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You are here: Home / Art Reviews / Is Paper Back? Drawing Shows at Vermillion and G. Gibson

Is Paper Back? Drawing Shows at Vermillion and G. Gibson

September 25, 2011 by Iskra Leave a Comment

I have a friend who can fix or make anything, including building a house or a motorcycle from "scratch" as Betty Crocker might say. As an added bonus he has an indelible instinct for good taste versus cheeziness and he really knows art. Yesterday he came over to help me figure out something about paper. Paper has been keeping me up at night. What is its nature? When will it return? Why did it go out of vogue? Should you glue it to a board and turn it into decoupage? Should you frame it behind glass? What about the apparently thousands of people who gallerists now claim "don't want glass in their house?" These people live where the sun shines, and with global warming, excuse me, climate change, this could end up being ninety-nine percent of the people in the world except for those under three feet of water. These people, these sunshine people, have requested oil paintings or things that look like oil paintings, on canvas or panel.

Paper is delicate, and paper is not forever. It doesn't like raking southern light. It doesn't like bugs, or humidity or dents from the vacuum cleaner handle. This is why picture framing was invented. "Think about those French chickens under glass," my friend said, "what was that dish called? It arrived under a dome and you knew it was special, and valuable." "And it had no flies," I added. We proceeded to line up every kind of hinging tape ever invented and figure out the best way for a person with absolutely zero crafting ability (myself) to attach a piece of paper to a piece of mattboard so it is straight and doesn't fall off. 

With that figured out I went downtown to look at some Art on Paper. "Over and Over: A Small Survey of Obsessive Drawing" is currently showing at Vermillion through October 8.  Notably, several of the artists left the frame off completely and tacked the paper to the wall, bypassing presentation anguish but perhaps substituting that of the errant wine glass, lipstick kisses or studded jacket on opening night. I was particularly taken with the work of Patrick Kelly. His "Carbon Traces" are nearly sculptural, with dense and pressurized strokes of graphite forming refractive swirls that appear dimension and metallic, and they benefit hugely from being seen without glass.  I found myself mesmerized by the surface ambiguity and lyrical patterning of Amanda Manitach's pencil drawings. They take me to a parlour on a gray day; the air is soft, perhaps rain has just fallen, and innocuous but scandalous poetry is being read offstage. Perusing Manitach's website I can see that here is a mind thinking in limitless media and layers of investigation. I want to keep up with this intriguing artist and see what she'll do next.

In Pioneer Square I visited G. Gibson. Here, in Justin Gibbens' astonishing ink drawings I found my chicken under glass, but with insects included. I am a true Arachnophobe, and so it is good that I didn't allow myself to identify what I saw until just now, reviewing his work online. I got lost in the beauty of his meticulous draftsmanship, which is a rare blend of scientific illustration and Chinese painting.  You will see wolves here, and falcons, and pelicans, but everything is not quite right. You will have to go yourself to see what it is I'm not telling you. I was so convinced it was "real" (as in an expedition notebook documenting the species of the New World), that I didn't realize until I came home that it can't be. His framing is brilliant, and the match between the specimen-box simplicity of some, the Victorian filigree of others, and the drawings themselves is striking and original.

I came home inspired and breathing happy: paper is back.

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Do you ever feel catatonic with helplessness in th Do you ever feel catatonic with helplessness in the face of relentless corporate propaganda? 

I do!🥲😳

We have only 48 hours left to comment on our city’s “comprehensive plan“. This zoning plan will control the destiny of our city for the next 20 years. The plan has been completely reframed by an unholy cartel of “urbanists”, developers and “social justice activists“. The moral future has been portrayed as 5 to 6 story concrete high-rises stretching as far as the eye can see. Each apartment will be between 250 and 350 ft.² and it will cost $2000 and up per month. This is considered “equity™️” and morally righteous because we have replaced the terrible bourgeois single-family homes that had gardens and maybe even a single unforgettable Dahlia draped over the arbor. Meanwhile, these martially certain upzoners, pushing their ideological trailer loaded with concrete, (one of the most energy intensive and polluting industries in the world), are “environmental”. 

