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555 Hamilton St. T. +1 604.683.7395 Gallery hours 12 - 5PM Admission Free |
Special-EventEditions & Cocktails Wednesday, December 9, 2009 6PM, 2009 You’re invited to an edition sale at the Or! Join us for an evening of conversation and new cocktails invented by world-renowned artists! The event will present limited artist editions by local and international artists, commissioned by the Or Gallery, Bywater Bros, Access Gallery, Artspeak Gallery, Fillip, and ECU Press. Including works by: Proceeds from the sale of artist editions will be used to support programming and operations at the participating organizations. |
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ExhibitionMichael JonesTolerance Time December 5 - January 16, 2009 Reception Friday, December 4, 8PM Curated by Paul Kajander A project of the Helen Pitt Gallery. Michael Jones’ new installation consists of a short, narrative 16mm film projection in which the artist is cast as Police officer. Set in the Vancouver Multicultural Society’s administrative offices, Jones’ character is seen responding to a disturbance call. As he inspects the premises, the objects, artworks and publicity material associated with officially sanctioned notions of Canadian multiculturalism become the focus of his investigation. Presented alongside a series of posters and sculptures drawn from and responding to the Multicultural Society’s archives, Jones’ new work explores the complex relationship between image, otherness, authority and security. Michael James Jones was born in Canada in 1980. From 1999-2003 he attended the Alberta College of Art and Design, obtaining a B.F.A in Media Arts and Digital Technologies. He later received an M.F.A in Fine Art Media from the Slade School of Fine Art, in London, U.K. He currently works in Vancouver. Film runs 12 – 4PM during gallery hours |
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Special-ProjectFUTURE SOCIAL: UBC Social Housing Design Ideas Competition October 23 - November 7, 2009 Reception Friday, October 23 7-9PM Curated by UBC School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture Future Social is a competition that challenged UBC students to develop innovative architectural designs for social housing. In teams or as individuals, over 40 UBC students have worked to imagine new supportive social housing that best responds to homelessness in contemporary Vancouver. For more information please visit the UBC School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture Future Social website. |
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LaunchCranfield and Slade12 Sun Songs , 2009 Reception Friday Oct 16th from 7 to 9. Zulu Records “Cranfield and Slade: 12 Sun Songs” is a yellow vinyl album made up of covers of pop songs about the sun. Aping a 1970s concept album Cranfield and Slade present twelve songs arranged to represent a day, beginning with songs about sunrise and winding down with songs about sunsets. Tracks range from classics such as George Harrison’s “Here Comes the Sun” and The Kinks’ “Waterloo Sunset,” to the lesser-known “Sun” by singer-songwriter Margot Guryan or “Where Evil Grows” by Vancouver’s The Poppy Family. The album combines field recordings made in various Vancouver locations with electronic sound and acoustic and electric instruments. Based in rainy Vancouver, Cranfield and Slade are made up of visual artist Kathy Slade and artist/musician Brady Cranfield, working with musicians including Larissa Loyva (Piano, Kellarissa), Johnny Payne (Victoria Victoria, The Shilos), and Chris Harris (Piano, Parks and Rec, The Secret Three, Womankind); and special guests John Collins (The New Pornographers, The Evaporators) and artist Rodney Graham (The Rodney Graham Band, UJ3RK5). The liner notes for 12 Sun Songs were written by celebrated Canadian poet and critic Peter Culley. Published with JRP Ringier in the Christoph Keller Edition series. |
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ExhibitionDebra Baxter, Dawn Cerny, Barb Choit, The Goggles (Michael Simons and Paul Shoebridge)Death & Objects September 12 - October 17, 2009 Reception Friday, September 11, 8PM in conjunction with Swarm 2009 |
