Patching
It
Quilts
and "quilts" in rival towns BY
SUZI STEFFEN
Quilts, once disregarded as simply "women's work,"
have come into their own over the past three decades as feminist
art historians revived the idea that communal work could still be
art. Though men and women often work together on large-scale quilting
projects, quilting remains largely women's work. Two shows, one
at Opus6ix and one at Corvallis' ArtCentric, examine contemporary
art and craft produced by women interested in continuing the tradition.
(above)
Vertical Garden by Hilary Pfeifer. (below)
String Quintet by Janet Hiller.
In Corvallis, the gorgeously hung show encompasses
the work of three Oregon women. The show, "More Than One View: Quilt
Country," stretches the meaning of quilting beyond its traditional
boundaries and is the stronger for that reinterpretation. ArtCentric's
newsletter explains that the work of all three women "follows the
same premise as quilting, making one unified whole out of many elements."
The airy, small converted church serves as a quiet
backdrop for the various media on display. Portlander Lisa Kaser's
felt constructions, the only fiber connection, are colorful and
evocative, a gesture at the internal world made visible. That
Beautiful Someday's abstract, Clyfford Still-like colors leap
from the wall and warm the room. Elephant Has 29 Visions While
Running up the Mountain gestures at cryptic children's worlds
and a mysterious cosmology with tiny animals, whimsical and grotesque,
sewn onto the blue felt background. Kaser also paints these animals
as watercolors and apparently creates them out of small clay as
well, but those pieces aren't in the show.
Eileen Kane's acrylics, each a small square, carry
the memory of early Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Agnes Martin and
Jo Baer with their color fields, etched grids and framing devices.
But the artist hangs groupings in a manner that sketch a reproduction
of piecing a quilt: The colors and patterns aren't the same, but
they do speak to each other and share certain themes. For instance,
the cool-tone groupings share water-related titles like Abalone
Shell and Late Afternoon — Yaquina Bay, and a warm
grouping contains not only Roseate Tile but also the lovely
New England Autumn.
Hilary Pfeifer's two works provide a site-specific
visual contrast with her piecing together of a variety of scrap
material and found pieces into a unified, whimsical, undulating
line of "lovebugs," each piece painted black with a red splotch
representing a heart. The piece, called 'sWarm in clever
homage to Gershwin's song "'sWonderful," twirls up and through the
former altar space and twines around her colorful, goofy Vertical
Garden pieces, also composed of scrap and found material. If
you head to Corvallis for the Fall Festival and its associated race,
do drop into ArtCentric for a lovely show whose power and grace
remain in the mind. The show closes at the end of the Festival on
Sept. 23.
ArtCentric's show runs in conjunction with quilt
displays all over Corvallis, and at the same time, Eugene's Opus6ix
gallery presents "Art of the Quilt," a fiber arts show with examples
of the work of 18 Linn and Lane County women.
This show contains a certain amount of whimsy —
like Phyllis Prom's White Birch with its gold birch leaf
hanging in the cleft of a fragmentary tree branch/torso —
along with a few eye-rollingly painful pieces (Digital cat photos
turned into quilts?! Oh no they didn't!). Yet some combine
skill and artistry to create works of interest.
One of the best of the smaller pieces is Lynda Christiansen's
Itsy bitsy, which despite its too-cute title combines patterns
of various colors and styles into an intriguing and professionally
finished whole. Jae McDonald's larger Red Center, with its
four quarters split yet unified by a diagonal river shape, becomes
oddly calming despite its sanguinary color scheme. Janet Hiller's
String Quintet and Scattered showers with sun breaks
display a strong sense of Mondrian-like balance, and Catherine Beard's
various pieces, especially Aspens III, gesture at realism
but hold to a commitment to blocky, lively colors and patterns.
"Art of the Quilt" runs through Sept. 30.