December 31st, 2008
Visual Arts Best of 2008 | Bright spots in a challenging year for the arts.1 comment
November 26th, 2008
Dark Corners: Dan Gilsdorf/Horia Boboia | Two installations explore the spooky corridors of the creative mind.0 comments
November 12th, 2008
Q & A • Jeanine Jablonski | Economy be damned, Fourteen30’s got bold ideas for our art scene.4 comments
October 29th, 2008
The Nines | Don’t just look at local art—sleep with it.1 comment
October 22nd, 2008
Brenden Clenaghen at Pulliam Deffenbaugh | Portrait of an artist—in search of a new style.0 comments
October 15th, 2008
Juri Morioka At Butters | The New York painter transcends the prosaic.2 comments
October 1st, 2008
Bruce Conkle at Rocksbox0 comments
October 1st, 2008
Gate Closing | Why is Jennifer Gately leaving the Portland Art Museum?3 comments
September 17th, 2008
Volume at Worksound | Portland artists explore space in curator-about-town Jeff Jahn’s latest show. 0 comments
September 3rd, 2008
Ed Ruscha at the Portland Art Museum | An edgy elegy to youth from a pop art original.0 comments
![]() Jane Bruce at Bullseye |
[May 7th, 2008]
“Nature is a haunted house,” wrote Emily Dickinson, “but art is a house that tries to be haunted.” Art, then, can only approximate nature, showing us an alternate reality, a model of a world we know or wish to know. Today, pivoting between MySpace, online gaming and reality TV, we are seeing with greater clarity that art was the original simulacrum and is still the most elegant. Local wunderkind Jenene Nagy and New York City artist Jane Bruce demonstrate this with conviction and elan in two thought-provoking shows.
At Portland Art Museum , Nagy’s s/plit is the latest in a series of similar installations themed around the interplay between landscape, the idea of landscape and the artistic representation of landscape. The genre-bending piece features tiny neon triangles grouped together to form directional signs, guiding the eye along the work as it begins as a painting on the wall, then juts into your personal space, becoming sculptural, then climbs the walls and wraps around you, becoming architecture or a stage set, turning you into an actor in Nagy’s stage play. The idea that barriers between artistic categories are fluid rather than fixed is not a new one, but Nagy restates it for the cyber age with winning pluck.
At Bullseye, Jane Bruce’s Contained Abstraction tackles similar issues via a different medium—glass—using the vessel as her point of departure. Bruce is not interested in the vessel; she is interested in the idea of a vessel, and so in piece after piece, she starts with jaunty, graphic outlines of a vase, flask and bowl, then switches into meta mode, rejecting the rotundity of three dimensions, willfully flattening these timeless forms into thin rhomboid planes that appear 2D from most angles. She rejects the inherent flash and sheen that is glass’ blessing and curse, in favor of a cool, matte finish. With their primary colors, the works exude a Platonic formalism tempered only by the skewed, cartoonish outlines of the über-vessels themselves. Finally, she extrapolates her commentary into the domestic realm in her themes and variations on the façades of houses. Side by side, one atop the other, or separated by handlelike dividers, these glass houses are anything but cozy. They prod us to question, as Dickinson did 150 years ago, why we so desperately need art to haunt the world and simulate the reality we are already living in.
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