leannegoebel

Archive for June, 2008

Ephemeral BIENNIAL, Durango Herald, June 27, 2008

In Biennial, Santa Fe, contemporary art on June 27, 2008 at 11:32 am

‘Lucky Number Seven’ at SITE Santa Fe explores collaboration, energy

Nadine Robinson’s sculpture “Tri-Christus” is on the roof of the SITE Santa Fe building, where the show “Lucky Number Seven” will run through Jan. 4.

June 27, 2008

| Special to the Herald

“It’s not the outcome that’s important, it’s your intention,” Lance Fung said.

Fung is the curator of SITE Santa Fe’s seventh international biennial “Lucky Number Seven.” Unlike previous biennials at SITE, and those held around the world, this biennial is about process, experimentation, collaboration, communication and energy. It is a biennial about experience. Not about outcome.

Consequently, all work is temporary; it will exist only until the end of the exhibition. There was also a no-fabrication rule, requiring the artists to create their works by hand, not necessarily their own hands, but the hands of local artists, community members, volunteers and board members.

Fung partnered with 18 institutional partners and 19 curators to select 25 emerging artists from 16 countries for this biennial.

Typically, biennials are about art stars and collectors, about crowds and fancy parties. And while that element was not eliminated in “Lucky Number Seven,” Fung and his partners, in hopes of minimizing the spectacle, set parameters. All work is a new commission. All work is site-specific and made in Santa Fe.

Additionally, all artists received the same stipend of $7,500. Many artists donated their works and some took months off from their day jobs to make art that they know is not saleable.

“What I did not want to happen in this biennial was for works of art from this utopian process to then be pimped out and sold into the marketplace. I have no problem with collectors or anything like that, I think everyone should live with art, but what I’m not interested in is the spin, the promotion, the branding and the capitalization of the art that often happens in the art world,” Fung said to the Phoenix New Times.

This biennial will have no precious objects to end up in a gallery, museum or collector’s home. Bronze will be melted down and remade into something else, wood will be donated to Habitat for Humanity and plastic will be recycled.

It’s a utopian concept rooted in Fluxus (Latin for “to flow”), an art movement from the 1960s based on the concepts of composer John Cage. Fluxus valued simplicity over complexity and included a strong current of anti-commercialism favoring an artist-centered creative practice. Fluxus artists worked with whatever materials were at hand and often collaborated.

“Lucky Number Seven” is rooted in Fluxus and Fung’s notion of creating a community of artists not working in isolation, but coming together to collaborate.

Yet, there is still spectacle surrounding “Luck Number Seven.”

Dealers for many of these artists are already receiving phone calls from collectors looking to purchase work.

The opening weekend, last weekend, was filled with gala events with ticket prices ranging from $250-$25,000, the latter for a table at all of the weekend events. SITE was established to host a biennial, and the biennial allows for the raising of money required to run such an organization.

Many Santa Fe galleries were also cashing in on the weekend, hosting openings of exhibits by art stars like Jenny Holzer, whose iconic installation “Gallery D” from the 1990 Venice Biennale is a short walk across the street from SITE.

And in many ways collaboration creates spectacle.

Nora Naranjo Morse, Eliza Naranjo Morse and Rose B. Simpson’s familial collaboration (they are mother, daughter, niece) snakes, literally, through Santa Fe, hanging in trees and draping over buildings. “Story Line” is made from clay, willows, waddle, linseed oil, rice, nylon and thread. These Santa Clara Pueblo artists have woven their installation to interact with other installations. The most powerful aspect of the work is where it ends inside the SITE Santa Fe building and breaks into shards.

“Story Line” made from clay, willows, waddle, linseed oil, rice, nylon and thread by: Eliza Naranjo Morse, Born in 1980 in Española, New Mexico /Lives and works in Santa Fe, Nora Naranjo Morse, Born in 1953 in Española, New Mexico /Lives and works in Española, and Rose B. Simpson Born in 1983 in Santa Fe, New Mexico /Lives and works at Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico.

Japanese artist Hiroshi Fuji invited the community to participate in his installation “Kaeru.” Local artists created 23 toy sculptures at the Museum of International Fold Art and 30 plastic bottle sculptures hanging from the light poles at the Santa Fe Opera parking lot.

Above and left: Plastic water bottle sculptures commissioned by Hiroshi Fuji and executed by Santa Fe volunteers hang from light posts in the parking lot of the Santa Fe Opera. All the artwork featured in “Lucky Number Seven” is temporary and will be taken apart after the show.


