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Immigration Rights and Resources for the Campus Community

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2010 Exhibitions: Made in Greece: An Exhibition of Works from the 2010 HSU Summer Art Program

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University’s First Street Gallery presents Made in Greece: An Exhibition of Works from the 2010 HSU Summer Art Program from October 2nd through November 7th.  This exhibition consists of works made by Humboldt State students and their instructors during their studies in Greece this past summer.  Based in Afissos, a beachside village on Greece’s Pelion Peninsula, the program mixed intensive studio classes in painting and drawing with intermittent excursions to important historical, archeological and cultural destinations, ranging across the country of Greece.

Included in the exhibition are paintings by the program instructors, HSU Professor Emeritus Demetri Mitsanas, HSU Professor Teresa Stanley and Eugenia Mitsanas of JFK University. Student artists participating in the show are Logan Bengston, Sara Broderston, Tim Clewell, Jennica Forrest, Chelsea Frazier, Kelsey Hardwick, Amanda Hart, Tess Keller, Mary Luong, Sasha Lyth, Hilda MacKinnon, Camille May, Jennifer McKibbin, Megan McTavish, Alison Morse, Malia Morse, Malia Penhall, Sarah Richmond, Emmy Smith and Claire Voigtlander.  

Art is one of the highest enrolled departments on the HSU campus with approximately 450 majors. HSU’s Art Department offers classes with 23 professors and lectures, multiple, well equipped studio facilities and several campus showcases that enable undergraduates to enjoy an early experience of presenting their works to the public.

Made in Greece is produced by HSU students enrolled in the Art Department’s Museum and Gallery Practices Program.  The course provides students practical, hands-on experience as they design, coordinate and curate exhibits at First Street Gallery. Gallery director Jack Bentley states, “This show is a valuable experience for the young artists who went to Greece as well as for the students who produced this exhibition. It provides both groups with the experience of working and exhibiting in a professional gallery while demonstrating to the community the depth and quality of the art instruction that Humboldt State provides its students.”

An opening reception in honor of the artists will be held at HSU First Street Gallery on Saturday, October 2, from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. The exhibition will run from October 2 – November 7th, 2010. The gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday, noon to 5:00 p.m., and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California. Admission is free and those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead at 707-443-6363.

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2010 Exhibitions: Mimi LaPlant: My Life as an Artist

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University’s First Street Gallery presents Mimi LaPlant:  My Life as an Artist, showing from April 3-May 16. This will be a survey exhibition, consisting of different bodies of work throughout LaPlant’s career. Her art is a reflection of her life: soulful, vibrant, daring, and experimental.  She has crafted work in a variety of different subjects and mediums, each a direct response to a particular period in her life.

Currently residing on California’s North Coast, LaPlant grew up in Marin County, California and studied drawing and printmaking at the University of California at Berkeley. She received her MFA in painting at the University of California Santa Barbara, and has exhibited her work in numerous West Coast galleries, while holding a teaching position at Humboldt State University.
 
LaPlant has developed an extensive body of work inspired by her exploration into the unconscious, music, family, and nature. Taking viewers on a sensuous ride of color and abstraction LaPlant’s work presents a strong physicality, echoed in the textures and shapes of her imagery. When seeing her work viewers are often transported to a place of exuberance, which LaPlant calls her, “preferred state of mind.”
 
The exhibition will run from April 3 through May 16, 2010.  Mimi LaPlant will give a talk and a tour of her exhibition on May 1st at 3:30 pm at the gallery. Admission is free and open to the public.  The gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday, noon to 5:00 p.m., and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California.  Admission is free. Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead at 707-443-6363.

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2010 Exhibitions: REVOLUTIONARY REALISM, Drawings by Chuck Bowden

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present REVOLUTIONARY REALISM, Drawings by Chuck Bowden, on exhibit from October 2nd through November 9th 2010. This will be the California North Coast artist's largest exhibition to date, which will include drawings from 1964 to the present day. The visual quality of his work often leads one to the conclusion that it was constructed digitally or through use of multi-media, however, they are meticulously drawn by hand. Much of Bowden's work contains strong political content, the inspiration for which began at a young age when he was affected by the Panama riots of 1964, and by the Kennedy assassination.