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Special-EventRuins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties. , 2009 Reception 7pm, Thursday, September 3, 2009 The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, at The University of British Columbia and the grunt gallery, Vancouver, invite you to a celebration of Ruins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties. Launched online in June, this resource and digital archive incorporates hundreds of photographs, press clippings, audio recordings and film clips. Drawn from private collections and archives as well as public sources, Ruins in Process brings together the research of many artists, curators and writers in an exploration of the diverse artistic practices of Vancouver art in the 1960s and early 1970s. Since its online launch, the project has been enthusiastically embraced by libraries, directories, blogs and listings worldwide. Please join us in celebrating the many artists, curators, writers, designers and researchers that have made www.vancouverartinthesixties.com such a success. Party! For more information, call 604.822.2759. Ruins in Process is made possible with the support of the Department of Canadian Heritage through the Canadian Culture Online Strategy. We are grateful for the assistance of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. |
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NewsINSURRECTION BY FAX AT RUINS IN PROCESS LAUNCH PARTY , 2009 Reception September 3, 7PM Please come and show your opposition to recent and devastating cuts to the arts in BC. The cuts to multi-year gaming grants have been lifted – but those not on multi-year are still out in the cold. Arts funding is being hacked by 80-85%. The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, the grunt gallery and the Or Gallery invite you to join us in faxing our continued frustration to our political representatives at the Ruins in Process: Vancouver Art in the Sixties launch party. Bring a pen and an opinion. |
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ExhibitionBrady Cranfield, Robert Filliou, Mark Nakamura, Nicole+Ryan, Håvard Pedersen, Kate Sansom, Holly WardScience Fiction 01 June 27 - August 1, 2009 Reception Friday, June 26, 8PM Downplaying many of the technological associations with the science fiction literary and cinematic genres, Science Fiction 01 focuses on works dealing with more subtly speculative and social aspects of science fiction – projections on what might or could be in the future, as well as considerations of idealized and dystopic space. In keeping with the theme of speculation, a number of the works in the exhibition exist in their proposal stage or as works in progress, not to take their final form until some possible later date. For Kate Sansom’s Nothing Is Free In Waterworld, the artist transforms part of the gallery into a working office space with the aim of acquiring the now-derelict floating McDonald’s restaurant from Vancouver’s Expo 86 world fair, intending to put the structure to some productive use. Artists Nicole+Ryan, Håvard Pedersen, and Mark Nakamura similarly make proposals that to varying degrees implicate the gallery in the process. Nakamura’s Back In Five promises the return of someone, likely a gallery staff member, perpetually five minutes in the future. Works by Brady Cranfield, Robert Filliou, and Holly Ward play on spacialized and historicized aspects of the genre, touching on future or alternative versions of the nation-state, revolution, and war. In Cranfield’s video Daydream Nation, two images of the artist are seen listening and contemplating the Sonic Youth double-album by the same name on a Sony Heavy Duty CD Radio, “(b)uilt with the workshop or jobsite in mind”. Filliou similarly uses a double image of himself – connoting some temporal rift by way of media – a video image of the artist barking instructions to his other-self. Filliou later muses, “The spirit of a nation is incomprehensible, but a spirit of a nation and a spirit of a nation is war, or what you will…” Ward touches on both the utopianism of Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic dome patterns as well as HG Well’s somewhat foreboding 1933 chronicle, The Shape of Things to Come, a history of the world written from the perspective of 2106. Science Fiction 01 is the first of roughly 88 science fiction-related exhibitions planned for the Or Gallery over the course of the next 260 years. |
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PerformanceDavid HorvitzLost April 25 - April 28, 2009 DEPARTURE TIMES FOR GETTING LOST Leaves from the gallery: Files sized to print at 8×10 inches and are free to download. Prints can be made on home printers, or the files can be taken into a photo lab. |
