Published in The Weekly Volcano, Aug. 28, 2014
“Pause,” quilt by Nancy Erickson |
The
“NW Contemporary Art Quilt Exhibit” at American Art Company is always loaded
with beauty. This, the 12th annual installation, is no exception.
Not only is almost every quilt on display of the highest quality, the manner in
which they are displayed is excellent as quilts are grouped by color and style
and even the sculptures on stands are placed near complementary quilts (both
spellings of complimentary apply).
It
seems to me that there are a lot more small quilts in this year’s show, and the
smaller ones work well in the space.
In
the front gallery purple and orange prevail — full-bodied, rich colors, with a predominance
of geometric abstract designs. The modus operandi seems to be contrasting solid
colors with delicate linear drawings in thread.
"Winter Silence" by Carla Dipietro |
Barbara
Nepon’s “Channels” is a grouping of four small vertical panels, each with four
rectangles of contrasting colors, purple, gray, red and light tan, with
sweeping lines that flow from one panel to the other, thus unifying the whole.
Similarly, her “Barely Bauhaus” is a strong design of three interlocking bands
of green, blue and red with white bars, all on a black back ground.
Jill
Scholtens’ “Firewall” is similar in concept but with dramatically angular forms
in tones of purple and orange on a black background.
In
contrast to all the geometric abstractions in the front galleries is Nancy
Erickson’s distinctive lioness in tones of purple and orange with line drawings
of other animals stitched into the surface. It is cut into the shape of the
animal and is a fierce counterpoint to all the restful geometric abstracts.
I’ve been seeing Erickson’s work in Tacoma as long as I’ve been writing
reviews, going back to the old Penny Lucas Gallery, and they are always
distinctive in style.
The
back gallery spaces feature mostly nature-based scenes in earth tones and a lot
of bright yellow. One of the best of these is Ann Johnson’s “Between the
Veins.” The “veins” are the stems of leaves in lyrical yellow line, and the
blue and green leaves are like expressionistic swathes of paint applied
wet-on-wet.
Melissa
Lang’s “Stick Around” and “Walking Sticks” are made of dramatic bands of bright
colors arranged in angular forms. In one they rest on fields of concentric
circles made of fine green stitching, and in the other the stitching follows
the shape of the negative shapes between the “sticks” in much the way Frank
Stella’s stripes followed the contour of
his shaped canvases in his early stripe paintings.
Perhaps
the most inventive works in the show are Carla Dipietro’s “Melting Glacier” and
“Winter Silence,” both of which are three-dimensional with the glacier in one
and snowflakes in a forest in the other depicted with tiny strips of cloth
woven into a grid of fine thread above the surface where they cast shadows.
These are strikingly lovely works.
Overall
this is an outstanding show. Don’t miss it.
American Art Company, 12th NW Contemporary
Art Quilt Exhibit, Tuesday-Friday 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Saturday 10
am. to 5p.m., Third Thursday until 8 p.m., through Oct. 4, 1126 Broadway Plaza,
Tacoma, 253.272.4327