VISUAL ARTS MARCH 11–17 Cynthia Lahti: Battle out in Kevin Kadar’s show, Portals and Puzzles , is the acrylic paint- ing Firewall . With its fl ame-licked, scorched-earth landscape, it looks like the unholy love child of James Lavadour, Alex Lilly and Hieronymus Bosch. In the back galleries hang Takahiko Hayashi’s impossibly intricate etchings and drawings on paper. The astonishing series of 12 pen drawings, collectively entitled In a Swirl of Many, Many Small Circles , shows a geometric cyclone of circles fl oating like snow- fl akes or fairy-dust. Through March 14. Froelick Gallery, 714 NW Davis St., 222-1142. On the heels of winning the 24th annual Bonnie Bronson Fellowship Award, Cynthia Lahti exhibits a suite of enigmatic and satisfying sculptural and photographic objects at PDX. In the past, Lahti’s idiosyncracies have occasionally veered into preciousness, but not in these works, which are at once witty and accessible. The top two-thirds of the digital print Bank , for example, shows a woman’s belly, pantyhose-clad groin and legs; the print’s bottom third shows a woman’s lips, chin and hair, but not her eyes. Like the eyeless female nudes painted by the late Pop artist Tom Wesselmann, Lahti’s image is denied the advantage of a window into the soul. Unlike Wesselmann’s objectifying paintings, Lahti’s work is neither smug nor salacious, but very, very smart. Through March 28. PDX Contemporary Art, 925 NW Flanders St., 222-0063. Lyric Truth: Paintings, Drawings and Embroideries by Rosemarie Beck If you were an “important” New York painter in the late 1940s and 1950s, you dutifully pledged allegiance to Abstract Expressionism and traf- fi cked in dollops, drizzles, smears and drips. Not so for Rosemarie Beck (1923-2003), subject of a rigorous exhibition at PSU organized by art historian Sue Taylor. In her mature work, Beck eschewed abstract state- ments, preferring to portray fl esh- and-blood human beings. Sometimes, as in the oil painting Two with Horse , her depictions were frankly sensual and erotic. She also drew inspiration from the myths of Classical antiquity, a predilection that was not exactly considered forward-thinking by her contemporaries. Still, she persevered not only in the medium of painting but also in drawing and embroidery. More information at rosemariebeckex- hibit2015.blogspot.com. Through May 3. Broadway Lobby Gallery at Portland State, Lincoln Hall, 1620 SW Park Ave. Dark Ecologies The fi rst thing you see when you walk into Bullseye’s three-artist show, Dark Ecologies , is Carolyn Hopkins’ beauti- ful and disturbing sculpture, Cascade . It depicts a strung-up dog with styl- ized entrails spilling out of its belly and looping over a tree limb. Glass beads link the dog to an eviscerated bird underneath it, which appears to leak blood into a red pool on the fl oor. This violent, virtuosic piece is left wide open to each viewer’s inter- pretation. Emily Nachison’s Diver is equally allusive, with its succession of oysters opening up to reveal crys- tals and geodes inside. Finally, Susan Harlan’s kiln-formed glass panels are diminutive masterpieces of exquisitely nuanced textures and wave forms in blue, beige, black and orange. Through March 28. Bullseye Projects, 300 NW 13th Ave., 227-0222. Nicholas Nixon: Hospice Patients Hedonic Reversal By now, the fetishization of urban decay (so-called “ruin porn”) has reached the point of ubiquity, if not outright obnoxiousness. In an intrigu- ing twist, artist Rodrigo Valenzuela has kicked the genre up into a “meta-” plane. In his suite of photographs enti- tled Hedonic Reversal , he’s created fake ruins in his studio, then taken pictures of them. So he’s not fetishiz- ing authentically derelict buildings; he’s critiquing the fetishization of der- elict buildings, and he’s doing so as an artist buttressed by the platform and aesthetic credibility aff orded by a gallery show. It’s a brain twister that Valenzuela leaves it to us as viewers to parse. Through April 4. Upfor Gallery, 929 NW Flanders St., 227-5111. Kevin Kadar and Takahiko Hayashi Froelick off ers a strong pairing of shows for February. A stand- PORTLAND GUIDES WW SMALL TABS WILLAMETTE WEEK 44 Portland Guides 2014 RESTAURANT Nicholas Nixon is best known for his series The Brown Sisters , for which he’s photographed his wife and her three sisters every year since 1975. He’s showing a diff erent body of work at Blue Sky this month, but one that also deals with the passage of time. In Hospice Patients , he trains his lens on people who are dying and their care- givers, friends and family. The patients are gaunt and careworn, but it’s their loved ones who seem to be having the roughest time. In the tender Maryann, Marianne, Madelon, and Elen Brinker, Wellesley, Massachusetts , an elderly woman lies in her bed at home, eyes closed, surrounded by onlookers. There is tacky wallpaper and kitschy furniture all around. There is a poin- settia. Three black dogs lie at the foot of the bed. It’s a scene of such comfortably mundane Americana, it seems almost incidental that a human being is living out her fi nal moments. It’s to Nixon’s credit that he brings us such intimate moments with such a deeply humane sense of restraint and respect. Through March 29. Blue Sky Gallery, 122 NW 8th Ave., 225-0210 . OF THE BEER GUIDE REVIEW MARIO GALLUCCI Rebecca Johnson: Barns = WW Pick. Highly recommended. By RICHARD SPEER. TO BE