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Albatross

Around Michael's Neck
Portland, Oregon
503-713-7106
A Michael Reinsch Performance.

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Albatross

  • 2023
  • 2022
  • Weight Of The World 2021
  • Living Studios Affiliated Artists
  • Welcome
  • Weight Of The World 2020
  • Albatross ARTFAIR
  • 2020
  • Artists 2019-
  • Artists May 2016-
  • Artists 2015- 2016
  • Contact
  • Albatross Shop
  • Michael Reinsch

Brandon Wilkinson

Bio

Brandon Wilkinson is a Pacific Northwest based painter and academic reference librarian. His work often

utilizes photographic source materials to create landscape based work which tends toward

environmentalism and existential allegory.http://brandonwilkinson.com/

 

Statement

I broke up with a long-term girlfriend who I was cohabitating with at the beginning of the winter and found

myself, abruptly, homeless. I’ve been sleeping in my car and at friend’s houses since. This series of

photographs attempts to express the texture of that experience through snapshots of my everyday life.

The stigma of homelessness is alive and well, even as the displaced population in Portland continues to

grow in response to rising housing costs. I present these photos as evidence that living without a home

doesn’t need to mean living without dignity or joy. My art is an attempt to deepen and extend empathy…

mine and yours.

 

CV

 

                        b. 1979 Redmond, OR

                       

                        Education

 

2001                 BFA, Pacific Northwest College of Art, Portland, OR

 

                        Solo Exhibitions

 

2013               The Shore: Paintings and Drawings, K&F Coffee House, Portland, OR.

2010               Paintings, Emerge Interactive, Emerge Interactive, Portland, OR.

2009                 Paintings, The Know, Portland, OR.

2008                 Friends, Vices, and Fantasies, Blackfish Gallery, Portland, OR.

 

Group Exhibitions

 

2007                 Blackfish Group Show, Gallery 110, Seattle, WA.

2006                 Blackfish Group Show, 55 Mercer Gallery, New York, NY.

2005                 New Paintings, Blackfish Gallery, Portland, OR.

2005                 Affair at the Jupiter Hotel, Portland, OR.

2005                 New members, Blackfish Gallery, Portland, OR.

2001                 Erotic, Eager Wally Gallery, Portland, OR.

2001                 PNCA Thesis Exhibit, Pacific Northwest College of Art, Portland, OR.

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John Dougherty

 

Bio:John Dougherty is a visual artist from Pensacola, Florida. He studied Studio Art as an undergraduate at the University of West Florida, and in 2014 completed his MFA in Visual Studies through the Hallie Ford School of Graduate Studies at Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Oregon. He teaches art and design at East Central University in Ada, Oklahoma. Recently he has exhibited at the Disjecta, IdeaXFactory, and PLACEPDX. He was a 2016 recipient of a Springfield Regional Arts Council Grant for his exhibition titled PILE(LANDS).

 

 

Artist Statement: I like to think about all kinds of trash and waste and poop. Where is it going to go? Who’s doing what with it? I like working in gardens for this same reason. It’s a microcosm of a system where waste is as good as gold, that I can experiment and play in. Unfortunately I still feel I have not tapped into the relationship between art and gardening. All I ever think about is making bad jokes with overgrown zucchinis and it’s childish and pathetic. PLEASE BUY THESE STICKS (NFS) is a series of playdates with shrink wrapping, shredded plastic bottles, dryer lint, and anything else I manage to come across.

 

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Caitlin Rooney

Spud

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Taj Bourgeois

 

Taj Bourgeois (1987) lives in Portland, Oregon. Half the week he has his daughter and the other half he works the night shift driving taxi. There's a lot of down time in the cab and this series came out of a desire to put his imagination to use sitting parked between rides making succinct digital collages on his phone. The images here reflect a mediation of poetry and sculpture in the modernist tradition of assembled readymades with no real purpose other than to be appreciated for their absurd aesthetics and fleeting lucidity.