Within the works of Chuck Bowden, exists a unique passion for exercising his technical virtuosity, using simple implements, paired with a platform of expressive free speech.  In a category of his own, Bowden mixes his rich compositions, which incorporate black and white hyper-realistic pencil drawings, with ballpoint pens and brightly colored markers. The artist uses historic photographs as subjects within his drawings; however his goal is to "surpass the photograph" by employing a wider tonal range than one would find in the original source material. Bowden's exhibition delivers depictions of his fine artistic talent and boldly confronts sensitive and controversial present day issues.  Greatly influenced by his upbringing in a military family, Bowden’s politically charged expressions evoke strong reactions by his audience.

Bowden’s prior success as a commercial artist is outweighed by his overwhelming interest in expanding his own fine art.  Bowden occupies a personal stylistic category and pushes the conventional boundaries of fine art. Within his method of juxtaposing words, abstractions, popping colors with super-realistic graphite drawings, he creates a new intense, lusciously heightened pictorial form. This process of rendering strengthens the severity of topics expressed. For example, the piece Manbomb, created in 2005, depicts the contrast between a graphite image of a 19th century woman and vividly colored phallic-shaped bombs. If observed closely, each bomb bears the name and face of political figures and their affiliations.  At the bottom of the image surrounding the woman, a manifesto is included stating Bowden's message, which is a feminist critique of warmongering political systems. Many other pieces include messages of anti-war, anti-colonialism and other politically charged topics.

The artists Bowden has been most influenced by are Hieronymus Bosch, Brueghel, and Dürer. He is also working in the vein of activist artists such as Sue Coe, George Grosz, and Käthe Kollwitz. As with other activist artists, Bowden's art is more motivated by his ideals than monetary compensation. When he was asked his incentive was for creating works, he answered, "Someday I might influence the world…on occasion."

There will be a public reception for Chuck Bowden on Saturday, October 2nd, from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m., during Eureka Main Street’s Arts Alive program.  HSU First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from noon to 5:00 p.m.  The gallery is located at 422 First Street in Eureka and admission is free to all. School groups are encouraged to call ahead to arrange tours. For more information call 707-443-6363.

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2011 Exhibitions: A Regional Holiday Exhibition

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Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present A Regional Holiday Exhibition, which will open on November 29th and will continue through December 23rd.  Featured in the show will be artwork by thirty-two artists from California's North Coast, who work in diverse styles and mediums.
  
The participating artists will display ceramics, works on paper, sculpture, and paintings.  “We're very excited to bring together these artists, many of them HSU alumni, during this holiday season," says First Street Gallery Director Jack Bentley. "This exhibition will remind those of us who live here, how fortunate we are to live in a community that is also the home of so many wonderful artists."

Of special note, the exhibition will emphasize works by regional artists who are working in the ceramic medium, creating sculpture and functional forms (such as vases). The wider art world has long recognized California's North Coast as a center of innovation in ceramic art, largely catalyzed by the artists teaching and employed at Humboldt State University.  Four of those artists, Scott North, Louis Marak, Keith Schneider and Nancy Frazier, will have works featured prominently in the gallery. 

Other participants include: Heather Cruce, Kit Davenport, Fern Diller, Jane Fusek, Jorden Goodspeed, Amy Granfield, Nina Groth, Ruth A. Jensen, David Jordan, Alyse LaVerne, Peggy Loudon, Cat McAdams, Julie McNeil, Justin Mitman, Jake Mondragon, Lush Newton, Terry Oats, Mike Pearce, Tsuya Pratt, Norman Scherfield, Rachel Schlueter, Stock Schlueter, Keith Schneider, Seth Simpson, Hannah Stills, Shannon Sullivan, David White, Sarah Whorf and Brian Woida.

A Regional Holiday Exhibition is produced by Humboldt State students. Students enrolled in the Art Museum and Gallery Practices Program participate in the daily management and planning of shows at the gallery.  The gallery provides real-life opportunities for the students to develop their gallery and museum skills, which in turn provides them with experience that will help them to enter the job market. Many students who have participated in the program have gone on to careers in museums and galleries throughout the nation. 

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2011 Exhibitions: Chroma: Paintings and Works on Paper by Tina Rousselot

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University’s First Street Gallery in Old Town, Eureka is presents ChromaPaintings and Works on Paper by Tina Rousselot. The exhibit will run from October 1 through November 6.