The experience of viewing “Lucky Number Seven” requires more than just a visit to SITE Santa Fe. It requires a scavenger hunt for art strewn across the city. (Maps are available at SITE.)

Marti Anson from Spain brought part of a demolished flour mill from his hometown to New Mexico and reconstructed it in the Museum Hill Auxiliary Parking Lot.

“I carried out the whole project with my own hands, as an act of faith to save the heritage of my home town. I built a copy of the original flour mill, brick by brick. After the exhibition, the building will be handed over to the city to be used for any function other than being an artwork,” he writes in his artist’s statement.

Nick Mangan, an Australian artist who lives in Berlin, provided one of the most intriguing works called “A1 Southwest Stone,” a reconstructed archaeological dig at a building on Alto Street in a residential neighborhood.

Creating the dig provided the artist with “a way of gathering information about the local history and myths, sieving through some of the facts and fictions, upturning some of the dried mud.” The narrative is so well constructed that one is unaware what is real and what is fabricated, from the partial walls in the dug out trenches to the newspaper clippings on the wall.

The SITE building also provides an interactive experience, as architects Tod Williams and Billie Tsien have restructured the interior. A ramp winds through the building allowing for moments of wonder and magic, glimpses of art from above or through a cutout in a wall.

Short documentary films about each artist and her or his work play near the entrance. Because visitors have not had the same experience as the artists, curators, staff and volunteers, the documentaries are the most important works in the show because they integrate the audience into the process.

“My goal at SITE Santa Fe was to make a biennial that would touch and inspire the mainstream public as much as the art world,” Fung writes in the catalogue.

A lofty goal because the mainstream public mostly understands art when it is a precious object and an outcome.

If you go

“Lucky Number Seven,” SITE Santa Fe Biennial

1606 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, 87501

through Jan. 4, 2009

(505) 989-1199, sitesantafe.org.


artsjournalist@mac.com Leanne Goebel attended “Lucky Number Seven” as a project of the Creative Capital/Andy Warhol Foundation Arts’ Writers Grant Program. She is a freelance writer and curator in Pagosa Springs.

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Pagosa Arts Council Show a Step Up, Durango Herald, June 24, 2008

In Pagosa Springs, contemporary art on June 25, 2008 at 3:42 pm

“The Flock” by Lorraine Trenholm won first prize at the PSAC 5th Annual Juried Show

Review

Pagosa Springs Arts Council’s fifth annual Juried Art Exhibition, Tuesday-Sunday, noon-4 p.m., through July 8, 315 Hermosa Street (in Town Park), Pagosa Springs, 264-5020.

The Pagosa Springs Arts Council opened its fifth annual Juried Show on Thursday and took a giant leap forward in presenting itself as a viable arts organization in the region.

Juror and Assistant Professor at Fort Lewis College Chad Colby selected 21 works by 16 artists for the show from submissions of 49 works by 27 artists. Colby approached his juror duties with the same criteria he uses in the classroom critique. First, he evaluates creativity and craft. If the subject matter is commonplace, he asks if the artist is attempting to represent it in a way that is innovative. Is the artist adept at handling the material? And, is there poetry in the content?

Colby writes in his statement, which is elegantly posted in the gallery, “I did my best to select a show that has both high standards and creative diversity.”

Artists from Pagosa Springs, Durango, Bayfield and Ignacio, and as far away as Aurora, Fort Collins and Santa Fe, are included in the exhibition. And while, as in any juried show, there are hits and misses, overall the show does exactly what Colby set out to do.

The quality of the workmanship is good; there is some level of innovation, not on par with what is seen in cutting-edge contemporary art centers in New York, California or even Santa Fe, but for a small community arts center, run by volunteers and artists in Southwest Colorado, it’s a step up.

In fact, the presentation is professional and on par with local commercial centers such as Shy Rabbit Contemporary Arts. It’s clear that the staff, the board and the volunteers involved in putting this show together value art and artists.

The space is small and less than ideal, but the installation is clean and consistent, and only one wall seems a bit cramped. They could have shown one less painting. In fact, there are probably two or three works that don’t seem at the level of the other work in the show. But that typically happens as the juror is judging work based on digital images and when the work arrives, things are not as they seemed.

