A new art venue for T-town
by Alec Clayton
“Old City Hall” performance piece by Gabriel Brown, photo by Travis Pranger
The Sobottkas curated the opening show with help from Spaceworks’ 950 Gallery. Jason Sobottka said his aim in choosing artists for the show was to include a wide variety of media and style and to show emerging and mid-career artists from the Tacoma area who “look like Tacoma” and “who may be underrepresented in the local (or national) arts scene.”
My initial impression upon walking
into the foyer was that I was seeing representative works from freshman art
majors — some clever, well-meaning and exciting ideas showing lots of heart but
amateurish in execution, with a handful of exceptions, most noticeably works by
Gabriel Brown and Becky Frehse, both of whom may be a little too successful to
fit the stated criteria for this show.
Brown’s “Old City Hall” sits in the
middle of the space and dominates in every conceivable way. It is a sculptural
installation that once served as a performance piece. The
central figure is a mannequin placed inside a large replica of the tower on the
old City Hall with arm, leg and head holes. On the floor in front of this is a
sandwich board advertising “Hard Times Shoe Shines,” and scattered about this
are tools of the shoe-shine trade plus photographs and a video played on a cell
phone of the time when this piece was used as performance art, with a live person shining shoes inside the
tower. It is funny and inventive, an
insightful commentary on the imbalance of power between rich and poor.
Frehse’s “A Rooster’s Crow,”
acrylic and collage on canvas, is a striking picture of a coal-black rooster in
an abstracted urban landscape. The bird itself looks like it is made from tar
ladled on the surface. The surrounding imagery is a swirl of bright colors made
from a twining wire and a scrap of sheet music and multi-colored ovals that
float in and over the background. The texture is rough and gritty, and the
swirling wire is a lyrical line that holds everything in place. The grittiness
and the variety of imagery and mark-making within a unified whole captures and
holds the viewer’s attention.
A few other pieces worthy of note
are: Kris Crews’ dramatic photo of street musicians and a juggler and a
bicyclist riding up the wall of a building; Chandler Woodfin’s “Heatwave,” in
intricate and delicate watercolor with a flowing floral design; a group of four
little twisted-wire sculptures of dancing figures by Chris Wooten called “Manic
Dance”; and a portrait by Adika Bell of the writer James Baldwin painted in
bright colors in a slap dash pop style with quotes from Baldwin’s writings, such as “Our crown has already been bought and
paid for. All we have to do is wear it.”
For Tacoma, 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday-Wednesday.,
7 a.m. to midnight Thursday-Friday, 8 a.m. to midnight Saturday, 9 a.m. to 10
p.m. Sunday, through Feb. 28, closing reception Feb. 21 6-9 p.m., Alma Mater
1322 S. Fawcett Ave., Tacoma, www.almamatertacoma.com.
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