India, with the cold chiseled scripts of Sanskrit and Hindi, Aryan languages of the north. She synthesizes folk rituals, such as kolam and rangoli, into her iconography. Even her choice of media is fusionist: she paints with Italian gouaches on traditional hand made paper of Rajasthan. George Lowe lives near Decorah, the oddest of Iowa towns both geologically and culturally. He shows a collection of clay pitchers, jars, teapots and bowls which flaunt their imperfections with the “wabi-sabi” honor of a Japanese aesthete. Flaws distinguish and enrich each work, a concept which is best understood in Iowa by stamp collectors.

Susan Chrysler White lives in Iowa City, the most cosmopolitan of Iowa towns. Her work reminds one of Hindu-Buddhist flux and the oneness of being. For the exhibit, she dramatically installed a “waterfall of bugs” in a corner of the gallery - silk screened Plexiglas wings evolving into paper and graphite doodles that add a dimension to their buggy cousins in her large canvas paintings. Those paintings remove mandala art from its circular confinements, reminiscent of both hippy era graphic arts and Mughal iconography, but with Western techniques including painting with ketchup bottles. Through August 3, at DMAC downtown.

The best new works in Olson-Larsen Gallery’s current exhibit also have Asian accents. Paula Schuette Kraemer has been producing significant monoprints for decades, but her new art seamlessly adds photogravure techniques to her process. Her Eastern metaphysical statements are more subtle than those White and Cain brought to town. For instance, Kraemer uses butterflies literally to illustrate their metaphoric meaning - anxiety. In a series about catching and releasing butterflies, she commits mystic psychology. She also shows a Zen-like series of squirrels mindful of dogs, and vice versa. Also at Olson-Larsen, Dan McNamara returns to his famous green meditations on shorelines. As usual, they are as meticulously designed as a Japanese rock garden.

Also in Valley Junction, Chinese artist Goujun Cha appears this month at Kavanaugh Gallery. Cha shows water colors, oils on canvas and oil pastels on paper. At Ritual Coffeehouse, Singaporean-Iowan Kem Bappe illustrates jazz instruments with calligraphic minimalism.

Roosevelt Reincarnation

Joan Hentschel opened Des Moines’ newest gallery this month, in the former Karloyn Sherwood space in the Shops at Roosevelt. “New Beginnings,” Hentshel’s grand opening exhibition, will debut May 20 and will feature works by two Iowans, Mary Kline-Misol and Nancy Purington, plus seven national artists. Searching coast to coast, Hentschel attracted some names, notably celestial painter Lita Albuquerque of Santa Monica, plus several interesting academic artists. She will also represent Iowans Travis Rice of Norwalk, Linda Flaherty and Pam Sanders of Fort Dodge, and Hilde DeBruyne-Verhofste of Cumming.

Milk Boat Cometh

Boaters on Lake Panorama are finding a new shore side attraction this Spring - Fred Truck’s sculpture “Mr. Milk Bottle Contemplates…” Upgrading the lake’s art from chainsaw wildlife levels, Jim Hubbell commissioned Truck’s installation.

Tout

“Tom Sachs: Logjam,” the artist’s first one-person museum exhibition in the United States, opens May 25 at the Des Moines Art Center.

April 2007

Arts Spring Back

Winter dumped several storms of anxiety on Iowa’s arts community beginning in early January when Anita Walker was passed over for reappointment to head the Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA). Officially Walker resigned but layers of political coincidence suggested she wasn’t wanted on new Governor Chet Culver’s ark: She was replaced by her deputy, Cyndi Pederson, who came to DCA from former First Lady Christy Vilsack‘s staff; Pederson’s newly appointed deputy, Mary Jane Olney, came from 18 years in the state’s agricultural department, just about the only bureaucracy Democrats lost in the last election; Walker was quickly hired by Earthpark, which had figured prominently in Culver’s election campaign. The Governor belittled his opponent for favoring federal funds for that “Iowa rainforest.” Normally Iowa Democrats support all federal pork for Iowa, but Earthpark is dirty with notable Republicans from Dave Oman to Robert Ray.

From any point of partisanship, Walker accomplished important things in what had been a powerless office. Notably. she established new associations connecting artists with state departments of economic development (ED) and tourism: Cultural Trust legislation, Cultural & Entertainment Districts, Iowa Great Places, etc.. Those justified the arts community’s public lifelines to the legislature.

In bureaucracies, any new power creates disproportionate envy. Pederson’s DCA will be challenged on three fronts: DCA’s budget is flat-lined but must absorb significant salary increases; ED boys play hard ball with public money; and the arts community easily lapses into a sense of entitlement. A recent arts advocacy forum at DCA did not include a single person from ED. Only one legislator showed up and he left expressing dismay about “preaching to the choir.”

When asked about her challenge, Pederson reminded us that Walker recruited her to DCA to initiate, “and to lobby for Iowa Great Places.” That program probably impresses ED types more than anything else the DCA has ever done. In Sioux City, Great Places aegis quickly led to an Iowa State University College of Architecture Satellite Design School, a year-round indoor farmers market and relocation of the Sioux City Museum. Pederson suggested Great Places is a model for how she wants DCA to move forward.

“Mason City’s Park Hotel is an opportunity we can’t afford to lose - the last Frank Lloyd Wright hotel anywhere,” she lobbied, adding that $20 million was needed to restore the hotel.

Another anxiety storm hit in January when The Art Store, bulwark of art infrastructure since 1970, announced its building on MLK had been sold. Spring brought the good news it will relocate in June, just off the interstate on 73rd Street. In March Karolyn Sherwood announced she will close her gallery, leaving several prominent local artists without representation. Again, there was good news at press time: Richard Kelley signed with Moberg Gallery; Bill Luchsinger & Karen Strohbeen, the pick of Sherwood’s litter, followed him there a few days later; Fred Truck was too busy preparing for two upcoming shows in Japan to worry about it; Joan Hentschel announced she would take over Sherwood’s lease and open a new gallery in May; Mary Kline-Misol said she will show her larger paintings there, while keeping small works at From Our Hands.

After a winter of stress, Valley Junction’s Gallery Night brought Carnival-like relief last week. Olson-Larsen Gallery debuted new work by eight artists including the venerable Sarah Grant, Scott Charles Ross and Dan McNamara. 2AU exhibited new gold and silver work by Ann Au and Sara A. Hill and newspaper/pearl constructions by Kiwon Wang. Through May 26.

Anthony Pontius’ new show, which opened last week at Moberg, will be his only Iowa show this year. It’s squeezed among two in New York City and one each in Los Angeles, Pennsylvania, Oregon and Indiana. It might well be Pontius’ last Iowa show. He can’t paint fast enough to sell his works and his stint as artist-in-residence at the Des Moines Art Center is winding down.

Last Drop

Bondurant’s Chris Vance won a tough competition to provide art branding for the Des Moines Art Festival billboards and T-shirts.
 
March 2007

Designing Winter

Des Moines Playhouse’s John Sayles retrospective precipitated a winter storm of graphic arts. Sayles has probably won more advertising awards than all the other graphic designers in Iowa combined, still the four-decade scope of this exhibition was a revelation. Even Sayles admitted he was overwhelmed to see his entire “family of work together.” A keen sense of ambiguity distinguishes him as both an ad-man and an artist - he knows how to grab your eyeball and then fool it with an unexpected twist.

Karolyn Sherwood Gallery’s “Once Upon Our Time in America“ followed the Playhouse show like snow after freezing rain, exhibiting another application of graphic designs. In a previous career, Tom Jackson quickly rose from illustrator to Creative Director at Stamats, which is eastern Iowa’s approximation of the Meredith Corporation. He still employs a graphic designer’s sensibility for surprise.

“I am intentionally ambiguous because I want viewers to have enough information to see new ways to make connections,” he explained.
Even his methods are drenched in ambiguity - oil paintings look like photographs and watercolors look like digital prints. A more obvious duality comes from original technique. In a series called “Spammed,” he combines familiar symbols with unsolicited e-mail titles, posing two questions: “What does it mean to be a man, or woman, in America today?;” and “What’s the easiest route to happiness?”

Answers come in iconic forms. For instance, two images from “The Wizard of Oz” - ruby slippers and a tornado cloud - accessorize “where would you find anything better?” Significantly, the slippers are made of red rhinestones and have high heels. They reappear in another work with less innocent, but more contemporary, modifications - even higher heels and fish net stockings.

“I just wanted to say something about the American myth in contemporary terms,” Jackson explained, adding that you can’t do that without cowboys.

“Lost America” is little boy’s cowboy dream, wearing a pink polka dot bandana and riding a horse that has all four feet impossibly off the ground. At the other end of innocence, “Half Cocked” shows a Colt 45 revolver built entirely of pharmaceuticals. In the photographic montage “Smoking Cowboy,” Jackson juxtaposes a stubble faced Marlboro man with the fully cocked plastic cowboy mascot for a family restaurant plus a cocktail waitresses’ midsection. The most ambiguous work is “Cowboyin‘” which shows a man in black riding his white horse out of New York’s Central Park and away from a romanticized skyline that could evoke any decade in the last 100 years.

“Des Moines’ Painter”

Chris Vance is surely the most collected contemporary Des Moines painter. Because of that popularity, Vance pushes himself into contradictory, non-commercial territories. In “Hinged,” at Moberg Gallery, he goes out of his way to make some things non-functional - even nailing doors and drawers shut in wall sculptures. At other times, he makes an opposite point - an odd candle in one installation suggests the utility of a shelf.

Vance has often called his paintings “my diary.” In that respect, the narrative is becoming that of a maturing, family man. The anxieties of any father of 14 year old girls come through in “Teen Aged Boys in America.” And “Baseball Careers Cut Short” tells of parental interference from two sides of the backstop. Vance’s palette has also matured this year, away from bright colors and toward earth tones. “Table Top” demonstrates a wizened Japanese aesthetic, barely accentuating the beautiful flaws of the aged wood (“sabi”) upon which he paints.
“In the past, I would have probably painted over it several times, I don’t need that kind of control now,” explained a man who always keeps an eye open for flowers in the garbage.

“Probably 90 per cent of the woods in my sculptures were pulled out of dumpsters,” he admitted, adding that he ardently admired an old wooden locker door that artist John Philip Davis kept in his studio.

