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Nominate-best-2010

2009: Worth another look

The gallery highlights of 2009
By GREG COOK  |  December 22, 2009

 ART_PSYCHEDELIC_main
PSYCHEDELIC DREAMS Lyon’s “Sound and Light.”

The lousy economy hit home this year as Stairwell Gallery in Providence and Yes Gallery in Warren closed their doors. RISD Museum cut staff and director Hope Alswang was fired . . . I mean, suddenly resigned over undisclosed differences with president John Maeda. In November, beloved Coventry painter Maxwell Mays died. The charm of his Rhode Island landscapes, as seen at Providence Art Club in September, remind us why especially in gloomy times we turn to art. So here are the highlights of 2009.


• THINKING BIG
In August, Providence artist Michael Bizon, who recently decamped for Los Angeles, filled 5 Traverse with a wall of speakers the seemed like some altar to the gods of music. And he invited visitors on an art treasure hunt that ended at a curious woodland hermit art shack. It was just one of the wonders presented at the Providence gallery, which consistently presents solo shows of some of the finest art produced hereabouts, including this year Bizon, Lisa Perez's quiet biomorphic abstractions, and Scott Lapham's sensuous landscape photos. But in '09, 5T mapped major aspects of the local scene, from the digital art hoedown "Pixilerations" (which Maya Allison, who joined 5T as gallery director late last year, organizes), to "Book As a Post Modern Medium," charting the central place of artist books here, to "Collective Access," rounding up works from AS220's print shop. It's a sign of increasing ambition from the gallery, and perhaps for Rhode Island art.


• THRONE ROOM
"Marcel Breuer: Design and Architecture" at the RISD Museum was a striking retrospective of a 20th-century master. The highlight was a chorus line of Breuer's (1902-1981) famous chairs, from slinky molded plywood chaise lounges to his signature S-curve tubular steel chairs that still seem futuristic.

 ART_Hassenfeld_main
MARVELOUS Hassenfeld’s paper confections.

• SOLO ACT
The economy has left Brown University's Bell Gallery down a curator, but you wouldn't know it from the shows that director Jo-Ann Conklin presents on her own. Recent marvels range from Kirsten Hassenfeld's giant paper confections to RISD prof Rachel Berwick's tree full of orange copal ghosts of extinct passenger pigeons (through February 14).


• SEEING THINGS
Natalie Purkey and Haley O'Connor did many amazing things at Stairwell Gallery, but what we'll most miss while they transition from their Broadway space to independent curating is their gallery-transforming installations. Before Raphael Lyon left Providence for New York this year (come back!), he filled the darkened room with a hollow crystal tree trunk with a glowing, watching dragon eye floating inside, under a constellation of purple stars. It was a place of psychedelic dreams.


• REWIND
Gallery Z's "Video Art Exhibition" provided a primer on the genre in Providence since the '70s. Impressive in its scope, it also dared one of the large art institutions in town to more deeply plum Ocean State tech art.


• WIRED
C.W. Roelle's exhibit "Not Just Women In White Dresses" as AS220's Project Space featured his trademark old-timey scenes that also fool with our sense of depth. His art is a remarkable sleight of hand, bending simple black wire into something resembling pen drawings floating in thin air. Also notable at AS220 was RISD teacher Liz Collins's Doll Cave, which filled the gallery with knit spiderwebs encasing eerie baby dolls.

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  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Entertainment, Visual Arts, John Maeda,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REBOOT  |  January 26, 2010
    Portland artist Randy Regier's work is just beginning to be known, but he may be one of the best sculptors in the country.
  •   BEAUTIFUL GARBAGE  |  January 20, 2010
    "Trash" at AS220's Project Space (93 Mathewson Street, Providence, through January 29) focuses on our love-hate relationship with garbage
  •   WORKS IN PROGRESS  |  January 12, 2010
    Back in October, Minnesota photographer Alec Soth spoke at MassArt. "Facebook: 15 billion uploaded photos," he said. "At its busiest, 550,000 images each second being uploaded. So I've been struggling with that. How do I function as a photographer in that environment?"
  •   VISIONS OF HOPE  |  January 13, 2010
    Shannon Heuklom of Providence spent the past two summers helping at a rural clinic, serving some 2000 HIV-positive patients, that is run by the nonprofit Hope Through Health in the West African nation of Togo.
  •   MODERN TIMES  |  January 06, 2010
    Does Jen Mergel's appointment mean that the MFA is getting serious about contemporary art?

 See all articles by: GREG COOK

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