1. The Importance of a Lobster Telephone: Notes on The NW Surrealists Show at Dearborn Gallery
    December 5, 2012 by Walden3

    Leiv Fagereng “Time Out” 2009

    Programming this month at W3 has made for an inspiring nod to the powers of surrealist vision in contemporary thought. First, it is undeniable that the Pacific Northwest, for whatever reason, has become home to a disproportionately high concentration of surrealist artists. This is something I had seen sporadically through the art scene in the last couple of decades- from Vital 5’s “Sixpack” show in 2002 to Jason Puccinelli’s “Dazzle Camouflage” performance (for lack of a better word) at ConWorks in 2003, to Jeremy Mangan’s show recently at Linda Hodges and Kirsten Anderson’s vivd programming at Roq LaRue over the last 15 years. Maybe it’s the many months of inward-looking weather or the unlikely rockscapes of the Cascades, but the extended body of work gives testimony to a liberal embrace of the absurd and the impossible in the creative culture here.
    So, currently on display at the Dearborn Gallery are paintings and sculptures from 26 Northwest artists. Mangan’s photoreal paintings of canyons throwing parties, Leiv Fagereng’s immaculate landscapes filled with airborne pharmaceuticals, and Rich Lehl’s ectoplasm-conjuring professors are dazzling works as flawless in technique as they are absurd in concept. I witnessed so many instances of people leaving the gallery with bemused smirks on their faces, like they had just had some sort of whimsical catharsis, and there was one well-put-together man in an expensive suit who literally doubled over with laughter in front of a painting of an apparent fight between two unmanned Caterpillar construction machines. The notion of a gallery experience that could be so readily measured by the facial expressions and emotional outbursts of its patrons is something I’m more than a little bit proud of.
    But then there’s the DIY Surrealist sculpture workshop I sat in on, where Erin Shafkind had a throng of local middle school students making things in the corner of the gallery that answered the question “Why isn’t there a….?” A line of pedestals were topped with ice cream airplanes and crab shoes, and a wall bore sketches of an umbrella made out of battery-powered fans and a some sort of collapsible suitcase car. “It’s like a patent office in Neverland,” she said, while showing a young woman how to use a hot-glue gun to join what looked like an industrial slinky to a Frisbee.
    And I was fortunate to catch John Boylan’s lecture on the Denny stairs about the connection between figureheads of innovation like Nikolai Tesla and Steve Jobs and their art collections, which were all filled with works by artists like Rene Magritte and Dorothea Tanning.
    Can pushing the boundaries of creative thought in the painting studio inspire inventors, architects, and technologists to expand our limits of the possible? Maybe it was the strength of Boylan’s well-crafted parallels, but I left feeling like the world could use a few more lobster telephones out there…and from the looks of it, there’s plenty of evidence that there will be.

    “The imaginary is what tends to become real” – Andre Breton

    JD