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Build to Suit

New paintings by Jeremy Mangan at Fulcrum

Strongly influenced by the building practices and architecture of the early American West Jeremy Mangan's structures exude a strength, usefulness, and beauty that defy the original simplicity of the composition.

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Would you like to see why Jeremy Mangan won the 2009 Foundation of Art Award from The Greater Tacoma Community Foundation? A peek at his show at Fulcrum Gallery might provide a good clue.

Mangan's paintings are inventive, thought provoking, humorous, technically marvelous and beautifully composed. What more can you ask of a painting? A painting can't feed the hungry of stop war or heal a broken heart, but it can remind us that the world we live in is not all humdrum and ugly. That's what Mangan's paintings do.

Mangan's photo-surrealist paintings look like photographs. The only clue that these are paintings and not photographs is that the subjects do not exist in the real world and that brushstrokes can be seen only in the long, thin shadows of the stilt-like poles upon which the houses rest in a few of his paintings and in the fast-moving clouds in a single painting called Collapsed Shed. In this painting an old farm shed isolated in a brown field has fallen in on itself. There is a rusted tin roof and spread out from it on the ground like pick-up sticks are the multicolored boards that formerly made up the side walls of the shed. The sky overhead is clear and blue with a few fleecy clouds and what looks like big brushstrokes with a clear gel across the clouds, which creates the impression of fast movement. This is a marvelous little painting that in its simplicity lifts the viewer out of the ordinary and transports him to a magical world that looks like the world we live in but is one step removed.

The shed and the multicolored boards are Mangan trademarks. One or the other, or both, show up in all of his paintings.  "Strongly influenced by building practices of the early American West ... my current work focuses on barn or shed-like constructions, often elevated and supported by stilts," Mangan writes in a gallery statement. "I hope these images allude to the strength, usefulness, and beauty, but also the hubris, precariousness, and ridiculousness, of human ambition."

All of his buildings look like they're very old and made of wood. Some have old grey wood slats and the others have slats of red, yellow, blue, green and white.

Another thing I like about Mangan, which is indicated in his artist statement, is his awareness of the tension "inherent in the illusion of three-dimensional space on a two dimensional plane." Not enough artists are aware of this.

The show-stoppers in this exhibition are a giant Trojan Horse and a panoramic view of Mt. St. Helens, but my favorites are the smaller paintings.

Gallery owner Oliver Doriss says Mangan is going places, and this may be our last chance to see his work in Tacoma. (Although I suspect some of his paintings may show up in future shows at Tacoma Art Museum.)

There will be an artist's talk Thursday, June 17 from 6-9 p.m.

Build to Suit: New paintings by Jeremy Mangan 

Through June 10, noon to 6 p.m. Thursday-Saturday and by appointment
Fulcrum Gallery, 1308 Martin Luther King Jr. Way, Tacoma
253.250.0520

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