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Arapahoe County DA Charges Death-Penalty Fees to the State
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Con Artist Gives Funny Cause for Pregnant Pause (7)
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Big Trouble (8)
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To the Max (5)
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The Magnet Mafia Sticks to Street Art (5)
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Meet the MasterMinds
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Colorado Clay 2008
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Double Take
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The Last Five Years
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Far and Wide
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Recent Articles By Michael Paglia
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Far and Wide
MCA Denver takes on Chinese Art, while the Lab looks at rural America.
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Parallel Pathways
Lakewood Heritage Center
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Now Showing
Capsule reviews of current exhibits
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More Big Beautiful Things
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New Frontier|Safety First
Plus Gallery
National Features
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Houston Press
"It Was Like an Armageddon Movie"
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Land Ho!
Colorado is looking good in this two-part landscape exhibit at Robischon and CVA.
By Michael Paglia
Published: August 16, 2007What constitutes Western art has been a hot topic among curators over the past twenty years. The answer is obvious when applied to material from the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, but it gets murkier and murkier after the 1930s.
What caused the confusion, of course, was the rise of modernism, with one formerly representational artist after another embracing surrealism, transcendentalism, cubo-regionalism and, ultimately, abstract expressionism. But other artists held steadfast to the pre-existing styles, including romanticism, realism and impressionism. This division created a split so that parallel Western art scenes developed essentially independent of one another. So are the traditional artists the ones who may be described as Western artists? Or are the contemporary artists the real McCoy? How about both?
Ann Daley, a curator of American art associated with the Institute of Western Art at the Denver Art Museum, has been on the forefront of dealing with this divide between old-fashioned and new-fangled. In curating the permanent collection display installed in the Western galleries on level two of the DAM's Frederic C. Hamilton Building, Daley defines the topic as encompassing both, and she includes the expected cowboy-and-Indian pieces, both old and new, as well as some unexpected things, such as a conceptual DVD by Bruce Nauman and politically charged photos by Robert Adams. She clearly believes in the have-your-cake-and-eat-it-too approach to defining Western art. For Daley, if the art is about the West — regardless of style —and/or the artist lives out West, then the work qualifies as Western art.
In the spring of 2006, Daley was contacted by Kay Fowler and Nancy Stem of Fresco Fine Art Publications and asked to select artists for inclusion in a book about Colorado landscape art. At the same time, I was offered a job writing short essays on the artists Daley picked. As at the Hamilton, her choices for this book are interesting and represent her ongoing attempt to forge a new understanding of the idea of what constitutes Western art. In this case, she believes that all Colorado landscapes are relevant to the topic regardless of whether they are contemporary or traditional.
The book led to a major two-part show, Landscapes of Colorado, that includes the same roster of artists but with different pieces than those published. As a result, the book does not act as a catalogue for the show, and Daley was not directly involved the exhibit other than providing the list of artists. The ball was then passed, and the resulting exhibit was jointly organized by Robischon Gallery and the Center for Visual Art. The complicated installation of more than a hundred pieces in two separate venues was ably carried out by Jennifer Doran and Debra Demosthenes from Robischon and Jennifer Garner and Cecily Cullen from CVA.
One of the most compelling aspects of their installation is the underlying narrative. It almost apes a history show, seeming to fall into an imaginary chronological order, even though everything in it is just a year or two old — or, in some cases, brand new. Landscapes of Colorado starts at the CVA and includes the most realistic pieces in the initial spaces. As we wind our way through the CVA, works in more and more progressive styles appear. By the time we get to Robischon, we're completely in the realm of contemporary art.
In one of the very first passages in the show are two paintings by Daniel Sprick that fully express the split between traditional and contemporary art: "Four Mile Creek" looks like it was done a century ago, while the other, "Corner Window" is very up-to-date. Comparing the two, it's easy to see how subtle the distinctions between traditional and contemporary are — yet how crucial. The difference, I think, is not just the subject matter, but also the self-conscious photographic quality of "Corner Window," which is so distinct from the naturalistic approach of "Four Mile Creek."
This same tension is evident in the next set of spaces, but contemporary art is still the overriding sensibility. This is partly due to the fact that the traditional paintings are mostly smaller easel-sized pieces while the contemporary works are sometimes very large.
Contemporary photo-related landscapes by Daniel Morper and Marsha Wooley carry the main wall, and there's a super-expressionistic version of a stand of aspens by David Foley adjacent to them. To the left is a wall hung salon-style, so that works by many traditional artists — including Len Chmiel and James Biggers — are clustered together.
In the group of spaces that run along the northwest side of CVA, the look is thoroughly contemporary thanks to paintings by Tracy and Sushe Felix, Joellyn Duesberry and Jeremy Hillhouse, along with photos by Mark Sink and Evan Anderman. At this point in the show, the landscape is no longer the subject of the works but is instead the inspiration, with the artists taking compositional and representational liberties with the scenery.
The show continues over at Robischon, but first there's a break in the form of a Karen Kitchel solo, Natural Order: Notes for an Opera, installed in the window spaces at the front of the gallery. Kitchel is one of the artists in Landscapes of Colorado — her pieces are hung across from the salon group — so although it's a digression, it's an apt and well-placed one.










