The Desoto Building
A building, a cross-pollination and a life-changing journey into basket weaving?
November 18th, 2009
China Design Now Portland Art Museum | PAM’s new show unwittingly plays into the worst stereotypes of Communist China.2 comments
October 7th, 2009
The Century Project At Bamboo Grove | Photographer Frank Cordelle wrestles with body acceptance.71 comments
September 30th, 2009
High Art | Tom Cramer resurrects the psychedelic ’60s.3 comments
August 19th, 2009
Shits & Giggles At Launch Pad | Jeremy Okai Davis paints the halcyon days of summer.0 comments
August 12th, 2009
Manor Of Art At Milepost Five | A hundred-plus artists turn a former nursing home into an aesthetic free-for-all.1 comment
July 29th, 2009
Marking Portland Portland Art Museum | Tattoo art graduates from bohemia to the blue-hairs.0 comments
July 8th, 2009
Equivocation (Oregon Shakespeare Festival) | Shakespeare in trouble.2 comments
July 8th, 2009
The Shock of the New Butters Gallery | Butters introduces four new artists to its roster.0 comments
June 17th, 2009
Lesbian Art Show At Fontanelle | Two artists put up a mirror to sapphic identity.0 comments
June 10th, 2009
Jason Low Moon | Checkmate; bang-bang.0 comments
![]() IMAGE: jonah schrogin |
[August 8th, 2007]
There's a Cole Porter tune called "So Near and Yet So Far" that could have been written about the two-block distance between the Everett Station Lofts and the newly renovated DeSoto Building. The Lofts, a funky petri dish for emerging artists, are physically close to the freshly rededicated DeSoto, but make no mistake, the DeSoto is an encroachment of the Pearl's chi-chi pedigree into a rapidly changing Old Town. And that's a good thing. Highbrow-lowbrow cross-pollination is always a welcome aesthetic aerator. That being said, in certain quadrants of the Portland arts press, the DeSoto's minutiae—cost per square foot, zoning tedium, developer Jim Winkler's shoe size—have gotten more ink than a Suicide Girl at a tattoo convention.
I'm more interested in how effectively the building's gallery spaces showcase the art itself. By this criterion the DeSoto largely underwhelms. The new Blue Sky and Nine Gallery spaces feel boxy and stolid despite their requisite high ceilings. Their previous locations were more welcoming. The Augen and Froelick spaces hit the mark better, opening up with expansive entry galleries, then scaling down more intimately inside. Charles A. Hartman Fine Art is smaller, more elegant and pristine in a way that obliquely recalls Jane Beebe's old PDX space.
Despite a soaring main gallery, the Museum of Contemporary Craft's new digs feel constricted (remember, the Contemporary Crafts Gallery upgraded its name along with its address when it moved from its Lair Hill home). This may owe to dense staging of the museum's inaugural show, Craft in America: Expanding Traditions. As for the show itself, the Colossus of Rhodes would've had a hard time living up to the advance hype the museum heaped upon this loosely curated survey. "Prepare for a journey..." begins the show's postcard, which features an image of (drumroll, please) a basket. "A journey of reinvention and renewal..." reads the text at the show's entrance, after which the exhibit cycles you through a procession of assorted benches, bowls, pots, plates, quilts, tea carts and rugs. To its credit, the show is dotted with many clever and inventive pieces: Charles Hollis Jones' gorgeous late-'60s Wisteria chair in Lucite and orange fabric; Myra Mimlitsch's deconstructed candelabrum, which recalls the melting clocks in Dali's The Persistence of Memory; and Peter Shire's wildly colored geometric étude.
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Are these fine examples of modern and postmodern design? Certainly. Could you find equally lovely pieces in the showrooms of Hive Modern and Design Within Reach? Probably. Does Craft in America take you on "a journey of reinvention and renewal"? Not unless your life is very, very boring. 724 NW Davis St., 223-2654. Closes Sept. 23. .
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