By Jim Duncan
Stephanie Brunia brings her performance photography display, including her own takes on classics, to the Des Moines Art Center through Aug. 7 |
Girls in white underwear: Highbrow or Lowbrow?
At a recent Des Moines Art Center (DMAC) lecture launching a Stephanie Brunia
exhibition, an audience member asked the artist what prizes her art had won.
DMAC curator Gilbert Vicario answered on behalf of the rather puzzled young
artist.
"
An exhibition in a major art museum is a significantly bigger prize than
any blue ribbon at any state fair or street fest," he said, as diplomatically
as possible.
The incident illustrated how highbrow and lowbrow cultures clash these days
in Des Moines. Vicario has played a significant role in that, bringing Leslie
Hall, the super diva of trailer jive and satirical rap, into the hallowed
confines of the DMAC last year. Brunia, still a graduate student at the University
of New Mexico, is his latest discovery. He first saw her dramatically lit
C prints of young girls mimicking Biblical scenes in white underwear at painter
Larassa Kabel's home. Kabel bought them at the 2009 Des Moines Art Festival,
the only street fest or fair in which Brunia ever participated. The prints
at DMAC comprise a series Brunia made on her grandfather's farm near Ames.
They include takes on classics like Leonardo‘s "The Last Supper," Michelangelo's "Pieta," and
John Everette Millais' "Ophelia."
She built the compositions one model at a time and stitched her compositions
together on her computer. Her "Last Supper" includes "all
the earthly delights and most of the seven deadly sins." Brunia described
her role as being "as much a performer as a photographer." For
instance, she obtained dramatic lighting effects by hand holding $10 flashlights
for 30-second exposures while keeping all props smothered in bug spray. While
her use of light recalls both Leonardo and the Dutch masters, these works
are more suggestive of the more controversial ads by Ralph Lauren and Benneton.
Brunia has become a source of pride for the Art Festival, elevating the aegis
of their emerging artists section. Her DMAC show runs through Aug. 7.
Photography also delights the eye at the Faulconer Gallery where Liz Steketee's "Family
Album" begins on June 24. The Bay Area artist uses photos "to rewrite
history from my vantage point." One panoramic shot of an ice cream parlor
in Michigan looks like it belongs in the Smithsonian. Steketee says she reconstructs
narratives in old photos, then prints them and ages these new photos to "reconstruct
memories, address old confrontations and face old demons." If that isn't
therapeutic enough, yoga classes will be taught in the gallery each Thursday
from June 30 – Aug. 18. Steketee will speak there Sept. 1.
At Moberg Gallery, John Phillip Davis confronts his "Nightmares and
Allegories" in large scale. The artist says this series of mostly 36
square foot canvasses is meant to discuss a single subject from a dualistic
point of view.
"
If you found someone in the rain crying, and you could not tell if the they
were really laughing or crying, you would need to think in other contexts… Nightmares
talk about slightly more specific focal points that energize us or make us
afraid or excited. Allegories talk more to subtlety, a self-narrative that
is personality bent," he explained. That show runs through July 9.
Olson - Larsen Galleries comforts us with dreamy summer landscapes. This
year's show adds two new artists to the popular trio of Gary Bowling, David
Gordinier and Betsy Margolius. Rod Massey uses the geometric distortions
of old fashioned Regionalism to personify houses and landscapes. British
artist Roger Towndrow draws exclusively with pencil, revealing "serial
and sequential" landscapes in flux. That exhibition continues through
July 16.
TJ and Jackie Moberg bought the Art Store's major assets and will move its
framing operations, and employees, to Ingersoll this summer as Moberg Framing.
The Mobergs also recently launched Moberg Editions, an online gallery selling
inexpensive art, and Moberg Consultations, a full service firm that directs
clients through all phases of art installation. CV






















