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Art Austin
reviews + articles February 2010

 

Not Too Tight at All

History in the Making

'Terrain' plays with nature

'Desire' comes in all shapes and forms at Blanton

Advertising's lasting impression

'Kia Neill: Terrain'

 

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art
Photo by John Anderson

Not Too Tight at All
The disciplined abstracts of Helmut Barnett

By Wayne Alan Brenner
Austin Chronicle
February 5, 2010

There's an explosion of color inside the big white 100-year-old house one block east of I-35 on Third Street. The house is the studio of Helmut Barnett, artist of large abstract paintings, of smaller abstract drawings. The explosion of color is his many works rendered on stretched canvas and fine thick paper: posed on easels, stacked in corners, hung on walls, piled upon tables, stashed in drawer after drawer of several wooden cabinets.

He's a busy man, this Barnett. He's currently preparing work for his fourth one-man show – appropriately titled "Big Paintings, Little Drawings" – at Wally Workman Gallery, and he has a warehouse worth of brilliance after almost four decades of pursuing his art.

"I've been in Austin a long time," says Barnett, "and I've been very lucky with studios. I had a studio on Congress Avenue for 28 years. That was 908 Congress, the same block that Little City is in now, and I was there from '74 to 2002. And before that I had a place on Sixth Street, upstairs from where the parkside restaurant is now."

Barnett's personal history is captured on the tall refurbished walls of the former residence that he's occupied for eight years now, cherished images marking the passage of time, framed among a spectacular array of paintings and drawings: photos of the band he played guitar with as a young man in Germany, of the plane he flew in as a radar technician for the United States Air Force, of his old studio on Congress, of Barnett and his wife on a date in the restaurant – the Avenue – below that old studio, of the couple's daughter, who's now attending Texas A&M.

History, arranged upon the verticals like the diversity of shapes in Barnett's biggest works. History, but nothing near the current studio's own century mark, right? Even though there has to be a substantial number of years to account for the skills the man has acquired, the finesse with which he brings his polychrome wonders into being.

"I'm going to be 64," says the artist, running a hand back through the thick brush of gray hair atop his head. "I don't feel 64."

Barnett uses whatever's necessary (but mostly acrylic paint) to translate his visions from internal to external, and the results are often stunning. Not in abstracts like abstract expressionism's more emo slashes and splotches that pretty much assault a defenseless surface, but strategically applied, complexly balanced abstracts. Like Mies van der Rohe tweaking the color schemes of lepidoptera. Like Joan Miró and Piet Mondrian collaborating at the peak of a Ritalin binge. Like no one does quite the way Helmut Barnett does.

"I like to draw a lot," says Barnett, gesturing toward a small outcropping of sketchbooks on one table. "I like black-and-white drawings, pencil drawings. The drawing is very spontaneous and quick, and there's a bit of playfulness involved – sometimes I'll start drawing with my left hand, just to get different shapes. And I do put some recognizable things in the abstracts, if they show up. But I don't intend to; I don't know what they're going to look like beforehand. This painting here, for instance, this shape started out as just a black blob, and I made it look more like a bust. It's called Bad Boy Bust." He chuckles. "I like alliteration in some of my titles.

"So, yes, sometimes I do work the shapes out: I see something I like, and I develop it a bit, kind of refine it. And usually the drawings stay the same size; but, lately, what I've been doing for my paintings ... I'll make little sketches – I have books that I fill with drawings – and when I do one that I like, I go out here and put on my overhead projector and project the image onto a canvas. And that way it comes out much larger but with exact proportions. And I'll paint it that way. This," he says, walking over to an unfinished piece on an easel, "is one I'm working on now, for the new show."

So amazing, the subtle gradations of color, that it has to be asked: He doesn't use an airbrush, does he?

"No, I don't," says Barnett. "I tried an airbrush, years ago, but I didn't like it. I found it ... too mechanical. This is just done very carefully – with a lot of taping. I use a lot of masking tape, and I do a lot of layering with a brush and just blend the colors together. I use a large brush, and I work very fast. I have to, because the paint dries so fast. It's acrylics – it's not oils. Large areas are really hard to do."

