History Versus Nostalgia
Two shows offer differing takes on the swingin’ ’60s, ’70s, and ’80s.
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
May 13th, 2009
Mary Henry & Ellen George PDX Contemporary | A one-two punch of transcendental abstraction and elegant sculpture.0 comments
April 22nd, 2009
Michelle Goldberg The Means of Reproduction0 comments
April 22nd, 2009
Frost/Nixon (Portland Center Stage) | A power-hungry, white-guy cage match.0 comments
April 15th, 2009
Mark Woolley Gallery Says Goodbye | The longtime outsider gallery calls it quits.1 comment
April 8th, 2009
Matt King Fourteen30 Contemporary | Sizing up contemporary life.0 comments
April 1st, 2009
Paul Dahlquist at Gallery 114 | This 80-year-old photographer shows he’s about more than boobs, butts and schlongs.0 comments
March 11th, 2009
Warlord Sun King, Art Gym | Northwest artists herald the age of “eco-baroque.”0 comments
February 11th, 2009
John Sisley & Jesse Durost At Fourteen30 Contemporary | Think Lincoln Logs in outer space.1 comment
[August 13th, 2008] Our endless fascination with celebrity and nostalgia takes center stage in two very different shows this month. First, at Augen’s DeSoto location, Bande à part: New York Underground time-warps back to the Pop era, which sowed the seeds of our current TMZ/Last Night’s Party/Brangelina/Britney madness. Eight photographers who documented the rock-’n’-roll and punk revolutions headline this traveling show, which made stops in Paris, Hong Kong, London, Los Angeles and Tokyo before arriving in Portland. Highlights include Roberta Bayley’s shots of Blondie’s Debbie Harry, the Clash’s Joe Strummer, and an androgyny-chic Iggy Pop circa 1976, looking a little bit like Portland’s Eva Lake circa 2008 (although Lake is oodles more stylish). Anton Perich’s Mick Jagger at Max’s captures the Stones frontman in dewy, pre-shriveled 1972 form, while his 1973 portrait of Yoko Ono, radiant in long hair and furry stole, is the perfect female complement.
Pulliam Deffenbaugh’s Free Love Gods addresses nostalgia from the same general era, but from the perspective of Gen-X and –Y artists looking back with a mixture of longing and campy condescension. Erik Bluhm’s collage of dashiki-clad flower children blurs the line between a smile and a smirk, as does Benjamin Lord’s psychedelic sunburst of a print. Longing for kindergarten in the shag-carpeted ’70s, Ami Tallman scrawls amateurish interiors and architectural details, Rebekah Miles creates ersatz dust jackets for pre-existing books, and Chris Jahncke gives credence to the age-old put-down of contemporary art: “My third-grader could do that!” This show was curated by Anna Fidler, a brilliant artist in her own right, whose felt, crayon and Magic Marker fantasias have made her a standout in Pulliam Deffenbaugh’s stable. Fidler did not curate herself into Free Love Gods, but if she had, none of these artists could have held a candle to her own work, with the possible exception of Brooklyn, N.Y.-based Reed Anderson. His Minorly Happy is a miracle of intricate cutouts, stencil-like pixels, and every color group known to man, woman or beast: earth tones abutting pastels alongside fluorescents in jarring, jubilant coexistence. This show and Augen’s rock reverie prove that nostalgia is the opposite of history: The former is the province of fantasy, the latter of context. In art, fantasy always wins. .
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