The real test of a show like this is what the juror selected – once all the work arrived and he was able to see it in person – to win the prizes. Colby judged the work blind, and arts council president Linda Echterhoff said he was familiar only with the work of one artist, former Fort Lewis College student Tirzah Camacho.

Echterhoff said Colby chose for first place “The Flock” by Durango artist Lorraine Trenholm for its whimsy, its strong cultural context and because it is a well-rendered pastel painting. Second place went to Pagosa Springs sculptor Rachel Leigh Alber for her steel and aluminum work called “Connection and Flow.” Third place went to another Pagosa Springs artist Pierre Mion for his masterful watercolor, “The Sentinel.”

“Chaise,” by Janice Lawrence of Fort Collins.

Other work of note that met his criteria and could have been prize-winning included: “Chaise,” a pastel by Janice Lawrence from Fort Collins. The painting is elegantly rendered, capturing light on a rattan chair. For me, this work was more than just the depiction of a chair in the late afternoon light; it captured a mood and a feeling, and provided a sense of story and poetry.

And as a fan of abstract work for its visceral quality, I liked Kay Harper Roberts’ “Triple X” clay mono print for its use of color and texture and Anthony Steventon’s palette knife oil painting “Flower Storm.”

artsjournalist@mac.comLeanne Goebel is a member of the International Association of Art Critics and a recipient of the 2008 Creative Capital/Andy Warhol Foundation Art Writer’s Grant.

Armory Expands, Adds Modern art dealers

In Art Fair on June 23, 2008 at 2:35 pm

The Armory Show will no longer be devoted exclusively to contemporary art. The Armory Show is expanding its current location at Pier 94 to include Pier 92. Pier 92 will be home to The Armory Show–Modern, dedicated to dealers specializing in Modern works.

According to The Armory press release: “The Armory Show is known for presenting works that come directly from artists’ studios, but expanding to Modern work opens the door to historically significant pieces. Modernism is generally known as the era of art beginning with Impressionism in the late 19th Century and extending through the Post-War years, which gives the fair a museum-like span.

Executive Director Katelijne De Backer says, “After ten years of tremendous success as a contemporary fair, we are ready to open our range to include Modern art. Visitors to The Armory Show will now have access not only to the newest trends in the art world, but also to the masterpieces that heralded these developments.”

Pier 92’s 30,000 square feet of exhibition space can accommodate some 70 new exhibitors, a significant addition to the 75,000 square feet and 160 exhibitors typically hosted in Pier 94, The Armory Show’s site for the past two years. Paul Morris, cofounder of The Armory Show, adds, “With The Armory Show’s expanded direction and VOLTA NY’s emphasis on emerging art, we now provide collectors unparalleled access to the most important artwork of the 20th and 21st centuries in New York, the heart of the art world.”

Application deadline for dealers is June 30, 2008
Applications can be found at http://www.thearmoryshow.com/application

SHOW DATES:

VIP Preview: Wednesday, March 4

Public Hours: Thursday, March 5 through Sunday, March 8

Piers 92 and 94

Twelfth Avenue at 55th Street, New York City

Theater takes center stage in Pagosa, Durango Herald, June 20, 2008

In Pagosa Springs, theatre on June 23, 2008 at 2:07 pm

Variety of genres featured during busy summer schedule

Actors Nick Hoenshell of Tyler, Texas, left, and Andrew Evans of Chica go, Ill., rehearse outdoors for the Square Top Repertory Theatre’s produc tion of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”
June 20, 2008

| Special to the Herald This summer, Pagosa Springs is filled with theatrical events. Whether audiences prefer professional repertory, melodrama dinner theater or a lively musical, it can all be found just an hour east of Durango.

Square Top Repertory Theatre presents Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” directed by the company’s Producer and Co-artistic Director Charlie Pepiton.

One of Shakespeare’s most beloved comedies, “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” blends love, mischief, spectacle and magic. This production blurs the line between fantasy and reality as the characters find themselves caught in a web of magic in the Athenian woods.

“This is a season of fantasy where we are blending blatant theatricality and the power of the imagination,” Pepiton said on Sunday.

Square Top has a unique style that comes from the inspiration of the very physically-based theater work of Anne Bogart and Jerzy Grotowski. Movement for this company is rooted in modern dance and improv. The company has a cast of seven professional actors culled from theater festivals and universities around the country. The cast comes from Second City in Chicago, Seattle, New Orleans and Texas.

