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Friday, July 02, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M. Visual Arts By Sheila Farr
In honor of its new home (which is still being renovated) a group of CoCA-affiliated curators put together a group show called "Domicile: A Sense of Place." I like it. As usual for CoCA, the gallery is a bit chaotic and there's one video piece that wasn't working due to technical difficulties. But — hey — with a staff of one (director Don Hudgins) and perennially tight funding, CoCA seems to be doing its best just to keep the doors open. "Domicile" is a fresh blend of video and mixed-media, offbeat sculpture, paintings large and small, photography and techno-what-have-you, some from artists whose work is familiar: Robert Yoder, Brian Novatny, Minoru Ohira and Tom Gormally, among them. There are new names on the lineup, too: some showing for the first time.
In size and style, they're polar opposites from Kyung Jeon's naughty little gouache and graphite paintings of sex-charged girls and toys, but they all express the same sense of strained aloneness, one point of view appropriate to the theme "Domicile."
I should point out, however, that so far Trefsger hasn't shown the commitment of, say, Marina Abramovic, who spent 12 days without food, living on a platform at the Sean Kelly Gallery in New York. When I visited CoCA, Trefsger's unmade bed was there, but she was nowhere to be found. Sheila Farr: sfarr@seattletimes.com
Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company
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