CoCA Digital Archive:

2010-2015

2010

Resident Alien

Exhibition Dates: March 11 - April 3, 2009
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Curator: David Francis Artists: Timea Tihanyi (Hungary), Sylwia Tur (Poland) , Ingrid Lahti (Finland), Iole Alessandrini (Italy), Anette Lusher (Germany), Evren Artiran (Turkey), Tobias Walter (Germany), Péppe (Holland), Paula Stokes (Ireland), Hanita Schwartz (Israel) and Simon Kogan (Russia).

  • A group exhibition focusing on local artists from Europe and the Mediterranean exploring issues of memory, history, immigration, and displacement. The show featured video, sculpture, book art, site-specific mixed media installation, and 2D works.

    These 10 artists have left their respective countries and cultures to make a home in the forests of the Pacific Northwest. Their relationship to history offers a fascinating contrast to an American past that "officially" extends up to 350 years ago, a fraction of the several thousand years that typically characterizes Europe and Asia Minor. Immigrating to America, is one really free of the past -- or does history somehow follow us to the ends of the earth? In a land of mediated images where nothing is outside the marketplace, what is the function of contemporary art? From Hungary to Holland, from Turkey to Germany, these artists have crisscrossed half the globe in the pursuit of such impossible questions.

    Added 06/18/2021

A full color catalog of the exhibition, created by former CoCA Publisher Ray C. Freeman, featuring an essay by former CoCA Curator David Francis and statements and bios for all artists is available for purchase from the CoCA Museum Store.

Becoming

Exhibition Dates: April 8, 2010 - May 8, 2010
Location: 6413 Seaview Avenue N.W., Shilshole Bay Beach Club
Artist: Gideon Kramer
Curator: Ray C. Freeman III

  • A visionary designer, artist, inventor, teacher, builder, lecturer, and businessman -- Seattle's Gideon Kramer was a true renaissance man. Long fascinated by the relationship between materials, technology, design, and function -- and given to flights of insightful socio-cultural and philosophical musings -- Kramer is recognized as one of the greatest industrial designers of our age. A graduate of the renowned engineering program at Chicago's Institute of Design, his achievements were myriad. Kramer devised the first truly ergonomic chair in 1946; began conceiving radically new truck designs in the early-1950s; started teaching Industrial Design at the University of Washington in 1957 and architecture workshops at the University of Oregon in 1960. In 1966 the American Institute of Architects (AIA) honored his "outstanding achievement in fine arts, allied professions, [and] craftsmanship in the industrial arts" by bestowing on him their coveted Industrial Arts Medal. Kramer penned essays for the AIA Journal, The Argus, The Arts, the World Institute Journal of the United Nations, and other industrial arts and design publications. A peer and friend to other Northwest architecture luminaries -- including Ibsen Nelsen (1919-2001) and Fred Bassetti (1917-2013), Kramer also contributed to the look of modern Seattle by designing some of the Aquarium's exhibits and preparing a guideline for exhibit development by the Museum of Flight. He also designed futuristic new offices for U.S. Plywood in Seattle and visually stunning cast-aluminum doors for the Scottish Rites Temple. In 1997 Kramer -- who played harmonica for fun and raised a large family along the way -- was again honored by the AIA who touted him as "the Northwest's closest kin to Buckminster Fuller." Gideon Kramer died on March 5, 2012. - excerpted from historylink.org

    Added 6/20/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including commentaries and other writings by Gideon Kramer and others, including background information and early articles, and Ray’s own reflections on how this show came to be, is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Essential Gestures

Exhibition Dates: February 11 - March 7, 2010
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Kate Vrijmoet
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • That Vrijmoet’s work is based in figurative portraiture is well represented by her charcoal drawings. Yet the artist’s radical project is immediately apparent in her “accident series” in which a single figure is in the process of a horrific (and usually grotesquely bloody) accident with a chainsaw, shotgun, axe or similar tools and weapons. Her handling of the paint matches the situation’s goriness – melting bodies tossing explosive splatters of blood. Often, her subjects seem not yet to be aware of the violence they have perpetrated on themselves: The viewer plays the role of the witness much as he might watch a horror movie – completely aware of the violence and agony that awaits the victim’s realization. - reviewer unknown

    That Vrijmoet’s work is based in figurative portraiture is well represented by her charcoal drawings. Yet the artist’s radical project is immediately apparent in her “accident series” in which a single figure is in the process of a horrific (and usually grotesquely bloody) accident with a chainsaw, shotgun, axe or similar tools and weapons. Her handling of the paint matches the situation’s goriness – melting bodies tossing explosive splatters of blood. Often, her subjects seem not yet to be aware of the violence they have perpetrated on themselves: The viewer plays the role of the witness much as he might watch a horror movie – completely aware of the violence and agony that awaits the victim’s realization. - reviewer unknown

    Featured Image: photo by Sarah Kane

    Added 06/20/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including essays by Joseph Roberts, Elatia Harris, and Daniel Kany, is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Excerpts from "Trophies of the American Home"

Exhibition Dates: Feb 11 - Mar 28, 2010
Location: CoCA Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay St.
Artist: Paul D. McKee
Curator: Darin Smith

  • Paul D. McKee received his MFA from Wichita State University in 2008. This exhibit is a variation of his thesis exhibition titled, Trophies of the American Home. He has transformed the CoCA Belltown Gallery into what, at first glance, appears to be an old-world Victorian living room but after closer inspection twists and becomes something more challenging and confrontational. Of this work Paul states, “I want the viewers to acknowledge the objects' existence- their histories, their contents and their connections to diverse perceptions of family, home and sanctuary. I want their personal stories and my own to establish common ground regardless of the viewer's upbringings, levels of tolerance or feelings about non-normative sexualities and spaces; I want them to use the work as a bridge between.”

    Featured Image: “Trophies of the American Home” by Paul D. McKee

    Added 04/06/2022

Across the Divide 2: Contemporary Art from Big Sky Country

Exhibition Dates: May 11 - June 5, 2010
Location: CoCA Belltown Gallery/ Shilshole Bay Beach Club
Curators: David Francis, Kevin Bell Artists: Lucy Capehart, Pamela Caughey, Michael Flynn, Sarahjess Hurt, Will Hutchinson, Lisa Jarrett, Steph Johnson, Anna Lemnitzer, Suzanne Lussier, Yaro Neils, Randi O'Brien, Cathryn Sugg, Nathan Tonning, Rebecca Weed.

  • CoCA is proud to partner with the University of Montana’s School of Art in bringing the first exhibition of Montana MFA candidates to Seattle, including 14 artists at various stages in their work exploring a wide range of media, including ceramics (internationally recognized program), drawing, painting, photography, mixed media installation, sculpture, printmaking, and video. The exhibit showcases the diversity of a vibrant program with an attention to objects, materials, processes, and interdisciplinary inquiry.

    CoCA’s “Across the Divide” series was started in 2009 in an effort to bring more contemporary art from the interior west and the “dry side” of the mountains to Seattle. As part of the project, CoCA staff flew to Missoula to engage the artists’ community before joining the road trip to deliver the artwork.

    Added 06/21/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including essays by David Francis and Anna Buxton is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

I RAN Home (In America)

Exhibition Dates: June 10 - July 5, 2010
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artists: Eric Robert Parnes, Hadieh Shafie, Taravet Talepasand, and Arien Valizadeh
Curators: Isabella Ellaheh Hughes and Barbara Petro Escobar

  • The Iranian art show “I RAN Home (in America)” is not about headscarves or hardships, but the work is heady nonetheless. The oft-milked A Flock of Seagulls-inspired title aside, curators Isabella Hughes and Barbara Petro, both of Iranian descent, have curated a thoughtful show with an eye for the ways in which young Iranians experience culture from East to West. Toward the West, there’s Eric Robert Parnes, who has turned religious symbols into blinged-out fashion statements, alongside a Farsi neon sign that translates “Sex, Drugs and Rock & Roll.” Pooneh Maghazehe, inspired by the famous “Beef: It’s What’s for Dinner” slogan, brands meats with an Islamic pattern as a comment on consumerism and identity. Eastward, you’ll find dreamy photographs by Hadieh Shafie, whose “Spin & Pari” series depict spirits and the spirituality of the dance of a Whirling Dervish.

    Featured Image: Eric Robert Parnes, “Starbucks”, acrylic on canvas, 25” x 15”, 2010

    Added 04/08/2022

Plakatief

Exhibition Dates: June 10 - July 5, 2010
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Pola Brändle
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • German artist, Pola Brändle, travels the world as a modern archeologist with her camera and discerning eye. She finds fascinating evidence of culture on decrepit billboards and ally walls. The permanence of her high gloss photographs printed on sleek aluminum provide a sharp contrast with her decaying subject: multiple layers and tattered fragments of art posters and advertisements, all evincing the vandalism of hand, weather and time.- Joseph Roberts

    Featured Image: Pola Brändle, "Argentinien", photographs

    Added 04/12/2022

CoCA Parks 2010

Exhibition Dates: June 25 - Sept 26, 2010 & July 10 - October 1, 2010
Location: Carkeek Park & Cougar Mountain Regional Wildlife Park
Curator: David Francis
Artists: (Carkeek) Ingrid Lahti, Piper O'Neill, Eden Rivers, Barbara De Pirro, Big Camera Group, Ken Turner, Miguel Edwards, John Henry Wooton IV, Anetter Lusher, Sylwia Tur, Julie Fisco, Julie Lindell, Brad Willner, ticktock Artists: (Cougar) Deby Harvey, Catherine Thompson, Bob Prowda, David Kitts, David Francis, Magdalena Hill, Kristine Eudey, Aaron Haba, Shirley Weibe, Shannon Durbin, Barbara De Pirro, Miguel Edwards, meadow starts with p, Anette Lusher, Ray C. Freeman III, Suzanne Tidwell, Sarah Savidge

  • Following a widely acclaimed debut in 2009 that received national attention, CoCA, Seattle Parks and Recreation, the Carkeek Park Advisory Council (CPAC), and the Associated Recreational Council (ARC) have partnered again to bring another exhibition of temporary, outdoor sculpture to Carkeek Park in northwest Seattle. As before, the theme concerns the natural world in a time of dramatic change. Some of the art is designed to weather in place and erode while other work incorporates movement and interactive use by visitors.