And yet look at how one color smooths into the next; see the barely discernible strokes of sable or camel hair or whatever pulled the pigment. Never mind, even, the overall visual impact; just, ah, groove on the skill of application. It's so wonderfully ... controlled.

"Well, you could look at it like that," says Barnett, smiling, seeming a shade uncomfortable with the compliments. "You could look at it like that – in a positive way. Or you could look at it in a negative way." He shrugs. "Maybe it's too tight."

As if providing evidence of his efforts in combating such putative tightness, Barnett points to another work on the other side of the room. "That's some of the masking tape I used," he says. "I cut it into pieces and glued it on there, just kind of messed around with it." Look: Short lines of textured color form a staggered spectrum in many rows across a large rectangle. Beautiful. And slightly reminiscent of something Lance Letscher might create.

"Ah," says Barnett, "I know Lance. What I do that's more like what Lance does, I paint on the collages I make. I take books – physics books, chemistry books, mechanical drawing books – because I like the little shapes in there – and I play with the shapes that are in there, cut them up, extend them into drawings, and paint over them. I make the collages at home: That's where I glue them together. My wife doesn't like me using the dining-room table, but that's where I do it. And then I bring them here for painting."

And over here, on a pair of paintings halfway up one of the walls, what technique produced the strangely modulated gray tones in the background?

"That's a solvent transfer," explains Barnett. "What I do, I take pages from magazines and put them in a cookie tray that's filled with lacquer thinner. The lacquer thinner loosens the ink, and if you pick the page up – real quick – and put it on here, then it transfers, and sometimes – see? – you can even pick up a pattern. And I like working in black and white, but most of the things I sell, well, people like color. And so here, on top of the transfers, I did a whole series on what, for lack of a better term, I call ribbons."

And over there is another series, based on other notebook sketches. And over there are variations on red waveforms. And over there are what appear to be giant silhouettes of complex beadwork. And over there is – holy Yves Tanguy, is this amount of work what it takes to make a living as a painter? What about when Barnett was first starting out, after the USAF, after graduating from UT with a bachelor's of fine arts back in '74?

"In the very beginning, I wasn't making a living from my art." he says. "I had to take part-time jobs. But I wasn't married then, and I didn't want to take a full-time job, because I felt – and I felt real strong about this – I didn't want to get comfortable with a regular paycheck and slowly delegate my painting to weekends. And, being single, I was able to go ahead and just take care of myself; I really didn't need a lot of money. So, because of the good graces of my landlord, I was able to work. Plus, I had a friend in the restaurant below; I would work in the original Waterloo [Ice House], get a free lunch and a little extra money. So I got by. And these days ... well, it's still not easy."

Barnett looks around the spacious studio, at the high ceiling that had to be rescued (with a car jack and several 2-by-8s) from sagging, at the formerly graffiti-covered walls now showing white between the dozens and dozens of paintings and drawings and collages and framed photos, at a growing body of work that another artist might sacrifice his left arm to have created. "I mean," he says, a wry smile collaging itself into the contours of his face, "I can come here and make art all day long, but I can't make anybody buy it."

Many people, however, do. And you can, too, of course; or, at least, you can see the newest works – an orchestrated explosion of color and form and techniques – on display at Wally Workman Gallery throughout the month of February at this particular point in history.

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Image courtesy of The Harry Ransom Center

History in the Making
A new exhibit at the Harry Ransom Center proves that no job is too small when it comes to 'Making Movies'

By Kimberley Jones
Austin Chronicle
February 5, 2010

"Dear Bobby. You like my letters? Here's another."

So wrote Elia Kazan to Robert De Niro in a letter on the subject of The Last Tycoon, the pair's first and only project together. No doubt Bobby did like Kazan's letters,and Kazan, too – along with Martin Scorsese, he presented the director with a controversial honorary Oscar in 1999. And one could comfortably claim that those letters had at least one more fan: the archivist. Indeed, if the archivist had a vote, one imagines he'd say, "By all means, keep 'em coming."