Tina Rousselot received her BFA from Cornell University and MFA from Columbia University. She studied in the College of Architecture as well as Fine Arts. After 30 years as an influential landscape architect in Northern New Mexico, Rousselot has rediscovered herself as a painter. She moved to Arcata, California 13 years ago where she became involved in the Honors Painting Program at Humboldt State University.  Formerly trained as a traditional representational artist, Rousselot has found a new artistic voice in abstract painting.

Inspired by a minimalist approach to painting and by her surroundings, Rousselot paints the chromatic essence of landscapes.  The elimination of referential forms erases chaos in her works, creating an essential impression of the landscape.  The colors in her work reflect her emotions as she explains, “I will respond to the color of the water as well as my feelings of that water.”  Her paintings also allude to the history of the landscape.

The collection of works titled Chroma relate directly to high saturation and vividness of color—which is primarily the overlying impression of the paintings. Rousselot creates glowing works by tapering the edges of uniquely shaped and sized canvases, allowing the hue to reflect off the paintings onto surrounding surfaces and between paintings placed close together.  She creates a luminous high chroma effect by applying thin layers of glazed oil paint on the canvas.  The layers mix the different hues, creating new combined hues, as they shine through each other.

Inspired by her audience, Rousselot enjoys having the response of other people and believes that, “It’s wonderful to have that community to share your experience and artwork with.” She continues to push the envelope of her abilities as a painter and states that her work is a sum total of her experiences in life.

A reception for the artist will be held on Saturday, October 1st from 6-9 p.m. during Eureka’s monthly Arts Alive event.  Celebrating its fourteenth year of service to HSU students and to the North Coast community, Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from 12 to 5 p.m. and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California. Admission is free. Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead.  For more information call 707-443-6363.

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2011 Exhibitions: e·las·tic: emerging alumni artists

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Humboldt State University First Street Gallery presentse·las·tic: emerging alumni artists, on exhibit from July 2nd through August 7th, 2011. The exhibition is billed by HSU First Street Gallery as a clear demonstration of the excellent career preparation that Humboldt State University offers its Art Majors.

Art is one of the highest enrolled majors at the HSU campus. HSU’s  Art Department offers classes with 24 full and part-time instructors, multiple, well equipped studio facilities and several campus showcases that enable undergraduates to enjoy an early experience of presenting their works to the public. Additionally, students enrolled in the Art Department’s Museum and Gallery Practices Program gain practical, hands-on experience as they design, coordinate and curate exhibits at HSU First Street Gallery. This summer’s alumni exhibition is curated and prepared by student gallery assistants Courtney Cross, Heather Cruce, Erin Grady, and Malia Penhall.

“The alumni participating in this show have all developed to a point where they are working at a professional level as artists,” states First Street Gallery Director Jack Bentley.  “All 28 participants demonstrate real evidence of artistic success.  Crucial to their success, however, are the less tangible qualities they all share—a dedication and commitment to making art as a way of life and a deep engagement with their work on poetic and intellectual levels.”

Participating artists include: Crystal Barr, Lindsey Behr, Michael Batty, Seana Burden, Edgar Burgara, Nancy Cervantes, Courtney Cross, Heather Cruce, Hollie Dilley, Mike Emerson, Chelsea Frazier, Kacy Gantly, Jorden Goodspeed, Becky Grant, April Rainbow Hoffman, Karissa Harvey, Joey Hiller, Sam Kirby, Kayla Johnson, Michael Lawler, Mary Luong, Matt Molen, Jon Lynn McCallum, Malia Penhall, Halley Roberts, Abel Raola, Justin Skillstad and Wesley Wright

There will be a public reception for the artists on Saturday, July 2nd, from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m., during Eureka Main Street’s Arts Alive program.  HSU First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from noon to 5:00 p.m.  The gallery is located at 422 First Street in Eureka and admission is free to all. School groups are encouraged to call ahead to arrange tours.  For more information call 707-443-6363.

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2011 Exhibitions: Faculty and Staff Exhibition

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A faculty and staff exhibition showcasing the talent of the artists who teach and work in Humboldt State University’s Art Department will be featured at Humboldt State University First Street Gallery in Old Town, Eureka, California.  The exhibit will run from August 23 through September 18.  