    In reviews by the Seattle Times, Ballard News Tribune, and Tacoma News Tribune, the 2009 exhibit was recognized for its unique combination of art in a wooded urban park, among the only such exhibitions in the country. While art in downtown parks is typical of many cities, only Seattle features art in the forest. As Michael Upchurch, writing for the Seattle Times, wrote, “the ‘show’ takes you through oddball corners of Carkeek Park with a sculpture-seeking intent that's surprisingly satisfying — no matter what you find.”

    Featured Image: In an attempt to keep the QR-based ID markers from traveling, CoCA applies these markers to heavy concrete blocks for the second year of the show. The effort was only partially successful.

    Added 06/21/2021

Double Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including essays by David Francis, Carkeek Park Naturalist Brian Gay, and King County Parks Project Program Manager Butch Lovelace is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

PRETTY | WHATEVER

Exhibition Dates: July 8 - August 7, 2010
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Leah Schrager
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • PRETTY WHATEVER is a collection of photo-poems (phoems) by Leah Schrager curated by Joseph Roberts. Leah is trained as a contemporary dancer and model and is currently living in New York City. These phoems have been created over the past year as an interpretation of Leah’s move from the Northwest to NYC, her studies of performance art, her forays into the world wide web, her travels, and her relationships with friends and lovers.

    Added 04/12/2022

Four Paintings

Exhibition Dates: July 17 - August 30, 2010
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Maria Frank Abrams
Curator: Matthew Kangas

  • Maria Frank Abrams: Four Paintings is an exhibition on the occasion of the publication of Burning Forest: The Art of Maria Frank Abrams. The long-time Mercer Island, Wash. resident, now 86, attended the University of Washington School of Art on a Hillel Foundation scholarship and arrived in Seattle three years after her release from a Nazi concentration camp in Germany in 1945. Born in Debrecen, Hungary, Abrams is an important part of postwar Northwest and American art history, won numerous awards, and had several important museum surveys of her work, including at the Seattle Art Museum and Nordic Heritage Museum in Ballard. Acclaimed for her beautiful landscape scenes of the Puget Sound area, Abrams has been overlooked as a transitional figure between the Northwest School (she studied privately with Tobey) and an emerging formalist modernism of the 1960s and 1970s. Developing her style over a period of years, she alternated between representational and abstract imagery and introduced photographic and collage elements into her later work.

    The four paintings Kangas has selected for the COCA exhibition present essential examples of her shifts from early and late imagery dealing with her experiences of the Holocaust and her attempts to suppress such memories through beautiful but often cloudy landscapes. In between, as the exhibit demonstrates, Abrams achieved a strict geometric style as well as moody scenes that may symbolize smoky skies in Poland and Germany filled with the detritus of the crematory ovens of Auschwitz and Bergen-Belsen where Abrams spent time as a prisoner and slave labor inmate.

    Featured Image: Maria Frank Abrams, “Faragó György”, Mixed media photo collage, 28.5" x 39.5", 2002 photo Richard Nicol

    Added 04/12/2022

Altered Photo

Exhibition Dates: August 12 - Sept 4, 2010
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artists: Sarai Givaty, Matthew Klein, Edward McHugh, John Schuh, Ray Schutte, Alexander Veith, Rebecca Woodward
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • An exhibition considering the question “what is an original” in this digital age. The work exhibited sought to illustrate various ways in which artists are manipulating photos to provide clues to aid future viewers in recognizing signature styles of particular artists, in verifying authenticity of a work and attributing it to a particular artist.

    A panel discussion, moderated by curator Joseph Roberts, convened to discuss the above issues plus the related questions of how an original can be distinguished from a fake; how does a digital artist protect her work; are there ways to protect the integrity of an edition, etc.

    Panel Discussion: August 12, 2010

    Moderator: Joseph Roberts

    Panel: David Ulrich, Paul Berger, Matthew Kangas

    Featured Image: Sarai Givaty: “paris viva la revolucion”, 34” x 34” digital print 2007 (detail)

    Added 04/06/2022

  • “In a groundbreaking exchange of art + ideas between recent BFA and MFA graduates, CoCA will showcase the work of 28 emerging artists form East and West coast schools including Rhode Island School of Design (RISD), University of Washington and Cornish.

    Participating artists are recent BFA and MFA graduates, and works presented span an array of media. The exhibition opens with an artist’s reception on Thursday, August 13th, 4-9pm at CoCA’s Ballard gallery and runs through September 11th. The opening reception will feature a panel discussion by members of the local arts community (including gallery directors, curators, collectors, art consultants, artists, and critics) on the opportunities and challenges confronting emerging artists today.”

    Featured Image: Enter/Exit (doorknob) by Gabriela Salazar, executed in milkpaint on gallery wall

    Added 06/21/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including a transcript of the August 13, 2009 Panel Discussion, is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Works on Paper

Exhibition Dates: Sept 16 - Oct 11, 2010
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artists: Wanda Pelayo and Shanti Geise
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • With additional work by: Frank Benson, Timothy Cross, Harold Cox, Lola Dale, Kristen Francis, Pamela Keeley, Claudia Fitch, Patricia Hagen, Dick Matthies, Kathleen Rabel, Jacques Roch, Lisa Sheets, Gary Wartzel.

    Various media techniques, including watercolor, oil & acrylic paint, color reduction woodblock print, drypoint, collage, mixed media, serigraph, cyanotype, and reverse glass monoprint.

    Featured Image: Wanda Pelayo, “100 Bones”, 68” X 48“, 100 mixed media works on paper presented on four 34” X 24” panels © 2005-09

    Added 04/12/2022

Bombs and Spears: Titillating Distractions During Times of War

Exhibition Dates: October 1 - 31, 2010
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Derin Smith

  • I remember the feeling I had in my stomach when Bush went to war with Iraq. As the war went on, I often wondered about the Iraqi civilians. How many tens of thousands were killed or wounded, or had their lives destroyed. Although at home, we seemed to hear more about a panty-less Britney Spears than the war. Not much has changed since then. Whether it is Britney or Lindsay or Paris or Snooki, we are still at war and we are still constantly confronted with superficial distractions.

    All paintings are 4 x 6 ft, oil on canvas, depicting a panty-less Britney Spears getting out of Paris Hilton's car. Bombs are 26 x 6 x 6 in, mixed media sculpture.

    Featured Image: Derin Smith, "Bombs and Spears", installation detail

    Added 04/12/2022

2010 CoCA Annual

Exhibition Dates: Dec 2 - Jan 1, 2011
Location: Pioneer Square / 1005 1st Ave, Globe Building
Guest Juror: Juan Alonso
Artists: Tereza Swanda, Laura Castellanos, Patti Shaw, Alma Leiva, Jillian Vento, Minh Carrico, David French, Douglas Gast, Sarah Gilber, Harold Hollingsworth, Philip Hua, Nia Michaels, Nate Orton, Scutt Shuldt, Garric Simonsen, Kate Sweeney

  • Memory Upgrade explores the ways in which artists have responded to the global financial crisis by changing various aspects of their work. Considered collectively, these artists hint at the heightened importance of memory, history, and the role of the artist to affect social change.

    Over 180 artists from across the county, Europe, and Australia submitted works for consideration. CoCA has presented the Annual since 1989, each time inviting an independent juror to select the work. For this year's 21st anniversary of the show, CoCA is proud to have Juan Alonso as juror.

    Over a career that spans 25 years, Alonso has received numerous grants, awards, and recognition from a wide variety of arts organization in the Seattle area, including the Behnke Foundation, PONCHO (2007 Artist of the Year), 4Culture, Mayors Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs, Artist Trust, Pratt Fine Arts Center, and Centrum. Born in Cuba in 1956, Alonso came to the Unites States at an early age, leaving behind his family to learn a new language in a foreign place.

    Featured Image: The 2010 CoCA annual was one of the the few shows at CoCA’s space at the Globe Building in Pioneer Square

    Added 06/21/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including remarks by Guest Juror Juan Alonso and bios and statements from the artists is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Second Nature

Installation Dates: Dec 6 - Jan 13, 2011
Location: Belltown Gallery /81 Clay Street
Artists: Antioch University students
Curator: Mary Coss, instructor

  • Featured Image: "Second Nature", interior view of gallery

    Added 04/12/2022

2011

Unveiled

Exhibition Dates: Jan 13 - Feb 6, 2011
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Chae Tongyull
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Recent paintings by Chae Tongyull. Although Chae has resided in Squim, WA for 20 years and exhibited widely in his native South Korea -including a November 2010 solo show at Indang Museum- this is his Seattle debut.

    • Parmenides spent his whole life observing the ever-changing moon.

    • What is the relationship between perception and truth?

    • Some moved the question further.

    • How does an observer affect the conflict between his internal perceptions and outside realities?

    • The difference between primitive and civilized is a degree of the distance between nature and dwelling, between outside and inside.

    • Privacy, the individual space, came into being during the Renaissance.

    • Where does my individual space fit within the whole?

    • Must the interior be controlled or let loose as nature?

    • Must the outside remain as is or should we seek to measure and control it?

    • In tackling these philosophical conflicts, a mere painting becomes a Greek drama.

    - Chae Tongyull

    Featured Image: Chae Tongyull, "Sunflowers, Nude and Nocturnal City" oil on canvas, 80" x 66", 2010

    Added 04/12/2022

oixio: cycle series

Exhibition Dates: January - March, 2011
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Seven Sauer
Curator: Derin Smith

  • Nine or so years of summers in bike shops and associated doings continue to eclipse all other influences on the makeup of my being. Perhaps the greatest beauty I have ever experienced was that found while riding in a pace line, inches ahead of my follower, and inches from my leader, all good friends, at forty miles an hour, on fantastically artful (mostly Italian) bicycles, and wearing finely-crafted and styled cycling clothing (likely from Italy, France, Belgium). Then with the right tail wind, add 5 miles per hour and the audible music of hand-sewn latex, silk, and rubber tires, aired to 120psi (and yes, from Italy). At that time around the early 1980s, nearly every bike racer rode a chromium-molybdenum steel framed bike with primarily Campagnolo parts, likely Cinelli stem and handlebars, perhaps a Sella Italia seat and Super Champion rims, with ideally, Clement Criterium Seta Extra tires. Those who had money might include some extra-special titanium bits from Campagnolo or light-weight specials from Zeus, and there were relative standards for a poorer man. Bicycle racing was largely a test of man against man, team against team, all relatively similarly equipped. I learned to fetishize these pieces of hardware for the joy that they brought to me in their beauty and function, and the unavoidable interrelationship of cycling, love and sexuality. Through my Cycle-Series set of sculptures, I celebrate my enduring passion for bikes and cycling, and my tribulations with cycles of passion, tying in a variety of other influences up to the present.