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LaunchRon TeradaCockatoo Island , 2009 Reception Thursday May 7, 8pm a book by Ron Terada ISBN 978-0-9780789-2-8 This book documents Ron Terada’s walkabout of Cockatoo Island in September 2008. Expecting an exotic, tropical landscape replete with cockatoos and other rare fauna, Terada instead found himself on an island more in common to an isolated penitentiary like Alcatraz. Located off Sydney Harbour, Cockatoo Island was indeed once the site of a former prison and shipyard, yet on this occasion, also the setting for the 2008 Sydney Biennale. Presented in a refined yet deadpan serial layout, Terada’s Cockatoo Island “blacks-out” any visual evidence regarding the works in the exhibit, the trajectory of his walk, or any clues to the island itself. What remains is a list of each participating artist as presented by the Biennale organizers: on homely, hand-made signage that evokes at once both protest and resignation. Price $25 CAN 10 copies of this edition include a special edition print by the artist |
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ExhibitionTacita Dean, Leslie Grant and Al Bersch, Jason Hendrickson, David Horvitz, Donald LawrenceThe Wild so Close April 25 - May 30, 2009 Reception Friday, April 24, 2009 8PM Curated by Jennifer Cane The Wild so Close presents photographic and video works by Tacita Dean, Leslie Grant and Al Bersch, Jason Hendrickson, David Horvitz, and Donald Lawrence. The sites of leisure culture and recreation—within the construct of ‘nature’—are worthy of rigorous investigation. This exhibition brings together varying photographic and video works that investigate concepts of natural leisure environments and resources. In all cases, there is an underlying component of travel—the artist making a journey as part of the work’s production, and of that distant place becoming the subject. These leisure sites are often situated in opposition to other types of spaces; to the spaces of labour, the spaces of the domestic; some spaces showing the demarcations of gender and class constructions. In an interlocking manner, the works contain elements that trouble notions of the ‘natural’ that make up representations of such sites. The exhibition raises important questions surrounding the spaces of recreation and tourism in the wake of Vancouver’s Olympic venture. What is at stake is an opportunity to reconsider the economies of their use in both real and ideal terms. The works, in turn, question specific values assigned to the category of leisure. Solitude, tranquility, masculinity and prosperity are just a few such qualities brought together in order to invoke a self-reflexive thematic that questions the motivations of recreational preoccupations. Looking more closely at the ideological implications of the province’s reputation, we see intersecting projections upon the sites of the so-called ‘wilderness’, evidencing different fantasies of space. Certain landscapes are hidden so that others might be highlighted. Through these spatial economies, we view complex and shifting, continually contested landscapes of leisure. This exhibition is curated by Jennifer Cane, a candidate to the Masters Degree in Critical Curatorial Studies at The University of British Columbia, with support from the Killy Foundation, the Alvin Balkind Fund for Student Curatorial Initiatives, the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, and the Department of Art History, Visual Art and Theory at The University of British Columbia. |
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ScreeningLisl Ponger and Tim SharpSelected Video Works , 2009 Reception Wednesday, April 22, 7PM at Emily Carr University of Art and Design The Or Gallery and Charles H. Scott Gallery are pleased to present a screening of video works by Vienna-based artists Lisl Ponger and Tim Sharp. Ponger and Sharp are currently Artists-in-residence at the Or Gallery with the support of the Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Arts and Culture. Beginning at 7PM in the lecture hall of Emily Carr (SB 301), the program will be as follows:
[Intermission]
Lisl Ponger has shown widely in Europe including recent solo shows at the CUC, Berlin, Kunsthaus Dresden, and Charim Galerie, in Vienna. In ArtForum, March 2007, Bridgitte Huck summarizes Ponger’s work:
A visual artist, photographer, and filmmaker, Ponger is equally at home at Documenta (she participated in 2002) and at film festivals. Acting (often in the same work) as director, set designer, performer, and archivist, she investigates the interfaces between art and science, between sociology, art history, and political activism, moving obliquely through these disciplines to create compositions of explosive power and precise observation. Ponger interrogates the resonances of non-Western art within Western modernism. __ Tim Sharp’s work is concerned with the construction of historical and personal memory. In his photo work he deals with the relationship between image and text while his films explore the changing relationship of image to sound and the mutability of the documentary assertion made by lens-based images. He has taken part in many international exhibitions and film festivals including Routes – Imaging Travel and Migration in the Grazer Kunstverein; Black Atlantic in the Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin as well as Shake in the OK Centrum für Gegenwartskunst, Linz and Villa Arson, Nice. More recently he participated in TIEFENRAUSCH also at the OK Centrum für Gegenwartskunst, Linz. In 2005 and 2006 he took part in shows in the Kunsthalle Dresden where he will be showing new work in 2010 as part of the series of exhibitions Notes on the Empire. |
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ResidencyLisl PongerAustrian Artist-in-residence Program March - May, 2009 Artist talk and reception (with Tim Sharp) The Or Gallery is pleased to announce a residency by Vienna-based artist Lisl Ponger, concurrent with a residency by Tim Sharp, both of which are supported by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Arts and Culture. Ponger has shown widely in Europe including recent solo shows at the CUC, Berlin, Kunsthaus Dresden, and Charim Galerie, in Vienna. In ArtForum, March 2007, Bridgitte Huck summarizes Ponger’s work: For the Dak’Art Biennial of Contemporary African Art 2004, Austrian artist Lisl Ponger hoped to photograph selections from the famous ethnographic collection of Dakar’s Musee d’Art Africain. As she waited for permission from the museum, she started a series of photographs in her hotel room; when the official okay never came, these works became her biennial contribution. Si j’avais eu l’autorisation … (If I Had Had Authorization …)—thus ran the project’s subjunctive title—then she wouldn’t have stayed in her room photographing props from her own personal archive of materials relating to the themes of colonialism, globalization, and travel. She grouped these items on the tile mosaic of the hotel floor according to classificatory patterns: ethnologist, painter, photographer, tourist. Although this was not the project that Ponger originally planned, it hews closely to her interests. Her politically motivated work continues to investigate issues of colonialism, ethnology, ideology, and constructions of identity. A visual artist, photographer, and filmmaker, Ponger is equally at home at Documenta (she participated in 2002) and at film festivals. Acting (often in the same work) as director, set designer, performer, and archivist, she investigates the interfaces between art and science, between sociology, art history, and political activism, moving obliquely through these disciplines to create compositions of explosive power and precise observation. Ponger interrogates the resonances of non-Western art within Western modernism. |
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ResidencyTim SharpAustrian artist-in-residence March - May, 2009 Artist talk and reception (with Lisl Ponger) The Or Gallery is pleased to announce a residency by Vienna-based artist Tim Sharp, concurrent with a residency by Lisl Ponger, both of which are supported by the Austrian Federal Ministry for Education, Arts and Culture. Sharp’s work is concerned with the construction of historical and personal memory. In his photo work he deals with the relationship between image and text while his films explore the changing relationship of image to sound and the mutability of the documentary assertion made by lens-based images. He has taken part in many international exhibitions and film festivals including Routes – Imaging Travel and Migration in the Grazer Kunstverein; Black Atlantic in the Haus der Kulturen der Welt in Berlin as well as Shake in the OK Centrum für Gegenwartskunst, Linz and Villa Arson, Nice. More recently he participated in TIEFENRAUSCH also at the OK Centrum für Gegenwartskunst, Linz. In 2005 and 2006 he took part in shows in the Kunsthalle Dresden where he will be showing new work in 2010 as part of the series of exhibitions Notes on the Empire. |