“The students benefit greatly from the broad and diverse artistic backgrounds of the staff and faculty of the H.S.U Art Department,” commented Jack Bentley, Director of the First Street Gallery. “This exhibition demonstrates how Humboldt State’s Art Department provides students with practical, living models of individual success in the art world, while providing them with the critical abilities to understand and interpret a variety of practices in the visual arts.”

This particular exhibition will give students and the public an opportunity to see how the instructors at H.S.U. approach their own art, outside of the classroom. “We have a very talented and productive faculty who are as dedicated to teaching as they are to their professional careers as artists. They serve as an inspiration to their students as role-models of working artists who teach,” states Teresa Stanley, the HSU Art Department chairperson.

The public will be introduced to a wide range of themes and styles, which include works in ceramics, drawing, graphic design, jewelry, metalsmithing, painting, photography and printmaking and sculpture.

The gallery will also exhibit pieces by some former professors.  Bentley cites the inclusion of these artists in the show as a way to demonstrate the depth and the evolution of the Art Department.  

A reception for the artists will be held on Saturday, September 3rd from 6-9 p.m. during Eureka’s monthly Arts Alive event.  Celebrating its fourteenth year of service to HSU students and to the North Coast community, Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from 12 to 5 p.m. and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California. Admission is free. Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead.  For more information call  707-443-6363.

Participating artists are:

  • Don Gregorio Antón
  • JoAnne Berke
  • Denton Crawford
  • Mimi Dojka
  • Rick Evans
  • Ricardo Febré
  • Nicole Jean Hill
  • Jeff Hunter
  • Vaughn Hutchins
  • Mimi LaPlant
  • Demetrios Mitsanas
  • James Moore
  • M. Sanderson Morgan
  • Kris Patzlaff
  • Joan Rosko
  • Keith Schneider
  • Sondra Schwetman
  • Jennifer Slye-Moore
  • Teresa Stanley
  • Eric Tillinghast
  • Lien Truong
  • Erin Whitman
  • Sarah Whorf

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2011 Exhibitions: Narrative Drift: Recent Works by David Olivant

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present Narrative Drift: Recent Works by David Olivant, on exhibit from February 1st through March 6th, 2011. This show will feature mixed media, two-dimensional and three-dimensional, new works by the artist David Olivant.  His work, which is fueled by mysticism and theoretical ideas of the unconscious, challenges traditional definitions of visual art. The artist’s fusion of bas-relief sculptures with vibrant pastel drawings create compelling and intriguing compositions.  His work portrays dramatic figures of people, animals and sometimes, mythic creatures, situated in dream-like landscapes and interior settings, evoking visceral emotional responses while revealing the broad spectrum of the human condition. 

David Olivant is an artist who possesses a particular skill for capturing fleeting images and emotions floating within humanity’s collective consciousness. His artwork engages the viewer in careful scrutiny of all the details that emerge from his pieces. His concepts are not visibly complete, which leaves viewers questioning, longing for more. Similar to dreaming, his work has layers of content that are deeper than we initially perceive. His work encourages the viewer to use their own imagination to provide meaning to the images before them. His approach has a flexible nature, so that we as viewers may have a more personal, introspective experience of the content.  One can sense in his work the feeling of excited discovery, which he experienced while creating and interacting with his art. 

"I use the interface between the illusory forms of the two dimensional picture surface and the sculptural forms that interact with it as the fulcrum for exploring the apparent attempts of archetypal figures to transcend their status as mental or illusory images," says Olivant. "It is my dream, possibly never to be realized, that the creation of such self-aware autonomous personalities, initially born from my own unconscious, might in its turn generate new worlds as each of these personalities appear to investigate his or her own unconscious and dream a new existence into being."

Born in Watford, England, Olivant received a B.A. from Falmouth School of Art in England and an M.A. in painting from the Royal College of Art, London. Olivant has been exhibiting his work worldwide for more than 20 years. His artwork is collected by various museums and art institutions internationally and he has been featured in numerous publications, including the Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and Art in America. Currently, he is a professor of art at California State University, Stanislaus.

Narrative Drift: Recent Works by David Olivant
 will be on exhibit from February 1st through March 6th. An opening reception for the artist will be held at HSU First Street Gallery on Saturday, February 5, from 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. The gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday noon to 5:00 p.m. and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California. Admission is free.  Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead at 707-443-6363. To learn more, visit www.humboldt.edu/first or link to the gallery’s Facebook icon in the menu on the left.