Of course, Kazan left this mortal coil some time ago, but De Niro's collection of movie-related materials still swells and has a permanent home at the University of Texas' Harry Ransom Center. Acquired in 2006 and ranging from early head shots to more than 3,000 individual costume items, props, and a full body cast used in the 1994 production of Frankenstein, the De Niro holdings feature prominently in a new exhibit called "Making Movies," which explores the collaborative process that goes into the craft and creation of cinema.

"I didn't want to do just another memorabilia show or just, you know, highlights of the collection. I wanted to try to say something," explained Steve Wilson, the HRC's associate curator of film. "I let the materials speak for themselves. So what the collection is about is the various creative jobs that go into making a movie."

The new collection, which opens to the public Feb. 9 and features more than 350 items culled from the HRC's vast holdings, devotes distinct sections to those various creative jobs: director, screenwriter, producer, production designer, art director, actor, costume designer, hair and makeup artist, cinematographer, special effects designer, editor, and composer. Publicity and exhibition are also highlighted.

Eleven days before opening, I walked through the exhibit with Wilson, sidestepping workmen as they leveled frames on a wall. A hall to be devoted to original costumes like Scarlett O'Hara's burgundy ball gown and Travis Bickle's taxi-driver jacket was still empty –"It's going to be pretty dramatic," Wilson assured me – but the materials already on display were hugely impressive. This is kid-in-a-candy-store stuff for any serious movie buff, where every corner turned begs a fresh exclamation: the giant scissors from Spellbound's Dalí dream sequence! Ernest Lehman's brochure from Mount Rushmore, with stage directions for North by Northwest's precipice-scaling scribbled in blue ink!

"Making Movies" is heavy on Gone With the Wind artifacts; producer David O. Selznick's papers mark the largest collection at the center, and Selznick, a notorious micromanager and memo-writer, required a lot of paper. In the producer portion of the exhibit, a preproduction chart weighs what rival studios MGM and Warner Bros. could bring to the table (respectively, Clark Gable and Errol Flynn, among other variables). Later, in the section devoted to screenwriting, a list details the pros and cons of writers considered for the Gone With the Wind gig, including Maxwell Anderson, William Faulkner ("not very reliable in his plans or habits"), Philip Barry, and Sinclair Lewis ("might be a little too political minded or a little too gin-minded"). The GWTW color scheme devised by William Cameron Menzies – for whom the term production designer was first invented – is examined in a wall of painterly storyboards. And around another corner, there's a take-your-breath-away close-up of Vivien Leigh with a clapboard labeled "tear stains"; rightly worried about continuity, the filmmakers wanted to make sure they could re-create precisely the mixed streak of dirt and tear.

That image is a particular favorite of Wilson's, who told me he plans to mount the reproduction on his office wall when the exhibit goes down in August. A 20-year veteran of the HRC who previously worked at the Paramount Theatre and the long-shuttered Varsity Theatre on the Drag, Wilson labored a full year on the "Making Movies" exhibit. He pointed to a nearby display about the 1966 film Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?, the assemblage of which, Wilson wagered, took several weeks alone –"and we had three times as much stuff." He looked around ruefully. "I kind of have curator's remorse throughout the show of all the things that didn't make the cut."

What did make the cut: a rare early draft of the Annie Hall script. Graham Greene's original hand-typed story of The Third Man, De Niro's The Deer Hunter dialect cheat sheet for "Western Pennsylvania Language Peculiarities."

"He told me a great story," Wilson said when we reached a trove of De Niro materials. "It was sometime around [The Deer Hunter]. He was at Western Costume looking for a costume for a movie. And it's real common even today for them to recycle costumes. So he's going through these racks of clothes, and he comes across a costume for Bonnie and Clyde. And he said, 'This is wrong that they're recycling this – this is an important [artifact]!' And at that point, he started keeping everything."

