Factor in a large Corrigan comic strip inspired by Portland's Occupy camp in Lincoln Park — in which the artist has buried a somewhat contentious discussion point in loosely translated Greek — and a line of guitar amps and pedals constructed by renaissance handyman-artist Ed Knisely, hand-painted by Corrigan as an upstart product line called Apohadion Effects, and this untitled, unpretentious show offers a lot about the current states of two of the city's most unique makers.

MIXED MEDIA WORKS by Pat Corrigan + Jennifer Gardiner | through Jan 31 | Mayo Street Arts, 10 Mayo St, Portland | 207.615.3609 | mayostreetarts.org

< prev  1  |  2  | 
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Mayo Street Arts
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY NICHOLAS SCHROEDER
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   SPENCER MCCALL’S BEWILDERING THE INSTITUTE  |  May 10, 2013
    Ostensibly, the first feature film by Spencer McCall seeks to provide a portrait of a San Francisco organization called the Jejune Institute, whose mission hovers somewhere between the poles of self-help, performance art, disinformation, and an alternate-reality game. But if this is a portrait, we're not in art class anymore.
  •   JAMES MARSHALL ESCAPES FLATNESS AT ICON  |  May 03, 2013
    In the first show of the season at the always engaging Icon Contemporary Art, James Marshall's collection of new works breathes life into the paper bag. Literally.
  •   DESIGNTEX STAFFERS STRUT THEIR STUFF AT SPACE  |  April 24, 2013
    "Surface Tension," the fantastic exhibit at SPACE Gallery, is a gorgeous set of oddities, surfaces, and structures, and issues a strong challenge to visual perception using remarkable techniques re-imagining the limits of texture, conception, and color.
  •   THE EYES HAVE IT  |  April 17, 2013
    The paradoxes in Brenda, the rock band of three (or sometimes four) members split geographically between Portland and New York, are hard to iron out.
  •   UNE’S WOMEN PIONEERS DEEPEN INQUIRY  |  April 04, 2013
    Third of four in the UNE Art Gallery's series of Maine Women Pioneers, the curators describe "Worldview" as an exhibit of artists "who are connected to their world . . . inspired by ethics, emotions, and existential holistic themes, as activists, healers, and visionaries." That's a definition with a pretty broad reach

 See all articles by: NICHOLAS SCHROEDER