    Featured Image: Seven Sauer, "cycle series", installation view

    Added 04/12/2022

DIDiva and The Mirror Looks

Exhibition Dates: February 10 - March 3, 2011
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Lynn Schirmer
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • The pieces in DIDiva & The Mirror Looks make up a loose collection of recent works, some of which refer to formative scenes, others to more contemporary scenarios. What they have in common is that they are all snapshots of my internal reactions to particular events. The works are multi‐figured because I am a container of multiple reactions, not only in a metaphorical sense, but also in an FMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging) verifiable sense.

    I have a condition called Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID). My paintings and drawings visually describe the process and consequences of extreme dissociation.

    DID, or as it was formerly and most commonly known, Multiple Personality Disorder, (MPD) is the result of the repeated use of a defensive, disintegrated memory process, usually in response to repeated and/or severe trauma in early childhood. DID is a greatly misunderstood and overly sensationalized condition. In evidence of that fact I give you the most recent Hollywood abomination: The United States of Tara. Hollywood is always quick to exploit the anomalous and DID is particularly defenseless. The clinical community lies prone beneath political and social processes too complex to summarize in an artist statement (although a reductionist might label their driving force a criminal cover‐up) and the lay public is woefully under or misinformed. I have even seen editors of prestigious news outlets conflate DID with schizophrenia. These outrages are a few of the reasons I brought DIDiva to life, at least virtually. The Diva is an alter ego I adopted to help me do what little I could to combat the profligate stigma and misinformation surrounding the condition. Her main soapbox currently resides at the URL DIDiva.com, but she serves me well here too, as an ambassador, and perhaps interpreter.

    If The Diva had one thing to say in this venue, it would be for viewers to consider that they share their community with numerous other DIDivas and that in most cases, they would not possess the skill to detect this reality. Being informed then, is beneficial for all involved. For those who remain unmoved at this point, feel deprived or even ill‐used, go ahead and entertain yourselves. Count the personalities in my artwork; see if you can. I bet you can't. - Lynn Schirmer

    Featured Image: “It’s a Context”, acrylic and pastel on paper, 80” h x 144” w, 2010, Lynn Schirmer

    Added 04/06/2022

Recent Work

Exhibition Dates: April 11- May 15, 2011
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Juan Carlos Castellanos
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Cuban born Juan Carlos Castellanos paints quietly, privately and obsessively in Seattle. All of his paintings are the same size, all are on painted on the same paper with oil that may begin in many colors but always ends in faded hues of grey, beige and hints of yellow. The works are not titled. Neither is the show. He has no artist statement. Castellanos argues that poetry and mystery lie in saying nothing, in not knowing. He says "my work is not about definition; anything I have to say is said in the work".

    Featured Image: Juan Carlos Castellanos, oil on paper, 2011

    Added 04/12/2022

Hypnosis

Exhibition Dates: May 1 - June 26, 2011
Location: Belltown Gallery /81 Clay Street
Artist: Jim Neidhardt
Curator: Darin Smith

  • The power of suggestion reaches the unconscious mind and produces an involuntary response in each of us. The kinetic optical discs in this show tweak your vision. The designs are modifications of OP ART experiments from the past. They feature my versions of work by such artists as Duchamp and Vasarely. These artists found that what we perceive is often limited by what we are able to see. Come observe the moving patterns and see what can happen to you. - Jim Neidhardt

    Featured Image: From “Hypnosis” by Jim Neidhardt

    Added 04/06/2022

Digging

Exhibition Dates: June 9 - July 5, 2011
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Betsy Barnum
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Betsy Barnum’s figurative work is almost embarrassingly honest. She is her own muse -both physically and psychologically. Her fears, anxieties, obsessions and joys are as transparent as the layers of paper, pigment and graphite that comprise her palimpsest-like works. Digging into her psyche, Barnum chronicles aspects of her life by depicting herself in manners that evoke her thoughts and emotions de jour. Of course, in doing so, she chronicles aspects of our own lives as well. - Joseph Roberts

    Featured Image: Betsy Barnum, "Never Sleeps", acrylic, pencil & collage on paper, 32” x 28”, 2010

    Added 04/08/2022

Second Nature II

Exhibition Dates: June 11 - July 8, 2011.
Location: CoCA Georgetown Gallery - Seattle Design Center
Artist: Bret Lyon
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • As an artist I have always felt compelled to make use of my superfluities. In 2000, I began a series of work using scraps of eliminated items from the process of making art. These same items were then reintroduced into the process from which they were eliminated. Since then the series has grown into utilizing whatever scrap deemed appropriate. While my primary focus still concerns discarded art, it is now mixed with other donations from patrons. The combined result creates objects that are aesthetically pleasing or whimsical commentary. The limitations of the material and circumstances from which it came have always been a source of interest. These two elements serve as inspiration when developing a piece. The use of discarded material has always been second nature to me, whether it is in art or in life. It only seemed fitting to join my second nature with my art.”- Bret Lyon

    Featured Image: “Point to Point”, wood, bronze, aluminum, copper, steel, 25” x 38” x 9”, 2011, Bret Lyon, with Artist Reception, June 11, 2011

    Added 04/06/2022

Thai with an American Mind

Exhibition Dates: June 11- July 8, 2011.
Location: CoCA Georgetown Gallery - Seattle Design Center
Artist: Poncharee Kounpungchart
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • My photographs capture portraits of people during personal moments. I record humans interacting with humans. My shots are candid, capturing people seemingly unaware of the camera lens. I am at my best when I am alone with my camera walking the streets of whatever city I am in, whether Bangkok, Seattle, New York or Hanoi.

    I was born in Thailand and left there when I was nine. I have gone back there many times as a child. This last year, I went there as a woman with a husband, son and a child on the way. This trip changed me. While living in Bangkok and visiting family in my home town of Lopburi, I found myself lost among the Thai ways. After a time taking photos, observing as intently as only a camera lens allows, the Thai ways began to make sense.

    My photographs begin with Thai daily routines and end with the upsetting of these routines. The routines of a boy on his bike or a street vendor lifting noodles out of a pot are comforting in their daily occurrences. These photographs also show the opposite of daily routine. The government opposition Red Shirts, mostly people from the country, peacefully took over the downtown commercial core. Then the tanks moved in. I went out to photograph the mess, the bullet holes, and the Red Shirts telling stories of blood, death, and more injustice. To my amazement, after the Red Shirts dispersed, ordinary Bangkok citizens came out one weekend to clean up the streets and burnt buildings. Then everything went back to normal as if nothing happened and the routines continue. Truly a Thai way of doing things. - Poncharee

    Featured Image: “Heritage”, giclee print, 36” w x 48” h, 2010, Poncharee, with Artist Reception, June 11, 2011

    Added 04/06/2022

Limb From Limb

Exhibition Dates: July-September, 2011
Location: 5701 Sixth Avenue South - Seattle Design Center
Artist: Peppé (1940-2019)
Curators: David Francis & Ray C. Freeman III

  • From the catalog:

    When I first met him at CoCA in February, 2006, Peppé was in the early stages of “outing” himself as an artist: after working as a kind of monk, keeping his work to himself for 20 years, he’d created his own catalog of images (which he had with him that night) and website. In the five years since then, his work has changed and grown to encompass steel and public art. He’s gone away from hand-painting bamboo leaves, tackling some of the largest projects of his career. (The archetypal outsider, meanwhile, rarely changes the basic pattern of the work.) Already then he was also voraciously reading everything he could get his hands on and had an insider’s familiarity with the Seattle gallery scene. I’ll always be proud that Peppé chose CoCA and that CoCA helped him find the audience he was seeking. - David Francis

    This is not something you take lightly. Peppé has been working on this show for 32 years. This is the first time it has been seen anywhere. It’s not like you bring it in, have an opening, leave the lights on for three or four weeks, and then ask him to come and get it. It’s much bigger than that.

    Our occupancy at Seattle Design Center has always revolved around this show. We didn’t start with it, and we didn’t end with it, but it was the centerpiece. More than a month before this show opened, we moved Crocodile and Timber Forest into the fountain, and Dune into the Lobby at SDC. When we move out of the space where this show was originally staged at the end of September, 2011, we are leaving Peppé and his work behind, in his own showroom (268A). - Ray C. Freeman III

    As it turned out, after another year or so, Peppé followed us to our new gallery at the Seattle Design Center, as Artist-In-Residence, where a good portion of the exhibition remained for several more years. In the meanwhile, SDC exhibited the work elsewhere in the building, including in the public atrium, and a portion of the show was exhibited at the Columbia Center Tower Club’s Annual Art Event.

    Featured Image: Limb By Limb Installation Image photo by Miguel Edwards

    Added 06/21/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including remarks by Ray C. Freeman III and David Francis, together with additional work by the artist is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Cycles of Return: Heaven and Earth III

Exhibition Dates: July 9 - October 9, 2011
Location: Carkeek Park and Point Shilshole Beach
Curator: David Francis
Artists: Anette Lusher, Thendara Kida Gee, Chris Papa, Barbara De Pirro, Gabriel Brown, Aaron Haba, April Lelia, Brian Gerich, Miguel Edwards, By Hand Fiber Consortium, Reginald Brooks, Stephen Rock, Zucker Turner Jacobson, Peppé, Julie Lindell, Matt Babcock, Eden Rivers, Teresa Burrelsman, Dan Smith, Sylwia Tur, David Francis

  • With additional funding from 4Culture’s Site Specific program and the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs, the Heaven and Earth outdoor artwork exhibit returns for a third year with an expanded roster of artists. In addition to Carkeek Park, a satellite of the show explores the Puget Sound marine environment at Point Shilshole Beach in Ballard. Seattle Parks and Recreation estimated that 150,000 people visited Carkeek Park during the display period last summer. The exhibition this year features 21 artists with 20-25 artworks located throughout the park and 10 more at Point Shilshole. A walking tour of the Carkeek portion of the exhibit takes about an hour and a half, but some work can be seen in much less time, including a variety of work visible from the access road.

