For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
Now it's time to add two more: Of Place and Time..., at the William Havu Gallery in the Golden Triangle, and Francis Johansen, at Ron Judish Fine Arts, located in what is now officially known as the Highland Arts District.
For Of Place and Time..., gallery director Bill Havu put together four artists in a sprawling show that fills his entire gallery. All four are seen in depth.
The first is Jeremy Hillhouse, who is represented by a group of landscape-based abstractions installed in the first couple of spaces. The well-known Denver artist has been doing this kind of work for the past several years. His paintings look like abstractions but are really landscapes inspired by imaginary aerial views of rivers and their tributaries -- or are they? In a statement that accompanies this series, Hillhouse writes that the paintings "started out to be about rivers" but wound up being "focused on abstraction" and thus about the "beauty of paint."
Hillhouse was born in Colorado Springs in 1940. He graduated from Colorado College in 1962 and earned a master's degree from the renowned art department at the University of California at Davis in 1968. Returning to Colorado in the early 1970s, he began an almost thirty-year relationship with the Denver Art Museum, where he worked as an exhibition designer from 1972 until his retirement in 2000. During this time, he exhibited consistently if not frequently -- typically once every two years or so. Though his work has been seen in shows throughout the West, especially in California, New Mexico and Arizona, he's mostly displayed his pieces in Colorado venues.
In many of his paintings at Havu, the colors that define the river's course are almost garish; they've been arranged in a spectral or rainbow array, though the color field is a modulated light brown, which remains well within the earth-tone range. The four-part, monumental "prairie stream," an acrylic on canvas, is the most significant piece in the show. In it, the river line runs from one canvas to the next while changing color from blue to yellow to orange to red and back again.
Installed in the two spaces adjoining the Hillhouse section are several recent paintings by James McElhinney, a contemporary representational painter who moved here a few years ago from North Carolina to teach painting at the University of Colorado's Denver campus. A native of Philadelphia, McElhinney is a 1974 graduate of the Tyler School of Art at Temple University and has a 1976 MFA from the Yale University School of Art. He's shown in the area only a few times, but this is the second time a body of his work has been seen at Havu.
The McElhinney paintings fall into two clearly distinguishable types -- a sketchy and expressive style and a stilted, retro-nineteenth-century style. The former is made up of views of battlefields and massacre sites, with superimposed elements such as cursive writing and arrows used to explain them. The latter is a set of three pieces illustrating a painter in a landscape who is painting the landscape. (A third type of McElhinney painting, idiosyncratic realistic figure studies of the nude, fall stylistically between the other two. These aren't included in the show, but they're displayed on the storage racks under the loft and may be seen on request.)