Bill
Luchsinger and Karen Strohbeen
are the godfather and earth mother
of Iowa art. While prepping their
new show at Karolyn Sherwood Gallery,
Strohbeen reflected on how much
has changed for artists since
their first exhibition.
"When we started at Percival
Gallery there weren't many artists
in Des Moines and it wasn't a
livelihood for anybody. Now there
really is an art scene here, there
are lots of galleries and we make
our livings as artists, in Iowa.
It's really pretty amazing,"
she says.
Probably the state's most popular
artists, Luchsinger and Strohbeen
never fell into the trap of just
reproducing variations on a successful
template. Instead, they continually
experiment. Strohbeen even paid
respect in the new show to Richard
Kelley, with a series of triangles
evoking the Des Moines master.
The couple's new work is more
collaborative than before and
sometimes combines pure simplicity
with inconceivable complexity.
For instance, one series of single-line
drawings (Strohbeen's signature
methodology) of a rabbit evolves
into an image spiked by repetitive,
unrecognizable images of the hare,
manipulated through fractal-based
software by Luchsinger. He uses
an offbeat painting discipline
that is based on quantum mechanics
and recognizes infinite possibilities.
The result becomes a visual memory
puzzle. So, too, is a Luchsinger
series on poplar forests.
"They are planted for rapid
growth, to supply the world with
toilet paper," he says. That
look into his subjects' destiny
revealed some sardonic visual
puns, and a squeezably soft appreciation
for his sense of texture, created
in part by deconstructing the
trees' bark.
"Black and White Heads,"
a dazzling montage of Strohbeen
drawings, is a time-lapse metamorphosis,
from human to floral forms. "Dancing
Scratches" seamlessly blends
an African wrap skirt pattern
with adobe scratches and a meadow
of flowers. The couple collaborated
on several reflections on lisianthus,
from pure still life to deconstructions
of bouquets fallen on the floor.
The latter make the point of this
show - that a quantum universe
accommodates infinite error and
whim. Strohbeen said her personal
title for the exhibition was "Accidents
and Scratches."
Pimp notes
The "Old Bags Luncheon"
for the Boys and Girls Clubs of
Des Moines brings a high-end silent
auction to the Downtown Holiday
Inn, Dec. 8. Designer purses,
handbags and cases, some created
for the event by local and national
artists, raised over $60k at last
year's sold-out event. Reservations
($125) are essential: 262-5695...
Steve Gerberich's "Holiday
Tree" will be displayed on
the Waukee Triangle through New
Year's. The nationally prominent
mechanical artist has relocated
from New York City and hinted
to us about a major art development
in downtown Des Moines... "Still
Life w/PEACHES (and a little black
boy atop a spotted pony),"
at the Anderson Gallery until
Dec. 9, is a thoughtful undertaking
by Mitchell Squire. Complementing
his brilliant bullet hole exhibition
earlier this year, PEACHES uses
funeral trappings and manipulated
hair pieces to comment on racial
assimilation and the passage of
modes of thought... Absolute Art's
Photography Show runs through
Dec. 6 starring timeless Iowanna
by Bob Bergazyn and graceful nudity
by Jay and Marilyn Anderson...
Eric Wickes & Michael Lane's
"DaVinci Dress Code"
runs through December at The Lift...
Photography, the opening round
of SMASH Gallery's high school
art competition is on display.
Each of four disciplines will
be shown for three weeks. Then
winners return for one-person
shows. Deadlines: Drawing Jan.
4; Mixed Media Jan. 25. CV
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