“Finally, John got tired of me asking what he was going do with it and gave it to me,” Vance confessed. It’s part of the show now, through April 6.
 
February 2007

Michelangelo‘s Fastball

Life in a Triple A town like Des Moines is blessed by access to uncut talent. I’ve been to several World Series, but my greatest baseball thrills came at Sec Taylor Stadium watching teenagers Vida Blue and Bert Blyleven go “mano a mano” on successive nights. As when hearing rising stars in the intimate confines of the Des Moines Metro Opera, local aficionados have opportunities “to see them when,” meaning before their unpolished glow is overwhelmed by the spot light of fame.
Greater Des Moines Exhibited is a kind of an all star game for Iowa artists without agents. This year’s 13th annual event brings its usual eclectic mix to the Heritage Gallery. Meridith Tenney, Andrea Gage and Vicki Adams show off master technique. Tenney seems to be an artist to watch when she finds her own style. Vic McCullough won “Best in Show” for his acrylic and pencil still life of an antique store display. That work expertly crossed over the dominating themes of this kind of show, which in Iowa invariably mines nostalgia from family history, art history and the idyllic grange. Steward Buck and Diane Hayes are other stars in that regard.

The strength of this exhibition is also a distraction. Steve Greenquist’s sculptures dominate the gallery. Technically, they aren’t part of the show, they are left over from his previous one-man show.

“They’re just so good, it was decided to leave them up so more people could see them,” explained docent Mary Brubaker.

No artist seems to have more irreverent fun than this Ankeny art teacher. His works meticulously mess with Leonardo da Vinci, Mantegna and Michelangelo. He builds intricate Leonardo-designed machinations out of antique (of course) kiddy toys such as alphabet blocks, monopoly boards and rulers. Several sculptures comment upon smiling. While Greenquist brings classical genius down to size, he also overwhelms the other artists here - like young Vida Blue’s fastball. Through Thursday.

Concetta’s Slow Pitch

Concetta Morales, Des Moines’ medium of tropical colors, unveiled her grandest work to date in January - a 16 piece narrative mosaic covering 4000 years of Florida Panhandle history. Comprised of 144 painted tiles (fired at Dahlquist Studio in Des Moines), the work was installed in a series of butteries in Alys Beach, Florida. Public art advocates note that Morales was commissioned by Florida businessman J.T. Stephens after he saw her mosaic mural at the Des Moines International Airport.
Grand Avenue Gravity

Des Moines Art Center’s new group show “Meet the New You” explores the dynamics between humans and their ideals, particularly that of perfection. Dutch photographer Ruud van Empel digitally clones babies from various perfect body parts, yet the results always add up weirdly short of any ideal perfection. Brooklyn sculptor Bryan Crockett embalms the myth of Persephone, in resin, to remind us that perfection is as ephemeral as a point of view. Swedish animator Magnus Wallin transforms a cloned sheep into the Biblical golden calf, keeping us as wary of new millennium science as of Old Testament laws.
Within this otherwise heavy dose of futurism, levity comes from an unlikely source- Sabrina Raaf. The Chicago photographer explained that she grew up in a family of doctors where autopsy results were the normal breakfast table conversation. Yet her work supplies the only lightness and hopefulness, suspending the laws of gravity in her meditations about cosmetic surgery, murder and housework. Through May 2.

Rocketship on Mars

University artists opened a show at Mars Coffeehouse with earnest efforts in familiar modes of expression. Charlie Evans demonstrates a good sense of minimalism, showing that an etch in time saves nine. Cat Rocketship, we kid you not, brings sardonic humor, mixing notions about nature while making some cultural puns. Tianchu Ge is the eyeball-grabber, showing an original sense of color and pattern. A Ge skyline is a full-prism Rorschach test that morphs with the viewer’s perspective. That takes talent as rare as a Blyleven curve ball. Through February.


January 2007

Patricia Piccinini - Moderating Outrage

Patricia Piccinini grabs your attention with six-inch claws. And because her best-known art solicits responses from those parts of the human brain shared with reptiles, some people try to dismiss it. The cover shot on the Des Moines Art Center’s announcement of Piccinini’s exhibition “Hug,” for example, drew complaints that it exploited shock value as a gimmick. It didn’t. Gimmicks shock for the sole purpose of shocking. Piccinini’s shocking creatures are visionary solutions to frightening real world problems.

Within the debates about the morality of cloning, genetics and stem cell manipulation, Piccinini is an extreme moderate. That makes her as odd within the worlds of art and politics as any of her creations are within nature. She articulates both sides of the debates with dramatic, but even restraint.

“We can genetically engineer a certain kind of protein in milk to feed all the children in Africa, which would be a wonderful thing. Or we might patent a new form of grain and then sell it at such a high price that it will be impossible for African farmers to remain, or ever again become, self-sufficient. That would be terrible,” she posed.

After 15 years of artful mediations about such human interventions in nature, the Australian artist now accepts a quantum range of possibilities.

“I am interested in outcomes, particularly in failures — in doing the wrong thing for the right reason,” she says. “When we intervene in nature, it is always with good intentions, but thinking we are in control is always the problem. We can’t ever control the consequences of the intervention. In Australia, we imported foxes and rabbits in order to look like England. They turned instead into the biggest pests on the continent. I try to create narratives, to tell stories that demonstrate our inability to control outcomes. Maybe this is part of evolution? Maybe this is how it goes from here?”

In “Hug,” one of those stories concerns a nearly extinct bird beloved in Australia — the HeHo, or golden helmeted honeyeater. They’re dependent upon gum trees and possums to tap their food. The controversial photo on the Art Center invitations depicted a Piccinini sculpture of a genetically engineered “Bodyguard” for the HeHo — fierce enough to frighten predators and with jaws to tap gum trees. Ferocious and repulsive at first sight, the clone becomes maternal and sympathetic on closer inspection — “more like us, than unlike us” in the artist’s words.

“My Bodyguards aren’t necessarily a real solution,” she says. “Maybe the real solution is waving goodbye to many endangered species. That’s nature, too. My work hangs on that structure.”
Another story in “Hug” concerns an issue more down to the Iowa earth. “The Young Family” is based on a chimera with dominant pig genes.

“I am interested in animal organs that can be transplanted in humans and since pig organs are the least likely to be rejected, I spent some time with pigs,” she says. “I wanted to be around a sow giving birth and it was an experience I will never forget. She delivered 13 piglets, but she sat on six of them. That’s nature.

“I’m a city girl like most people in Australia and most people in the world for that matter. So it was a bit of a revelation to see that she’s full of human qualities. The disturbing thing for us is that that reflects us in a lowly point of view. Then we have to think about how we treat pigs and other animals. They are more like us than unlike us,” she reiterated.

As if to dramatize that, Piccinini explained that “The Young Family” is partly autobiographical.

“This work is about a mother thinking about her children and their future. My mother was sick from the time I was 13 until she died many years later. I would have done anything to help her. So, I don’t find it problematic to consider organs transplanted from creatures that aren’t genetically all human. Confronting a pig mother and her own dilemma of destiny is just as emotional for me.

“I am pregnant now. My sister is depressed and her mother was depressed when pregnant with her — depression prevents the transmission of seratonin to the fetus. We never know to what extent we interfere with the outcomes of others. But when we do know, it evokes new questions about how to behave. It’s all about education. Letting people know so they can make good choices about how to behave. Education is part of nurturing and nurturing is a big, big part of my work,” she says.

Piccinini and her clones will be nurturing Des Moines at a lecture Jan. 17 at Levitt Auditorium, at a preview party Jan. 18 and at her opening Jan. 19, both at the Downtown DMAC. “Hug” runs through April 6.

Touts

Karolyn Sherwood’s “You Are Here” features affordable works by household names, from Donald Judd to Cecily Brown, Claes Oldenburg to Roy Lichtenstein, through Feb. 12… Other group shows open Friday at Heritage Gallery (“Greater Des Moines Exhibited”) and Drake’s Anderson Gallery (faculty art); and Feb. 2 at Mars CafĂ© (Drake student art). The Ankeny Art Center hosts a quilt show through March 2.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Des Moines Art 2005

Best of 2005

Art Stories of the Year

1.) Ana Lives!
Des Moines Art Center’s (DMAC) “Ana Mendieta” resurrected an international artist from the ashes of an icon’s martyrdom. A Cuban political refugee at age 12, Mendieta grew up in Iowa’s foster care system. Her dramatic art took flight while still at the University of Iowa. Later, during husband Carl Andre’s trial for her murder, she became feminism’s poster child for abuse, in the art world’s dress rehearsal for the O.J. Simpson debacle. Mendieta used her body and blood in a chilling autobiographical style, pioneering rape awareness with beastly crime scene re-enactments. Susan Talbott’s final show as Des Moines Art Center Director was a swan song with a broken neck, posthumously birthing a terrible beauty.

2.) Public Architecture Takes a 180
Wells Fargo Arena completed the Iowa Events Center and signaled a 180 degree turn in our philosophy of public architecture. Previously public designs in Des Moines (e.g.: the Civic Center projects of 1900-1920 and of the late 1970’s) featured local architects and democratic designs intended to bring the community together. The new arena was most conspicuous for the way its out-of-state designers stratified the community, with luxury suites, valet parking, exclusive entrances and club levels.

3.) Door Closes, Others Open
Arthouse declared bankruptcy early last year, but, in a sign of a healthy art scene, most of its artists found representation elsewhere. New galleries opened: in East Village, specializing in the third dimension (From Our Hands); and downtown, with an inclination to design (Fitch, HLKB) and attitude (Verbotim). The East Village Arts Coalition expanded its program of exhibitions in non-traditional spaces. Grass root galleries (Des Moines Project, Art Dive) became scene-makers while Moberg continued to upgrade the image of a new arts generation, coaxing expanded repertoires from Frank Hansen, John Philip Davis and T.J. Moberg in particular. Most significantly, some long-time street fair artists outgrew that life style and committed to exclusive relationships, a sign the art community is maturing.