    In reviews by the Seattle Times, City Arts, The Art of Science, REI Blog, and the Seattle Weekly, the 2010 exhibition was recognized for its unique combination of art in a wooded urban park, among the only such exhibitions in the country. While art in downtown parks is typical of many cities, only Seattle features art in the forest. As Michael Upchurch, writing for the Seattle Times, wrote, “(t)here's a hide-and-seek aspect to finding the artworks as you walk the park trails, and one side effect is that you wind up looking at natural phenomena with an ‘aesthetic’ eye.” Like the two previous incarnations, this year’s show is sure to “slow you down, draw you in and sharpen your eye.”

    Featured Image: A group of students walking Aaron Haba’s Undercurrent at Cycles of Return during a school visit

    Added 06/21/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III including remarks by Curator David Francis, Artist Dan Smith, and Park Naturalist Brian Gay, together with statements by the artists at the CoCA Museum Store.

(Un)Sanctioned: 13 Pacific NW Contemporary Urban Artists

Exhibition Dates: Aug 13 - Sept 13, 2011
Location: Seattle Design Center / 5701 Sixth Ave S.
Organized by: CoCA and Bherd Studios
Curators: Jodie Nelson (CoCA), Michele Osgood (Bherd)
Artists: ksera, John Osgood, Sneke One, Jesse Link, hera, Duffy, David Joel, CASH, Carlos Aguilar, Zachary Bohnenkamp, 179, Parskid, Jesse Edwards, Few and Far

  • CoCA and Bherd Studios are collaborating to bring attention to Pacific Northwest urban contemporary artists creating sanctioned murals and/or ephemeral work in public urban environments. (Un)Sanctioned will educate viewers about a commonly misunderstood and perceived "outsider" art community and begin a conversation about the controversial nature of street art. The show will also celebrate the diversity of the unique PNW street style aesthetic which tends towards a cooler color palette utilizing greens and blues; often incorporating natural elements indigenous to our area; and also giving nods to Native American line form drawing and Asian pop culture.

    There were three elements to the exhibition:

    1. A collaborative sanctioned mural painting on location at Sandbox Sports, 5955 Airport Way South on Sunday, August 6, 2011. Many of the artists participated.

    2. A ‘tag wall’ was set up in the parking lot for freestyle work, and was later dismantled, cut into 2’ squares, and presented and sold during the exhibition.

    3. An exhibition at CoCA’s Georgetown gallery, featuring ‘studio’ work from each artist, in addition to the subdivided freestyle tag wall.

    Featured Image: The collaborative mural shortly after completion

    Added 06/22/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III in collaboration with the artists is available at the CoCA Museum Store.

Sanctum

Exhibition Dates: July 7 - August 31, 2011
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Francis Donovan
Curator: Derin Smith

  • This exhibit, “Sanctum,” uses a unique space, surrounded by a mass of concrete, steel, and glass, to create a sacred and private place. These wooden sculptures use a natural medium to capture the fullness of humanity. Come visit my friends. - Francis Donovan

    Featured Image: Francis Donovan, "Sanctum", installation view

    Added 04/12/2022

The Use of Everything: Contemporary drawings from Guayaquil

Exhibition Dates: Oct 5 - Nov 6, 2011
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Curators: Joseph C. Roberts and David Pérez-MacCollum; collaboration with DPM Gallery
Artists: Antonio Arrobo Vélez, Eduardo Vélez Aráuz, Fernando Falconi, Graciela Guerrero Weisson, Jaime Nuñez del Arco (MoNo), Jose Hidalgo Anastacio, Juana Córdova, Maria Gabriela Cherrez Vela, Ricardo Andrés Coello Gilbert, Roberto Noboa, Saidel Brito Lorenzo, Stefano Rubira.

  • For context and comparison, other Ecuadorean artists on view:

    Oswaldo Guayasamín, Jorge Velarde, Bolivar Peñafiel Moran, Luis Enrique Tábara, Humberto Moré.

    Featured Image: “00”, by Antonio Arrobo Vélez, mixed media

    Added 04/08/2022

Visitation

Exhibition Dates: August 4 - August 26, 2011
Location: plume21
Artist: Haris Purnomo
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Visitation is a large installation of 100 larger-than-life-size babies that was first exhibited in 2009 at Bentara Budaya in Jakarta, and, later that year, was split for partial installations in CoCA's Ballard and Belltown (Seattle) locations. Thanks to the generous collaboration with plume21, this is the first time that all 100 babies will have been exhibited in a single location in the U.S. The present installation was co-organized by plume21's Thomas Lamprecht and CoCA's Joseph C. Roberts and mounted by Ray C. Freeman III.

    When CoCA first presented these works at its Belltown Gallery in 2009, Lamprecht wrote in Singapore's C-Art magazine, "When it works, the overall strength of Purnomo's artwork resides in creating a platform for unresolved whimsy. It falls short of being a punch line, a conclusion, and keeps the question hanging. In the end, the wondering travels the viewer tends to go through are not deeply visceral or profound. They do, however, aspire to intellectual intensity. It is about how close to those intensities Purnomo is able to get himself and then pitch it to the viewer. However politely.

    Featured Image: Haris Purnomo. "Visitation", installation at plume21

    Added 04/12/2022

Treehouses and other Abstractions of Nature

Exhibition Dates: Oct 17 - Nov 30, 2011
Location: CoCA Belltown Gallery, 81 Clay Street
Artist: Derin Smith

  • As a kid, I spent a lot of time in the woods building treehouses. The best was when there was new construction in the area and you could scrounge quality materials. I loved climbing trees and incorporating found materials into the high branches. I don't climb trees so much anymore, but I am still fascinated by nature and how we geometrically standardize nature into usable parts. Today, I still like to build treehouses, only now it involves building cubes into branches and the dynamic relationship between nature and the abstraction of nature. - Derin Smith

    Featured Image: Derin Smith, "Treehouse", mixed media installation, 2011

    Added 04/12/2022

Reductive Woodblock Prints

Exhibition Dates: Nov 10 - Dec 11, 2011
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Kirsten Francis
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Featured Image: Kirsten Francis, "Lead", color reductive woodblock on paper 11 3/4" x 11 3/4", 2004

    Added 04/12/2022

an exaggeration of data

Exhibition Dates: Dec 15 - Jan 15, 2012
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Stephen Rock
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Stephen Rock exposes the volume of data streaming past us and investigates the transient nature of the medium by compiling visual remnants of our virtual experience.

    Excessive amounts of information are now easily accessed through a vast array of personal technological devices. Individual statistics and patterns are gathered and disseminated with reckless abandon and access to Museum and University archives is countered by the drone of the blogosphere. Revolutions, celebrations, disasters... the fabric of society flows by without cessation giving fleeting "importance" to any given moment. - Stephen Rock

    Featured Image: “the transgression of articulation (detail), inkjet print on paper, 36” x 92”, 2011, Stephen Rock

    Added 04/06/2022

2011 CoCA Annual Juried Exhibition

Exhibition Dates: Dec 29 - March 18, 2012
Location: Georgetown / 5701 6th Ave S. 3rd Fl
JurorGary Hill
CuratorsRay C. Freeman III and David Francis

  • With submissions from 14 countries and 21 states, this show clearly captured a global sense of contemporary art. Ranging from fiber to painting, photography, video, installation, sound, sculpture, and new media, the 2011 Annual exhibition presented a diversity of materials and approaches that cumulatively reflected a certain restlessness with representation. In the work of the 16 artists selected by guest juror Gary Hill, audiences observed a collective effort to broaden the meaning of identity, memory, time and history at a cultural moment of great economic uncertainty. Jen Graves, writing in The Stranger (Feb. 1, 2012; Layoffs, Missing Persons, and Hot Wheels: CoCA First International Survey), recognized the international scope: “CoCA's annual juried exhibition began 22 years ago as a regional survey, eventually expanded to allow artists from across the United States, and now this year broadened to accept international submissions, which came in from 14 countries and 21 states. It's an exceptional showing, facilitated by both the prestige and intelligence of this year's juror, artist Gary Hill. Hill's post-'60s sensibility, his predilections for philosophy and multimedia, and his European connections all are apparent.” Ray C. Freeman III, then Board President and David Francis, Programming Director, recruited Hill and curated the exhibition. As Graves recognized in her final sentence, “The world according to Gary is full and strange.”

    A black box video room was built for the exhibition by Marvin Wetzel.

    Featured Image: Installation view Photographer: Ray C. Freeman III

    Added 05/17/2021

  • Artists: Sara Overton (New York, NY), Julia Oldham (Eugene, OR), Sean Johnson (Seattle, WA), Christopher Steadman (Berlin, Germany), George Drivas (Athens, Greece) Cheryl Yun (Wilton, CT), Erin Endicott, (Port Republic, NJ), Bjoern Drenkwitz (Frankfurt, Germany), Jérémie Baldocchi (Le Bourget, France) Conny Blom (Landskrona, Sweden); Ida Rödén (Stockholm, Sweden), Inguna Gremzde (Ogre, Latvia), Sabe Lewellyn (Seattle, WA); Alyson Ogasian (Culver City, CA), Bean Gilsdorf (San Francisco, CA) and Barna Kantor (Austin, TX).

    Prizes: First: Conny Blom (First); Second: Sara Overton; Special Mention: Erin Endicott, Sean Johnson, Sabe Lewellyn

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

2012

Penumbra

Exhibition Dates: March 9 - April 5, 2012
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Miguel Edwards
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • Miguel Edwards had created a site-specific piece called Penumbra, which is about the interplay of light: how it reflects, transitions, mixes, and transforms. This piece is a multi-layered installation of hand formed plastic sculptures which will reflect lights of various colors in carefully considered and very specific ways. The curves create transitions of tone and color from the multicolored LEDs shining and mixing on them. Lights from different angles fill in the shadows in other colors making graphic counterpoints to the objects themselves. These lightweight white sculptural elements are placed on mirrors resting on the floor and various elevated surfaces, as well as hung from a grid in the ceiling. Additional monitors, LED panels, edges of mirror, and various other evidence of the process and materials used draw the viewer in. This piece is dynamic and engaging day or night.

