Regional artists shine at SPSCC
Published in the Weekly Volcano, July 21, 2016
“21st Century Oxpecker” painting by Jason Sobottka, courtesy South Puget Sound Community College |
Upon entering the 2016 Southwest Washington Juried Exhibition
at South Puget Sound Community College, my eyes were immediately drawn to
Bernie Bleha’s sculpture, “Minaret,” acrylic on wood, a colorful tower topped
by a playful spire that looks like a tinker toy construction. From there, my
gaze went to Carla Louise Paine’s painting, “I Died for Beauty,” an oil
portrait of a contemporary woman in a flower-strewn interior painted in a style
reminiscent of Rococo portraiture yet in a clearly modern setting. Both the
Bleha sculpture and Paine’s painting are Merit Award selections from juror Esther Luttikhuizen.
“I Died for Beauty,” oil on canvas by Carla Louise Paine, courtesy South Puget Sound Community College |
Olympia artist Gail Ramsey Wharton has her weird sense of humor on
display with a couple of mixed-media collages: “Modern Family” and “Department of Humor Analysis.” The former is
like Picasso’s “Family of Saltimbanques” moved to a modern-day beach with a
frolicking family with weird faces that don’t match bodies; the latter is
purportedly a graph showing the funniest places to hit a baby with a ball.
Wharton’s collages are bizarre and skillfully executed.
Next to “Modern
Family” are two more beach scenes, these from Marianne Partlow’s “Boys on the
Beach” series, soft and simplified bodies in glowing pastel colors.
David Noah Giles, a recent transplant to Tumwater from Seattle, is
showing a large abstract painting called “Times Square.” Filled with
repetitive, similar but not identical shapes that dance across the surface in
energetic movement, this painting is like an abstract expressionist version of
Mondrian’s abstract city scene with the usual AE drips and splatters and
collage elements that create a rugged surface. Had I been the judge, I would
have picked this one for an award.
Next to Giles’s painting is another large abstract-expressionist
painting, “Through the Rain” by Debra Van Tuinen, a local artist of long
standing in the community. It is a field of bright orange and gold slashes of
paint that almost cover the entire surface of the canvas like sheets of wind
and rain. This is a stunning painting that captures the emotional power of a
storm without resorting to imitative depiction of the subject matter.
Another favorite is Jason Sobottka’s “21st Century Oxpecker.”
I had to Google Oxpecker to find out it is a kind of bird. I don’t remember
seeing a bird in this painting, and there’s no mention of a bird in the notes I
took. What I do remember seeing is a rhinoceros all decked out and ready for
interstellar war, with glitter and what the artist calls “googly-eyes.” This is
a funny, inventive, and nicely painted image.
There are a lot of talented artists in Southwest Washington. This show
offers ample proof of that.
South Puget Sound Community College, Kenneth J Minnaert Center for
the Arts Gallery, Monday-Friday, noon-4 p.m. through Aug. 25, 2011 Mottman Rd.
SW. Olympia, 360.596.5527.
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