The keeping of everything is a curator's dream, of course – especially when the subject exactingly labels every bric-a-brac, as was the case with screenwriter Ernest Lehman, who started sending his materials to the HRC in the early Sixties. "He wrote notes on everything," said Wilson. "In some cases, it's just kind of better to let him explain things."

But there's thrill in discovery, too, in solving the puzzle of a piece that comes in without any identifiers. Wilson showed me a wall devoted to the archival papers of Alfred Junge, the German-born production designer who worked closely with the Archers, Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger's film collective. Wilson pointed to a page of doodlings and near-indecipherable note-taking.

"This is all Junge's handwriting. It's written on top of a letter that his son wrote to him. In corresponding with Junge's daughter-in-law, we think that this is some sort of conversation or he was brainstorming with somebody.

"On the other side there's a lot more ballet [drawings]. We think that he was having a talk maybe with [director] Michael Powell, maybe with [costume designer] Hein Heckroth. And we think they were talking about both The Red Shoes and Black Narcissus at the same time.

"But he makes these notes about Black Narcissus: 'Always just off-white.' The nuns' habits were off-white and that was kind of the famous thing he did on Black Narcissus. It brought the color palette down and it made everything look realistic because of that white not being white but being a little farther down the palette."

For Wilson, the mystery behind that slip of paper wasn't an idle curiosity; rather, it represented something integral about the filmmaking process.

"I'm always trying to show how each one of these artists involved in a film is trying to make a contribution to the characters and the story. A costume designer is not just putting clothes on but is really trying to say something through the clothes."

That fact –that movies are built on attention to the tiniest of details –is the raison d'etre of the exhibit. But if filmmakers are doing their jobs right, then most moviegoers won't even notice. "The vast majority of our collection is about mainstream Hollywood filmmaking, and that style is marked by invisibility, by not calling attention to itself and by putting the story and the characters first."

"Making Movies," then, makes that invisible work overt and, in the process, pays remarkable tribute to it.

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LED lights add sparkle to the geode creations that are part of Kia Neill's 'Terrain' installation, which almost fills the Women & Their Work gallery on Lavaca Street. The exhibit runs through Feb. 27.

'Terrain' plays with nature

By Jeanne Claire van Ryzin
Austin American-Statesman
February 10, 2010

Ersatz nature can be so utterly beautiful.

And in the hands of Houston-based artist Kia Neill, such pseudo-nature - specifically the geological formations of her gallery-filling installation 'Terrain' now at Women & Their Work - is irresistible.

'Terrain' is engrossing in its detail, enthralling in its quirky homage to all things artificial and clever in its commentary on the tradition of landscape-rendering over the centuries of art history.

Neill clearly has raided her local craft supply store to assemble her art-making materials - sequins, glitter, flocking fiber, burlap, papier-mâché, blinking colored lights, chicken wire and that weird spongy polyurethane foam used by modelers to simulate tree foliage.

In what must have been a meticulous process (and a heck of a lot of time with the glue gun), Neill layered all that crafty stuff into an undulating cavescape adorned with craggy outcroppings and towering stalagmites. Odd geodelike cluster formations of plastic crystals pulsate with jewel-tone light. Crevasses reveal clusters of glittering, gaudy imitation precious stones. 'Terrain' covers nearly the entire floor of the Women & Their Work gallery. To navigate it, you follow a winding path.

But that's only after your eyes have adjusted to the darkness. The only illumination in 'Terrain' comes from the blinking or glowing colored LED lights that dot Neill's fake geological formations. You even have to pass through heavy curtains to slip into Neill's wonderland of a simulated cavern.

Is this a natural history museum diorama on special effects overdrive? The backdrop for a 'Journey to the Center of the Earth' theme park ride? Then again maybe 'Terrain' is a cave-themed Las Vegas restaurant.

Likely, it's all of the above.

As Neill's delightful ersatz environment suggests, we're as inclined these days to be as seduced by - or at least as accustomed to - a simulated landscape as we are the real thing.

Glitter, after all, is so irresistible.

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Blanton curator Annette DiMeo Carlozzi says she avoided pieces that literally show desire when she put together the new exhibit.