    Featured Image: Miguel Edwards “Penumbra” installation at CoCA Belltown Gallery

    Added 04/10/2022

They've Released the INTRUDER

Exhibition Dates: March 29 - May 9, 2012
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artists: Nikki Burch, Max Clotfelter, Aidan Fitzgerald, Billis Helg, Ben Horak, Alexa Kristine Koenings, Jason T. Miles, Tim Miller, Tony Ong, Marc J Palm, and Tom Van Deusen.
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • INTRUDER cover #1, March 2012, 11"x17" ink on bristol with digital coloring, Nikki Burch

    An Exhibit of Seattle's Latest Underground Comic Art. 11 Seattle cartoonist and designers present the release of Seattle's first all comic and art newspaper "INTRUDER". The show includes original art from the paper along side artwork and comics that lead up to it's inception.

    Featured Image: INTRUDER cover #1, March 2012, 11"x17" ink on bristol with digital coloring, Nikki Burch

    Added 04/08/2022

You Will Get Through

Exhibition Dates: April 11 - June 17, 2012
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Jeff Gerber
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • Gerber creates work in surrogate spaces on the road. Hotel rooms and burnt-out parts of the city have become his studio. While he does not consider himself a street artist, he sees the street as art and uses punk, metal and all-out noise influence to bring these elements together. By highlighting urban objects that evoke security and restraint (such as a fence, the net of a basketball hoop, a confessional), Gerber re-contextualizes them and introduces an element of ambiguity. You Will Get Through is a site-specific installation that explores “the path from obscurity into manifestation,” a concept he appropriates from feng shui. The three different groupings explore the prepositions “Over,” “Through,” and “Within” as a means of expressing spatial relationships as they occur in urban environments cluttered with barriers, dead-ends, and cul-de-sacs.

    Gerber fabricates “barriers”, renders portraits on glass bottles with a painterly hand, and links repeated patterns through out the exhibition. PORTAL, for example, references to the iconic basketball hoop and explores the prepositions “Over,” “Through,” and “Within” with emotional and metaphorical relationships.

    Featured Image: Jeff Gerber, “You are the star….Breakthrough”, 127”L x 70”H, photo by Nathaniel Wilson

    Added 04/06/2022

REFLECTIONS

Exhibition Dates: May 7 - June 10, 2012
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club/ 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artists: Bob Jordan, Mariko Marrs
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • REFLECTIONS covers more than a decade and consists of 4 bodies of work, including Marrs’s paintings and Jordan’s drawings, as well as both artists’ multimedia resin boxes. Sharing complimentary traits, the pieces lightly play off one another. Graphic detail and precision offset dreamlike elements emerging from their work. Shimmering, repeated images and objects are: colorful pills, icons, representational imagery, toys, and black and white portraiture. For Marrs and Jordan, these resin-filled boxes explore the world of isolated objects and capture an extended moment, creating the sense that it will be preserved forever.

    Featured Image: Bob Jordan, "Egyptian Kit", mixed media with resin, 2000; Mariko Mars, "Milky", mixed media with resin, 2005

    Added 04/10/2022

Wavelines

Exhibition Dates: May 18 - July 14, 2012
Location: Georgetown Gallery - Seattle Design Center
Artist: Carrie Bodle
Curator: David Francis

  • Bodle created a new video and sound installation for CoCA based on two previous works, Sewing Sonification (2009) and Waveforms (2010). Both projects use data from ecosystem models along the Washington Coast to create a multimodal experience of art through scientific research. In CoCA’s 4,600 sq. ft. space, a six-channel video installation layers five dimensions of oceanographic data on large semi-transparent textile screens, while a five-channel sonification engages viewers/listeners with references to underlying systems of data.

    In the adjoining window gallery, Bodle displayed her Sewing Sonifications work, where sound is translated from data, then visualized and made tactile by the artist stitching the sound waves by a computer-to-embroidery machine interface. Also, a video grid of the sewing process captured the rhythm between fabric and thread. - David Francis

    Featured Image: Installation of Carrie Bodle’s “Wavelines” at the CoCA Georgetown Gallery, the first exhibition in the new space

    Added 04/06/2022

Visual Cues

Exhibition Dates: June 9 - August 10, 2012
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Laurel Kam
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • I am interested in exploring how visual information is used to form a person's identity. My work is a reaction to our culture's obsession with categorizing people based on appearance. Approaching my portraits is like approaching an actual person. As you come closer, they reveal them selves to be more multi-dimensional and complex than previously assumed.

    I perforate patterns or layer fabric onto the portraits to draw attention to the way we use visual cues to create a person's identity. The pattern is a signifier; viewers must look through the pattern to see the portrait. Patterns carry history and personal associations that control how they are viewed, in turn controlling how the person is perceived.

    I never questioned my heritage growing up. My family had come from different countries, just like everyone else. It wasn't until college that I began feeling constantly questioned what race I was. It surprised me because I never felt like I looked different-I just felt like myself. What surprised me even more was the answer people expected. If I told them I was German, but didn't mention I was also Chinese, they wouldn't believe me. It was difficult for me to see in myself what others found so visible. As my identity was questioned, I became increasingly aware of the social binaries we construct and our preconceived expectations.

    The camera, patterns and fabric hide and reveal the person. The images act as a prominent visual indication of the limited scope of a judgment based on an outward persona. - Laurel Kam

    Featured Image: Laurel Kam, "Peek-a-boo", 2012

    16” x 20” x 2”, archival pigment print & hand-dyed polyester

    Added 04/10/2022

Rootbound: Heaven and Earth IV

Exhibition Dates: June 23 - October 31, 2012
Location: Carkeek Park
Curator: David Francis
Artists: Suzanne Tidwell, Joe Reno, Lee C. Imonene, Peppé, Fox Anthony Spears, Garry Golightly, Brenda Scallon, Judy Shintani, Miguel Edwards, The Unearth Collective, Josho Somine, Alan Fulle, Suze Woolf, Julie Lindell, Rebecca Maxim with Joe LeGore, Tiki Mulvihill, Cameron Anne Mason and Laura McIntosh, Viewlands Group

  • One of the country’s only outdoor art exhibits occurring in a public nature preserve, Rootbound: Heaven and Earth IV offers visitors a 2-3 mile sculpture trail through Carkeek’s canyons and creeks in northwest Seattle, highlighted this year by performance art and site-specific sculpture in 120-year old Piper’s Orchard. Additional media include sound art, kinetic sculptures, and landscape interventions. All works are considered experimental: some are designed to last for the entire four month display period, while others incorporate decay and erosion. The exhibit’s themes offer a variety of perspectives on art and nature.

    Sponsored by Center on Contemporary Art, Seattle Parks and Recreation, Carkeek Park Advisory Council, Seattle Office of Arts and Cultural Affairs, and 4Culture Site Specific.

    Damage:

    Less than a month into its display period (June 23 – Oct. 31), the Rootbound exhibition of temporary artwork in Carkeek Park suffered widespread damage, including the arson of artist Josho Somine’s 20’ tall cardboard tree, “a shrine of fragile ambitions,” which the Seattle Fire Department responded to at 4:30 pm on Wednesday July 18. The piece burned to the ground.

    Following a review in The Stranger, artist Fox Spears’ work “I Will Go Back and Not Come Out,” consisting of four large, hand-woven dream catchers, is missing. Spears, a Native American artist, like the others in the show, is now contemplating how best to respond.

    Numerous other works reflect a particularly aggressive public attitude this summer, including: removal and damage to Suze Woolf’s “Tree Futures”; damage to Viewlands Group’s “Landscape Intervention” (subsequently repaired); damage to Tiki Muvihill’s “Fruitless Grafting”; and dismantling and removal of about 50% of The Unearth Collective’s “The Mediated Landscape.”

    Curator David Francis explains that for these kinds of cutting-edge, experimental exhibitions, such response is part of the art’s greater purpose, “to help people learn how to see the world in a new way,” apart from a static display of art in a gallery, museum, or even a more guarded public urban space. “By activating a nature preserve where people are radically free to interact with art,” reflects Francis, “all kinds of boundaries are redrawn. Where does the artwork begin? Where does it end? Can a work of art predicated on change be seen in one or two visits? What if the actual object is a mere stand-in for the actual artwork, which is the intangible and subtle adjustment of the public’s understanding of art?”

    Featured Image: Alan Fulle’s Four Noble Truths reduced to rubble by vandals

    Added 06/22/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III, with essays by Willow Fox and David Francis plus artists’ statements is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Across the Divide IV: The New Boondocks

Exhibition Dates: July 27 - Sept 20, 2012
Location: 5701 Sixth Avenue South - Seattle Design Center
Curators: David Francis (West), Kevin Bell (East)
Artists (East): Brad Allen, Nicole Pietrantoni, Matt Hamon, Edgar Smith, Kevin Bell, Karina Noel Hean, Trey Hill, James Bailey
Artists (West): Natalie Niblack, Aaron Haba, Janet Fagen, Rodrigo Valenzuela, Gary Berg, Lily Martina Lee, Libby Gerber, Zach Bent

  • Responding to CoCA’s ongoing series of group shows that bring contemporary art from the “dry side” to the Puget Sound area, University of Montana (Missoula) Art Professors Edgar Smith, Brad Allen, Nicole Pietrantoni, and Matt Hamon arrived in a convoy with a wide variety of media (painting, sculpture, ceramics, new media) including their own work and that of fellow faculty members Trey Hill, James Bailey, and Kevin Bell to exhibit in conjunction with a group of west-side artists whose work was juried into the show to reflect similar themes of rural versus urban.

    Joining the ‘Montana gang’ are Natalie Niblack, Gary Berg, Zack Bent, Libby Gerber, Lilly Lee, Janet Fagan, Aaron Haba, and Rodrigo Valenzuela (Professor of Comparative History of Ideas at UW). The two groups offer a fascinating series of correspondences and divergences that collectively suggest that the 20th century opposition between rural and urban is rapidly changing and being redefined by technology and cultural exchange.

    Featured Image: Smith’s One Square Mile of Public Land | Pietrantoni’s The Forest Looks Good | Hamon’s After Albert Bierstadt’s Deer in a Clearing | Bell’s Specimin

    Added 06/22/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III, with essays by Kevin Bell and David Francis plus artists’ statements is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Organic Painting

Exhibition Dates: August 14 - Sept 3, 2012
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club/ 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artists: James Weed, Dick Matthies
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • I am interested in exploring how visual information is used to form a person's identity. My work is a reaction to our culture's obsession with categorizing people based on appearance. Approaching my portraits is like approaching an actual person. As you come closer, they reveal them selves to be more multi-dimensional and complex than previously assumed.