Developers have convinced everyone under 32 that the reason they do not own a home is because someone else does. Therefore, we should punish those who have a home by zoning their neighborhood so that their home will disappear and it will all be an apartment. . .

The people pushing this propaganda, most of them came to Seattle 3 to 5 years ago. They don’t remember grunge, they don’t remember when we were a dirty affordable city filled with genius artists and musicians. They don’t remember Kurt Cobain. And they do not understand that when you build a city of micro Apartments, wholly owned by corporate REIT’s and banks and no garages, you do not have garage bands .
This is the time of year I would be normally sendi This is the time of year I would be normally sending out a Winter Solstice greeting and a meditation on inner peace, with contemplations on the beauty of winter’s bare-boned architecture. Alas, this moment of respite from the daily commerce of life has been forced into an unexpected pivot. 

Just as I was in the midst of a holiday sale, and fulfilling my first order from my very first Etsy advertising campaign, Etsy threw my shop into (involuntary) “vacation.” This new purgatory is, I learned Friday night from three hours of bleary research on Twitter, Google and the dark ‘n light web, happening worldwide. It is inexplicable, inexorable, and even calling upon Spock and the superior intelligence of the #NewJerseyDrones will not alleviate the condition. Etsy “customer service” is now allocated to bots and “chats with bots” and if you are a tiny cottage arts industry supremely devoted to your customers, you may be on involuntary vacation for three days, 6 months, or until you leave this galaxy for another. They do not give you free Xanax.

What to do? The swans were in flight, and everything was just humming along. I am not prepared mid-December to research and set up a whole new interface for commerce. I just want to kick back, as I’m sure you all do, with a fragrant branch of spruce and some eggnog, and listen to the Vienna boys’ choir. 

My shop, oddly, still allows you to see everything. You can’t purchase through Etsy. . . but you can still browse, and then send me an email. And we have many options here, ranging from personal check to Zelle to Square to stopping for coffee or trading art for repair on my dishwasher or my fence: So there you have it, an end-run. Perhaps, like me, you are not looking forward to Tariffs On Everything! Or, for that matter, polio (Thanks Bob, Vaccines for Nobody!) or Free Speech Just For Who I Say So! (lawsuits for everybody else.) We will need to be fluid, creative, and easy going.
Sometime in January I will rally and figure out what to do if Etsy decides my inexplicable purgatory is a forever thing. Meantime, I will honor the holiday sale of 20% discount in my shop til 12.21 for any purchase over $150, cards excluded.
It is so peaceful living in the studio with swans. It is so peaceful living in the studio with swans. This morning I am putting together card orders for local customers. When the spotlight in the media goes to the artists working at heroic scale, is it perverse to take so much pleasure from these small moments? One thing I took away from lockdowns, and hope I never forget: the power of the quiet conversation with a friend, walking through the woods. When I had not seen anyone for weeks, these single hours became luminous, and kept my spirits going. The fine art note cards are for the lost art of conversation: for taking time to say hello, in handwriting, to share a memory, an observation out the window, news from home. Thank you to all my new friends who love paper and pen, and who keep the human connections going, one note at a time. First Link in bio to purchase.
“Pedestal,” new series of deconstructed archit “Pedestal,” new series of deconstructed architecture, started while waiting for the bus in Bath.
"Facade No.1" Who is this gilded carpet for, one t "Facade No.1" Who is this gilded carpet for, one thinks, glancing up to see this vision in the bus window. And how much tax advantage is gained by boarding up the selected windows? Or did the winds come up one night and lift the panes, whole-planed and unbroken, into the moon's orbit? These are the questions that whisper behind the green curtains. . . After the precision of The Swans Suite I need to let my imagination run a bit wilder. Today beginning the proofing process for my new experimental series deconstructing the architecture of England. Sometimes (often!) when I am working I do not know what I am looking for. What makes the scene reveal itself? It's always about balancing difference. In this case the right balance of luminosity and the authority of stone. These will be very limited editions of 1 to 3, printed om German Etching and William Turner. I'm excited to see where the series goes.
The Swan Suite is now live! Link in bio. The Swan Suite is now live! Link in bio.

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