And this company is not afraid to tackle difficult work. Each season, it produces an original or adapted world-premier production. This year, Co-artistic Director Shane Fuller has thrown caution aside and is producing a version of Cervantes’ “Don Quixote” set in a contemporary office cubicle where the ingenious gentleman from La Mancha battles his giants.

Pepiton said, “We figured if we’re going to go for broke why not do ‘Don Quixote’ and yell ‘Macbeth’ five times in the theater!”

Fantasy and imagination aren’t the only offerings this summer. The Springs Theatre Co. is producing its Summer Starlight Series at the Pavilion Tent on the grounds of the Harman Art Museum.

These chuck-wagon suppers and shows are fun for the whole family. In June, the production is “Dora the Beautiful Dishwasher,” a 1990s melodrama. In July, sit back and enjoy a 1940s radio variety hour featuring an episode of “Red Ryder and the Roaring River Renegades.” In August, the offering will be a second melodrama, “Foiled by an Innocent Maid.”

Doors open at 5:30 p.m. for dinner, which includes brisket, chicken or a vegetarian entrée, baked beans, coleslaw, peach cobbler, warm rolls, lemonade, coffee and water. Guests can tour the art museum featuring the work of Fred Harman Jr., the creator of the Red Ryder comic strip and one of the founding members of the Cowboy Artists of America.

They can also visit the historic Gomez Store, learn to square dance, play horseshoes and check out the Old West craftspeople.

If it’s musicals that get the toe tapping, don’t miss Music Boosters production of Lionel Bart’s “Oliver!” an adaptation of Charles Dickens’ classic tale.

Local students and residents fill out the cast of this delightful and spirit-lifting production. Music is always the highlight of a Music Boosters’ production, and its volunteer board includes music teachers from the area.

If you go:

Tickets for all Pagosa Springs theater productions are available on the Web sites for each company. Square Top Repertory Theatre is at square toptheatre.com or call 264-0264. Springs Theatre Co. is at springsthe atrecompany.org or call the Plaid Pony at 731-5262. Music Boosters is at pagosamusicboosters.org. Ticket prices are $8-$28.

• “Dora the Beautiful Dishwasher,” Springs Theatre Co., 5:30 p.m. today and Saturday, Pavilion Tent at Harman Art Museum.

• “Oliver!” Music Boosters, 7 p.m., July 3, 5, 6, 10, 11, 12, Pagosa Springs High School Auditorium.

• “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” Square Top Repertory Theatre, 7 p.m. July 10, 11, 12, 19, 24, 26, Aug. 2, Pagosa Springs Community Center.

• “Don Quixote,” Square Top Repertory Theatre, 7 p.m. July 17, 18, 19, 25, 31, and 2 p.m. Aug. 1, Pagosa Springs Community Center.

• “Red Ryder and the Roaring River Renegades,” Springs Theatre Co., 5:30 p.m., July 18, 19, 25, 26, Pavilion Tent at Harman Art Museum.

• ” Foiled by an Innocent Maid,” Springs Theatre Co., 5:30 p.m. Aug. 8, 9, 15, 16, Pavilion Tent at Harman Art Museum.

artsjournalist@mac.comLeanne Goebel is a freelance writer specializing in the arts. She lives in Pagosa Springs.

The Armory Show–Another Strong Year

In Art Fair on June 16, 2008 at 3:55 pm
Collector’s at the Armory Show

Yesterday, I posted an article on the PULSE Art Fair. The Armory Show is the most important American art fair and the largest fair held in New York that last weekend in March. There were ten art fairs that weekend and one would have to be a bit psychotic to attend them all if it’s even physically possible. It was all a bit surreal for me as it was the first time I attended one of these Art Fairs as a member of the media. Checking in with all the young writers from the fashion magazines and walking around with the editors of major art magazines made me feel a bit like Dorothy in Oz. This was definitely not Durango.

Roberta Smith wrote an excellent piece for the New York Times that ran on March 28, a few days after the press preview. Link to that article here.

Smith said that the Armory Show should have taken as their motto: “If you see anything interesting please let someone know immediately!”

Artist’s John Waters and Mary Heilmann at Armory Press Conference

The press conference featured Mary Heilmann and John Waters, who created limited edition prints to commemorate the 10th edition of the show. Waters 20″x 30″ C-print came in an edition of 45 + 15 APs and is a photograph of a sign that says: “Study ART for profit or hobby.” Heilmann’s Iris print is of an abstracted painters pallette dripping with white paint. The 35″ x 26″ print came in an edition of 45 + 20 APs. The prints started at $2,500 and benefitted the Pat Hearn and Colin de Land Cancer Foundation and the Pat Hearn and Colin de Land Acquisition Fund at the Museum of Modern Art.