    I perforate patterns or layer fabric onto the portraits to draw attention to the way we use visual cues to create a person's identity. The pattern is a signifier; viewers must look through the pattern to see the portrait. Patterns carry history and personal associations that control how they are viewed, in turn controlling how the person is perceived.

    I never questioned my heritage growing up. My family had come from different countries, just like everyone else. It wasn't until college that I began feeling constantly questioned what race I was. It surprised me because I never felt like I looked different-I just felt like myself. What surprised me even more was the answer people expected. If I told them I was German, but didn't mention I was also Chinese, they wouldn't believe me. It was difficult for me to see in myself what others found so visible. As my identity was questioned, I became increasingly aware of the social binaries we construct and our preconceived expectations.

    The camera, patterns and fabric hide and reveal the person. The images act as a prominent visual indication of the limited scope of a judgment based on an outward persona. - Laurel Kam

    Featured Image: James Weed, "Baby Animal as Food 2" 48" x 60", acrylic on canvas, 2012; Dick Matthies, "Nearly Plein Air #7" 22" x 30", watercolor on paper, 2000-2005

    Added 04/10/2022

empty ritual

Exhibition Dates: Sept 18 - Dec 31, 2012
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: #TRACKSTARS
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • The preparation with anticipation to a monumental event, summon the inner majestic dream. This spell will burn memories into the abyss. All that's left is faded pictures and smoke.

    #TRACKSTARS take a look at a shiny gold framed family portrait that hangs in a quiet Spotless home, everyone is in their best dress, a picture of unity and devotion.

    Using repurposed wood, latex paint, MDF and a pencil., #TRACKSTARS unveil a more real look at what should hang in the empty home. A set of work that is loose, unfinished, and rough with potential. Three portraits of various stages in the ritual from naive beginning to deflated truth. - #TRACKSTARS

    Featured Image: “empty ritual” installation at CoCA Belltown Gallery by #TRACKSTARS

    Added 04/10/2022

Show Us Yours: 2012 CoCA Members' Show

Exhibition Dates: Sept 30 - Oct 25, 2012
Location: 5701 Sixth Ave S. - Seattle Design Center
Curator: David Francis
Producer: Ray C. Freeman III

  • Now that any artist can have work at CoCA (in theory), is the ‘quality’ diluted? Or is this a necessary populist enrichment of the organization as its quest for sustainability continues? Rhetoric aside, it’s obvious that contemporary art is becoming more community-based. ‘Quality,’ as an evaluative term, is also changing. It’s an exciting time when galleries of all kinds have been closing for the past six or seven years and the economy, at a glacial pace, slowly improves. Not long ago, commercial galleries often carried 10-15 artists and massaged their careers. Nowadays, galleries carry 200 artists and do not spend much time nurturing artists or offering career advice. Into this vacuum (into this inter-regnum), CoCA has inserted itself as a different kind of organization: not a collective, not a vanity space, not a commercial space, but an organization by artists, for artists, with 25% of the board required to be working artists. As it continues to survive, the membership will become more and more vital. Show Us Yours represents the future; it shows the way forward. If there is a theme to be teased out of the work, perhaps it is hope. - David Francis

    Unlike many CoCA shows, of course, this show is not thematic. There was no prompt or issue at the curatorial core. No statement of intent to which the artists were asked to respond. No geographic, social, political, or cultural issues to be explored, except on an individual basis, and at each artist’s choosing. And yet, there are societal issues at play at every turn. We live at a specific time, in a specific place. The strength of this show is that it presents the concerns of a self-selected group of individuals who find it not only necessary but important to participate in the conversation. - Ray C. Freeman III

    Featured Image: Jesse Boleyn entertains among Peppé’s trees at the exhibition opening

    Added 06/22/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III, with commentary by Ray and David Francis plus artists’ statements is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Harvest Moon!

Exhibition Dates: October 10, 2012 - November 11, 2012
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artists: Jody Joldersma, Flynn Bickley, Aidan Fitzgerald
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Featured Image: Jody Joldersman, “Mr. Robot Did A No No acrylic and paper on wood, 25” x 25”, 2010

    Added 04/10/2022

Alive, Dead: 28 Artists’ Interpretations

Exhibition Dates: Nov 1 - Dec 14, 2012
Location: 5701 Sixth Avenue South - Seattle Design Center
Curator: Lucy Mae Martin
Artists: David Blakesley, Jessica Lynn Bonin, Joel Brock, David Cassera, Patty Detzer, Sarah Detzer, Kathleen Faulkner, Kelly Fleek, Paul Foertsch, Jack Gunter, Elias Hansen, Todd Horton, Theodora Jonsson, David C. Kane, Mark Kemble, Lindsay Kohles, Charles Krafft, Eve McCauley, Allen Moe, Kris Estrand Molesworth, Michael Phifer, Tracy Powell, James Reisen, Andrew Vallee, Karen Willenbrink-Johnsen, Michael Wirth, Katherine Woelke, Thomas Wood

  • This exhibit was inspired by the curator's daily work of making headstones. Lucy Mae Martin took over her father's headstone business, Todd's Monuments, in 2007. Every day she is faced with helping people through one of the most tragic times of their lives and in this time she has learned and grown to know a very specific interpretation of alive and of dead. She personally invited each of these 28 artists to present their own interpretation of both alive and dead, as they have inspired her through the years with their unique and courageous styles of creating art.

    The work on display includes a wide variety of mediums including oils, acrylics, glass, otter bone, ink, pencil, found objects, egg tempura, carved marble, mono type, brass shells, etching, aqua-tint, neon, ceramics, clip-on-ties, SPONE™, modified cement, graphite, colored pencil, organic peppers, fish bones, mirror, gold flakes, hand sculpted glass, and more.

    Lucy Mae Martin is a CoCA Board Member from the Skagit Valley, intent upon introducing Skagit to Seattle on a more regular basis. She has done just that. Lucy Mae made her own tombstone for this exhibit, and it shouldn't be missed!

    Featured Image: Michael Wirth, “More than a Visitor”, neon, 54” x 20”

    Added 06/21/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III featuring an essay by the Curator, Lucy Mae Martin, and bios and statements from the artists is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

  • For this year’s 23nd anniversary of the show, CoCA is proud to have Portland based artist MK Guth as juror.

    Guth is a multidisciplinary artist working in video, photography, sculpture and performative exchange based projects. Her work arrives from an indeterminate state of suspicion, where realities fluctuate and believing what one sees is a confining place.

    Guth has exhibited widely and received critical praise for her work at The Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC; Boise Art Museum; The Melbourne International Arts Festival, Australia; Nottdance Festival, England; Swiss Institute, NYC; Elizabeth Leach Gallery, Portland; Betty Moody, Houston, TX; White Columns, NYC; Artists Space, NYC; Yerba Buena, in San Francisco; and the Henry Art Museum, Seattle and featured in Flash Art, New Art Examiner, and Art in America.

    Utilizing CoCA’s expanded 4.600 square feet of exhibition space at Seattle Design Center, this year’s juror was able to more than double the number of finalists, up from 16 last year to 33 this year. With entries ranging from fiber to painting, photography, video, installation, sound, sculpture, and more, the call drew entries from 17 states plus Canada, although the greatest number were from the Pacific Northwest – Washington and Oregon – and this is reflected in the juror’s selections.

    Featured Image: 2012 CoCA Annual opening reception at CoCA’s Georgetown Gallery | photo by Ray C. Freeman III

    Added 06/22/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III featuring Juror’s Remarks by MK Guth and bios and statements from the artists is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

2013

Confined Chaos

Exhibition Dates: Jan 9 - Feb 10, 2013
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Sonya Stockton
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Featured Image: Sonya Stockton, "How to be a Lady", marker on cut deli parchment paper, 18" x 24", 2011, collection of Ray and Amy Freeman

    Added 04/12/2022

Projector

Exhibition Dates: Jan 12 - Feb 12, 2013
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Ben Buswell
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • In Projector, Ben Buswell creates a series of works that point to the disappearance of self and the construction of knowledge. In this recent body of work, Ben highlights emergent systems in the creation of the art object, willfully disappearing the metaphysically deft stroke of the artist's hand. The massing of many insignificant, artless gestures undermines the assumption of a meaningful narrative and points to the physical processes of experience.

    Rather than utilizing imagery associated with particular cultural or personal significance, Ben utilizes images that are cross-culturally and historically ubiquitous. Communication technology, mirror glass and the figure: each, in it's own right, is an archetype of both meaning and cliché. By conflating the reading of these images with the comprehension of their physical structure these works function as surrogates for self-reflection and question where the foundation of understanding lies.

    Featured Image: Ben Buswell, “Projector”, view through the gallery window

    Added 04/10/2022

Whose Fault

Exhibition Dates: March 12 - April 9, 2013
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Jave Yoshimoto
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • For those who have not experienced Yoshimoto's epic work, Baptism of Concrete Estuary, brace yourselves. This painting took a year to execute, and it is Yoshimoto's personal meditation on the Tohoku earthquake and tsunami. It evidences his therapeutic journey; his effort to process what happened, why, and what to do in response.

    Yoshimoto's work is influenced by Katsushika Hokusai , the Japanese Edo period ukiyo-e painter and printmaker who created the woodblock print series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji (Fugaku Sanjuroku-kei). Notably, that series included the internationally recognized print, The Great Wave off Kanagawa, created in the 1820s.

    Tohoku and the Pacific Northwest nestle shores of the Pacific Ocean. For centuries, the scenic and strategic beauty of these areas has attracted large colonies of people. Constuction of major infrastructure naturally follows: ports, cities, dams, nuclear power plants… all built on goelogic faults that we have long known will shift. Similar conditons exist around the world.

    Featured Image: Jave Yoshimoto, "Baptism of concrete estuary", gouache, ink, and acrylic on BFK Rives paper, 24" x 366" (detail)

    Added 04/12/2022

The New Neo-Naturalists

Exhibition Dates: March 14 - April 12, 2013
Location: Georgetown Gallery - Seattle Design Center
Artists: David Eisenhour, Lisa Gilley, and Sean Yearian
Curator: Ray C. Freeman III

  • The three artists share both a rural upbringing and formative periods on the Northwest’s Olympic Peninsula. Washington artist, Lisa Gilley, was born in Mount Vernon, and currently resides on Marrowstone Island. Sean Yearian, also a local native, grew up in Chetzemoka Park, Port Townsend, and is currently living and working in Seattle. David Eisenhour grew up in a northern Pennsylvania farming community, moved to a small town on the Chesapeake Bay in Virginia, and currently has his studio in Port Hadlock, Washington.