'Desire' comes in all shapes and forms at Blanton

By Jeanne Claire van Ryzin
Austin American-Statesman
February 13, 2010

Desire — it's not what you think.

Or perhaps, desire drives everything we do.

It's the latter idea that Annette DiMeo Carlozzi, director of curatorial affairs at the Blanton Museum of Art, used to organize "Desire," the surprising new exhibit of international contemporary art that opened last week.

"Desire is universal, and it's also particular," says Carlozzi. "Desire is so subjective and yet it's a driving force — perhaps the driving force — in our lives. It's something we all have in common, and yet our individual experiences of it are varied. There's nothing more individual than our desires, in fact. And the object of desire is different for everyone. We love what we love."

If the exhibit is surprising, it's because, as Carlozzi explains, she searched for art that didn't interpret desire literally. Forget saccharine romantic idealizations of love (whether it ends happily or tragically). Instead, Carlozzi gathered art that suggests desire in a more oblique and conceptual fashion and in which desire isn't necessarily, or ever, satisfied.

Which isn't to say that "Desire," the exhibit, is subtle: sex, the body, even pornography emerge as subjects in the exhibit's film and video installations, sculpture, paintings and photography. (There is plenty of adult content in the show.)

What also emerges are modern riffs on mythological love stories, reconsiderations of classic films, the nostalgia for a particular place and the yearning to find one's identity confirmed in popular culture.

It also might surprise some visitors with the notable number of edgy, sophisticated works plucked from a few private Austin collections. And even the exhibit's catalog steps away from the norm: Carlozzi jettisoned the usual collection of stuffy essays for a collection of writerly riffs and responses to the exhibit's art.

Carlozzi admits she somewhat crafted "Desire" with an Austin audience in mind. "People here are interested in new ideas and new energy," she says. (But no, the Valentine's Day timing of the show was purely a coincidence of scheduling.)

From the collection of venture capitalist and Texas Tribune publisher John Thornton and his wife, Julie, comes Gajin Fujita's vividly hued painting in which historic Japanese erotic art collides with pulsating East L.A. graffiti art. Also from the Thornton's collection is Jesse Amado's "L'Avventura, Tapes, #1-8," an homage to Michelangelo Antonioni's ground-breaking 1960s film about modern love and alienation. Petah Coyne's sculpture "Untitled #1103 (Daphne)," also from the Thorntons' collection, is a graceful depiction of a laurel tree made of lustrous black wax, a reference to the Greek myth of Daphne, who fled from Apollo's desire.

Other Austin collectors represented in the show include Suzanne Deal Booth and David G. Booth as well as Alexa and Blaine Wesner.

Perhaps the signature piece of the exhibit — and a painting that has elicited more comments than any other since it went on view at the Blanton a few years ago — is Marilyn Minter's "Crystal Swallow," a promised gift to the Blanton from Austin collectors Jeanne and Michael Klein.

Minter's magnified image of lipsticked lips wrapped around a crystal necklace at first seems like it's straight from the pages of a fashion-forward magazine. But its oversized scale — it's 5 feet by 8 feet — and magnified details make it as grotesque as it is compelling.

Minter — whose video "Green Pink Caviar" was used as a stage backdrop for Madonna's recent "Sticky and Sweet" tour — frequently mines the unsettled territory between high fashion and high art to challenge accepted preconceptions. "Most desire is never realized," Minter said last week when she gave a talk at the Blanton. "And there's a glass ceiling when it comes to women artists being allowed to own their own images of female sexuality. The art world always thinks of itself on a higher plane than (the fashion world), but it's not."