4.) “New New II”
Karolyn Sherwood Gallery’s off beat exhibition “New New 2” included three artists wrestling with originally inspired demons: Mitchell Squire created abstract human victims out of police gun practice targets, revealing a dialectical dynamic in an artist whose other shows (including an exhibition at Anderson last year) have been serenely meditative; Joe Biel brought reworked drawings of iconic moments in American culture. The maniacal and tortured subjects in his work tapped the psychic condition of the disturbed underworld; Jay Vigon conjured a “Little Monster” series of paintings that layered wet acrylic and hand scratched forms ranging from whimsical to devilish.

5.) Mary Kline-Misol’s Big Year
After a “Mid Career Retrospective” at the Dubuque Museum of Art, Mary Kline-Misol prepared her “Alice Cycle” for the State Historical Museum’s “Victorian Iowa” exhibit and the Lewis Carroll Society’s International Conference, which was held in Des Moines because of Kline-Misol. Then her “Wives of Henry VIII” cycle was shown at the Salisbury House.

6.) Dan McNamara Adds Dimension
Dan McNamara took a break from his Zen fling with monoprints and the color green to layer oil on canvass. He showed a Byron Burford-sized talent for catching the human form with its guard down - a new dimension to his prodigious talents, at Olson-Larsen.

7.) DMMO Debuts “Gloriana”
Daringly, Des Moines Metro Opera took on Benjamin Britten’s “Gloriana” last summer, only the third staging ever by an American company. It was the season’s kept mistress, a sophisticated lady for opera aficionados, with Elizabethan court costumes, historical choreography, a Madrigal troupe and massive choruses. All supported audience favorites Gwendolyn Jones and prodigal son Ted Green.

8.) “Iowa Artists 2005”
DMAC’s 55th annual Iowa artist show focused on emerging talent -- Jamie Burmeister, Nathan Carder, Tova Carlin, Amze Emmons, Jessie Fisher, Andrew McCormick, Michael Perrone, Brian Roberts, Lee Running, Jean-Marie Salem, and Pete Schulte. Emmons’ minimalist visions of environmental structures had a visual appeal that most political statements lack. Fisher just laid it out there viscerally, with freaks and horrors redefining the genius of beauty - high Renaissance style with a Gothic twist that stuck like leeches to the veins of the psyche.

9.) Moe Dana Rides Into the Sunrise
By sheer force of personality, Moe Dana convinced Des Moines to support an ever-growing art fair which she built into a rite of summer and a bone fide tourist attraction. So much so that, before she left town last year, Dana’s job description had grown like Pinocchio’s nose, into a year-around series of events that civic leaders hope will become as successful as the art fest.

10.) DMAC Promotes Fleming
For the first time, DMAC promoted a museum director from within its ranks. Jeff Fleming’s selection was a just reward and a novel idea. In this era of fundraising-first, Fleming’s forte is as a curator. Because of his personal contacts with emerging artists, he has been able to assemble shows here that travel well and raise the international profile of the museum.

Zeitgeist of the Year

Self esteem. A twentieth of the way through the 21st century, Des Moines found an artistic verve that had been hiding much of the previous century. At last, it was possible for artists to make a living without leaving town.

New Artist of the Year

Ryan Clark is the only artist Karolyn Sherwood has ever signed off a walk up interview. At 25 he is also the youngest in her stable. His debut solo show here, “On the Mortality of Memory,” considered both the ambiguity and consciousness of time, juxtaposing images that evoke memories: grave yards; library archives; a tattoo dated like a death camp memory. All this while framing insider jokes on Raphael and Michelangelo.

New Artist of the Year (with an asterisk)

Elaine Hudson Hamilton. This 82 year old artist moved to Iowa last year. Her woodblock series “Stoneworkers” (Fitch Gallery) does for prints what Wendell Mohr does for watercolors, conveying monumental insights with minimalist embellishment.

Political Artist of the Year

Fred Truck. Des Moines‘ thoughtful iconoclast exhibited a “Medicine Cabinet” of bombs (Sherwood), cracking a dead serious joke on terrorism.
“Bombs are most effective if you don’t use them, as deterrents. Art is similar. Once it is used, it’s the property of advertisers and media, etc. It loses power,” he explained.

Environmental Artist of the Year

Bill Luchsinger. Luchsinger’s mathematically complex “Poplar” series” (Sherwood) beautified the fate of trees grown to become toilet paper.

Historical Artist of the Year


Will Mentor. Mentor’s “Bionic Farm” (Sherwood) deconstructed the history of farming to symbols and icons.

Concert of the Year

Pianist, composer and AIDS survivor Fred Hersch played a tribute at Sheslow to Thelonius Monk on the occasion of the master’s 88th birthday, on an 88 key instrument. Like the numerology, the evening was an epiphany.

Deal of the Year

Both Civic Music and the DMAC’s music series brought big time performers to intimate venues, at prices a fraction of what they would be in Chicago.

Angel of the Year


Melva Bucksbaum gave sculptures by Joel Shapiro and Sally Petrus to the Art Center, for placement on the Principal Riverwalk.


November 2005

Poplar Art: Painting the Forest for the Puns


Bill Luchsinger and Karen Strohbeen are the godfather and earth mother of Iowa art. While prepping their new show at Karolyn Sherwood Gallery, Strohbeen reflected on how much has changed for artists since their first exhibition.
“When we started at Percival Gallery there weren’t many artists in Des Moines and it wasn’t a livelihood for anybody. Now there really is an art scene here, there are lots of galleries and we make our livings as artists, in Iowa. It’s really pretty amazing,” she said.
Probably the state’s most popular artists, Luchsinger and Strohbeen never fell into the trap of just reproducing variations on a successful template. Instead, they continually experiment. Strohbeen even paid respect in the new show to Richard Kelley, with a series of triangles evoking the Des Moines master. The couple’s new work is more collaborative than before and sometimes combines pure simplicity with inconceivable complexity. For instance, one series of single line drawings (Strohbeen’s signature methodology) of a rabbit evolves into an image spiked by repetitive, unrecognizable images of the hare, manipulated through fractal-based software by Luchsinger. He uses an offbeat painting discipline that is based on quantum mechanics and recognizes infinite possibilities. The result becomes a visual memory puzzle. So too is a Luchsinger series on poplar forests.
“They are planted for rapid growth, to supply the world with toilet paper,” he explained. That incite into his subjects’ destiny revealed some sardonic visual puns, and a squeezably soft appreciation for his sense of texture, created in part by deconstructing the trees’ bark.
“Black and White Heads,” a dazzling montage of Strohbeen drawings, is a time-lapse metamorphosis, from human to floral forms. Where have all the flowers gone, indeed? “Dancing Scratches” seamlessly blends an African wrap skirt pattern with adobe scratches and a meadow of flowers. The couple collaborated on several reflections on lisianthus, from pure still life to deconstructions of bouquets fallen on the floor. The latter make the point of this show -- that a quantum universe accommodates infinite error and whim. Strohbeen said her personal title for the exhibition was “Accidents and Scratches.”
Mother Nature couldn’t have said it better Herself.

Art Skinny

The “Old Bags Luncheon” for the Boys and Girls Clubs of Des Moines brings a high-end silent auction to the Downtown Holiday Inn, Dec. 8. Designer purses, handbags and cases, some created for the event by local and national artists, raised over $60G at last year‘s sold out event. Reservations ($125) are essential dahlings: 515-262-5695…Steve Gerberich’s “Holiday Tree” will be displayed on the Waukee Triangle through New Year’s. The nationally prominent mechanical artist has relocated from New York City and hinted to us about a major art development in downtown Des Moines…T.J. Moberg stars in Moberg Gallery’s Holiday Show. Three new constructions showed both a unique imagination and a serious innovator’s technique…Olson-Larsen and 2Au Galleries co-host combined holiday show openings Dec. 2 (through New Year‘s eve), with new magical realism from the inimitable Michael Brangoccio at the O-L…“Still Life w/PEACHES (and a little black boy atop a spotted pony),” at the Anderson Gallery until Dec. 9, is a thoughtful undertaking by Mitchell Squire. Complementing his brilliant bullet hole exhibition earlier this year, PEACHES uses funeral trappings and manipulated hair pieces to comment on racial assimilation and the passage of modes of thought…Jane 360, a new support group for women artists, held their first show last month in East Village. Glass bones, santos and neon veves (voodoo amulets) cast spirits at more traditional media…Absolute Art’s Photography Show runs through Dec. 6 starring timeless Iowanna by Bob Bergazyn and graceful nudity by Jay and Marilyn Anderson… Eric Wickes & Michael Lane’s “DaVinci Dress Code” runs, wild as rumors, through December at The Lift…Photography, the opening round of SMASH Gallery‘s high school art competition is on display. Each of four disciplines will be shown for 3 weeks, then winners return for one-person shows.


October 2005

Things Fall Apart: Art & History

History is the blood of Iowa October, the season to slaughter pigs, commune with the dead and honor ancestors. Appropriately, three thoughtful artists share unique visions of history with Des Moines this month. Will Mentor’s inspiration came while driving in Iowa. That lucky coincidence has led to regular career stops at Karolyn Sherwood Gallery between the two coasts. Mentor, who hangs his hat at MIT, is a painter of exponential analogies, commenting simultaneously on the historical relationships between technology and nature, on the methodologies of landscape painting and on the development of Op Art.
Originally his “Bionic Farm” series took form in straight line paintings using the colors of corporations that converted Iowa from virgin prairie to biotech laboratory. As much as any contemporary artist, Mentor is adding a Post Industrial chapter to art chronicles of the American Midwest, picking up brushes dropped by Tom Benton and his Regionalist minions. Mentor’s recent show at Sherwood developed new styles and analogies. “Feral swirls” replaced straight lines and paid tribute to the Op Art ancestors. On a superficial level, these look like psychedelic computer art. Look closer and brush strokes betray more complicated technique.
“Flipping and duplicating on the computer takes 30 seconds. The painting takes 6 months and that’s with two assistants working full time,” Mentor explained of a process that involves 4 layers, taping off with pliable automobile striping tape, gesso; and hand painting in both oil and acrylic.
His interest in Op Art is more scientific than hippie.
“Op Art tires the eye. It beats up the rods and cones leaving the impression of an after-image on the brain. Duchamps’ ‘Roto Leaf’ was an attack joke on Op Art, reducing it to a visual pun. When the Freudians wrote about Op Art, it acquired their vocabulary. The Sixties added psychedelics. Then computer art became the last of the lineage of things tiring the eye. So I started asking ‘What happens when that happens, in this complete historical context?’”
Mentor creates 3D illusions by adding earth tones next to bright acrylics. Because the earth tones are the last painted on the canvas, he flips the order of traditional landscape painting.
“Abstraction has been expunged by analogy, but I love analogy,” he joked.
That is clear in his use of colors, which employ the signage of rural Iowa: “true blue” Garst (and the orange hunting jackets that Mentor remembers Garst giving to their good customers); the blue on blue of Henry Ford tractors; and the cornfield colors of John Deere and Pioneer.
“Agricultural Iowa has four layers. There was virgin prairie, then animals traced trails of convenience on that landscape. Then came Europeans with their horse drawn plows, who cleared the land and drained it and left more dramatic marks. Finally the Industrial Age brought mechanized grids of townships, then hybrids, chemicals and genetics introduced new analogies,” Mentor explained.