    Belying the somewhat tongue-in-cheek show title, these artists are all engaged in serious personal explorations of the role of nature in the production of contemporary art, and have produced a manifesto:

    We the new neo-naturalists do hereby declare:

    Our god the natural world is one with us as evidenced by our DNA connecting us to the first life on earth 3.5 billion years ago.

    Biology is our religion.

    We pledge

    To continue to evolve that we may escape the fate of our bacterial ancestors in this petri dish we call earth.

    Our allegiance to the life system of this planet.

    We strive to connect and repair this splintered destructive world with our art.

    Featured Image: Left to right, works by Sean Yearian, Lisa Gilley, and David Eisenhour

    Added 04/06/2022

Pungmaven: 2020

Exhibition Dates: April 10 - 19, 2013
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artists: Jungmaven and Ray C. Freeman III
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • This month at our Belltown gallery, we're channeling our punk rock roots and selling t-shirts to help raise funds for CoCA programming. These amazing shirts are made from eco-friendly, 100% USA, hemp and organic cotton blends lovingly crafted by Jungmaven. Select your shirt and have it custom silk-screened while you watch by none other than our very own CoCA Board President.

    Featured Image: CoCA President Ray C. Freeman III silkscreening shirts

    Added 04/12/2022

I'm not sure I'll be home in Time

Exhibition Dates: April 20 - August 10. 2013
Location: Belltown Gallery / 81 Clay Street
Artist: Elias Hansen
Curator: Jodie Nelson

  • It is a boat we find on the shore of this little town, a cute little dingy only tied to a log, oars tucked inside along with a cooler and a pair of life jackets. We throw our beer in the cooler, drink the warm beer that's already in there, jokingly put on the life jackets and push off. We haven't planned on going anywhere, but we also haven't really planned on much else. A bit choppy, the full moon teases us that we are safe in it's light.

    It's a short row across the water to the reservation, we make good time with the wind at our backs. Do we do this often? Not enough, really. Hidden in our little town, we spend nights on the beach, watching the few lights flicker on the opposite shore. Drinking beer, throwing the bottles in the water, chasing them with rocks. We are children, we are happy with our few miles of beach, our little country roads to patrol. The trip across the water is to the grocery store, to see the girls we know, to sit on the dock and watch our town's few lights flicker.

    My shift at the oars lands us, Steven hops off the bow and pulls us in. We tie to a log, leave a beer in the cooler in case anyone is thinking like us. These are the type of nights we are always looking for, a night where we don't pretend to have answers, where we ask for the unpredictable. We walk out on the dock to smoke and watch our little town. We talk about what it will be like to grow old enough to leave this bay, what will finally pull us away. We are always unsure, but also always proud. We have grown like young men, we have made our families proud. We are the next generation, and the little town will talk about us when we move on.

    At the pay phone next to the gas station we call the few girls we know, convince them to sneak out and meet us at the basketball court by the water. The five of us start a fire on the beach, Steven and I sitting on opposite sides of these young women, so proud of ourselves for this little moment. We are young men; we are easy to please.

    It is stories of our childhoods in these little towns, it is stories of the water. It is stories of how scared we are to leave, stories of how anxious we are to leave. - Elias Hansen

    Featured Image: Elias Hansen, “Some people call us survivors. I just figure we ain’t dead yet”

    ceramic, epoxy, found object, glass, steel, wood, 2012

    Added 04/10/2022

Whitewashed

Exhibition Dates: April 22 - July 12, 2013
Location: 5701 Sixth Avenue South - Seattle Design Center
Artist: Joseph Gregory Rossano
Curator: David Francis

  • Rendered in tar (a by-product of the petroleum industry) and framed in old-growth Douglas Fir or cedar (an atmospheric purifying carbon sink), these works discuss the effects of human culture and global climate change on species already extinct or in a final bid for relevance. Using oil as both metaphor and medium, these tar depictions of endangered species bleed through water-based white paint, leaving ghostly images that cannot be completely covered or hidden.

    Featured Image: Photograph by Ray C. Freeman III

    Added 06/21/2021

Acclimatized: Heaven and Earth 5

Exhibition Dates: July 13 - October 20, 2013
Location: Carkeek Park
Jurors: David Francis, Paula Hoff
Curator: David Francis
Artists: Lucy Mae Martin, Andrew Alba, Philip McGaughy, Thendara Kida-Gee and Tim Gee, Elizabeth Gahan, Alan Fulle, Light Table Design Collective, Ingrid Lahti, Aaron Haba, Richard Metz, David Francis, Fred Lisaius, Susan Arthur, Suzanne Tidwell

  • Rendered in tar (a by-product of the petroleum industry) and framed in old-growth Douglas Fir or cedar (an atmospheric purifying carbon sink), these works discuss the effects of human culture and global climate change on species already extinct or in a final bid for relevance. Using oil as both metaphor and medium, these tar depictions of endangered species bleed through water-based white paint, leaving ghostly images that cannot be completely covered or hidden.

    Featured Image: Photograph by Ray C. Freeman III

    Added 06/21/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III featuring remarks and an essay by David Francis, excerpts from the Carkeek Park Forest Management Plan, and bios and statements from the artists is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Pungmaven: 2020

Exhibition Dates: July 11 - August 2, 2013
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Michael Dondanville
Curators: Ray C. Freeman III and Jack Dondanville

  • Michael Dondanville was an artist born and raised in the Seattle area who produced hundreds of pieces of art almost entirely for his own amusement. Self taught, never part of the Seattle art scene, Mike created oil paintings using whatever materials he could get his hands on, mostly cheap boards and strips of canvas. Despite these apparent limitations, his works of art provide a rare glimpse into the depths of the human imagination, drawing on everything from mythological archetypes to mathematical abstractions. The result is at times alternately beautiful, surreal, and nightmarishly grotesque, as if a reflection of the many contradictory facets of the mind exploded onto a canvas. This, coupled with his vivid eye for color and affinity for almost topographical textures, make the paintings of Michael Dondanville something not to be missed, and yet they have never been shown outside of the occasional commercial mural or home of a friend or family member.

    Now for the first time since his untimely passing in January of this year, CoCA is proud to present a retrospective of Mike's oil paintings, spanning over twenty five years and drawn from a selection of over 200 pieces, this exhibition showcases the multifaceted abilities of a previously unknown painter in all his stages of artistic development.

    Featured Image: Michael Dondanville, "Man On Fire", 16 x 20, oil on canvas

    Added 04/08/2022

CoCA Collision: 2013 CoCA Members' Show

Exhibition Dates: July 18 - Sept 13, 2013
Location: 5701 Sixth Avenue South - Seattle Design Center
Curators: Shawn Ferris, Joseph Roberts, Chris Crites
Director: Anna Hurwitz

  • Last year’s Members Show, the first one presented in recent memory, featured 32 artists, representing about half the membership at the time, and many of those were new members. Many of these members were hoping that we would do it again this year, so we did.

    Our Outreach Director, Anna Hurwitz, agreed to organize the show in conjunction with an ongoing membership drive. As I am sure it comes as no surprise, the Members Show serves two functions. It showcases the work of our current members, giving the public a first-hand look at who CoCA is, and it encourages new members to join, in order to part of the exhibition. We themed it “CoCA Collision”, representing our efforts to reach out to past, present, and future members.

    In the end, we ended up with 143 artists, pushing membership up to 231 in the process.

    Featured Image: The 2013 CoCA Members’ Show at CoCA’s Georgetown Gallery at the Seattle Design Center | photo by Ray C. Freeman III

    Added 06/22/2021

Print Catalog designed by Ray C. Freeman III featuring remarks by Ray and bios and statements from the artists is available through the CoCA Museum Store.

You Won’t See Me

Exhibition Dates: Sept 19 - Nov 15, 2013
Location: Georgetown Gallery - Seattle Design Center
Artist: Art Jones
Curator: Krista Kelly

  • Over 300 4” x 6” prints of Polaroid portraits from the ongoing series Instant Karma Portraits ran along either wall, unframed, in long horizontal strips. Photo subjects included Obama Administration’s smaART Power program Jones collected working in Karachi, Pakistan and his home, New York.

    In the middle of the gallery, a map of Karachi, Pakistan was projected on the floor. Mapped onto this were short videos from the Karachi Notes series. Multiple headsets were available to listen while viewing the videos.

    A sound piece was located in a dark booth area in the rear of the space for two people to sit: on the floor is an illustration, which is revealed by a top-mounted, slowly revolving ultraviolet spotlight.

    Art Jones' films and media art projects have been presented at the Museum of Modern Art, London's Tate Gallery and numerous media festivals and broadcast outlets internationally. Jones works in a variety of genres, including fiction, documentary and music-related pieces, where his unique sense of humor and dynamic style of directing, animation and editing has gained him notice among music aficionados, film critics and media scholars.

    Jones is best known for for his innovation in the art of audio/visual mixing. His live mixes have been performed in collaboration with musicians and artists including Soundlab, DJ Spooky That Subliminal Kid, Phillip Virus with Alec Empire, Teleseen, Amiri Baraka, Femmes with Fatal Breaks, and Anti-Pop Consortium. He lives and works in New York City.

    Featured Image: Portraits by Art Jones

    Added 04/16/2022

Reconstructed Moments

Exhibition Dates: Sept 18 - Nov 18, 2013
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Kathy Kissik
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Featured Image: Kathy Kissik, "The French" mixed media on stolen aluminum road sign, 30" x 30", 2010-12

    Added 04/12/2022

Ineffable

Exhibition Dates: October 2 - 27, 2013
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Jean Albus
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • A solo exhibit of Montana based artist Jean Albus’s beautifully disquieting photographs..

    To make her rural Montana landscapes personal, she injects evidence of herself in each photograph. Often, that evidence is a young woman’s dress in some state of decay and completely out of context in the dry desert terrain. The emotional effect is palpable. Is this evidence of a romantic coming of age -or a moment of rage? The work comments on aging, memory, transition, loss and mortality. Cheerfully, however, Albus says, “if you shine light on a dark subject, it’s not dark anymore; right?”