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2011 Exhibitions: Paintings by Leslie Kenneth Price

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Humboldt State University’s First Street Gallery in Old Town, Eureka is honored to present Paintings by Leslie Kenneth Price, a collection of artist Leslie Price’s recent work from his Enfold series. The exhibit will run from October 1 through November 6.

A retired Humboldt State University painting professor, Leslie Kenneth Price uses acrylic paint on birch panels to create layers and permeable planes of color, achieving a sense of space, balance, and imbalance. Price’s work appears effortless and spontaneous, but is a premeditated, and carefully planned out map of his inner thoughts.

Price’s work is deeply influenced by Buddhism and by his observations that the impermanence of nature is a metaphor for life. Zen meditation, which Price practices, is apparent in the conceptual content of his works. The subjects he uses are inspired by memories of objects in his daily observations. The shapes dance around the canvas, alluding to a sense of balance and imbalance, creating motion in the still painting. The series responds to a rhythmic composition, inspired in part by his relationship with Jazz and its improvisational qualities.

His paintings respond to living in the moment, the microscopic details of life that you can’t necessarily see, but can sense. The importance of observation and being in the moment is apparent in Price’s work. As he explains, “The trees, they’re still but I know there’s a vitality happening at the same time. There’s life happening. That makes sense to me as a metaphor for life. Wherever we look, there’s this vitality, a life force within us that’s active until we’re dead, but it’s something that’s going on—that you can’t see, but you sense it.”

Viewers will be able to sense the meditative qualities in his paintings and react in their own way to his work. As a former pupil of Price’s reflects, he sees in Price’s artwork “the release of attachment to a permanent reality, being in the moment while letting go of that moment.”  While the series of paintings are initially visually striking, time is necessary to appreciate the depth, meaning, and allusion of movement unique to each painting.

A reception for the artist will be held on Saturday, October 1st from 6-9 p.m. during Eureka’s monthly Arts Alive event.  Celebrating its fourteenth year of service to HSU students and to the North Coast community, Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is open Tuesday through Sunday from 12 to 5 p.m. and is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California. Admission is free. Those planning group tours are encouraged to call ahead.  For more information call 707-443-6363.

Paintings by Leslie Kenneth Price
by Brooke Benedix and Jennica Forrest

It takes a lifetime for an artist to ever be finished with a piece of art.  For an artist like Leslie Kenneth Price, he’s sensible when it comes to knowing that a painting can never be finished. If he feels that the composition, depth and color are in the right place, he can move on, but he accepts that every finished piece will always have a few loose ends that will act as a catalyst for the next piece.  Sensibility to Price is having a firm grip on his artistic motives without abandoning his intuitive, subconscious mind.  As an abstract painter, the only time Price ever hits an artistic block is when his heart is no longer in a piece.  For a piece to make sense to him, it has it feel right—to make sense.
 
As a child, Price recalls his earliest moments of art making while at a summer camp. Placed in an infirmary to control his asthma, Price longed to play with the other children he saw outside through his window.  An alternative to his boredom was sitting at a table and drawing, which became a lifelong practice from that time on. From a young age, Price looked to nature as the inspiration for his art. While growing up in the dense, urban South Bronx of New York, Price found quiet solitude in Van Cortlandt Park, which he considered his second home. When he wasn’t shoveling snow off the courts in the winter to play basketball with the other neighborhood kids, Price spent his time playing in the park, physically surrounding himself with nature and drawing it. His time in the park would come to serve as a metaphor for life.  Price remembers “Noticing and being amazed by weeds pushing up through the cracks of the sidewalk and causing the cement to crack more. It always seemed that there must be something more to all this.”

After attending the High School of the Arts in Manhattan and later earning an art degree at The Pratt Institute, Price made the decision to move to Oakland, California in 1971 to attend graduate school at Mills College.  Traveling cross-country on his BMW motorcycle with the East Coast blurring past him and drifting away, Price began to experience a certain psychological freedom by beginning a new life on the West Coast.

Shortly after arriving in the Bay Area, he began to delve deeply into Zen Meditation, which helped him find a sense of who he was during an uncertain time in his life. “I felt like I was this leaf blowing in the wind, like there was no me in there. I was a chameleon. I had a sense there had to be something else. It was always about getting to something essential about me.”  Price believes that his practice of Zen Meditation has a lot of overlap in his intuitive art making process.