 

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Bob Fish

 Bob Fish is a craftsman/artist based out of Portland, OR.  He holds an A.F.A. in Arts Education from Parkland College inChampaign, IL and a B.F.A. in General Fine Arts from the Pacific Northwest College of Art.  Bob works with a wide range

Bob Fish is a craftsman/artist based out of Portland, OR.  He holds an A.F.A. in Arts Education from Parkland College inChampaign, IL and a B.F.A. in General Fine Arts from the Pacific Northwest College of Art.  Bob works with a wide range of media including wood, clay, watercolor, collage, photography, stone, amongst other things.  Since graduating he has been working as a craftsman for a furniture manufacturer in Portland.  He approaches his current employment as a paid master’s degree program as he was not at all familiar with furniture building or design.  Because of this opportunity his most recent work is focused on craftsmanship and creating functional works of art.  As a maker he has and still feels the need to create work with the intention of repeated personal and physical interaction.  Form and function are the two major driving forces for the work he has created since graduating from P.N.C.A.

or Albatross gallery Bob is returning to his B.F.A. thesis focus which was education.  His thesis was centered around the idea that America’s education system is failing on all accounts.  He created work challenging the current and past systems of K-12 education; from corruption in charter schools to the early development of public educational institutions.  As a college student he felt the need to attack the system in which he was a part of (college institutions) but was discouraged from doing so because of the likely hood of being seen as a hypocrite.  He instead looked at his development as a student from K-12 and created work that was about his personal experience.  However, now with four years separating his graduation and an 18 month old daughter Ellie, he looks to revisit his thesis and challenge the idea of higher education as being the leading way to a “successful” life.  As a parent his concern for the education system from pre-K to P.H.D. has only been magnified and hopefully his work for Albatross will reflect that concern.

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Patrick Collier: Field Burns

Field Burns

 

I have always felt a strong affinity to the land, yet I never purposefully made art about nature until I did a five-year stint as an organic farmer. Over the course of that time, I gained a new appreciation for the meanings of the word “landscape,” and with it, what it means to “do landscapes.” My ongoing series of photographs titled “Field Burns” is as much about farming practices as it references modern art.

 

I have been photographing the annual grass seed field burnings in the Willamette Valley for eight years. Due to a change in state laws, many of the fields I’ve photographed over the years, and time and again, are no longer sown in grass. Others are no longer burned and instead are baled as hay. Despite the impressiveness of these field fires, I am watching a fading farming practice. Yet, I didn’t start out photographing the fields strictly as a documentation of this decline for I am just as much drawn to and struck by the rich textures and contrasting tones created in the blaze’s aftermath.

 

I often wonder if the farmers working those burns see some aspects of the beauty I see. I hope they do.



 

Patrick Collier — Artist’s Bio

 

Patrick Collier came to making art by an indirect route, via an undergraduate degree in Philosophy and an MA in English Literature. He received his MFA in 1992 from the University of Illinois at Chicago. Accordingly, his approach to art making is multidisciplinary and incorporates a variety of media.

 

Collier has lived in rural Oregon since 2003. Recent exhibitions have been at The Suburban in Illinois and Nine Gallery in Portland. He continues to write art criticism, now for Oregon ArtsWatch (www.orartwatch.org).

 

 







 

 

-- 

www.patrickcollier.com
www.tumblr.com/blog/twentymileperimeter

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Jamie Marie Wälchli

 

Title: The Life I Was Hoping For

Statement: This series is a reflection on the life I had in Portland, and the experience of leaving Portland to move to Tacoma. 

Bio: Jamie Marie Waelchli’s practice involves a continuous process of life evaluation and an investigation of the self through photography, drawing, installation and performance. Her work has shown in spaces throughout the US and her video work has been screened both nationally and internationally. She lives in Tacoma, Washington.

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Matt Leavitt

 Little Light o’ Mine

 

There is a core of my work that is austere, minimal, designed, refined, and that’s what I usually want to put in a gallery. That’s my brand. This show at Albatross features work that I’ve enjoyed making, but ordinarily wouldn’t choose to represent me, haven’t shown, or haven’t put my name on before. It may be vulgar, unsophisticated, meaningless, dumb, ridiculous, unrefined, not me, or maybe it just never found a venue before. Please enjoy!

 

Bio: Matt lives in Portland, Oregon, where he works mostly in ceramics, ink, graphic design and gardening.

 

Links:
vimeo.com/107795971
instagram.com/buckwildpegasus

Jizo.etsy.com

mattleavitt.etsy.com

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Andre Filipek

Unique Lot 3

packaging, tissue, cardboard, digital inkjet prints, bodega jewelry, obsidian stone pendant, blessing from Reiki master. 

2016

 

 

go from drab to fab in minutes --

some things aren't granted at birth. 

for everything else theres [redacted]

 

------->authentic real diamond crucifix la virgen de guadalupe selena gomez jlo peter parker REIKI #blessed good energy turn your life around today one of a kind subvert your circumstances.