    Featured Image: Jean Albus, “Moira, Goddess of Fate”, 16” x 24”, Photograph 1/5, 2013

    Added 04/08/2022

Ceci N'est Pas Une Pipe

Exhibition Dates: Oct 17 - Jan 10, 2014
Location: Georgetown - Seattle Design Center / 5701 Sixth Ave S.
Jurors: David Francis (Museum of Glass), Hillary Ryan (Museum of Glass), Traci Kelly (Museum of Glass) and Reo Hornibrook (independent borosilicate aficionado).
Curator: David Francis
Curatorial Assistant: Tarasina Bononino 

  • "For the past two decades, a vibrant group of largely underground, torch-wielding glass artists have taken the technical and aesthetic boundaries of the pipe as an art form to new heights, collectively forming one of the few bonafide avant-garde art movements in the country. Featuring 25 artists from across the U.S., many of whom are also in the award-winning documentary "Degenerate Art: The Art & Culture of Glass Pipes" (M. Slinger, 2012), this exhibition blends street and urban art, high brow/low brow, and grass roots spiritualism in a fascinating and dynamic survey of borosilicate frameworking in its emerging golden age. Much of the artwork reveals a strong interest in contemporary culture—from guns, to biomimetic abstraction, to the dominance of corporate logos, to the juxtaposition of cartoon characters with drugs. And aliens.

    In addition to showcasing the diversity of functional forms such as Sherlock pipes, bongs, bubblers and recyclers, "Ceci N’est Pas Une Pipe" also includes large-scale glass installations, conceptual sculptures and other works inspired by the movement."

    Many of the artists attended the opening reception on Thursday, October, 17. Performances by art collective Ear, Noise, Throat helped celebrate the opening of this dynamic exhibition.

    Artists:

    Arizona: Bandhu Dunham, Ninja Hamm ; British Columbia: Patrick Stratis ; California: Bob (Cheese) Gutierrez; Ryan (Ryno) O’Keefe; Nathan (JAG) Purcell; Colorado: Alex Ubatuba ; Florida: Robert Mickelsen ; Idaho: Bryan Dosher ; Oregon: Chris Carlson; Tim (Ease) Carruthers; Ryan (Buck) Harris; Jay (Bird Dogg) Harrower; Darby Holm; Rob Morrison; Tara Roberts; Lacey St. George ; Pennsylvania: Daniel Coyle; Matt Eskuche; Jeremy Grant-Levine; Zach Puchowitz; M. Slinger ; Washington: Nathan Aweida; il; Kevin (Quave) McCulley

    This exhibit is widely regarded as the first survey of borosilicate pipes to occur in a contemporary art gallery.

    PRESS

    11/11/2013 The Seattle Times: CoCA's 'Pipe' show riffs on legal pot's imminent arrival

    08/03/2013 The Wall Street Journal: These Are Heady Times for Glass Blowers' High Art

    Featured Image: Artists: Rob Morrison & Ari Rom | Photographer: Miguel Edwards

    Updated 06/17/2021

Exhibition Catalog by Ray C. Freeman III available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Watching the Snakes Volute

Exhibition Dates: December, 2013
Location: Shilshole Bay Beach Club / 6413 Seaview Ave NW
Artist: Lyle Carbajal
Curator: Joseph Roberts

  • Paintings by the internationally acclaimed Lyle Carbajal. Citing references to childhood imagery such as comics, monsters and machines, Carbajal juxtaposes the innocent associations of youth with the complicated path of maturation. He holds a degree in design yet is self-taught as a painter. His work has been exhibited in galleries around the world such as Museu de Estremoz in Portugal, the Caro D'Offay Gallery in Chicago, and Art Fair in Denmark and can be found in many private and corporate collections.

    Featured Image: Lyle Carbajal, "El Boxeo", mixed media on wood, 48" x 48", 2013

    Added 04/12/2022

2014

Nightmare Inductions

Exhibition Dates: Jan 16 - Mar 14, 2014
Location: Georgetown Gallery - Seattle Design Center
Artists: Noxious Sector Arts Collective
Curator: Lynn Schirmer

  • Nightmare Inductions is a series of interactive installations by Noxious Sector Arts Collective. With the aid of brain wave entraining sound and video, participants are guided through a shared trance induction experience focusing on a common nightmare theme: Dreams of Falling; Dreams of Teeth; and Noxious Sector's most recent creation, Forgetting.

    Included in each installation are artworks by Noxious Sector and imagery created by past collaborators in response to the experiences.

    Featured Image: Installation view and artwork by Noxious Sector

    Added 06/04/2022

PostGlamism: Glam Art in the 21st Century

Exhibition Dates: May 15 - August 1, 2014
Location: 5701 Sixth Avenue South - Seattle Design Center Guest Juror: Michael Sweney
Producer: Jodie Nelson
Artists: Karen Clark (CA), Dixie Darling (WA), Christian French (WA), Jeff Gerber (WA), Troy Gua (WA), Vin Hill (WA), Virginia Jenkins (WA), Lauren Kalman (MI), Rebecca Maxim (WA), Lindsay McCoy (WA), Dylan Neuwirth (WA), Hadley Northrop (CA), Matthew D. Rowe (WA), and Glenn Tramantano (WA).

  • Each year, CoCA curators invite an independent juror to select the work from among the entries received, and was proud to have Michael Sweney as the 2014 juror. Sweney serves as Manager for the Art in Public Places Program with the Washington State Arts Commission. A member of the Tacoma Arts Commission and Tacoma Art Museum’s Collection Committee, Sweney’s work is informed by almost 20 years experience as an art dealer and curator in New York City (Charles Cowles Gallery) and Seattle (Davidson Contemporary).

    The exhibition featured the work of 14 artists who embrace and glorify the concept of PostGlamism pop culture and history through a mastery of mediums in both small and large scale including: neon, glass, painting, photography, interactive video installation, found objects and performance.

    Featured Image: photo by Miguel Edwards

    Added 06/20/2020

Exhibition Catalog by Ray C. Freeman III including Juror’s remarks by Michael Sweney along with bios and statements from the artists available through the CoCA Museum Store.

Who Are You? 2014 CoCA Members Show

Exhibition Dates: Sept 18 - Nov 7, 2014
Location: 5701 Sixth Ave South - Seattle Design Center
Juror: Joseph C. Roberts
Producer: Ray C. Freeman III
Project Assistant: Eva Schach

  • From the Call:

    No, really, who in the Hell are you? All CoCA member artists are invited to participate in the 2014 CoCA Member Show, “Who Are You?”. Whether you define the world by geography, cultural or political concerns, social circumstances, or other factors, we invite you to show us how your work is responding to what’s going on in your world.

    Two CoCA Past-Presidents are collaborating to bring the 2014 Member Show to life. Ray C. Freeman III, CoCA President 2009-2013 is producing the show, and it will be juried by Joseph C. Roberts, CoCA Curator since 2007, and CoCA President 2005-2008.

    From the Juror’s Remarks:

    CoCA’s call for 2014 Members’ Show submissions asked member artists: Who Are You? On one level, we seek a direct answer to that question. Who are our member artists? What interests them; what do they see; what problems do they confront; how is their work engaging and responding to their world? On another level, we want to know more about who we are. Intentionally or not, artists speak for all of us –both us as individuals and us as CoCA. Their world is our world. Their job is to express. And to do so with searing honesty -using whatever mediums available.

    Submitting artists who met the broad measure for inclusion were assured that one of their artworks would be physically or digitally exhibited in this show. Thanks to CoCA’s ample gallery space at Seattle Design Center, we were able to physically accommodate all 115 selected works that employ an expansive array of mediums.

    Featured Image: photo by Miguel Edwards

    Stylized graphic used to promote the show

Exhibition Catalog by Ray C. Freeman III including Juror’s remarks by Joseph Robers along production notes from Ray and bios and statements from the artists available through the CoCA Museum Store.

2015

  • As the 24 artists in Change–Seed clarify, the city of Hong Kong is a kind of Southeast Asian melting pot, where past and present collide. In addition to a core group of artists born, raised, and currently working there, the exhibition also encompasses resident artists from other countries (United States, France, the Caribbean, Taiwan). The events of September through December 2014, during which Hong Kong witnessed unprecedented civil unrest, occurred just after I left after a five-month extended stay. As much as I wish I’d been able to stay just a few weeks longer, at least I observed the build-up over a long hot summer that began with the 25th anniversary of Tiananmen on June 5 (which drew 180,000) followed by the release of the White Paper of June 10, a key document issued by Beijing (see separate text panel) which precipitated the “Umbrella Revolution.” In Hong Kong, umbrellas aren’t just for rain – they are used just as often for shade.

    Not all of these artists are necessarily associated with the immediate political situation. As suggested by Caroline Ha Thuc in Contemporary Art in Hong Kong (2013, p. 12), many Hong Kong artists “(t)read the fringes of politics…(and are) more oriented toward civic actions” or symbolic civil disobedience than direct commentary in their work. The artists are concerned with issues of global significance such as the movement of people from rural settings to giant cities. Living in Hong Kong in a kind of exile from the countries of their birth, they have found new homes in this baffling and improbable city with a colonial past. Identity in Hong Kong is often elusive and conjoins fragmented aspects of ethnicity, nationalism, gender, sexuality, and the role of the artist.

    - David Francis

    Featured Image: The opening reception for Change-Seed. Note the transparent umbrellas hanging upside-down in the bar to the far right

    Added 06/22/2021

Exhibition Catalog by Ray C. Freeman III including Curator’s remarks by David Francis, an essay by Annie Lukins, contemporary Hong Kong Street Art, and statements from the artists available through the CoCA Museum Store.

  • Sponsored by Carkeek Park Advisory Council (CPAC) and Seattle Parks and Recreation, this public art exhibition will offer visitors artistic interpretations of this year’s theme, As Above, So Below, displayed in three main outdoor galleries within the 200-acre park. By focusing the art in more public spaces, the exhibition addresses accessibility concerns for the less mobile and helps protect the art.

    The works were chosen by CoCA Curator and local artist, Thendara M. Kida-Gee, in consultation with Seattle Parks and Recreation, "We are delighted to facilitate this event with 16 inspired artists who will create a menagerie of site specific art in nature, from 15 foot tall knitted flowers by Suzanne Tidwell, to an intricate 10 foot skull crafted from materials found in the park by 3D printing artist Joshua Harker." This unique collaboration between the city and a contemporary arts organization has resulted in an innovative and exciting annual event built on the long-standing support for public art in the Northwest.

    Featured Image:

    Updated 04/19/2023

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