Carlozzi has chosen a diverse group of writers and creative artists, each of whom has written a creative personal response to a particular work in the exhibit, be it poetry, stream-of-consciousness narrative or even love letters. "I'm hoping the catalog spurs visitors to maybe write their own responses to the art," says Carlozzi. Novelists Sarah Bird and Jim Lewis offer their takes on painters Georganne Deen and Richard Prince, respectively. Choreographer Deborah Hay writes a poem to complement a video by Bill Viola. Dunya Bean imagines the love letter that's written on the giant crumpled pages of Michael Scoggins' paper sculpture. Kurt Heinzelman, University of Texas professor and co-curator of the Blanton Poetry Project — which gathers Texas writers to compose poems in response to works in the museum's collection — offers a hip contemporary poetic take on the ancient Greek myth of Daphne and Apollo as it's represented in Coyne's sprawling sculpture.

From the collection of Ballet Austin artistic director Stephen Mills and his partner Brent Hasty comes "Consummation" by Susie J. Lee, a delicate black-and-white video of two long wicks slowly disappearing as they burn, the image projected on an undulating piece of wood while a soundtrack of plaintive solo piano music plays. Write Mills and Hasty in the catalog: "It's an improvised dance of slow burning desire and lingering satisfaction, a consummation of the physical and emotional suspended in time. It's beautiful choreography."

And if visitors find the contemporary art in "Desire" not so beautiful or too risqu?? Carlozzi suggests they might want to check out the more than 50 works she's selected from the Blanton's renowned print collection, which spans more than five centuries.

There's a lovely nude drawing from the 1930s by famed Mexican muralist Diego Rivera of his then-wife Frida Kahlo. And naked men ready for a skinny-dip in a pastoral swimming hole get an impressionistic treatment by Paul Cezanne. Rembrandt represents with a visual study of lust.

Carlozzi shrugs. Desire has, after all, been the concern of artists through millennia. "Today's artists are doing the same."

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A poster promoting Minnie Pearl and the Grand Ole Opry is displayed with the two hand-carved blocks that were used to create it. In the letterpress printing process, each color requires its own block, which is carved, coated with ink and pressed against the paper.

Advertising's lasting impression
Exhibit of vintage posters and hand-carved blocks captures more than century of popular entertainment

By Jeanne Claire van Ryzin
Austin American-Statesman
Wednesday, Feb. 24, 2010

Think of all the e-mails, the tweets, the Facebook pokes ("Would you like to become a fan of …") that you receive hawking plays, musicals, live music and other entertainments.

Now, think of all those virtual notices as real objects, specifically printed posters and handbills.

Time was, before barrages of bytes flashed in front of us, we were lured to live entertainment by means of eye-catching posters.

And arguably no other company in the country made more of those posters than Hatch Show Print of Nashville.

Now, with the South by Southwest music conference right around the corner, "American Letterpress: The Art of the Hatch Show Print," a new exhibit at the Austin Museum of Art, reminds us of the vivid, expressive and very tactile means by which live entertainment was advertised.

The exhibit is organized by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service in conjunction with the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, which now owns Hatch Show Print. More than 100 posters, along with some of the original hand-carved wood blocks, recount a history of popular culture - and the graphic design it inspired - from vaudeville to Johnny Cash to Coldplay.

Hatch Show Print was started in 1879 by Charles and Herbert Hatch, sons of a printer who had settled in Nashville looking to take advantage of the city's burgeoning printing industry. The Hatch brothers purchased letterpress equipment - essentially the same ink-on-carved-block printing method used since Johannes Gutenberg perfected the process in the mid-15th century and revolutionized the written word.

The first item the Hatch brothers produced was a handbill advertising a public lecture by Henry Ward Beecher, a minister and brother of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" author Harriet Beecher Stowe. A copy of the handbill opens the current exhibit.

Soon, the Hatch brothers began to specialize in posters for popular entertainment.

In our day of music videos going viral on YouTube and costly high-concept corporate concert tours, it's easy to forget that a century ago, entertainers relied almost solely on advance notice by printed materials to advertise their shows. As they traveled from town to town, the vaudeville troupes, musical revues and theatrical productions - and solo music acts - employed advance men who literally plastered a town with posters and handbills of the coming attractions, even striking deals with roadside building owners offering free tickets in exchange for poster-hanging space.

"Advertising without posters is like fishing without worms," the Hatch brothers are said to have proclaimed. By the dawn of the 20th century, Hatch Show Print was booming.