CONSIDERED FOR LISTINGS, submit show informa- tion—including opening and closing dates, gallery address and phone number—at least two weeks in advance to: Visual Arts, WW, 2220 NW Quimby St., Portland, OR 97210. Email: rspeer@wweek.com. Rebecca Johnson’s acrylic paint- ings of barns exude a quiet ele- gance. In the pieces Spring Ranch, Gable Roof Barn and Barn on a Hill Clarke Road , she renders the struc- tures with a cipher-like lack of aff ect. The barns look forlorn, sandwiched between fl at, green grass and an even fl atter blue sky. They don’t look so much like actual barns as they do Platonic ideals, fi ltered through some eerie Andrew Wyeth time warp. Heightening this ethereality is the fact that Johnson braces her paintings with wood salvaged from barns and other structures. These aren’t panels you pick up from Blick Art Materials; they’re relics with unique histories, which seem to bubble up into the paint above them. Through March 28. PDX Window Project, 925 NW Flanders St., 222-0063. To Feel What I Am Have social media aff ected our body language? That’s a big question, and in the exhibition To Feel What I Am , curators Eileen Isagon Skyers and Iris Williamson answer it obliquely and incompletely. Mostly that’s because Hap is a small space, and there are a whopping eight artists in the show. As a consequence, it feels too crowded with objects and ideas. The most suc- cessful piece visually is a short fi lm called Aquarium by Chicago-based artist Tobias Zehntner. It was shot underwater in a swimming pool, with the camera upside-down. The bathers, therefore, appear to be swimming upside-down, with their legs where we expect their heads to be. This is an extremely odd eff ect that you have to see to really appreciate. Does it have anything to do with social media? Damned if I know, but it’s cer- tainly cool to look at. Through March 28. Hap Gallery, 916 NW Flanders St., 444-7101. Words, Words, Words: An Exhibition of Text-based Artwork The relationships between text and image have given artists fodder for exploration for a long, long time. That’s what hieroglyphics were about, as well as illuminated manu- scripts, petroglyphs and the tradi- tions of Chinese, Japanese and Islamic calligraphy. It’s also what inspires the artists displaying their work in February and March at Elizabeth Leach Gallery. Jenny Holzer’s scroll- ing electronic messages have made her an international art star. Ditto for Ed Ruscha’s enigmatic words painted in typeset fonts across mountain and desert vistas. And then there are the text-and-map sculptures of U.K.- born, Ashland-based artist Matthew Picton. Picton, who used to show at Mark Woolley Gallery and Pulliam Deff enbaugh, joins Elizabeth Leach’s roster with this exhibition. Through March 28. Elizabeth Leach Gallery, 417 NW 9th Ave., 224-0521. For more Visual Arts listings, visit PNCA’S NEW DIGS Look closely for the schooner… First Thursday’s must-see destination for March was the brand-flippin’-new campus of Pacific Northwest College of Art, which crowns the North Park Blocks at 511 NW Broadway. Although the building’s name is an unwieldy 15 syllables—the Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Center for Art and Design—the structure itself is anything but. Portland architecture star Brad Cloepfi l of Allied Works has invigo- rated a century-old building with an ingenious redesign. Originally a post offi ce, then a federal building, the structure had been tackily ret- rofi tted over passing decades with cumbersome low ceilings and fl oor coverings, a labyrinthine layout and the kind of fluorescent-bulbed, government-meets-corporate aesthetic that calcifi es souls. Renovated and revivified by Allied Works, the building centers on a 2.5-story atrium ringed by thick metal cables, which drape diagonally like ropes tying a tall ship’s sails. In fact, the space as a whole feels like a cross between a schooner and a circus tent. Fitting given that anything as impractical as a fi ne-arts education may as well be a fl oating theater of the absurd sailing toward Atlantis. Beneath the atrium and surrounding the expansive commons, artworks stand, hang and hold forth, including a handsome debut exhibition, Gathering Autonomy: Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative, in the newly inaugurated 511 Gallery. On opening night, visitors’ chatter echoed into the skylights, mingling with ambient soundscapes from video installations. Those skylights are one of Cloepfi l’s most bracing touches; by day they fl ood the newly unearthed hardwoods and marble tiles in a luminous honey bath. The overall gestalt is quite grand, if a touch drab, with a color palette tending toward Calvin Klein ecru and eggshell. Chromatically, the space would benefit from, say, a juicy stripe painting by Tim Bavington or a sculpture of Jeff Koons shiny- metal variety, although such acquisitions would have shot the project’s already-spendy $34 million budget through those fortunate skylights. Lastly, let’s face it, PNCA’s new home needs a catchy nickname for its cumbersome formal moniker, something more imaginative than its address. Some are calling it the “511 Building.” Hmm…nautical meets circus. How about the Commodore Ringling? RICHARD SPEER. GO: The Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Center for Art and Design is at 511 NW Broadway, pnca.edu. 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