Historical painting takes traditional form at the State Historical Museum and the Salisbury House. Mary Kline-Misol’s “Alice Cycle” brings together, for the first time, two decades of the artist’s paintings of both the historical Alice Liddell, and the amazing adventures of the Lewis Carroll literary character she inspired. Like Alice, Kline-Misol channels the power of strangeness, from the far side of wonderland. Assembled from dozens of private collections, this is an astounding array of portraits, so much so that the Museum Director told us Kline-Misol broke down when she saw them all together.
“They are her babies,“ said Curt Simmons.
They are also the highlight of the museum’s Victorian Iowa exhibit, two months of parlor games (including chess boards made by Des Moines Public School students), teas, talks, storytelling and hat making. The Lewis Carroll Society will conference here and at Salisbury House, where Kline-Misol’s collected portraits of the wives of Henry VIII are exhibited. Those subjects also channel from beyond, but they are grown up girls without the aura of innocence. All Kline-Misol’s work is best observed in October, when souls cross the bar and broadcast the sinister urges of otherness. Through November.

Ledelle Moe tells tales of historical upheaval with elemental media and metaphor. The South African is a hot artist, her name keeps company with expressions like “major contemporary.” Interpreters of her large-scale sculptures see timely commentary on the willful destruction of monuments, from the World Trade Center towers to synagogues in Gaza. We found her last week wearing a tool belt and heavy gloves, reassembling two tons of molded concrete, broken down into over 100 hinged pieces for their cross country trip to Drake’s Anderson Gallery.
Her exhibition includes a ruin of three giant heads and a baker’s dozen of small ones. They have never been exhibited together before, and one of the large pieces debuts in Des Moines. Moe told us that one of the heads is modeled after a photograph of a young Liberian who was murdered by Charles Taylor’s rebels.
“Originally I thought he was alive. Looking closer I saw just a severed head. His expression was so serene, despite his horrible death, it reminded me of a feeling I have of personal loss. Big immovable objects are like heavy memories of things you can’t get past,” she said, adding that she lost several friends in South African riots.
She insisted that the inspirations for other heads remain anonymous. “It’s important that I didn’t know them, yet that I felt all this empathy for them,” she explained.
She works in concrete and dirty motor oil for symbolic reasons.
“Concrete’s such a strange material. Limestone and sand come from deep in the earth, get separated and then go under these extremes of heat to be put back together as cement. Yet, it is so familiar to us, because we’re surrounded by it in all urban settings,” she said, before mentioning that she recently lost her mother.
“When we lose our heroes, we all try to reconstruct them in our own way. People live through memories of other people. On this planet that is,” she clarified. Through November 4.

Big Grant

“I Love It, But It Doesn’t Match My Sofa” at the Iowa Genealogical Society included a couple works each by Sarah Grant, Jason Scott Hoffman, Jeni Johnson, Andrea Kraft, Michael Lane, Rachel Merrill. Anthony Pontius, Jeffrey Thompson and E. J. Wickes, along with sundry furniture. Grant brought wonderful big canvasses that the artist normally wouldn’t show in Des Moines. Her reputation here, for works on paper and for smaller pieces, is so well established that she shows her big works and canvasses only in the Palm Springs and Santa Fe markets. She explained that “The Moon and the Vessel on the Midnight Prairie” was autobiographical.
“I am the red vessel. I’m 51 now, the woman in menopause. Too much information.”
Andrea Kraft’s new collage deconstructs a female portrait in which everything except the foot looked Gothic. E.J. Wickes brought some chess puns that played with famous artists and Jason Hoffman showed interesting self portraits. All the sofas looked happy.

Little Big Shows

It’s the best of both worlds for music fans -- if you can get tickets. The Des Moines Art Center Music Series is filled with musicians used to packing big concert halls. In Des Moines they will play theaters as small as the Art Center’s Levitt Auditorium and no bigger than Drake’s Sheslow Auditorium. The lineup starts with Jon Nakamatsu and the German trio Jacques Thibaud. Kuss, another German group with a reputation for stirring classical fervor in the young, and the Aspen Ensemble follow. The Art Center’s biggest coup combines the Brentano String Quartet, oft regarded as the best of their generation, with revered violist Maria Lambros. We are blessed because Gilda Biel is a well connected impresario and her organization is generously endowed by music loving angels. So get your tickets before they sell out.

Big Grant II

Des Moines Metro Opera won an initial National Endowment for the Arts’ “Great American Voices Military Base Tour” grant. The company will take their production of Davies/Mozart’s “Three Little Pigs,” to Offutt Air Force Base. There is a timely, porcine lesson here. As the military takes a bigger role in the restoration of hurricane-blown cities, they shall now heed Despina Pig‘s wisdom -- Build levees that are huff & puff proof.

Now Boarding…


Des Moines Art Center’s re-opening “To All Gates” is a stunning demo of both restraint and employee morale management. Imagine having all the resources of the museum’s secret vaults at your disposal to accesorize a room. Even those of us without the decorator-gene can get excited about that. The amazing thing is that so many curators used minimalist discretion. The Anna K. Meredith Gallery, for instance, has just two pieces -- Alberto Giacometti’s “Man Pointing” and Mark Rothko’s “Light Over Gray.” Through February 19.

Orson Welles once said that movie stars can aspire only to a semblance of the immortality that Jean Renoir bestowed on his blooming models. The Faulconer’s astonishing Impressionist exhibition glorifies several of them: Julie Manet, the only daughter of Berthe Morisot (Renoir’s co-star in the show) and Edvard Manet’s brother; Lucie Hessel, Vuillard’s model and the wife a famous gallery owner; Germaine (so famous she had no last name), who was Renoir’s discovery from the Folies Bergere. These identifications are a small detail in dazzling show, but so was the meaning of “Rosebud.” Through December 11.

While visiting Thomas Jackson’s studio in Cedar Rapids, Karolyn Sherwood found some old photographs the artist had forgotten. She persuaded Jackson to resurrect them, and he begin pairing them with ironic partners. Later he painted versions of the pairings. In one, a man ties his necktie against six landscapes that indicate different comfort levels for men in suits and ties. Opening reception October 13, through November 12.

Valley Junction’s Gallery Night is October 14 with Olson-Larsen Gallery premiering new works by salty ceramist John Beckelman and bright colored painters Sharon Booma and Jan Zelfer-Redmond. Thorugh November 19.

Moberg Gallery ’s “Cohesive Pursuit” is a joint exhibition of new works and collaborative pieces by abstractionists Edward Blaze Brafford and Shawn Wolter. Through October.

“Attention Deficit” promises new paintings by Christine Mullane, dealing with “cowboys, snowboarders, topless dancers, bomb pops, canned corn, Buddha, veiled woman, the Taj Mahal, geisha girls, the Dali Lama and Marlon Brando,” plus a film by Mike Gustafson and collage & magnet art by a group of Kansas City artists. Huh? October 28 at Art Dive.

Salisbury House hosts an a capella choir from Norway at Central Presbyterian Church, October 28, $25. That concert is part of a Nordic chamber music weekend that also includes an a concert on the Salisbury Steinway and a catered wine dinner, $100 for all events. 274-1777.

Des Moines Project showcases new work by Vanja Borcic. Also at DMP, Arthur Martinez’ paintings show a serious eye for both portraiture and irony: “Country Road” is a sweet visual pun on the “grass is always greener,” with cows lingering longingly behind a gate that leads from their green fields to an utterly bleak mudscape.

We Are Who We Are

Brent A. Holland’s figure drawing course at ISU is having trouble finding nude models. The school is paying $7 and hour for clothed models and $10 an hour for unclothed models. 515- 294-4768.

September 2005

King of the Road


“My uncle used to love me, but she died.” Roger Miller

Visual arts are supposed to stand on their own two dimensions. But sometimes a little background music gets them airborne. Without Richard Strauss, “2001: A Space Odyssey” would have never found an audience beyond science fiction fanatics. Without the songs of Leonard Cohen, “McCabe & Mrs. Miller” would never have been released. Similarly Roger Miller songs, chosen by the artist, helped clarify Frank Hansen’s big show of 70 paintings at Moberg Gallery, “The World According to Frank.”
Like baseball and opera, Hansen’s art is best appreciated in person, and with complete acquiescence to the implausible. Moberg Gallery has the dang good sense to realize that, so they added a second artists’ reception, September 9, for the show. Hansen’s work has always reminded us of Southern folk artists, because every painting seems to have a confounding, personal story. Other artists compare Hansen to Basquiat and Frank admits that Goya’s grotesque period might have been an influence. But he says he isn’t arrogant enough to go there.
“What do I know about Europe 200 years ago?,” he asked, adding that he prefers to call his art “Emotionalism,” which just means that it expresses his personal emotions.
“Art doesn’t have to be pretty, the best art usually isn’t,” he said.
Yet, some of these paintings are, in spite of themselves. “Pretty Woman” is lovely, in a naĂŻve and minimal sense. For the most part, the paintings in this show seem stuck in the Roger Miller repertoire of sad songs, childhood memories and hitch hiking discoveries. Some of Hansen’s titles sound like Miller songs: “Fish Outside the Box;” “Human Succotash;” “Dirty Birds Lay Bad Eggs;” “Sad Betty and Her Bobcat,” etc.
This is blasphemy to purists, but Hansen deserves to be considered among the landscape artists in Iowa. His rural visions are comical and have more narrative than a field trip to the farm. His urban skylines find every lock that ain’t locked, when no one’s around. So, chug a lug down Ingersoll this Friday. Hansen and Miller will be telling stories that complement the paintings. You can’t roller skate in a buffalo head, but you could win a limited edition print of some 280 “Lost Images.” That is a story too. Many of Hansen’s paintings are trompe d’oeil’s. He paints a subject, photographs it, and then paints a second related narrative on top of it, but at a different angle. Sometimes, the originals get off the train in Baltimore.