Yet for all their eye-catching artistry, Hatch Show Prints weren't considered art by those who made them. The business of printing was strictly a business. Designers and block-carvers never signed their work or otherwise identified what they created. Carved printing blocks were typically destroyed after they were used or chopped up and reused. And the posters themselves, often left exposed to the elements, were usually considered trash once a show left town. Hence considerably few vintage posters remain. Many of the posters in the exhibit are contemporary restrikes from existing vintage blocks. And the posters are also hard to accurately date: A poster might advertise the date of the show, but not the year.

As graphic design, Hatch Show Prints mirror the development of American popular visual aesthetics. Text-heavy designs of the 1910s give way to the more fluid Art Deco-inspired look in the 1920s. By the 1930s and 1940s, a stylized, streamlined aesthetic began to rule. And by the late 1940s, the process of using photographs was perfected.

The company's Nashville base made it a natural for the myriad country music performers and presenters based there. Roy Acuff, Johnny Cash, Charley Pride, Dolly Parton and Minnie Pearl are just some of the country stars who are immortalized in Hatch Show Prints, and the Hatch "look" became inextricably linked to country-music culture.

By the 1970s, Hatch was no longer a family-owned concern, and it was struggling to survive in an advertising landscape that favored promotional methods far more advanced than laboriously printed posters. But in 1981, a new owner, Bill Deny, launched what would eventually be a rebirth of Hatch Show Prints. At the same time, roots-inspired new bands such as R.E.M. and Jason and the Scorchers began ordering Hatch Show Prints for their gigs, reviving interest in the now-vintage print medium.

In 1992, the nonprofit Country Music Foundation stepped in and made Hatch Show Prints a division of its preservation efforts. Meanwhile, a whole new generation of history-savvy musicians - including the Squirrel Nut Zippers, Sigur Rós, Wilco and the White Stripes - found interest in the storied poster press and its unmistakably vintage aesthetic.

What was once old suddenly is cool again .

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'Kia Neill: Terrain'
Women & Their Work through Feb. 27

By Wayne Alan Brenner
Austin Chronicle
February 5, 2010

Houston artist Kia Neill, responsible for having turned entire art venues into glittering, glowing caves and grottoes in which you wouldn't be surprised to find the fossil remains of a Sleestak, now gives the Women & Their Work Art Gallery the geological-fantasy treatment with a less claustrophobic creation, called Terrain. Neill uses a diversity of materials to construct her eerie, shimmering otherscape: chicken wire, papier mâché, shattered CDs, plaster, rhinestones, paint, glitter, oh, the list goes on, as does this beautiful Terrain, taking over the gallery's interior, accessible past a wall and curtains that provide the darkness from which embedded lights, reflected from kaleidoscopic shards of recycled CDs and filtered through cattywampus lattices of wire, flicker in complex patterns, in a fractured rainbow of colors.

It's so dark in there among the artificial hills and stalagmitic risers, you get the feeling of having entered the land of faery while simultaneously flying into LAX late at night, the City of Angels' sprawling grid disrupted by seismic and volcanic events and eroded by centuries of fey weather. This, you could imagine, is what the inside of Bat for Lashes' Natasha Khan's head looks like. Or the parts of fantasy writer Neil Gaiman's head that aren't yet papered with royalty statements and divorce decrees. Or maybe the artist's own head, of course, she being the force that moved the hands that worked the matter that rendered this compelling glimpse of elsewhere.

You go to a different place like this, you tourist your way through an eldritch land so far removed from where there are banks and courts and mundane quotidia, it could be that you'd also want a souvenir to prove your visit. Neill has provided several such objects for the enchanted public: Her "geodes" and "crystals" and other objects made from the same stuff (art materials, recycled media, craft-enhanced whimsy) as the installed Terrain are available, piece by piece, although the price is somewhat more dear than most gift-shop relics. Stopping by the gallery for a look-see into this fantasmaspeleological installation, though, will cost you nothing but an enhanced sense of wonder – which we earthily recommend.

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