The Armory Show was started by dealers de Land, Hearn and Matthew Marks in 1994 at The Gramercy International Contemporary Art Fair. Its early incarnation was hosted by the Gramercy Hotel.

“In the hotel, it was a great moment to discover artists,” dealer Paul Morris said.

Artists like Takashi Murakami and Tracey Emin were discovered during this period in the Armory’s history. Today the Armory Show is a major corporation.

According to Bloomberg.com “Chicago-based Merchandise Mart Properties Inc., a unit of New York’s Vornado, owns the Manhattan armory show, as well as Volta NY, a smaller fair running concurrently at 34th Street and 5th Avenue, across from the Empire State Building. Vornado also owns Art Chicago.

Merchandise Mart, which Vornado acquired from the Kennedy family, develops market buildings and mounts more than 300 trade and consumer shows, conventions, conferences and special events each year, according to its Web site.”

While many dealers were nervous and anxious about the economy, post reports from Armory on April 22, 2008 reported capacity crowds and strong sales. No word yet if they surpassed the staggering 2007 sales figure of $85 million dollars.

Sean Kelly Gallery sold every Rebecca Horn they could get their hands on and a large work by Joseph Kosuth priced at $275,000. Greenerg Van Doren Gallery reported having the best Armory show since they began exhibiting with the sale of a Katsura Funakoshi sculpture and a new painting by Sharon Ellis. Cheim & Read sold several Jenny Holtzer pieces priced from $300,0
00 to $400,000. First time exhibitor
Galerie Urs Meile, sold a Li Song painting for $160,000 and Art in General sold 21 of 25 editions of Glenn Ligon‘s Self Portrait at Nine Years Old.

Lines stretched for blocks as 52,000 were in attendance to view work by over 2,000 living artists from 160 galleries and nonprofit organizations around the world. Exhibitors came from 39 cities and 21 different countries.


A few works that caught my eye:

  • Andrea Bowers “Memorial to one of the largest urban farms in America” at Susanne Veilmetter Projects Los Angeles
  • Tony Cragg Untitled wood sculpture at Buchmann Galerie

Thousands of artists are represented at this show and the PULSE and several artist are repeated at nearly all ten art fairs. Hot commodities. Much of the work seems similar and after a while it all blends together in a mass of white walls and colorful blobs. There was more painting at the art fairs than at the Whitney Biennial, though Mary Heilmann did get a few paintings hung at the Whitney. But I was left with the question, what’s with the giant licorice shoes?

Highlights from the PULSE Art Fair, March 27-30, 2008

In Art Fair, contemporary art on June 15, 2008 at 6:35 pm


I’ve overly challenged myself to keep up with all the great trips and experiences I’ve been having since winning the Creative Capital | Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writer’s Grant. This last week the Affordable Art Fair hosted 70 galleries in New York, representing work from $100-$10,000. It brought to mind the amazing experience I had visiting New York this Spring and touring the Armory and PULSE art fairs. Armory was by far the premiere event, but PULSE was a thriving contemporary art marketplace that included new media, performing arts and large installations along with renowned international galleries representing hundreds of visual artists.

Licorice Shoes by Andy Yoder

The PULSE Art Fair at Pier 40 in New York’s West Village wrapped up a four day run on March 30, 2008. Attendance was the highest to date for the fair and included 12,000 major collectors, art professionals and critics (up from 9,500 in 2007). The 96 exhibitors representing more than 20 countries reported solid sales.

Large-scale photographs, digital prints and new media works were in high demand. New York’s P.P.O.W. sold a $50,000 woven photograph by Dinh Q. Le and Richard Levy Gallery of Albuquerque sold a $60,000 large photograph by In Sook Kim. Frankfurts gallerist Anita Beckers reported a complete sellout. Many works sold to museum trustees and board members. A Spanish foundation purchased Leonardo Drew’s large glass-vitrine and cast paper installation “Number 90” from Houston/San Antonio based Finesilver Gallery.

Gallerie Anita Beckers

Leonardo Drew’s “Number 90″

The PULSE Prize, a cash grant awarded to an emerging artist selected from those exhibiting in the IMPULSE section of the Fair went to painter Philip Gurrey of London’s Madder 139.