The Fiddle King


The 20th century’s most famous child prodigy is 60 now. And only the gods of music know what’s next for Itzhak Perlman. Lately, he’s been conducting more often, having, perhaps, lost the feel for challenge after five decades as the world first violin. Other new career moves include film scores for Steven Spielberg and serving as master of ceremonies for big concerts in baseball stadiums. As much as any baby boomer in the world, Perlman has been there and done that. He was a featured guest at the Ed Sullivan Theater - for both Ed and Dave (Letterman, for those of you who don‘t watch TV). The Iron Curtain he famously broke through is gone now. But there’s always Gaza.
First, he opens the season for the Des Moines Symphony, in a rare event that is fully entitled to use the word “gala.” The performance of his signature piece, the Beethoven Violin Concerto, will mark thirty three years since he last played in Des Moines. The program will also include Berlioz’s Roman Carnival Overture and Bizet’s Symphony in C.
Tickets to the concert are now available to non-season ticket holders, at $85 and $55. Tickets to the pre-concert dinner cost $115. We value musical legends in Des Moines, almost half as much as frou frou suppers.

Art and Archeology


In 1996, a run-away husband turned uranium prospector discovered a dilapidated motel near Little Lost Creek, Wyoming. Proprietor A.C. Crump, dead six years at the time, was sitting upright at the check-in desk, a pencil still clutched in his fingers. Crump had built the motel during the uranium heydays of the Cold War, but it declined after Interstate 80 was built, some 60 miles away. Afterwards, the recluse survived on social security checks and desperately lost tourists.
With a nod to Orson Welles‘ ‘War of the World,’ Los Angeles artist Michael C. McMillen gave that brief history to “Red Trailer Motel,” the resurrection of Crump’s derelict structure at the Des Moines Art Center Downtown. McMillen has transformed the museum into a cross between a carnival side show and a film noir set. Gravel driveways, squeaky doors and peepholes await barkers. Tumbleweeds and rusty hubcaps dance to radio blues as the museum broadens the range of its mission, with yet another totally original exhibition.
Curator Patty Hickson said that McMillen has been a favorite artist of her’s since the early 1980’s.
“His ‘Garage Door’ is a California icon, it’s been one of the two most popular pieces in the collection of the L.A. County Museum of Art for over 20 years now,” she said.
“‘Red Trailer Motel’ has been in university galleries at Wyoming and Reed College, and in the artist‘s gallery in Los Angeles, but this is its first museum showing,” Hickson explained, adding to the legend. Through December 30.

Big Night X 2


Will Mentor’s ‘Bionic Farm’ opens September 8 at Karolyn Sherwood Gallery, with an artist reception. The Cedar Rapids artist gone international has been calling his shows by that same name since the decade began, in Los Angeles, New York and beyond. His idea is to merge the biological with the mechanical. The latest version promises an analog discussion of agri-business in Iowa.
On the same evening, the Hotel Pattee presents an evening with U.S. Poet Laureate, “Writing Poetry with Ted Kooser.” The Pulitzer Prize winner will conduct a workshop, a lecture and a poetry reading.

Let Light Define

Bobbie McKibbin is the yardstick other Iowa landscapists use to measure up. More than anyone, she has looked at this state, and those west of here, from both sides now. With Ellen Wagener gone to Arizona, McKibbin is Iowa’s unchallenged keeper of pastel visions too. “New Work by Bobbie McKibbin” completes a year of just recognition, including major shows at the Faulconer Gallery and the Missoula Art Museum, where the following was written about her work.
“Her journeys capture the story between departure and arrival points, presenting the viewer with observations…of where the light becomes an element not passively rendering objects visible, but actively filling and defining space.”
Don’t attempt that without protective goggles. At Olson-Larsen Gallery, through October 8.

New Gallery

“From Our Hands” Gallery opened last month in East Village. Owner Ann Harmon told us she means to keep things affordable, with lots of 3-D art. The main exception will be the paintings of the inimitable Mary Kline-Misol.
“I am taking a playful approach to the work I show. Some pieces are very fine art, or craft objects. Some are just pretty, or clever, or funny. I am trying to have a good selection of work under $150, to make it accessible to a broader audience. I've also brought in work by emerging artists and an organization helping the handicapped,” Harmon said.
She has an equal mix of Iowa and out of state artists and craftspeople. Local art includes: Peggy Johnston’s hand-made books: Jan Gipple’s hand-painted scarves and wall hangings; Melissa Miller’s pique assiette mosaics; Robin Paul’ s stained glass sculpture; Sharon Nelson-Vaux’s xylostones; Ruth McNamara’s ceramic pottery and faces; and Laurie Briden’s stained glass objects. From Eastern Iowa: John Schwartzkopf’s furniture and sculpture; Nathan Riley’s metal and stone sculpture; Gail Chavenelle’s 3-D metal sculpture; Connie Schumm’s pottery and mosaics. From Central Iowa: Sheryl Ellinwood’s glass tiles and blown glass vessels; Nick Seivert’s ceramics; and Alyssa Harmon’s ceramics.

August 2005

Stones of Summer


Susan Noland is gold’s grand mistress of Iowa, having taught her alchemy to a generation of metal artists. This summer in her studio gallery in the Shops at Roosevelt, she’s investigating the psychologies of stones, dividing gems into four groups based on some applications for healing, expanding consciousness, protecting and teaching.
“It sounds a little too New Age, but there are aesthetic reasons for our interest,” she said, explaining that she has a new Brazilian gem supplier who shares her interest in stones that show off their flaws and idiosyncrasies, like quartz with rutile and tourmaline veins exposed.
“There is so much visible energy stored, it reminds us that this is the gem of phonograph needles, it’s capable of channeling energy and re-broadcasting it.”
At 2AU, Ann Au also has also been playing with some dazzling freak stones, “I love the color and flash of opals, their mystic petrified pools of color, so I am playing with those now,” she admitted, but added that some dazzling Brazilian stones would be taking up most of her time. Emerald slices with obvious matrix veins, green garnet ice, German cut golden beryl, faceted pink tourmaline wings and deep green emeralds were mixing it up in her studio with black, gray and white Tahitian pearls, as large as 17.8 millimeters. She showed us a collection pearl freaks, including some chartreuse pearls and some podded pearls. A bag of African tanzanite also tried to fit in with her Ipanema beach boys and South Sea mermaids.
“I don’t know that the summer will have any theme at all. It’s so hard to plan, I love them all and sometimes they sell out before the show even starts,” she explained, gems reflecting like puddles under lightening.

Big Event

Civic Music announced its 81st season, sticking to the eclectic/educational format that has been working well this decade. Each performance will be accompanied by at least one educational event featuring the series artists.
Brazilian guitar brothers SĂ©rgio and Odair Assad, featured on Yo-Yo Ma’s bally hooed new Brazilian recording, have a repertoire ranging from Baroque keyboard transcriptions to Ginastera and Milhaud. Pianist and composer Fred Hersch will pay tribute to Thelonius Monk. Ramsey Lewis keeps hanging on with the in crowd. A capella Chanticleer blends 12 male voices, including two formerly from Des Moines - Justin Montigne and Matthew Oltman, who sang Albert in Des Moines Metro Opera’s Albert Herring and Camille in The Merry Widow.
Highlights of the season look to be: the Brentano String Quartet celebrating Mozart’s 250th birthday with violists Maria Lambros and Hsin-Yun Huang. They will present the complete Viola Quintets on successive evenings in Des Moines; and Angela Brown, whose debut with the Metropolitan Opera, inspired the New York Times to write “At last an Aida.“ That esteemed paper’s Anne Midgette called the night "a major event." A “major event” in New York equals what in Des Moines?
Mitchell Squire
“I am a minimalist. In my approach to manipulating things. Just show what is there, which I think is powerful enough.
“I believe, and I teach, that it is important to think of organization as a creative act. “

Dr. Larsen answers the question; “What are your top five all time favorite death arias?”

“Since most characters are not alone singing an aria at the death moment, I am choosing my favorite opera death 'moments' in no particular order.

1. Mimi's death of consumption in the arms of Rodolfo at the end of LA BOHEME
2. Aida and Radames live entombment at the end of Verdi's AIDA
3. Lucretia's suicide at the end of Britten's THE RAPE OF LUCRETIA.
4. Rodrigo's shooting at the end of Verdi's DON CARLO.
5. Tosca's leap to her death from the top of a parapet of the Castel Sant'Angelo. “

July 2005

Christian Serendipity Pins Art Center on New Map

Christian Jankowski sweats enthusiasm. Gesticulating with a bottle of Dos Equis, he made sure we appreciated the miracle of serendipity.
“’This I Played Tomorrow’ just fell together. The chef was only there because his daughter wanted to look for movie stars, because ‘Gangs of New York’ and ‘Passion of Christ’ were being shot at the same time. The school girls were skipping class for the same reason. I was shooting on the set of ‘Francesco di Assisi’ and the woman worshipping was in real Franciscan church. I was using costumes from Fellini’s costume designer. That’s the sort of thing that happens when you get the right people and energy together,” he said, avoiding the obvious phrase.
“Everything Fell Together” is the title of what this young German artist called his biggest show ever. The Des Moines Art Center is the first American museum ever to assemble his films and videos. That too is a story of serendipity, beginning with acting director Jeff Fleming meeting Jankowski while guiding a tour group through Berlin studios, co-producing a new film for this show, and transforming the museum into something it has never been before, and something that will raise the museum’s profile with the avant-garde.
Opening night had glitches that might have bothered a less spirited artist. The audio of some films drowned out others.
“With television, life in America is like that. You have to tune things out and tune others in. You find a way to do it,” Jankowski explained before letting another story fall together.
“When I was in Korea with (karaoke giant) Taijin, I found this old German song ‘Jeannie’ that had been my favorite when I was a teenager. It was moment like that. It made me aware karaoke is an amazing translator of culture. Taijin keeps 20 musicians working all the time just programming music. Now I can be seen in my video of my little teenage anthem in all these little villages in China. How amazing is that?” he asked, smiling even more than usual.
After strolling through the show, which can add up to nearly 4 hours of film and video, we passed Jankowski’s karaoke booth. A charismatically punk German voice shook the walls. Christian was singing his old anthem with devious vigor. The small audience in the room asked him to translate the German verses.
“You want a translation, ok. This young girl goes to an island with her friends. Just before they are supposed to go home, she goes off with three boys she just met there. They go to the beach and bad things happen. The world media comes with their cameras,” he laughs before wailing the chorus.
“Jeannie, quit living on dreams. Jeannie, life is more than it seems.”
Through August 28

Show Goes On

Opening weekend at the Opera was a rescue mission. For the first time in DMMO history, a principle voice had to be replaced and the last minutes. Not just one, but two, covering three roles. Jane Redding (title role of Lucia and Olympia in Hoffmann) and Omar Salam (title role of Hoffmann) both needed to withdraw. Serendipitously, Anna Vikre, who already had a rep for Lucia, was available and Larsen persuaded Drew Slatton, a tenor he had conducted in New York, to join the Company as Hoffmann. Apprentice Artist Nili Reimer was promoted from cover to principle as Olympia.