 

thanks for looking! 

 

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Chris Freeman: Girls With Guns On Tinder

Girls with Guns on Tinder, by Chris Freeman, is a collection of screen shots of women with guns from the popular dating app.  Guns as symbols can carry with them messages of political division, violence, and danger; and also tradition, protection, and sport.  In the context of dating, another layer is added to the cultural meaning as the gun becomes intertwined with feminine mystique, strength, the gaze, and motherhood.  
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Sharita Towne

Our Family in Stereo is a collaborative multimedia family narrative project led by artist Sharita Towne. Incorporating both original and existing material, the work includes video, self-publishing, and photos and letters from her family collection. Towne will give a short informal presentation that includes video and printed ephemera from this work in progress, and engage in dialogue with invited attendees about Black family recordkeeping and auto-ethnography in contemporary art.

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MK Guth

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Sara Siestreem: mean time

 

PAINTING
I make abstract paintings. My painting process is based on observations of Nature combined with a formal structure and improvisational practice.
I recognize that Nature generates new life through rhythmic cycles of elemental interaction. I see this in biologic life cycles, geologic and hydrodynamic events, and in the astronomic elements that affect the seasons. 
My second observation of Nature is that basic designs repeat themselves from one form to the next structurally; matter organizes itself in predictable and repetitive ways. 
Informed by the first observation, I follow a formal structure in my painting practice. I combine color field painting, gesture drawing, and color theory. These three elements represent a natural system, a rhythmic cycle.
Through combining these elements, I am seeking my second observation. As I create a visual noise through this improvisation I am looking for basic forms from nature to emerge. When something elemental shows itself to me, I refine the picture plane to support that event. 
My hope is that in the same way we receive an energetic charge from contact with the land, other animals or a natural event, these paintings will affect the viewer. 

 

 

 

ARTIST BIO

Sara Siestreem (Hanis Coos and American, 1976-) is a master artist from the Umpqua River Valley in the South Coast of Oregon. Her studio work is multi-disciplinary. Her primary language is painting, but she also works in photography, printmaking, drawing, sculpture, video, and traditional Indigenous weaving. Her art practice branches into education and institutional reform. She comes from a family of professional artists and educators, her training began in the home. Siestreem graduated Phi Kappa Phi with a BS from PSU in 2005. She earned an MFA with distinction from Pratt Art Institute in 2007.  She is represented by Augen Gallery. Her work has been shown in museums, universities, and galleries and figures in prestigious private and public collections around the world. She lives and works exclusively in the arts in Portland, Oregon. 

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Billy Nee

Stephanie Littlebird Fogel

 

Ancient totem poles found in the Pacific Northwest are highly-personalized, familial treasures that communicate lineage and spiritual heritage. These sacred objects are codified with tribal symbolism and no two totems are the same.

As a contemporary totem maker, I continue ancestral practice while incorporating new materials and forms. Each piece is one-of-a-kind and intended to bring the owner inspiration and wellbeing.

BIO:

Stephanie “Littlebird” Fogel is an indigenous artist, writer, and maker hailing from Portland, Oregon. Drawing connections between our collective past and imminent future, Fogel mixes her own tribal traditions with contemporary materials and subject matter.

Fogel graduated from the Pacific Northwest College of Art in Portland, Oregon (2015), her work has been featured by the United Nations, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), The Oregon Bee Project, and the U.S. Postal Service. 

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Cecilia Mignon

Vincent Aloia

Worth Their Salt
Worth Their Salt

“Worth Their Salt”


The availability and control of salt has built empires, amassed fortunes, and made men.

It’s lack has toppled the same.

The scarcity of salt at times elevated its value above gold, and certainly above the lives of others.

This capitalistic locus of trade and greed conjured sayings such as “worth their salt”- when a person was considered valuable enough to keep around if their perceived social value or labor was worth more than the salt they required. A “salary,” as the Romans called it.

The average human body holds roughly 1.25 cups of salt in composition.

Michael Reinsch, the bearer of Albatross, has been asked to risk spilling as much.

In this gestural work, a pendant composed of salt shakers filled with salt is worn. As the bearer moves about, the vital mineral will spill. This action is at least threefold in consequence:

As the vessels empty, their lack will become evident- the substance of wealth and preservation lost- something akin to an emptying hourglass. This fleeting moment.