One of his artistic concerns is addressing what is meaningful to him and using that as his inspiration when he paints.  Before beginning a piece Price will often look at maps of the area he inhabits, old photographs taken over the years or he goes on walks, all of which facilitates his creative mindset.  Price also finds inspiration in past masters of abstraction, in the works of artists such as DeKooning, Hoffman, Ad Reinhart, and Rauschenberg.  These mundane, daily acts of seeing inform his work. “I’ve always believed that if you input something, it’s going to shape you in some way. It’s going to manifest out.”
            
Price will title his pieces only when the work is finished. His titles have nothing specifically to do with the art he creates; instead they are reflections of his thoughts during the period of painting the piece. His inner dialogues provide inspiration for his titles depending on what is currently going on in his life.  A good example is his piece, Impermanence, which is influenced by the Buddhist concept regarding the aging process, the life cycle and the experience of loss.  For Price, impermanence signifies death, his children getting older and observing his garden.  The concept of impermanence is important to Price, and this work is reflective of its significance.  Price attests that his titles are like markers in time, each one documenting his thoughts and bringing back a specific memory.
            
It could be argued that Price’s intuitive and spontaneous skill of creating abstract works of art springs from his life-long appreciation of Jazz music.  Jazz is full of complex rhythms, melodies, harmonies, and improvisation, and one can postulate the visual equivalent in Price’s work.  He grew up listening to his father play saxophone in a Jazz band, and since early childhood has been influenced by the music’s artists and developments.  While painting, Price frequently makes artistic decisions in the moment rather than methodically planning each stroke of the brush out.  He explains that, “Improvisation makes Jazz unique and that quality takes on the appearance of abstraction in my paintings.”

Despite his love for Jazz music and the influence it has had on his art, Price claims that he is unable to listen to Jazz when he works because it tends to pull him out of the work. Instead, Price prefers to listen to Classical Baroque music which functions as contemplative background and doesn’t make such an intellectual demand on him as Jazz or songs with lyrics tend to do.  For Price, his focus must be on the subconscious space he is tapping into in order to mold the piece with his own individual influence.

Viewers of Leslie Price’s art have commented that they feel like they are seeing nature at a microscopic level.  Various shapes seem to morph before one’s eyes, completely idle at first glance but very much alive as one approaches the work, much like slides viewed under a microscope.  Price states that his goal in painting is for his pieces to appear still and simultaneously active to the viewer.  For instance, When Is Enough, one of his paintings from his Enfold series, contains much more than the biomorphic shapes and lines seen with a passing glance.  For the artist, his hope is that his paintings will engage people to look because his works are not intended to be a quick read for the viewer.  Price’s translucent layers entice viewers to take a closer look and lose themselves in the evocative space he has created.  When Is Enough reveals Price’s fascination with the natural world. Engaging with this painting is like being inside an all-encompassing flower.  Pink and brown cells float around, carrying all the potential in the world.  A huge, yellow stamen shoots up from the bottom right of the piece, perhaps reminiscent of his childhood memory of the weed in the sidewalk crack.  The brownish-green surface seems to vibrate with life, yet it has a very peaceful quality to it, which recalls Price’s Buddhist influence, leading the viewer to infer that Price is truly one with his art form.

The still life force of the natural world is Price’s metaphor for life. When Price steps out into his yard everyday, he observes the stillness of the trees and is aware that there is movement and growth occurring at a microscopic level that he can’t necessarily see, but can sense. “The trees, they’re still but I know there’s a vitality happening at the same time.  There’s life happening. That makes sense to me as a metaphor for life. Wherever we look, there’s this vitality, a life force within us that’s active until we’re dead, but it’s something that’s going on-- that you can’t see, yet you sense it—being quiet and being dynamic simultaneously.” Ultimately, this is the intention of Price’s paintings—to lure viewers to stop and quietly contemplate the stillness and the movement that occur simultaneously in his pieces. Price surprises himself at times when he sees a work and realizes that he is no longer simply looking at the work, but is instead deeply sensing it.