The Emperor’s New Exhibition


Just in time for the 200th anniversary of Hans Christian Andersen’s birth, Grinnell’s Faulconer Gallery opened the Danish installment of its Scandinavian Photography series with Crown Prince Frederik, the
future king of Denmark, is serving as patron of the exhibition. "Scandinavian
Photography 2: Denmark" features artists of all ages and styles, with an effort made by the curator to include work bridging three centuries. The oldest artist in the exhibition, Keld Helmer-Petersen,
84, studied photography in Chicago in the 1940s, and was one of the
first to introduce Denmark to the qualities of abstract art and
design. Tove Kurtzweil’s series on the Tranquebar, a former Danish
colony in India, stars. Special programs for the exhibition, including visits by a number of artists, are planned for early September. Through September 11.

Iowa 20

IAXX at the Heritage Gallery drew 200 applicants this year. Best in show honors went to Lois Wiederrecht-Finke of New London, for the print “Looking East at Night” which had a gilded quality rare in the medium. Minimalist storyteller Jean Hagert Dow of Ames was our favorite artist, building a vocabulary out of scratches and scribbles.
Larry Holden has a sense of both humor and narrative. His “Dear in Headlights” shows Tom Benton scope - love, lust, jealousy and liquid refreshment on a smoldering day at the farm. Elinor Noteboom showed a personal style with two paintings, from two totally different points of view, of half harvested Iowa fields. Also impressing us Anna Wood’s Ana Mendieta like play with fire and film, Shari Booth’s eye for watercolor landscape, Kaye Condon’s pop sculpture of Frida Kahlo and Peggy Johnston’s paper art that subtly teases out meaning. Through August 6.


Mile Stones



Melva Bucksbaum has given two major sculptures to the Des Moines Art Center, for placement on the Principal Riverwalk. Joel Shapiro’s untitled cast bronze minimalist monument alludes to the human body in motion. The artist’s work is best known for stunning installations at the Holocaust Museum and The Met. Sally Pettus’ “Quantum Leaf” is a recently finished bronze leaf that appears to be floating on a pool of water.


Mac Hornecker’s 16 foot tall “Hills, Fields, Wind, and Rain,” has been unveiled at The Mid-America Group’s North Park Business Center in Urbandale. 16 feet. The sculpture is fabricated of Cor-ten steel and ferroconcrete .


Road Trip


If you have not seen it yet, the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art (410 Third Avenue SE, Cedar Rapids) long running “Art in Roman Life: Villa to Grave” is a rare opportunity, with over 150 Roman objects--sculpture, frescoes, jewelry, furniture, coins and other decorative art objects--borrowed from major museum collections, presented in a recreated Roman architectural setting and domestic context, including an exterior courtyard and interior rooms of a Roman villa. Through Sept. 18.


June 2005

Hot Time Summer in the City

In Des Moines, June is the month that struts booty hot enough to wax an art pimp’s ride. First the Des Moines Art Festival turns our downtown bridges and streets out, feting the nubile muses and filling hotels and restaurants with art johns who venture this way but once a year. Then Des Moines Metro Opera debuts its 33rd season, with tricks that defy geography, weather and economics. DMMO is the only opera company in America to run without any red ink for 32 consecutive years. And it did this while subsidizing an annual seven-week residency for apprentices, graduating over 1,100 young sirens from chorus and understudy roles that seduce cosmopolitan opera-goers who come each year from 40 states and foreign countries.
This year the Opera’s challenging repertoire includes Benjamin Britten’s “Gloriana,” a DMMO premiere and only the third staging ever by an American company. It’s the season’s kept mistress, a sophisticated lady for aficionados with Elizabethan court costumes, historical choreography, a Madrigal troupe and massive choruses. All support audience favorites Gwendolyn Jones and homegrown rising tenor Theodore Green.
For less discriminate ears, the opera puts out the carnal flesh of grand opera - tales of seduction and betrayal. Lustrous soprano Jane Redding will sing two fated seductresses, the title role in “Lucia di Lammermoor” and Olympia in the “Tales of Hoffmann.” We asked her how the first role ranks among the great doomed ladies of operatic lore.
“As far as a soprano singing herself literally to death from madness, Lucia is the only one I can name. Sopranos can die in many creative ways. Generally they sing motives of an earlier aria as they expire, taking a few minutes to do this after receiving the poison, stab wound, dying by their own hand, feeling there is no other solution to their hopeless existence as in Butterfly, Suor Angelica, or Tosca. They can make themselves the sacrifice as in Gilda (Rigoletto), all these sing until their last breath,” she mused.
Opera Tips: Tuesdays and Wednesdays have the best seat availability; Ignore “sell outs,” returned tickets go on sale the day of the show; The “Stars of Tomorrow” concert on July 7 is one of Iowa’s greatest art secrets.

Young Guns

The 55th annual Des Moines Art Center’s “Iowa Artists 2005” opened last month with a focus on a emerging talent -- Jamie Burmeister, Nathan Carder, Tova Carlin, Amze Emmons, Jessie Fisher, Andrew McCormick, Michael Perrone, Brian Roberts, Lee Running, Jean-Marie Salem, and Pete Schulte. The majority are academics, somewhat protected from the harsh judgments of the market. Running’s site-specific installations are as ephemeral as poppies. “I like that at the end of an experience my art all gets washed out and goes away,” she explained.
Of this group, Carlin’s art holds eyeballs the longest, with mixed media that deconstruct colors while giving expression to her driving force - illusory space. “Space is what involves me. None of my work is just two dimensional anymore. Even my drawings are sewn into, to allude to space outside. Two dimensional space is a point of departure. I will never do sculpture because it does not involve illusory space,” she word-knitted.
Salem, Burmeister, Roberts, Shulte, Perrone and McCormick all brought metaphors or archetypes to the party, mostly amusing and often referencing earnest commentaries for serious explorers. Perrone loaded so many symbolic references into his paintings that picking them out became a game for visitors. Sculptures by McCormick, Roberts and Burmeister also entertained crowds.
Carder was most original, building very personal sculptures that both reflected upon and included the tools of modern medicine - synthetic body parts with a sense of humor. You don’t need a doctorate to “get” painters Emmons and Fisher either. Emmons’ minimalist visions of environmental structures have visual appeal that most political statements lack. Fisher just lays it out there viscerally, with freaks and horrors redefining the genius of beauty - high Renaissance style with a Gothic twist that sticks like leeches to veins. Through August 12.
“On the Mortality of Memory” is 25 year old Ryan Clark’s first solo show at Karolyn Sherwood Gallery. For our purposes, he fits in the DMAC crowd, working the same intellectual streets. Nietzsche and Bergson dripped off his artist’s statement, while his art framed insider jokes on Raphael and Michelangelo. Among the “IA 2005,” only Fisher translates powerful ideas into media so deftly. Clark brings home the ambiguity of time, and consciousness of time, by juxtaposing snow-covered tombstones with photos that suggest objects gone, but not forgotten. Similarly he forces body scars to share little motel rooms with man made earth scars. He uses several media to rearrange a tattoo experience, which he has dated like a death camp memory, into non sequential time. He studies library archives that are far too delicate to continue their roles as preservatives of cultural memory. Clark is the only artist Sherwood has ever signed off a walk up interview. He is also her youngest. See why through June 25.

Landscape All Stars

“Land & Water,” Olson-Larsen’s annual landscape show opened last week with the genre’s Midwest all star team. Appreciation of landscape art is as subjective as sexual deviancy. To our eyes, the most original vision belongs to Dan McNamara, whose monoprints scratch and torture Zen visions with green juices and white space. The best eye for irony and contrast belongs to Michael Johnson, a black and white photographer who would be a Venerable Presence in Japan.
Painters John Preston and Steven Lauterwasser, who sometimes paint together on car-forsaken roads, have the Big Sky thing down, as does Carlos Ferguson, who shows some wide angle miniatures considerably different from his last brilliant one man show. Willow charcoal artist Barbara Fedeler and painters Genie Patrick and Pat Edwards focus on the opposite side of the horizon, with more detailed observations on gravity‘s end of vision. Carol Pelletier, an ocean painter from “The Mountain State,” plants her vision in the middle, blurring wide-angle horizons of sunrise, sunset. Workhorse Gary Bowling covers all altitudes, continuing his pure Impressionist exploration of Midwest backwoods, layering primary colors that troll for light.
Other artists forget about horizons, with close-up impressions of botanicals. Priscilla Steele’s are an interesting break in her usual figurative routine, as are Don Dudenbostel’s X-ray images of plants. Tilly Woodward’s are more dramatic, invaded by humans. Through July 16.

