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Karon Davis
"Pain Management" addresses Karon Davis' experience of her late artist husband Noah Davis' losing battle with cancer in a two-gallery installation that grapples with the sombre difficulty of her roll as care-giver, the grief of loss, and the importance of being able to move on. More...


Thomas Kellner
Thomas Kellner's exploded photographic grids of iconic international sites evoke violent flux through orderly means. More...


“Structures and Feelings”
"Structures and Feelings" is the first of four exhibitions organized by curator-in-residence Michele Fiedler. The artists here probe connections between popular culture and communications systems. More...


Picasso Lithographs 1945–1960
The focus on this exceptional selection of Picasso's print output fully engages the master's creative process by presenting multiple states. More...


Pablo Picasso
A pair of exhibitions focus on Pablo Picasso's great draftsmanship as well as his creative process. Works represent many of his stylistic periods, and we are also reacquainted with the various women who served as both muse and partner. More...


Jun Kaneko
Jun Kaneko's large painting installation work "Mirage" anchors an arresting, striking colorful exhibition of paintings and ceramics. More...


The Democratic Lens
Richard Speer is both delighted and exasperated by the now ubiquitous presence and use of the smartphone camera. If it has democratized the making and distribution of images, it also obscures and discourages any real sense of standards. More...


“Symbol Pleasures”
Squeak Carnwath, Walter Robinson and Orlando Leyba make up a three-part funk-art harmony that is delightfully free-spirited. More...


Michael T. Hensley
The rich but agitated surfaces of Michael T. Hansley's mixed media paintings are like walls or billboards that display multiple generations of posters. Hensley is a great example of Portland's regional "painterly painting" approach that both reveals and conceals latent imagery. More...


Kirstine Reiner Hansen
Inspired by both old and modern masters, Kirstine Reiner Hansen recycles her own portraits and collages to make the imperfect real. More...


SITElines.2016
If many surveys of American art tend to think Each Coast-West Coast, "SITElines" is oriented on a North-South axis. The artists here emphasize our spiritual relationship with land and water, informed by geography and ethnic identity. More...


Rebeca Puga
It can take years for Rebeca Puga to complete some of her paintings, but they often feel as though they are the product of a dream-like instant. More...


“30 Americans”
This survey of works from Miami's Rubell Family Collection focuses on African American artists and offers how formerly excluded and marginalized black Americans simply dismantle discredited historical stereotypes and assumptions about supposed creative or intellectual limitations. More...


Mark Klett
"Desert Citizens" are saguaros cactii as photographed by Mark Klett, which gives you a good idea as to the spirit of these images. More...


George Herms
A selection of pioneering assemblagist George Herms' new work reaffirms his past and current relevance. The Dude abides. More...


Mark Spencer
Mark Spencer paints in-between places, clearly taking pleasure in the play of ambiguities. His technique is quite polished, is utterly logical in his approach, but pushes images to be constantly morphing into something more that they initially seem. More...


Dennis Evans and Nancy Mee
Husband-and-wife artists Evans and Mee collaborate on the smart, lovely “Prospero’s Library." More...


George Tice
The urban landscape in decline may be an eyesore to most of us, but for George Tice the details of aging hometowns provide the source and inspiration for arresting black and white photographs. More...

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