Here is some of the work that caught my eye or stood out amongst the barrage of art.

  • Loretta Lux, surreal portraits of childhood at Torch Gallery, Amsterdam
  • Wouter Druytter, Kodak Endura Archival Print, laminated, mounted on dibond at Torch Gallery, Amsterdam. Imagine my surprise to see these western cowboy photographs at a hip contemporary art fair in New York
  • Terry Rodgers, hyper-realism inkjet from Torch Gallery, Amsterdam
  • Brian McKee, photography at Galeria Ernst Hilger, Vienna
  • Zane Lewis, cut acrylic paintings of Brad & Angelina and Obama, Mixed Greens Gallery, Chelsea
  • Edward Burtynsky, “Silver Lake Operations #3” digital chromogenic print at Nicholas Metivier, Toronto
  • Michael Awad, digital choromogenic prints at Nicholas Metivier, Tornoto
  • Kim Keever, c prints of landscapes the artist builds in an aquarium then infuses with colored dye.
  • Hannah Bureau, “Passage” acrylic on canvas at Saatchi Online
  • Patte Loper, “Adaptive rather than normative” oil on paper at Lyons, Wier, Ortt
  • David Lefkowitz, Robert Standish, & Joy Episalla at Carrie Secrist Gallery in Chicago
  • Rainer Goss acrylic and oil twin paintings at Galerie Stefan Ropke, Cologne, Germany
  • Jennifer Burkley Vasher, installation “The Tylenol Room (Entitlement, The Past is Never Dead and Buried) Richard Levy Gallery, Albuquerque.

detail from Jennifer Burkley Vasher pill sculpture

Konnichihua: Bar D Wranglers play Japan, Durango Herald, June 6, 2008

In Country, Durango on June 8, 2008 at 8:15 pm

The Bar D Wranglers, from left, Joel Racheff, Levi Mullen, Cy Scarborough, Gary Cook and Matt Palmer at a temple in Kamakura, Japan, after their performance at a cherry blossom festival near Tokyo in April.

You can take the cowboy out of the country, but you can’t take the cowboy out of the Bar D Wranglers.

The Wranglers traveled to Japan in April at the invitation of Lynn Duncan Cooper, wife of U.S. Navy Captain Justin Cooper, commanding officer of Atsugi Naval Air Facility, which is located 20 miles outside Tokyo.

And who says high school reunions aren’t a good idea? Lynn Cooper went to high school in Farmington with Wrangler Joel Racheff. While visiting her ailing father in Aztec last summer, Cooper took her children to see the Bar D Wranglers perform their 40-year-old chuckwagon show. The classmates reunited, and after several months of naval logistical planning and a 13-hour flight to Tokyo, the Wranglers took the stage in front of an audience of 35,000 at a cherry blossom festival.

“They treated us like we were the Beatles,” said two-time national flat-pick guitar champion Gary Cook during an interview at Carver Brewing Co. on Tuesday. “They made us feel so at home.”

The band not only played the main festival, but it performed intimate living room concerts for pilots and their families from the USS Kitty Hawk.

Booked by the Morale, Welfare and Recreation Department from Atsugi, a bunch of cowboys in Japan seemed to be just the taste of home the naval officers and crew needed. And being guests of the commander and his wife allotted the Wranglers special treatment. They played golf, practiced their flying skills in an F-18 simulator (they all crashed), toured an air and equipment show, and were given a tour guide to take them to Mount Fuji and Kamakura, where they visited the great Buddha statue, temples and shrines.

The great Buddha is the second largest in Japan and was cast in 1252.

“On the inside, you could see the seams where they put the bronze together, but from the outside it is all smooth. It’s amazing how they built it without welding,” Racheff said.

It seems the Japanese citizens also enjoyed having some real western cowboys around.

“Everywhere we went, people would stop and take our picture. We dressed like we always do, in our jeans and boots and hats,” Cook said.

They were as shockingly noticeable as the Japanese girls dressed up like anime characters.

“The Japanese were quiet, humble and unobtrusive people. They smiled a lot. They wanted to help. They were very generous,” Racheff added.

The Wranglers were adventurous in their meals, trying everything from steamed octopus and octopus dumplings to sushi and sashimi. Though they admit they didn’t try sushi until they were at the airport waiting for their flight home.

Perhaps because it is a recognizable food, but Racheff went on about the Fuji apples.

