Painter David Freeman from the crew of Cirque Du Soleil picks up his work "Nautical Triangles." The final day for Trifecta Gallery was on a wet grey Friday. The last piece of art was packaged and ready to be picked up by the artist. Marty Walsh was standing by. Then she looked around and saw something else hanging on the bare white wall. It was her business license. The gallery owner walked over, took it off the all, and laid it on the coffee table. She then sat down to share some stories.
The Parade of Good--Byes Begins (with added links) I Paint This Desert
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Matthew Couper shared some Parisian street art. Oh yea, works by the Las Vegas based painter are on exhibition at “Au Pair” at Galerie Gimpel & Müller. LOCAL
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Adolfo Gonzalez I Photo: paintthisdesert.com FIELD NOTES: The working list of artists selected for ZAP 7 was presented Tuesday during Clark County Arts Committee's January meeting. The final 20 came from a “strong” field of 80 artists who applied to paint utility boxes along Maryland Parkway, according to Michael Ogilvie, Clark County Parks and Recreation Cultural Specialist. Artists will meet the public and present their design at the Cambridge Recreation Center February 27, 2015, The work begins March 27 and boxes will be completed in time for an April 24 dedication. THE ZAP 7 TWENTY: Abraham Abebe, Chris Bauder, Gig Depio, Shan Michael Evans, Salvador Jon Gascon, Adolfo Gonzalez, Tatiana Hantig, Su Limbert, Sush Machida, Melissa McGill, Krystal Ramirez, Lisa Rock, Sean Russell, Nanda Sharifpour, Lance Smith, Erin Stellmon, Holly Vaughn, Eric Vozzola, and Valentin Yordanov. The 20th selection will come from a group project from students in a Public Art Class at UNLV. OTHER FUTURE BUSINESS: The committee approved motions to be a liaison between local artists and County Departments for new projects, including creating public art in the expanded parking lot for the Welcome to Las Vegas sign on the Strip. Artists can also watch for notices to create public art on empty medians around the valley. Details for both these projects are pending. The Percent for the Arts Program - Art Committee meets every 4th Tuesday at 3:30 p.m. (except December) at Winchester Cultural Center. "Vaquero" by Luis Jiménez at McCarran International Airport entering Terminal 1 I Photo: PtD January 2014. “Vaquero” charged over a hill during the first wave of art programming at McCarran International Airport and now it’s a monument showing there is art history in Las Vegas. The sculpture by the late Luis Jimenéz, dated 1990, is a Mexican Cowboy on holding a pistol in the air riding a blue bucking horse. It’s only viewable driving into Terminal 1, and for now it can’t be seen at all. It’s wrapped in plastic while the surrounding hillside undergoes a xeriscaping. “Rest assured the plastic covering isn’t anything permanent. I don’t have a time frame for when the landscaping will be done, but I suspect that will wrap up before spring,” said Chris Jones, the public affairs and marketing manager for the airport. The sculpture has faded and the bonding is showing cracks from decades of guarding the airport entrance under the sun and birds. Restoring it and moving it to a more visible spot, like Terminal 3, where more people can see it, is one of the first goals of Michael Ogilvie, public art cultural specialist for Clark County. He found restorers who specialize in works by Jimenéz and lobbied to anyone at the airport who would listen, but any plans to restore “Vaquero” have been set aside. His update for the upcoming Clark County’s Percent for the Arts Program Art Committee will be brief. He can say upper management at the airport are aware of the condition and value “Vaquero,” know who can restore it, and that they were introduced to a spot in a terminal where is can be viewed and easier to maintain. The report will also say there’s no decision or commitment from the airport on restoration and relocation. “It was one of the first public art pieces that impacted me when I moved here fifteen years ago. I would often walk to the airport--when it was easy to walk to the airport--to take it in.” Ogilvi said. “I have heard much the same adoration of it from just about everyone in the community who has seen it. It would definitely benefit the community to have it restored to its original glory.” “It’s one of the most important pieces in the valley,” said Patrick Gaffey, Cultural Program Supervisor for Clark County. “And not many people see it.” The purchase of ‘Vaquero’ came from cultural guidance of the now defunct McCarran Airport Arts Advisory Committee, an ensemble that included Michael Saltman, Nancy Houssels, Elaine Wynn, Roger Thomas, Brent Thomson, Mark Andrews, and Mark Fine. “I saw ‘Vaquero’ at the Smithsonian, just before we were lucky enough to purchase this piece for the County and the airport,” Saltman said. “It tied in with the early movement of cowboys between the American Southwest and our neighbor to the South.” Besides the Smithsonian American Art Museum, a first cast of ‘Vaquero’ sits at Moody Park in Houston. The El Paso Museum of Art had one on loan and it’s since been sold and moved to Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art (the same Arkansas museum that selected Las Vegas artist Justin Favela to join “State of the Art: Discovering American Art Now”). Each one is painted with different colors. “Still, and