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LaunchCranfield and SladeSunshine Daydream/Maerdyad Enihsnus For Fillip 9 - Winter, 2009 Reception Saturday March 28, 8PM at the Fillip Office: 305 Cambie St., Vancouver The Or Gallery is pleased to announce Sunshine Daydream/Maerdyad Enihsnus, produced in partnership with Christoph Keller Editions and JRP|Ringier as an insert edition for Fillip 9. Sunshine Daydream/Maerdyad Enihsnus is a misremembered cover of the Pop-O-Pies’ song Sugar Magnolia. The Pop-O-Pies, headed by Joe Pop-o-Pie, were an early 1980s San Francisco punk group that started as a Grateful Dead spoof/tribute band, originally playing only the song Truckin’. Eventually they started writing and recording their own material but also continued to produce responses to the Grateful Dead, such as a version of Sugar Magnolia. In the Pop-O-Pies’ version, the main body of the song plays in reverse, ending with a forward-playing simplified refrain that repeats the single phrase “sunshine daydream,” taken from the concluding lyrics of the original song. Cranfield and Slade’s misremembered version, which plays forward on side A and in reverse on side B, is only the refrain section of the Pop-O-Pies’ remake, as if stuck on a partially remembered fragment of the song. The physical and mechanical action of flipping the record over (and over) suggests a perpetual loop, forever inhibiting the ability to fully recall the original. Cranfield and Slade are interested in the role pop music plays in simultaneously expressing and commodifying—and thereby potentially undermining—genuine feelings such as happiness and sadness. That ambiguity is inherent to pop music, which is somehow felt to be as intimate and precious as it is contrived and indifferent, a mere commercial good. Choosing neither side over the other, Cranfield and Slade consider the dialectic of the two to be most significant. Sunshine Daydream/Maerdyad Enihsnus came out of 12 Sun Songs, a concept album, to be released by Or Gallery Records later this year, made up of cover songs from the 60s and 70s about the sun, but it took on a thematic life of its own as a dedicated 7” record. Please join us for a launch of Fillip 9 at the Fillip offices in Vancouver on March 28th at 8 pm. 305 Cambie Street |
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Special-EventVancouver Anthology, Second Edition Pre-launch and design exhibit , 2009 Reception Friday, March 20, 8PM In partnership with Talonbooks, the Or Gallery presents a new edition of Vancouver Anthology, edited by acclaimed artist Stan Douglas and first published in 1991. Featuring a newly designed hardcover format, and a new afterword by Stan Douglas, the second edition of Vancouver Anthology coincides with a renewal of the Or Gallery’s 25th Anniversary celebrations and renewed mandate to incite and promote critical discourse both within and outside of the Vancouver art community. The essays collected in this book were first presented in the autumn of 1990 as part of a lecture series entitled Vancouver Anthology, a forum in which each contributing writer could test his or her research on the question of art and politics in public, before their papers were sent into print. Contributors include: Keith Wallace, Sarah Diamond, Nancy Shaw, Maria Insell, William Wood, Carol Williams, Robin Peck, Robert Linsley, Scott Watson and Marcia Crosby. The pre-launch event will feature an exhibit of the book’s new design, plus allow attendees to order copies of the book at a special low price. Stan Douglas will be in attendance to make short remarks. This project is generously supported by the 2009 Cultural Olympiad, BC Arts Council Special Project Assistance – Unique Opportunities, The Audain Foundation, and Canada Council for the Arts Media Arts Section. |
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ExhibitionLutz Bacher (Berkeley), Drakkar Sauna (Lawrence, Kansas), Heather and Ivan Morison (Wales), Oscar Tuazon (Paris/Tacoma), Jordan Wolfson (New York/Berlin)Of vagrant dwellers in the houseless woods March 14 - April 18, 2009 Reception Friday, March 13, 2009 8PM Curated by Eric Fredericksen I hate her. I hate her, a puppet show by Heather and Ivan Morison, performed by Betsey Brock and Mike Pham The Or Gallery announces “Of vagrant dwellers in the houseless woods,” including work by Lutz Bacher, Drakkar Sauna, Heather and Ivan Morison, Oscar Tuazon, and Jordan Wolfson, and curated by Eric Fredericksen. The exhibition includes works in video, film, sculpture, puppets, photographs, and handbound books. “Of vagrant dwellers…” is a tour through the sublime, in a degraded but recognizable form. It argues that the concept of the sublime—objects or experiences that exceed comprehension—retains discursive possibilities even as the word itself decorates tourism brochures or dessert menus. The exhibition engages what Peter Culley has called the “critical and infomed relationship to various landscape traditions [which] has been a defining feature of Vancouver’s postmodern aesthetic.” The title is drawn from Wordsworth’s “Lines Written a Few Miles above Tintern Abbey,” written in 1798 as part of an uncompleted project to be titled “The Recluse.” The surrounding lines sketch out an imagined figure, a stand-in for a wilder existence the poet cannot access directly:
This imagined hermit has contemporary analogues among the works on view, arriving in the form of Bacher’s Polaroids of plastic troll dolls, a talking crow in Jordan Wolfson’s “Perfect Lover,” or rough puppets inhabiting the Morisons’ sculpture of a midden. The discourse of the sublime was influential in art, architecture, gardening, and poetry, in Burkean and Kantian aesthetics and in the ethical thought of the Scottish Enlightenment. The 19th century settlement of the North American West was promoted though an instrumentalization of the sublime, as in spectacular painted, photographed, or written images of wilderness. The sublime is largely associated with natural creation, but also with monumental human endeavors (skyscrapers, the lunar landing) and altered states of consciousness. The overwhelming terror and pleasure of the sublime links the experience of perceiving the Alps and the skyline of Sao Paulo. It’s also a link between the attacks of September 11 and Donald Rumsfeld’s “Shock and Awe” operation at the start of the Gulf War. In this exhibition, natural awe, hallucinogens, and forests appear as various modes in a search for overmatching experience, for a post-apocalyptic return to wilderness, for altered states of consciousness. As opposed to fully instrumental uses, the works approach what the poet Lisa Robertson describes as a “kind of zone of metaphor or incompletion or unraveling that offers itself as the potential site for new meanings.” These zones are discovered not in untouched wilderness but in the seat of a used Subaru while listening to Berkeley’s freeform community radio station, as in Lutz Bacher’s video “Organic.” Oscar Tuazon, born on the Olympic Peninsula and currently living in Paris, contributes an editioned hand-bound book of his stories and photographs, which feature moments of entropic dissolution in semiwild landscapes. He also presents a hand-bound collection of issues of “Dwelling Portably,” a zine published for the past thirty years somewhere near Philomath, Ore., by a couple living invisibly and off the grid in the Oregon woods. Jordan Wolfson’s 16mm film loop “Perfect Lover” shows a realistic, animated, talking crow in woodland scenes, calling out the hours of the day in a monotone, uncanny and mundane. Heather and Ivan Morison’s large sculpture of shells in the form of a midden becomes the stage for a scabrous puppet show, “I hate her. I hate her.” Toward the end of the show’s run, Lawrence, Kansas, duo Drakkar Sauna will perform at locations in and around Vancouver and in the gallery. Their songs, including “Spear for When the Bear Comes” and “There’s Not Enough Tits on a Wolf,” will illuminate the exhibition’s themes. Eric Fredericksen is the Director of Western Bridge (Seattle). Image: Lutz Bacher, Organic, 2006. Still from a projected video. Courtesy of Ratio 3, San Francisco, and Taxter and Spengemann, New York. |
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ExhibitionAhbyah Baker, Jason Froese, Dana Hawkes, Eric Roddy, Darius Stein, Dylan WolneyDanger in Paradise January 31 - March 7, 2009 Reception Friday, January 30, 2009 8PM Curated by Dana Claxton The Or Gallery is pleased to present Danger in Paradise, an exhibition featuring works of six emerging Vancouver painters, curated by Vancouver artist Dana Claxton. Noting resurgent interest in representational painting among a younger generation of artists, Claxton uses the exhibition as a means to ask a number of questions related to this practice, particularly reflecting on the role of interpretation as a means of disrupting representation, ‘rendering it formless’. Thematically, the exhibition explores the notion of danger and its role as a subtext in the works, often as a contrasting element in the portrayal of otherwise idyllic landscapes. Works in the exhibition shirk a literal read, however, and Claxton intentionally confuses her use of both danger and paradise, suggesting them as open concepts, acting just as easily as actions, emotions, or places. While differing in content and manner, the works in the exhibition all combine opposing subjects as a natural way to form narrative and allegory. Danger in Paradise is the first of a series of three guest-curated exhibitions at the Or Gallery that make reference to a troubled West Coast landscape. |
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