Archive for the 'Guest Artist' Category



Dale Chihuly at the Bellagio

Published on May 21, 2007

I just got back last night from my trip to Las Vegas, and while the Guggenheim was closed for installation, I was able to check out Dale Chihuly’s glass installation, Fiero del Como, in the lobby skylights of the Bellagio Hotel. It is composed of over 1,000 “flowers,” weighs over 40,000 lbs. and is reputed to have cost around $1 million. A thing of beauty in a city that seemed to be suffering from a lack of it.

Dale Chihuly's Installation at the Las Vegas Bellagio.

Close-up View of the Chihuly Bellagio Skylight Installation

Detail View of the Pieces in the Chihuly Installation at the Bellagio Hotel


Alberto Cerriteño at Basil Hallward Gallery

Published on May 7, 2007

One of my former co-workers, Alberto Cerriteño, has a new show up in Portland on Powells’ 4th floor. Alberto is an extremely talented designer and illustrator, and his new show is incredible, composed of original drawings on paper, drawings on wood plaques, and of course, framed digital prints featuring his original, caricature-based compositions. Check it out, now through May 31st.

Alberto Cerriteno's piece,


Lobster Tail

Published on March 31, 2007

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This was Brandy’s creation for dinner this evening. And yes, it tasted as good as it looks. She is an artist with food!


A New Era: Iowa’s Art Building West

Published on March 27, 2007

Gabe got married last weekend, but he’s either too busy or too shy to say so. He made himself an amazing ring that matched the one he made for his new wife, and the two were married in a wonderful ceremony at the Lueders family farm near Osceola, Iowa. Sarah and I considered ourselves lucky to be in attendance at the wonderfully intimate ceremony, which included a special cameo by little Ethan Lueders, aged two months. I’ll let Gabe post photos if he feels like sharing.

Steven Holl's University of Iowa Art Building West Overhangs a Small Pond

While in Iowa, Sarah and I also had the opportunity to see several of Iowa’s art institutions, begining with my old alma mater, the University of Iowa. In September, the art school opened with a new building, not so cleverly titled “Art Building West,” but very cleverly designed by Seattle architect Steven Holl. Situated across the street from the severely aged main buildings, the new building houses a large lecture hall, the art library, and a new, very professional gallery space.

View from the Library of Art Building West

As dramatic as the exterior is, the changes inside are phenomenal. When I was at Iowa, the library was literally stuffed to the ceilings, with books wedged anywhere there was room. In the dark (and damp) basement, many of the books were tatterred and torn by decades of rough treatment, and students routinely slept in the dank and cavernous lecture hall.

Interior Stairway in the New Iowa Art Building

In perfect contrast, the interior of the new building is flooded with light, set off with light materials like maple ply wall paneling and cork flooring. A soaring central staircase in lightweight sheet metal sends light ricocheting throughout the space. Attention to detail is evident in the sculptural door handles and careful spacing of the stairs.

I was especially pleased to see that the building houses a newer, more professional gallery space, which my sister tells me is considered by students to be more prestigious than the old building’s Drewlowe Gallery. Judging by the quality of the work being shown by graduate student Terry Rathje in Poetic Structures, I think she’s right.

My favorite piece was this tower composed of found metal parts, which I believe was entitled Fibonacci’s Ziggurat. I enjoyed the simple geometry of its structure, but appreciated the complexity of the various elements used to define those shapes: very interesting and slightly rusty bits of packaging from the midwest’s past. I really want to know where Rathje finds all those pieces!

Nearby, a more functional piece of artwork looked simultaneously comfortable and hostile, a piece Sarah called “the Skeleton Chair.” I confess, I didn’t write its title down.

Terry Rathje's Skeleton Chair

Discarded license plates form the backbone of Rathje’s wallpieces, an amazingly original technique that seems so obvious once you’ve seen it, but I appreciated the eloquence of the statements as well.

Terry Rathje's Round Wall Piece with License Plates

A pretty amazing show by Terry Rathje, I felt, one really worthy of this amazing new space. The building is really a welcome and dramatic change for the department. Now, if they could only address its decrepit cohorts …


Curtis Johnson

Published on March 19, 2007

Here is a link to a friend’s website. He makes some interesting sculptures out of paper and post consumer waste. I met him at the Vipassana retreat. Even though we only talked to each other briefly on the first and last days, we have kept in contact through emails. Worth checking out!

http://www.studiocurtis.com/


Wedge Clamp

Published on February 18, 2007

I received an e-mail from my friend and fellow woodworking artist Josh Carlson yesterday. After reading your posts on clamp situations, he sent me these pictures of a wedge clamp that he was working on. I thought I would invite him on as a guest artist since it was pretty fitting with recent topics.

Guest Artist Josh Carlson wrote:

“Basically it is a jig for gluing up lots of rips into larger planks or countertops. It is based on the sliding wedge method of clamping pressure to glue boards tightly together as well as hold them down to a flat surface. The large moveable rail part has many wedges attached going in one direction, it is the loose wedge that is driven into place that pushes the board together. The moveable rail allows you to reposition and clamp various sizes and combinations of wood into counter top quality flats. Then just a little work with the jack plane and there it is.”

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