even more, it resonates today with our population demographic. Although I doubt that most people who pass by even give this a second thought,” added Saltman. There’s more to ‘Vaquero’ than an anti-bronze statement on the equestrian as civic decoration, or gaucho machismo as the origin of the cowboy. Jimenez’ use of color came from watching the way light hit man-made materials in the desert. In his early years the artist straddled new and old worlds by being surrounded with the arrival of abstract expressionism, and studious visits to Mexico to bathe in how Mexican muralists approached and positioned art for the general public. Art historian John Yau wrote in 1994 that Jimenéz work “bridges and imaginatively restates three seemingly divergent currents in 20th Century American art,” the American regionalist movement of the 1930s, public murals and paintings of Latin American artists, and Pop art of Andy Warhol and Claes Oldenburg, with a "complex, nuanced style." Jimenéz’ work has also found favor from Latino art scholar Shifra M. Goldman, who championed David Alfaro Siquerios and advocated Latino art, and David Hickey, the provocative former Las Vegas art critic and pirate-in-residence. Jimenéz using fiberglass is a defiant stance to highbrow art and used it to craft brighter colors from the sun. It’s a connection to workmanlike materials he used as an apprenticeship to his father, a neon-sign shop owner who had signs up in midcentury Las Vegas. Before studying fine art, Jimenéz was an architecture student, so there was an advanced awareness of signage working a message. In many ways his education had the artist beginning to practice what Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown would later teach in “Learning From Las Vegas.” Even though ethnicity tradition of Chicano and folk art are there, labels that Jimenéz preferred to reject, he left behind something else to contemplate. The artist began in shop that produced small early neon signage and commercial sculpture for Las Vegas, and from that grew into works like “Vaquero” that says contemporary pop art isn’t a transplant to Las Vegas. It’s a native. "Vaquero" by Luis Jiménez I Photo: PtD January 2014. "Vaquero" by Luis Jiménez I Photo: PtD January 2014. "Vaquero" by Luis Jiménez in January 2015 I Photo courtesy Michael Ogilvie.
"Atomic Passages" (2009) are stars on sidewalks and benches benches credited to Atomic Industries and artists Danielle Kelly, Adam Morey, Aaron Sheppard, and Erin Stellmon. Casino Center Boulevard between Charleston Boulevard East Colorado Avenue. "What do you think is a symbol for Las Vegas?" That was a question I was asked by Richard Hooker, curator, artist, and the former senior cultural specialist for the City of Las Vegas who helped push public art forward. I had an answer. I've seen on sidewalks and signs. It’s that four-pointed star, I said. Hooker gently asked: “Do you mean the star with eight points?” He was referring to the red starburst Betty Willis used to top her 1959 “Welcome to Fabulous Las Vegas” sign. That’s undeniably a Las Vegas invention, but the design pedigree is from her childhood recall of a Los Angeles neon experience, and the flickering star was her nod to the promotion of happiness from Disney, an insider story recanted by the Las Vegas Weekly in 2008 (Disneyland had just opened in 1955). And yes, there is Vegas Vic, but the winking cowboy on Fremont Street is more of a downtown landmark. The four-pointed star is flourish with backstory and in a city of replicated landmarks curated details also have weight as symbols. Make an online search for “Atomic Starburst” and you may get a space race flashback that has a with eight light bursts. Eight is too busy, almost too generic. Consider the four-pointed star. That works. It is a also a throwback to atomic power and mid-century modern culture, and as a simple graphic it is a identifier to consider as a symbol of Las Vegas. It has been tested. In “Atomic Passages,” the city of Las Vegas first major investment in public art, where artists were matched with civil engineers and city planning, four-pointed stars are embedded in the sidewalk on Casino Center Drive as repeating constellations. Accompanying benches have backs that refer to desert geology as texture, and in the crevices of the rock scape are more painted stars, micro-sized emblems in minimalist form. The 1967 Stardust monolith used the star shape in coordinated clumps with naïve optimism about science. According to a recent tour at the Neon Museum, the hotel packaged atomic testing parties. Before the Stardust there were other four-pointed stars on earlier signs, like the Starlite Motel, built in 1963. The four point flare is more than a starburst in the night. On abandoned decaying signs with peeling paint, sockets with sparse leftover bulbs and faded color the blaze is affixed in a metal apex. The burst is still “seen” in the daytime off-hours, making the blink of manufactured light a Las Vegas parable, the illumination of settlement in western culture. This star is a cultural badge worn by a city that's always shining. "Atomic Passages" was funded by the city of Las Vegas Percent For the Arts program through the Las Vegas Arts Commission. Away from the Neon Boneyard are large sections of the Stardust sign in storage Four-point stars can be seen in the upper left corner of this graffiti piece in the 18b Arts District. All photos: Paint This Desert
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