Double Davis Maneuver

Most galleries relax during the summer, Moberg Studio Gallery is spending the hot months more exuberantly. Their first show with John Phillip Davis will be two separate shows, a rare demonstration of youngblood in this business sector. “Crossovers 1 ” opened last Friday and runs through July 2, then will be completely torn down so “C2” can be hung through the rest of July.
The artist explained, sort of, “The idea ultimately of the show is to show the hybridization of emotion, composition, and design as it creates and sustains an entity - those entities being the artist and the work which ultimately for me have become quite inseparable."

Jobs in Newton

It’s not Newton’s dream, but this weekend’s Iowa Sculpture Festival at Maytag Park should be a kick for the local economy. Big steel and bronze, mostly wildlife sculptors return for the third annual event. The famous art community of Loveland, Colorado is well represented, while Steve Maxson of Kalona, Paul Algueseva III of Washington, Christopher Bennett of Bentonsport, Ben Britton of Marion and Christopher Ruggle of Perry represent Iowa. June 11 - 12 ($1-$2). Artists reception ($17.50) on June 10.

Poultry in Motion

"Poultry In Motion" at Absolute Art shows painter Julie Oakes examining the cyclical predicament of chicken hood, from the egg to the plucked skull, with predators predominating the points of view. Through June 26


May 2005

Death Descends on Ames

Sometimes it’s hard to change a single word of a press release. This is from Iowa State University museums - “This Spring death descends upon the Farm House Museum with a new exhibition presenting common rituals and traditions observed following the death of a loved one…a child’s casket, women’s mourning apparel, hairwork and jewelry, as well as death notices and cards. This exhibition coincides with the 125th Annual Iowa Funeral Directors Association Convention.” Talk about product placement.
No need to hurry, you can commune with death through October, though the funeral directors will be leaving before then, Death permitting.


Thank Heaven, For Little Girls

The Daughters of Durand-Ruel (1882), a Pierre-Auguste Renoir masterpiece, is the superstar of the Des Moines Art Center’s exhibition In the Open Air: Renoir & Impressionism. DMAC landed it from the Chrysler Museum of Art in exchange for the Art Center’s loan of John Singer Sargent, Portraits of Edouard and Marie-Louise Pailleron (1881) and it complements permanent collection works by French Impressionists Claude Monet and Camille Pissarro, and segues into American artists such as Mary Cassatt and Childe Hassam.
In Impressionism’s most charming clichĂ©, Daughters depicts two girlsm languishing on a garden bench in the open air. The girls are the daughters of Renoir’s friend and art dealer Paul Durand-Ruel, who gave the artist his first solo show and built his reputation. The pay back is sweet as frozen innocence. Through June 5.


Riverwalk Largess


Melva Bucksbaum recently gave two major sculptures to the Des Moines Art Center, for placement on the Principal Riverwalk. Joel Shapiro’s untitled cast bronze minimalist monument alludes to the human body in motion. The artist’s work is best known for stunning installations at the Holocaust Museum and The Met. Sally Pettus’ “Quantum Leaf” is a recently finished bronze leaf that appears to be floating on a pool of water.

Susan Noland is gold’s grand mistress of Iowa, having taught her alchemy to a new generation of metal artists. We asked her recently what’s new in the hard currency of precious metal art. She and her partner Leslie … told us they are investigating the psychologies of stones. Noland divides these stones into four groups, based on some New Age applications for healing, expanding consciousness, protecting and teaching.
“It sounds a little too New Age, but there are aesthetic reasons for our interest,” she said, explaining that she has a new Brazilian supplier of gems who shares her interest in stones that show - off their flaws, rather than hiding them.
She showed us some rare quartz that had rutile and tourmaline veins exposed.
“There is so much visible energy stored, it reminds us that this is the gem of phonograph needles, it’s capable of channeling energy and re-broadcasting it.” See for yourself. Susan Noland Studio Gallery, 902 42ND

Ann Au of 2AU also has been playing with some dazzlingly freakish stones, “I love the color of flash of opals, their mystic petrified pools of color, so I am playing with those now,” she admitted, but added that some dazzling Brazilian stones would be taking up most of her time between now and the Valley Junction Gallery Walk on April 22.
Emerald slices, revealing their matrix veins, green garnet ice, German cut golden beryl, faceted pink tourmaline wings and deep green emeralds from Amazonia were mixing it up in her studios last week with black, gray and white Tahitian pearls as large as 17.8 millimeters and a collection pearl freaks, including some chartreuse pearls and some podded pearls. A bag of African tanzanite also tried to fit in with beach boys of Ipanema and the mermaids of the South Seas.
“I don’t know that the next show will have any theme at all. It’s so hard to plan, I love them all and sometimes they sell out before the show even starts,” she explained, gems reflecting like puddles under lightening.

Road Trip

If you have not seen it yet, the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art (410 Third Avenue SE, Cedar Rapids) long running “Art in Roman Life: Villa to Grave” is a rare opportunity, with over 150 Roman objects--sculpture, frescoes, jewelry, furniture, coins and other decorative art objects--borrowed from major museum collections, presented in a recreated Roman architectural setting and domestic context, including an exterior courtyard and interior rooms of a Roman villa.

April 2005

Opening Day: The Art World Imitates Baseball

April springs forth in the art world, as the fruits of long winter hours in the studio are unveiled in galleries. Valley Junction’s Gallery Walk on April 22 becomes the local art community‘s version of baseball‘s opening day - the time when slates are wiped clean, old faces try on new masks and we see things in a brighter more hopeful light.
Ann Au, of 2AU, told us she has no idea what theme her Gallery Night show will take. She’s fallen under the spell of myriad gems, including an array of circus freaks from the kingdom of pearls, plus emeralds sliced against their matrix. Goldmistress Susan Nolan also took the spell plea, explaining how quartz with visible tourmaline veins reminds her that this was the gem of phonograph needles - “a stone that receives, stores and transmits energy.”
Olson-Larsen Galleries’ Gallery Night show will be less mystical, with new works by gallery heavyweights Ken Smith, Jeannie Coupe Ryding, Wendy Rolfe, Gary Olson, Bill Innes, Jane Gilmore, Stephen Gerberich, Peter Feldstein, Tim Frerichs, Michael Brangoccio and Bill Barnes, plus new artist Jane Gilmore.
Gilmore promises to be interesting, to say the least. She is a self described “hunting blind” artist, some are “penis-shaped” in her own size, and others are sized for her cats. The latter have TV’s and move. She took one large hunting blind to Portugal where it interacted with a 5000 year stone circle and a 500 year old convent. We kid you not.
We got a look at some of Frerichs’ and Feldstein’s works recently and admired new styles, with Feldstein’s “cliche-verre” painting on film looking more architectural, and Frerichs embracing “less is more,” using encaustic, pencil, and acrylic to scratch white meanings out of the deep blues and blacks of handmade paper.
The most dramatically different works though were by Barnes, who is showing acrylic and paper collages that includes human beings, something rarely seen in his casein paintings, and Brangoccio, who suspends the laws of physics without his pet symbols - floating elephants, earthbound birds and the checkered schemes of Moorish Granada. These two artists, both of whom came to Iowa from the American West, continually explore man’s relationship with the wide open spaces, with manifest destiny if you will.
Both were frantically busy last week preparing for new shows in bigger markets, but they explained these new lighter works.
“These are what I do to unwind,” Barnes said of his collages. “I have not shown them for 15 or 20 years, but Marlene (Olson) persuaded me to. I think of them as having a faded grainy look of a movie still from the silent film era, they would be the antique version of what Cindy Sherman does,” he added.
Brangoccio came at his collages from a similar perspective.
“Those collage works are almost like a vacation to me. The process is much quicker and immediate than the paintings, which keeps me from too much “naval gazing” and over intellectualizing the work,” he explained, going to add that.
“I relate to them on a more emotional basis, much like I do to music. Colors, shapes, lines and all the other plastic elements of art combine to present a strong yet nonjudgmental, non-dogmatic symphony of visual stimulation. It's kind of like enjoying something just for the fun of it.”
Through May 28.

Musical Thunder

Next year’s DMAC Music Series is almost unbelievable. Jon Nakamatsu, who oversold Sheslow’s much larger auditorium a year ago and Jacques Thibaud, a German String Trio specializing in Mozart, are signed up. Also coming to Grand Avenue are Kuss, a Berlin-based string quartet that has a reputation for stirring classical fervor in the young, and the crack Aspen Ensemble.
That‘s an incredible lineup, however, the biggest coup of the season combines the Brentano String Quartet, generally regarded as the best of their generation, with violist Maria Lambros, also spoken of in reverent terms. These concerts will oversell Levitt Auditorium and stimulate Art Center memberships, which, along with musical angels, subsidize the incredible bargains ($5 - $25).
This year’s series has two more concerts. Misha Rosenker & Nicholas Roth play April 30. The Des Moines Symphony featured Roth on Tchaikovsky’s first piano concerto earlier this month and he turned out a subtle interpretation far more thoughtful than what one gets from the piano divas in white tuxedos who pound out the piece. On June 4 Charles McPherson, who played the Charlie Parker solos in Clint Eastwood’s “Bird,” and a trumpet star Tom Farrell bring their quintet here to recreate the holy jazz days of “Bird and Diz Live.” A few tickets remained at press time, plus some seats will be released for resale ten minutes before the concerts.

Perpetual Energy Man

Founding papa of Paintpushers Chris Vance’s energy reproduces without normal human regard for the constraints of time. In his most recent show at Arthouse he revealed that: 1.) He has moved into figurative, expressionistic modes, “in order to get more of me out there.” His new show took on everything from cave paintings to parenthood and social elitism in Des Moines; 2.) He has been promoted to lead painter at Sticks, his day job; 3.) He paints while interacting with his four children; 5.) He is working on a new style of abstraction, which allows paint to gravitate into less preconceived forms.

April Lightening

Karolyn Sherwood Gallery’s current show returns to the gallery‘s bread and butter, a major print show from Gemini G.E.L., of Los Angeles, with blue chip works by blue blooded post modernists: John Baldessari, Phillip Guston, Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, Brice Marden, Elizabeth Murray, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Rauschenberg, James Rosenquist, Susan Rothenberg, Ed Ruscha, and Frank Stella.

Larassa Kabel, who is also a book illustrator, puts a flourish of narrative to both large figurative oils and small figurative paintings. The latter reveal the artist’s irreverent fantasies concerning: Elvis‘ sainthood; dog’s with Queen Elizabeth I and Pagliacci complexes; Emily Dickenson‘s alter ego, Annie Oakley’s thing for horses; Alice’s doorway to Wonderland. At Arthouse through May 13.