“They were huge and pretty dang good,” he said. “They were expensive, $3 a piece, but the presentation was incredible. They were hand- wrapped and cradled in a little basket. It was like gift-wrap.”

The Wranglers marveled at the immaculate cleanliness of the cities they visited and the accuracy of the trains, the miniature size of the cars and how everything moved like clockwork.

“There is no trash. Everything is recycled,” Cook said.

The Bar D Wranglers have a worldwide reputation. People in the audience at the cherry blossom festival told the band they had been to Durango and the Chuckwagon. In fact, on Memorial Day weekend, a family visiting Durango brought greetings to the Wranglers from Japan.

“How great is it that we got to get on an airplane and go halfway around the world to sing cowboy songs?” Cook said.

artsjournalist@mac.comLeanne Goebel is a freelance writer specializing in the arts.

All in the paintings, Durango Herald, June 3, 2008

In Durango, Native American, painting on June 8, 2008 at 7:38 pm

Review

Rance Hood: Mystic Painter by Rance Hood and James J. Hester, University of New Mexico Press. 176 pages, 71 color plates, 138 color photos, 18 halftones, 1 line drawing, 1 map, $39.95 hardback. Collectors edition with an original drawing by Hood, signed by the artist and dated March 2008 are available at Rain Dance Gallery, 945 Main Ave., along with paintings and prints by Hood.

“Palo Duro Holocaust” is a mural painted at Comanche tribal headquarters of a battle where American soldiers burned the Comanche camps and killed more than 2,000 horses in Palo Duro Canyon near present day Amarillo, Texas.

“Coup Stick Song” (1980) originally a 40 by 30 in. watercolor and a lithograph in an edition of 1,500. This image was recently commissioned by the guitarist Carlos Santana and will appear on his new album.

Rance Hood has been considered the most successful Plains Indian artist for 40 years. Like R.C. Gorman, Hood was one of the first American Indian artists to market and control the distribution of his work.

James J. Hester, professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of Colorado, and co-author with Hood of Rance Hood: Mystic Painter , ranks the painter, along with Gorman and Fritz Scholder, as the three top American Indian artists.

The book has a simple and elegant layout. The foreword by John R. Rohner is well-written. Unfortunately, the introduction by Indian historian Joan Frederick and the biography by Hester add little to what is summarized by Rohner in a few pages.

Frederick seems to talk around what she really wants to say.

“Some tales, of course, are too wild for a dignified publication of this nature, so I will refrain from the whole truth, but suffice it to say, that Rance Hood is one in a million,” Frederick writes.

Hester’s writing is simplistic and formulaic. He has an annoying habit of ending each chapter with a sentence about what is in the next chapter. And the essay features more quotes and supplemental material by others than original narrative.

The book opens with the fascinating story of Hood’s childhood. The son of a white father and Comanche mother, Hood was raised by his maternal grandparents in Oklahoma. He grew up speaking Comanche before learning English. His grandfather taught him the peyote religion. His grandmother did beadwork and decorated buckskin with traditional tribal symbols.

Hester spends a scant three pages on this biographical story, choosing instead to write an anthropological essay focusing Chapter 2 on the history of Native American painting in Oklahoma and Chapter 3 on Comanche culture and history, including the peyote religion.

The most interesting parts of the book are the artist in his own words. These are found throughout and include a personal statement in the introductory pages, Chapter 6, which is Hood talking about his art and his heritage, and the 71 pages of color plates that include a comment from Hood about each work.

In his personal statement, Hood writes:

“Why do I paint what I paint? I paint for the old people and try to keep the old ways alive. I just want to be known as a good artist who remembers the old ways as they were long ago. I wish I lived in that period of time.”

Hood writes about medicine and magic, about the supernatural power given him by his grandfather, saying: “If the battle scenes are wild, it’s because I go back to be in the actual battles. I become a warrior of long ago.”

For Hood, a painting is merely a symbol of something that happens within, something influenced by voices and visions. A painting is a communication from the soul. And that’s all one needs to understand before flipping through the color plates and thumbnail catalog of work that includes early sketches and a significant number of Hood’s watercolor and acrylic paintings, lithographs and gicl`ees from 1960s through 2005.

For Hood it is simple: “My painting style explains itself,” he writes. “I am Comanche.”

artsjournalist@centurytel.net Leanne Goebel is a freelance arts journalist from Pagosa Springs.