As the vessels empty, they are literally salting the earth- an ancient ritualized curse on the re-inhabitation of a city (or in this case, Pearl District). A person’s impact.

As the vessels empty, a temporary trail showing Michael’s path may be shown, similar perhaps to that haphazard trail of breadcrumbs. Perhaps inconvenient to galleries.

Salt, this item of preservation, became a symbol of long life, the bonds of relationships, and wealth. In turn, the spilling of it became an ill omen which could jeopardize these.

Artist Statement:


Vincent Aloia creates discrete objects, finite situations, and paintings to examine relationships with social and physical engagement, control, boundary creation, and transgression. He is a maker of mischievous interdisciplinary pieces, often of interactive intent.

He explores choice and consequence through structures and imagery utilizing play, violence, touch, and humor. He uses objects and moments to reflect on the shifting social contracts that form both everyday interactions, the dynamics of art community, and the current tumultuous economic and political climate.


Aloia is perhaps best known for his participatory sculptures and the corresponding activation of audience through their engagement. Studying interaction patterns, he produces objects and paintings that may present potential for physical engagement through their form, function, content, and material- sometimes to the point of the work’s destruction. The debris, tools, and recollections from these events then serve as a point of reflection- remnants of individual choices and group dynamics. The joy of fleeting moments, precarious structure, and above all- the will to engage is celebrated in these works. Vincent is continuously in awe of the people around him.




About:


Vincent Aloia is an interdisciplinary artist born in CT, and working out of Portland, OR.

He received his MFA in Visual Studies from the Pacific Northwest College of Art, attended the Maine College of Art, and received his BA in Visual Studies from Eastern CT State University.

Aloia has presented work at Page Space, the Dorothy Lemelson Innovation Studio, and Allied Works Architecture in Portland, OR; Gallery Two in Pullman, WA; Akus Gallery, and the John Slade Ely House in New Haven, CT. He has attended residencies at Caldera Art Center in Sisters, OR; the Stephen Pace House in Stonington, ME; and a Global Citizenship Residency in Havana, Cuba.


Contact Vincent: valoia@pnca.edu 971-276-316















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Johanna Robinson

Bio:

Johanna Robinson (b. 1985, Mt. Kisco, NY) is a painter whose work explores the limits of constructed knowledge. Within her paintings, imagination is given primacy as a source for truth-seeking and world building. Robinson is a 2018 graduate of Virginia Commonwealth University’s MFA program. Additionally, she has participated in the Turps Correspondence Course for Painters based out of London, UK, and holds a BFA from The School of the Museum of Fine Arts with Tufts University. She is the recipient of a Regional Arts and Cultural Council Professional Development Grant in Portland, OR, and an Artist’s Grant from the Vermont Studio Center. Recent group exhibitions include Against Forgetting, Gaa Gallery, Provincetown, MA; Emerge, Page Bond Gallery, Richmond, VA; and Not One But The Other, Art Bermondsey Project Space, London, UK. 


www.johannarobinson.com


Statement:

Recently I have been concerned with making work that is tactile, creating physical presence through texture. Brushmarks in the ground are left intentionally clunky, giving the image some tooth to sit within and compete against. Narratively speaking, irony and absurdity function as devices to examine the formation of Western scientific and philosophic thought. I try to re-envision such scenarios through a feminist lens.

Eye of the Beholder
Eye of the Beholder
Carbon Monoxide Oxygen Exchange
Carbon Monoxide Oxygen Exchange
Reinventing the Wheel
Reinventing the Wheel
Harvest Moon
Harvest Moon
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Back to Artists May 2016-
14
Brandon Wilkinson
10
John Dougherty
4
Caitlin Rooney
27
Taj Bourgeois
 Bob Fish is a craftsman/artist based out of Portland, OR.  He holds an A.F.A. in Arts Education from Parkland College inChampaign, IL and a B.F.A. in General Fine Arts from the Pacific Northwest College of Art.  Bob works with a wide range
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Bob Fish
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2
Patrick Collier: Field Burns
2
Jamie Marie Wälchli
18
Matt Leavitt
3
Andre Filipek
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3
Chris Freeman: Girls With Guns On Tinder
1
Sharita Towne
2
MK Guth
3
Sara Siestreem: mean time
6
Stephanie Littlebird Fogel
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Cecilia Mignon
Worth Their Salt
4
Vincent Aloia
Eye of the Beholder
5
Johanna Robinson

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