Des Moines University cuts the ribbons for their new Student Center April 19. Among the impressive collection of all-Iowa art, T.J. Moberg’s massive DNA Molecule stands out. When we asked the artist about it, he did his best Jim Morrison impression. “Love hides in molecular structures.” If so, there’s a whole lot of love hanging over the fireplace of the new atrium.
Moberg also just completed an amusing installation at Toad Valley Golf Course. The two golfers chipping onto the green of his “Hole #17” sculpture are the original owners and designers of the course.

Moberg Studio Gallery’s “Alan Weinstein” opens Tuesday. The long established Iowa City artist brings his eclectic styles and bright colors, often with human profiles and primitivist inspirations, to Central Iowa. Through June 4, with an artist reception May 13.

Thomas Jewell Vitale, whose show at Olson-Larsen concludes this week, will also have a one man show at the Dubuque Museum of Art through June 5. The artist’s works are so contemplative that we stupidly asked him if he was a monk. A mid-career retrospective of the dark fantastical realist Mary Kline-Misol is also at DMA, through May 20. Kline-Misol told us recently that she is absorbed in a series of portraits of the wives of Henry the 8th, possibly for a summer show at Arthouse.

The Faulconer‘s new show, on the Grinnell College campus, is
“Bobbie McKibbin: Drawn West.” The metamorphic landscape artist’s new pastels depict from Iowa, Wyoming, Montana, and places in between.

February 2005

California Dreamin

Preacher likes the cold
He knows I’m gonna stay. John Phillips

Last month California art debuted on such a winter’s day that big crowds accumulated at the Des Moines Art Center Downtown, where “California Dreamin” warms the winter, as well as at Arthouse, where Bill Hamilton‘s show of paintings lovingly embraces San Francisco signage and at the Brunnier, where an iconic California sculptor’s love-in opened.
The Art Center show reviews sunlight and humor in California-based art movements with Robert Arneson starring. The self proclaimed high clown of Funk makes you smile with a giant paper cast of Jackson Pollack and a couple self portraits. Art history lessons are condensed here: Wayne Thiebaud’s cakes and John Baldessari‘s blotted faces; Mel Ramos’ pop, Richard Diebenkorn‘s beachy sunshine, Ed Ruscha‘s ironic wordplay, H. C. Westermann‘s signature stick figure men, and William T. Wiley‘s funk.
But, where is David Hockney? We know he’s English born, but would you leave Charlie Chaplin out of a retrospective of American silent film? Hockney defined California art, in the context of this show, plus he touched a lot of local art lives teaching at the University of Iowa. Through April 22.
Hamilton’s appeal transformed Arthouse into mosh pit of youthful enthusiasm, while the Brunnier decorated for Valentine’s Day with Bay Area painter-sculptor Manuel Neri, plus works of his muse/model Mary Julia Klimenko. Their post Pygmalion mutual admiration society mixes life sized sculpted figures with painted nudes, illustrations and her poetry. Imagine George Segal working in Italian marble, with more than a little help from Yoko Ono. Through May 15.

New New 2

Karolyn Sherwood Gallery’s New New 2 opens Thursday with the edgiest stuff ever shown there. Former Des Moiner Joe Biel returns (he’s had some big time shows on the West Coast and in Europe) with sweetly demented drawings of odd people in surreal situations. His former teacher, Vivian Torrance, sends some painting collages that Sherwood describes as “Joseph Cornell without all the horror.” Two abstractionists, Andrea Belag and James Bockelman, come with architectural points of view. Bockelman’s nature work has sold so well that Sherwood isn’t even sure what will be left for her show. Mitchell Squire, an architect like Belag, assembles minimalist installations by layering and painting bullet-shredded police target paper. New comer Jay Vigon, who moved from LA after making a film for the Des Moines Art Center last Fall, conjures a “Little Monster” series of devilishly cute masked people, finger crafted in layered swabs of acrylic. Through April 2.

More Than Nothing x 4


The Fitch, formerly the BMS Building, opened under it’s new name last month with a four episode exhibition entitled “Idle Hands.” Nora Wendl debuted impressively. The ISU architectural student’s research on Mies Van de Rohr discovered some personal items of Mies’ first client, Chicago doctor Edith Farnsworth. Van de Rohr built the doctor a new house, but refused to allow her personal things in the house. They went into storage for the greater glory of Bauhaus. Wendl’s exhibit reassembled them, as “Clean Living (an invent_ory laid bare)” in a Miesian wunderkammer of glass, steel and travertine. Wendl brought Farnsworth’s rejected artifacts into a house-like organization of what might have been, a meditation on what Wendl called “connections between elements becoming ‘beinahe nichts‘” (almost nothing).
The final segment of the Fitch show, Catherine Hille’s “1908 Spare Minutes” begins this Friday, at 304 15th Street.

Moberg Studio Gallery just opened a new show of Scott Alan Wright, from his “Wonderment” series. Wright’s work reminds us of Moody Blues album covers expanded by cyber surrealism. Just groove out on the colors and forms, man. The Gallery also built some dramatic new spaces to show off Jean-Marie Salem’s glass bone series and added new works by Edward Blaze Brafford and Shawn Wolter, the Paintpushing nova who is new to Moberg. Through March 2.

Olson-Larsen Galleries’ February show opens Friday featuring five artists playing off one another: Mac Hornecker’s real men’s bronze sculptures contrast with brightly colored fiber vessels by Mary Merkel-Hess; Tipton artist Mary Koenen Clausen explores secular and sacred text and images through a combination of magazine/Bible collage, dolls and painting, with themes focusing on sets of twins. (Honest); Printmaker-painter Bonney Goldstein and oil & wax composer Thomas Jewell-Vitale, a Loras professor, demonstrate parallel interests in surface with obviously different media.
Merkel-Hess is an Iowa original. She glues, molds and paints paper cords, reeds and fiber in the body of the vessels. Her unique work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the American Craft Museum and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Through March 25.

Suburban Theater & Photo


Suburban theater is no longer an oxymoron in Iowa, thanks to the launch of Culture CafĂ©, a collaboration of former Los Angeles theater people. This Friday, “New Found Land,” explores Lewis and Clark’s excellent adventure using the art work of Elizabeth Miller, at Arthouse in Valley West Mall. $5. On Feb. 19, “Across the Known World” includes selected works by poet Keith Ratzlaff.

Arthouse on Ingersoll will open a new photography and video show on Monday, Feb. 14. The exhibition references south and southwest China and was shot by Robert Bergazyn, his daughter Eve Bergazyn and his step-son Garrick Stoner. Through March 6.

The Des Moines Playhouse is exhibiting Casey Gradischnig’s “Body Parts," digitally enhanced original photographs studying the human from altered perspectives. Through Feb, 13.

Czech It Out


It’s a Bohemian winter in Iowa. The Prague Symphony Orchestra will play Hancher and CY Stephens with crack young pianist Navah Perlman on Chopin’s Second Piano Concerto. Czech group Jitro, the Euro-feminine form of the Harlem Boys Choir, will sing a free concert at St. Wenceslaus Catholic Church in Cedar Rapids, Feb. 17. (319-362-8061). Bohemian garnets, one of the world’s most distinctive gems, dazzle at the National Czech & Slovak Museum in Cedar Rapids. On loan from the Archbishop of Prague is a 300 year old Baroque monstrance encrusted with 386 garnets, 19 diamonds, and 135 rock crystals. This will be its first public display anywhere since 1895. March 4 - Sept. 25.

Grinnell’s Faulconer Gallery keeps the Euro theme alive with the first show in its survey of contemporary Scandinavian photography - “Sweden,” through March 18. Niclas Ostlind, curator of the Liljevalchs Konsthall in Stockholm, will speak on contemporary Swedish photography on February 15, at 4:15.

January 2005

Eddy Scissors Hand


Chris Eddy is one of the most interesting Iowa artists to surface this year. He constructs portraits and narratives out of magazine ads, taking a hands-on approach to the “close-up/back-off” perspective distortion that computer artists embrace these days. We asked him about the process.
“The computer should be a tool only, not the process. My main medium is women’s magazines. Having a wife justifies my subscriptions to Vogue, Vanity Fair, Elle and GQ. Those are the best magazines for what I do, the ads are so vibrantly colored, they’re like painting without a brush,” he said.
Eddy’s vision is sometimes twisted, into the images reminiscent of Japanese erotic woodblocks. Currently he’s working on portraits inspired by 1950’s and 1960’s high school yearbooks, one of his mother is showing at Moberg Studio Gallery.
“They’re like turning black and white into color.,” he observed, adding that irony is an artist’s bedfellow.
“I hated math in school, yet my work is so mathematical.”
Eddy keeps a color wheel of magazine scraps. Bookbinding glue and wood sealer, scissors and imagination complete the process.
“This is the flip side of life, at least for a corporate graphics designer,” he laughed.

Eddy Scissors Hand


Chris Eddy is one of the most interesting Iowa artists to surface this year. He constructs portraits and narratives out of magazine ads, taking a hands-on approach to the “close-up/back-off” perspective distortion that computer artists embrace these days. We asked him about the process.
“The computer should be a tool only, not the process. My main medium is women’s magazines. Having a wife justifies my subscriptions to Vogue, Vanity Fair, Elle and GQ. Those are the best magazines for what I do, the ads are so vibrantly colored, they’re like painting without a brush,” he said.
Eddy’s vision is sometimes twisted, into the images reminiscent of Japanese erotic woodblocks. Currently he’s working on portraits inspired by 1950’s and 1960’s high school yearbooks, one of his mother is showing at Moberg Studio Gallery.
“They’re like turning black and white into color.,” he observed, adding that irony is an artist’s bedfellow.
“I hated math in school, yet my work is so mathematical.”
Eddy keeps a color wheel of magazine scraps. Bookbinding glue and wood sealer, scissors and imagination complete the process.
“This is the flip side of life, at least for a corporate graphics designer,” he laughed.


~The surprise hit show in Paris last summer was Jean Paul Gaultier’s “Pain Couture” at the Cartier. The exhibition consisted entirely of historical high fashion designs sculpted in loaves of bread.