Entries from January 1, 2008 - February 1, 2008
1/30: Late Afternoon Walk





1/18: Philip Koch Video

1/10: Seattle

We saw at least 42 galleries in the last couple of weeks. That’s quite a bunch if you’re really taking a good look, and you can become almost dizzy with the effort. Most of these we saw last Thursday and Friday, our final days of travel.
After Port Hadlock, we took a ferry to just north of Seattle and saw a few more galleries. One gallerist won my “most solicitous” award. In a gallery of her own paintings, she left her students in the back room to hover beside us, pointing out the merits of each of her paintings, comparing her water lilies to Monet’s. She didn’t wait for any reaction or clue from us, just launched into her spiel. I couldn’t get out of there soon enough. This is why many of us hesitate to even enter single-artist galleries.
For First Thursday, we focused on the Pioneer Square area. It was raining heavily when we arrived. We put on our rain gear and forged ahead to the first galleries, where the rain obviously kept the attendance down. Then, through the tall corner windows of a building ahead, we saw the brightly-lit, glowing colors of what could only be a ten-foot high hanging Dale Chihuly sculpture.
It drew us out of the dark and rain into the Foster White Gallery, a huge space with a new show opening by two painters, Sherry Bakes and James Martin.
I immediately liked Bakes’ vague landscapes, but I wasn’t sure about Martin’s small, crudely-painted fantasies. I kept looking though, and the more I looked, the more they grew on me. They were loosely painted on what appeared to be kraft paper, simply framed and affordably-priced (about $650 to $1200). Most seemed to have some sort of story going on: a fancy yellow car up on blocks surrounded by a scene acted-out by scantily-clad starlets and cowboys, with the occasional celebrity like Andy Warhol or Van Gogh mixing things up with anthropomorphized lions. The paintings made me smile, and as more visitors arrived, I found I wasn’t the only one. I looked the whole collection over a couple of times, and settled on the lion’s head on the Pez dispenser body. All I had to do was put it on the credit card, but that card had gone through a tough workout lately, and I left feeling a pang of loss.
We followed the growing crowd to more galleries, including the Tishuro Kaplan building, where artist studios and “corridor galleries” were open. If you wanted wine and crackers, these are the places to go (food and drink were noticeably absent at the bigger galleries, except for a few of the privleged few visitors). Here, the artists were much more adventurously dressed and pierced, and the media was likely to include menstrual blood, “ritual” blood and hair on doilies.

On Friday, we continued our gallery walk to the Pike Market area and downtown where we visited another ten or so galleries. Our flight was at midnight, so we had some time to kill, but we were all getting a bit weary. Highlights included the Lisa Harris Gallery, the William Traver Gallery, and photographs at the Benham Gallery. When one gallery attendant asked “so, what do you think?” I was at a loss. (Would I ask such a general question of my visitors? Probably not.)
At the mall, where we had to catch the monorail back to the car, we sat down and ate a pizza, getting up one last burst of energy for the last gallery, which was nearby: yes, the “Painter of Light” himself, Thomas Kinkade. The gallery was done-up like a quaint village shoppe, with multiple panes of glass showcasing the sweet scenes of yesteryear inside. We poked our heads in and saw that the shoppe-keeper was making a sale- the only one I witnessed taking place in over forty galleries.
That lion with the Pez body still hasn’t sold. Aw shucks, now it has.

1/7: The Art Mine

The Inn is constructed in the shell of a factory that made alcohol from sawdust, then sat vacant for many years. Completed in 2004, it has the feel of a grand old hotel, complete with its own marina, sculpture gardens, restaurant and an art gallery integrated into the hotel with separate spaces on three floors.
One enters it much like a museum, into a lobby flanked by staircases and an open space overhead, currently occupied by hanging metallic sculptures of squid. Also like a museum, a gallery gift shop stocks smaller items kept separate from the artwork on display. Upstairs are three distinctly separate display spaces, each with its own personality. We were there between shows- the small works show (under $500) having just ended and the next show yet to begin, so there was a great variety of work, all of it by accomplished, talented artists, a number of whom were recruited from other parts of the country (the labels listed the artist’s location).
The main lobby was hung with several larger paintings, including close-up portraits and glass sculptures. Off to one side, the art library consisted of big comfortable chairs around a fireplace with shelves full of art books.
We were able to look at our liesure. Then we met Eric Swangstu, the director and curator, who showed us around, pointing out the sculpture garden outside in the rain, and describing his efforts at drawing a crowd. It was an uphill battle against notions of Port Hadlock as an out of the way, uncultured location. He combated the problem with massive PR: mailings and articles touting both the new art and free concerts in the sculpture garden, and had been successful at drawing phenomenal crowds.
As we spoke with Eric, it became apparent that we had similar issues: running a gallery off the beaten path, working with other businesses to create an arts destination, finding the right artists, and getting the media to do more than just print your press releases word for word.
The Art Mine also has an educational aspect, with executive team building workshops and programs for younger artists, as well as a studio residency program. Considering the mission statement, and commitment to the community, the gallery has the attributes of a top notch non-profit organization. Admittedly though, I appreciate the commercial aspect, the vision of a single curator putting a group of work together, and his faith that a buying public will support it.



