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FEATURE
Busy Town
Raise high the roof beam, carpenters!
Everything old is new again at the Standard Dairy Building on Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard..


BY MICHAELA LOWTHIAN
mlowthian@wweek.com

photo by Basil Childers

Metropolitan Art Studio
2808 NE Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd., #13, 422-9052, www.metroartstudio.org


The Standard Dairy Building on Northeast Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard is the kind of residential building planners--and other people--get really excited about. It's a close-in, mixed-use hunk of property where lately a lot of creative people have been setting up shop. Restored by North Portland developer and renovator Billy Reed, the dairy was converted from an ugly duckling the shade of Pepto-Bismol into a state-of-the-art swan reworked by recycled beams, galvanized steel, and stretches of copper veneer. Last month, the building christened its bar and restaurant, Billy Reed's, before a buzzing crowd of young and old. The place was packed to capacity with an enthusiastic crowd of neighbors, artists and musicians.

Marvella McPartland, a resident of the building, was in the crowd that night. McPartland has worked as a fine-art framer for the past 25 years and sings and plays bass in the jazz/blues combo Lighten Up. When her friend Reed approached her and offered her a space in which to live and work, she gladly accepted.

"This is the nicest place I've ever lived," McPartland said of her new digs. In true urban-village style, she lives directly above her new gallery, Artisan, which had its first show in December and now has 25 artists scheduled for shows in the next year. Retailers Vessels, Sheba's House of Elegance and Diane's Boutique will soon follow with plans of their own for the remaining commercial spaces.

Bryan Markovitz, founder of Portland's Liminal performance group, and visual artist Steve Kratowicz had just moved into one of the live/work spaces on the Northeast Graham Street side of the block a week before hosting their first show, "fasterharderbiggerbettermore," on Feb. 5. Their space, the Metropolitan Art Studio, is divided into a gallery and performance area in the front and living quarters on the upper level. "This building is really a model of what people mean when they talk about mixed-use development," Markovitz says.

The two artists kicked off their new project with their vision for a multidisciplinary space for contemporary artists fully intact. Kratowicz says he hopes MAS can create an atmosphere conducive to artists' coming by and sticking around, unlike the often frantic experience of taking in the Pearl District galleries on First Thursday.

Indeed, the pair's first show seemed to accomplish just that. John Berendzen played electronica via a computer and mixing board, while big-eyed art students mingled with older artists juggling side careers in everything from Web development to graphic design. The featured visual artists were Kratowicz and Kieran McGuire. Kratowicz's honeycomb-patterned, optical paintings hung on one wall opposite McGuire's work. The spaces between and around the fractal-like paintings on Kratowicz's portion of the wall were filled with glued-on green, white and tan packing peanuts. Along the floor, a drift of unattached packing peanuts lay strewn; the compulsive viewer couldn't help but want to finish the job of attaching them to the wall. Across the room hung McGuire's drawings and paintings, like glimpses of a puzzling internal world turned inside-out. They were surrounded and sometimes upstaged by hand-written words and stories scrawled in black Sharpie. The walls looked something like a caged person's writing experiment.

For their next project, a couple of shows down the road, the two plan to incorporate talent from Liminal and feature a performance-art show with slides and sound. "We're going to mix it up," says Markovitz. "There will be a lot of sushi involved, too."


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Willamette Week | originally published February 9, 2000

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