As a mature artist, Leslie Kenneth Price has an authentic and humble approach to art making that is truthful and identifies with his past and his philosophy of nature being the metaphor of his life.  His work expresses the process of movement that is the catalyst to change, which we can never see happening at the moment, only the accretion of effects over time.  Contemplating his work, a process of experience occurs that begins with seeing and understanding.  At any given moment, a viewer of Price’s work may realize that one is no longer just looking at the surface of a piece, but visually attempting to discover something within it, a longing to reach for an unknown that can’t seen but can nevertheless be sensed. It takes something more than just a glance to appreciate Leslie Kenneth Price’s paintings, there is a demand for the viewer to surrender one’s attention to the work and connect with it on a higher level.

This essay was jointly prepared by HSU students Brooke Benedix and Jennica Forrest, with editorial assistance by Erin Grady and  Kiersten Deacon.

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Third Street Gallery archive: 2011 Exhibitions: Seascapes: Paintings and Watercolors by Jim McVicker and Steve Porter

Third Street Gallery • -

Humboldt State University First Street Gallery is pleased to present Seascapes: Paintings and Watercolors by Jim McVicker and Steve Porter.  Produced and curated by the students in the Museum and Gallery Practices Program at Humboldt State University, the exhibition will run from March 31st through May 15th.

McVicker and Porter are longtime friends, brought together by a passion for nature and landscape painting.  This exhibition of new paintings seeks to illuminate the many aspects of the seascape surrounding the environs of Trinidad, California, from calm and meditative to the passionate intensity of the crashing waves.  These paintings contain a certain quality that reminds the viewer of deeper truths held in the rocks and in the water’s reflections.  Beauty, true and simple as the sea, is the objective of these two artists who have spent years observing Nature’s subtleties. 

In the 1970’s both McVicker and Porter separately moved from the over-crowded and overbuilt cityscapes of Southern California to Humboldt County, California, where they first met each other in the lush and resplendent haven of California’s North Coast.  Both artists were seeking a more introspective and meaningful existence by living closer to the natural world.  It was on California’s North Coast that McVicker and Porter found a wealth of inspiration in the diversity and beauty, which became the subject of many of their paintings.

The exhibition features paintings and watercolors, which often incorporate unconventional methods.  Porter and McVicker both paint with watercolors vertically, on an easel, unlike the more traditional method of painting flat.  Such an approach creates a dynamic feel to the paintings, since Porter and McVicker must work quickly and thickly to reduce dripping lines and to capture the ever-changing light.

McVicker’s style has been described as invigorating and effortless.  Through painting he pursues the exposition of atmosphere, form, light, and solid drawing.  In his work, McVicker seeks to express the “elusive spiritual energy, the mystery of nature and life, [and] the unknown.”  He believes without this sensitivity to the land, his work would “merely be marks on a surface.”  When McVicker settles on a location, he may work on five or six canvases at once, keeping a careful eye on the sun’s position. Describing his process in a recent interview, McVicker states that, “Years ago, I would work three and four hours on a landscape, but I’ve become so sensitive to the changing light that an hour and half is my limit now. This may mean working on a painting for as many as twenty-five sessions, returning to the same site, but the end result is worth the effort and patience.  When the painting conveys the emotion and essence of that first-hand experience, then it is complete."

Over the past three decades Porter has developed a unique approach to the landscape in both oil and watercolor, which has allowed him to achieve a balance of feeling and realism.  Porter emphasizes the importance of reflecting on a particular site from which he draws his inspira­tion, “They are moments in time [that] will never happen again”.  His interpretation of a landscape site lends itself greatly to an approach that seeks to unify his realist observations of the landscape with a strong foundation of design.  His approach allows his intuitive response to be seen in the design and depiction of what is essentially a transient and impermanent scene.  Porter’s landscapes incorporate a balance of reality, experience and feeling to render a fleeting scene into a poetic object.  “Watercolors are a favorite medium for me.  It’s a wild ride.  You never know where it will take you.”  In his continuous development as an artist, he has learned that something beautiful often blossoms out of a struggle.

Jim McVicker’s and Steve Porter’s longtime friendship has led to this strong collaborative exhibition of landscape painting in Trinidad, California.  In a sense, this exhibition is as much a portrait of a friendship as it is a depiction of landscape in which these two men dwell.

First Street Gallery is open to the public Tuesday through Sunday from 12 to 5 p.m. It is located at 422 First Street, Eureka, California. Admission is always free. School groups are encouraged to call ahead for tours. For more information, please call 707-443-6363. 

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